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Ethnic Minorities - "Forgot about them".

Gbraga

Member
I really don't want to shit on the thread and the issue being discussed, but Sazh is easily the best character in FFXIII, and not just because everyone sucks, he's actually really well made, and the fact that he looks like your typical black videogame character may be on purpose to break your expectations, since he's just a really cool and responsible guy.

A really bad example imo, I know it's not relevant to the point the thread's making, but using good black characters as examples to discuss bad black characters is a potential backfire to those who could do something about it and follow those discussions closely. Maybe something like "damn, if they think Sazh is crap, I won't even try".

Just talking out of my ass though, I have nothing to support that this could actually happen.
 

Balb

Member
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Direct Source: Race in Video Games: Why it Matters... And Why Things Won't Change Anytime Soon

Games are not meant to directly or indirectly produce or support stereotypes. A black man, more important a black person is and can be non-violent, anti-drugs, educated person with intellect and integrity. It should never be a "black man is all about the ghetto, and the money and the bitches".

And all ethnic minority groups have got their own interesting stories and movies like Django Unchained that can be made into a good game.

I agree with what you're saying but my question was specifically related to "black hair" and "speaking like a black man." I don't see anything inherently wrong with those things. My guess is that the image in the OP wasn't specific enough which is why I asked for clarification.
 
Well OP, what do you mean by 'forgot about them'? I was looking for something more direct. Should I have looked at the links?

Anyway I think that obviously a lot of minorities are misrepresented in games. They have demographics and they have marketing do a lot of these test, so especially here in the U.S. , you will find your protagonist as a white male.

I kind of just got used to it. In Japanese games, well, what do they really know anyway? The characters that are and have been created in the past, don't look that Japanese to me, and I am citing older adventure games and most modern games. To me, that is rather telling.

But yeah, as a whole the industry needs work. Well, no actually society needs work. I actually can't fault a publisher/developer wanting their game to reach as many people as possible. If the population didn't respond the way it does they wouldn't have to.
 

Zomba13

Member
Dark Souls 2 got you covered

dark-souls-2-straid.png


No hair even visible, has a wizardy voice, loves magic, no guns, and he's a pretty badass , powerful dude.

Oh so he's the magic black man trope? How racist.


I'm joking by the way. Straid is cool.
 

besada

Banned
I am interested. That's why I posted something. I did not speak for others. I shared my mind as to what I feel others belonging to my ethnic group would feel about the matter at hand. Maybe you feel I'm not qualified to do that. I'd argue I am.
Given that I've spoken to many, and read more, people who do care, no, I don't think you're capable or qualified to express the opinions of others. You can argue that if you want to, but it seems a ridiculous hill on which to plant your flag.
 
Video game characters(mainstream) do not exactly represent what you'd like to be. They are not role models. There is no message to propagate or convey.


The main problem is that they're still made to appeal to a demographic and that's a problem IMO. They're not role models but yet, the reason we see the same kind of characters is often a marketing reason and I don't think that's a good idea to make a character just to make sure a demographic will be happy of this.
 

Thorakai

Member
I am interested. That's why I posted something. I did not speak for others. I shared my mind as to what I feel others belonging to my ethnic group would feel about the matter at hand. Maybe you feel I'm not qualified to do that. I'd argue I am.

Video game characters(mainstream) do not exactly represent what you'd like to be. They are not role models. There is no message to propagate or convey.

You did speak for others.

As an 'ethnic minority', I honestly gotta say I don't give a hoot about it nor do most people, I believe. Some people are just fighting quixotic battles.

Right above. No indication that you were speaking for others in your ethnic group, if you meant that then you poorly conveyed your message with that sentence. Regardless, you are not qualified to speak about everyone belonging to your ethnic group. Unless you are friends with every single person within that ethnic group in the planet and asked them for their opinion, you are not qualified to generalize your sentiments.

Not everyone is asking for video games characters to be role models, or to propagate a message. Some of us just want to play a character that looks like us to feel included in a hobby we've poured so much time in.
 

RedSwirl

Junior Member
To make it clear: I would love/applaud more inclusiveness. But I fear we live in the wrong society for that. Minorities are the definition of not many. Capitalistic products are aiming for the many, for the massmarket. Transformers, Star Wars, your average white male shooter.. heck even Fifa doesn't even bother to include women.

To a certain extent I can see it happening, but not completely. But thats hopefully just me being pessimistic.

