santaslayer
Active Member
Letraset is hardcore...!
that is the funniest thing ive heard all dayArgonaut said:My sister was going to use that until she found out what it means. She now goes by "Semhirage".
yesterday when i was playin source .. this 14 yrold kid joins the server and instantly spam talks .. then this 13 yrold chick comes in and he starts flirting with herLexxY said:ROFL! Well people think im male anyways.. rofl its just usually when I speak on mic cos I cbf typing: MOVE U FKN BLOCKER or something
haha ive had that before in aok. its kind of like...umm no. the fun part was i took his number and then continued to prank him for a flat hour, hanging up just before he picked up. one of the times i let it ring longer and he picked it up and was like "hahaha! whoevers doing this i picked it up im so fast!"hipPo3 said:almost a week old thread .. w0o0o
yesterday when i was playin source .. this 14 yrold kid joins the server and instantly spam talks .. then this 13 yrold chick comes in and he starts flirting with her
everyone was like wtf ?!?!? .. lol, it was soo funny cause the kid thought he had a chance, he asked her phone number and asked what her name was
normally when theres a chick playing counterstrike, it boosts the moral of male gamers, everyone wants to impress
That made me LOL big time.Constip8edSkunk said:
Another thing is, most female game avatars are designed to be eyecandy, or 'hypersexualised' - Chun-li, for example, wears stockings, (into battle?!?!) and has yellow swirls on her top that clearly point out where her chest is. When I was younger, I would rather play as Android 18 in DBZ than Chun-li, because 18 is female, yet not eyecandy-ish. (http://www.dbzsc.com/images/gamereviews/snes-game2-3.jpg 18 on the right)PaleReflection said:That made me LOL big time.
I reckon all this bitching about the lack of female-oriented games is pointless. If girls want to game, they should, and not let any preconcieved notion of female inferiority when it comes to gaming ability get in the way.
I'm not sure if Chun-li is really indicative of contemporary female gaming. If you're after moderate female lead characters who aren't objectified, there's always games like Beyond Good and Evil, The Longest Journey, Syberia (1 and 2), and loads more (These are just the ones that spring to mind which I've played recently). I'd suggest that perhaps the fighting genre is not where you're going to find the most enlightened, gender-neutral games.malkin86 said:Another thing is, most female game avatars are designed to be eyecandy, or 'hypersexualised' - Chun-li, for example, wears stockings, (into battle?!?!) and has yellow swirls on her top that clearly point out where her chest is. When I was younger, I would rather play as Android 18 in DBZ than Chun-li, because 18 is female, yet not eyecandy-ish. (http://www.dbzsc.com/images/gamereviews/snes-game2-3.jpg 18 on the right)
Some female gamers would rather play as a female, yet not wearing chainmail bikinis (ouch!) or the like. It can be fun to play as an eyecandy avatar sometimes, but not all the time. Someone cool, a bit more like 'She can kick arse and not have to distract them with her undies to do so!' would work better, I think.
Someone looking to disguise the distinct lack of worthwhile gameplay going on, so that at least someone buys the game, even if it is just 13 year old kids with too much spare [strikeout]penis[/strikeout] time on their hands.Argonaut said:Of course they're designed for men to look at - take Tomb Raider III for example: who the hell wears that getup in Antarctica?!
I see your point about Chun-li, just I thought some perspective was useful. Being created so long ago, there's no doubt that overall opinions have changed to an extent (Despite the fact that you still see games like Dead or Alive, etc, which clearly haven't come too far in regard to not casting female characters in that light). More a throwaway comment than anything though, I guess I'm just saying that despite certain companies and games displaying women like that, there *are* fairly mainstream games around which are much more moderate (Moreso now than previously).malkin86 said:Chun-li was the first, or one of the first, and she is iconic. That was why I mentioned her - everyone knows what she looks like, and most have played an incarnation of SF.
Beyond Good and Evil is a game I'd have no trouble rating among my top 10 favourite games of all time, it's got a fantastic plot and just oozes style. It's perhaps marginally infantile compared to the other games I've listed, and games in general, but I love it anyway. I've provided links for some reviews, I've skipped over the gamespot one because I disagree wholeheartedly with them (They gave it an 8.3, which is reasonable, but not all that close to how I'd rate it)malkin86 said:Are those games you mentioned any good? I've never heard of them, and my brother, who games more seriously than I do, doesn't own them, but has heard of them vaguely.
I just mean that I'm not sure that anyone making fighting games is really thinking of ways to get girls into fighting games by creating moderate female characters. Generally speaking, I think this genre specifically is geared fairly heavily at the young teen male audience, and I'd think in a lot of cases they simple decide that it's far easier to increase the size of a character's breasts or remove some clothing in order to make another horde of teen guys buy it than it is to add a female character and try to get female gamers in that way.malkin86 said:Why shouldn't the fighting genre be any good for having decent female characters?