But are those things mutually exclusive to each other? The role of the protagonist and the representation of races among a game's cast can be handled within each individual product. Plus, the OP already pointed out the link between representations of minorities in media and white peoples' views of those minorities in real life.
 

jay23

Member
Shout out to Rockstar, they seem to always do a great job of including all races/ethnicities in their games.

GTA4 dlc, Ballad of gay tony had a Dominican character as the protagonist. Thought it was pretty cool to play as someone from my country.
 
Lack of women, lack of sexual minorities, lack of gender minorities, lack of racial/ethnic minorities, lack religious minorities all fit under the same umbrella problem of video games failing to capture even a fraction of the human diversity available in the world.
True enough. I'm just pointing out that some people seem to rate all of those as equally misrepresented, which isn't true. Representation of women in gaming (both in the medium and the industry) has grown by leaps and bounds over the past decade....which is logical tbh, it is half the world's population.

The others you mentioned....not so much. I know it's unrealistic to expect every problem to see the same rate of progress, and the rate of progress for some issues vs. others extends well past gaming, but idealistically you'd like to see them all addressed equally. And there are ways to kill several birds with one stone but most people don't seem able (or willing) to do it.
 

sn00zer

Member
I think white characters are generally safer to write for without any controversy. You can write a stupid, redneck, rapist, gangbanger who slings meth and be hailed as one of the greatest videogame characters ever. I can't imagine people would have felt the same if the character was a minority character. Regardless, I would love seeing more minority character in games, pretty weird seeing only white guys being the heroes in media (im noticing especially in the Marvel movies where all the main characters are white)
 

nOoblet16

Member
The Assassins creed games are the most multicultural game I've seen. The games goes from Arab to Italian to Native American to welsh-born British and African to French.

Probably because of the diversity they have in their studio themselves. You'd even find some Indian characters in Bioware games, possibly because of the fact that there are lots of Indians in Canada and they might even work for Bioware. Think Mass Effect itself had a few Indians and wasn't the supreme commander of Allicance or the president of Earth an Indian guy as well in Mass Effect universe?
 

RedSwirl

Junior Member
The main problem is that they're still made to appeal to a demographic and that's a problem IMO. They're not role models but yet, the reason we see the same kind of characters is often a marketing reason and I don't think that's a good idea to make a character just to make sure a demographic will be happy of this.

Well if you want a diverse cast to really work with good characters it probably has to come from a place of genuine familiarity with the diverse groups being represented. The writers or designers probably have to actually come from diverse backgrounds to the point where that's just what comes directly from their heart. That doesn't mean non-minority designers can't try. If they do want to do this and do it with good characters then it probably helps to do some research.
 

Stumpokapow

listen to the mad man
True enough. I'm just pointing out that some people seem to rate all of those as equally misrepresented, which isn't true. Representation of women in gaming (both in the medium and the industry) has grown by leaps and bounds over the past decade....which is logical tbh, it is half the world's population.

Why did representation of women grow in leaps and bounds? Because it was identified as a problem and people tried to address it.

What does your original post do? Sarcastically derides people who identified it as a problem and try to address it on the grounds that they haven't turned around and jumped to a new problem fast enough when progress was made on the old one, pitting both problems against each other.
 

Sothpaw

Member
I'd love to see more minority representation in games, but hard to support the games that have minorities when there are so few and the few there are usually bad.

GTA 4
GTA 5
Left 4 Dead
Left 4 Dead 2
Madden
NBA 2K
Mirror's Edge
Portal
Diablo
Gears of War
Resident Evil 5
Borderlands
Borderlands 2

Come on now the games with minority protagonists are not "usually bad." Anyway seems to me like there are quite a few games out there with minority protagonists.
 

DocSeuss

Member
I have a great personal example of this. I've been going to comic conventions for about twenty-five years. I went to one about two weeks after The Avengers came out and we were all astonished. Not only was the thing packed like no other con I've seen, but it was packed with young women wearing Avengers shirts, clearly entering fandom for the first time. I was fortunate enough that day to be working a friend's table who published comics specifically geared to young girls and women, so I got to spend the whole day talking to people who were there because The Avengers had turned them onto comics, and nearly every one cited how amazing it was to see Black Widow kicking ass amongst the men.

In all my time I had never seen so many young women at a convention. Reaching out to people works.

This is part of the reason I created that thread a while ago asking why Marvel couldn't go ahead and try to get more women into their movies, even if it's gender swapping or something. It bugs me that the only woman on the team is the least-effective person in the film, as well as the only person who actually gets scared--when the Hulk is chasing her. The guys are all like "yeah, I'm so awesome," and she's, y'know, a squishy little person. She's awesome, but Marvel should totally have women on par with Hulk and Thor.

Selfishness is when you have a problem and you look at other problems and say "My problem is worse, pay attention to me"

Empathy is when you have a problem and and look at other problems and say "I've been through stuff myself, and I know how it hurts. How can I help?"

This is why so many threads about women in gaming go wrong. Instead of trying to foster empathy, these threads try to generate list wars or whatever. Even ones where it's a guy talking about how bad women have it--like that Polygon article a while ago. That guy shows up, and basically goes "that problem is worse than your problems, you're a terrible person if you don't help with it." As someone who's endured sexual discrimination, "as a guy, I'll never have sexual discrimination happen to me" type claims upset me. So my initial response, as a human being, is to push back.

But I'm a person who tries to have empathy for this. I wrinkle my nose at the people who express pride at being social justice warriors. I think we need to be social justice educators. Instead of going "X has it worse than Y, so Y, shape up and fix this," we need to go "hey, Y, X has a problem, can you help?"
 

Bleeether

Member
It is a shame that there isn't more diversity in video games. It's a really shitty feeling when all your life you've played games as white male/female protagonists and there seems to be no change in sight.
 

Preemo

Banned
Fergus Mills searches for the words. It's clear he wants to say this carefully. The 22-year-old from Macon, Ga. is black. His Xbox Live avatar is black. Except that it's not.P

Drawing it out of him, Mills says it's because of the avatar's body language. And while Mills doesn't say that's really a white guy on his screen, palette-swapped to look like him, he's pretty clear this representation is not from his neighborhood.P

"I can make him look like me, but have you noticed, when he's standing right there, the way he moves? It's ... weird," Mills said. "He puts his hand on his hip. He twirls his head. I've never seen people who act like that."

well, he failed, and it seems he distinguishes between his ideals of what a black man should be anyway.

another fucked up crying wolf article.
 
Shout out to Rockstar, they seem to always do a great job of including all races/ethnicities in their games.

GTA4 dlc, Ballad of gay tony had a Dominican character as the protagonist. Thought it was pretty cool to play as someone from my country.

Great work with ethnic and racial diversity (even centering on Chinese characters in China Town Wars), but they still have a long way to go in terms of neurodiversity. It's though that around 0.6% of criminals have some form of autistic spectrum disorder, for starters, so a GTA game feature an autistic criminal, even if as just a minor character doesn't strike me as all that implausible compared to real life.
 

Stumpokapow

listen to the mad man
can I have brown hands in driveclub?

If it's sincere, I hope you can and it seems like it would be a relatively easy feature to implement.

If this is an insincere way of trying to state that ethnicity is not particularly important, I think it's fair to say that the extent to which particular portrayals make people feel comfortable or less comfortable depends on the depth of the portrayal and the exclusion.

A person of colour typically has no problem with playing as a white character in any one game, they might just have a problem in aggregate with the number of people of colour represented in the medium as a whole and how they're represented. Games that have more player control over the player character are going to feel more conspicuously excluding than games that have less player control, especially as marketing highlights "being able to make the character you want".

A driving game is typically going to be mostly about cars, and thus I suspect most players of colour would find that the colour of the visible wrist skin is probably less significant to them than in most games (and I would hope that a white player would not find it "odd" if a driving game featured only drivers who are persons of colour).
 

Hendrick's

If only my penis was as big as my GamerScore!
I don't have any percentages or anything, but it seems like the majority of people making most games are not of an ethnic minority. It makes sense that predominantly white males would make games about characters they can most closely relate to. Therein, the problem lies not in the content of our games, but rather the lack of diversity in their creators.
 
But are those things mutually exclusive to each other? The role of the protagonist and the representation of races among a game's cast can be handled within each individual product. Plus, the OP already pointed out the link between representations of minorities in media and white peoples' views of those minorities in real life.

Speaking for all white people - way to stereotype.
 

Loakum

Banned
Assassin's Creed Black Flag tackles this issue in one of their real world computer hacks. It stated, the reason why AC3's main character wasn't accepted by the masses, is because he looks too ethnic. I disagree with their point...AC3 failed, because it sucked. The Video Game Industry is improving in this...just look at The Walking Dead season #1 video game. The main character is black, and it was a major hit.
 

test_account

XP-39C²
"I don't see race" is a way to sidestep the issue and is completely disingenuous to those who are daily reminded of their race due to discrimination. Its basically "I don't see race because I'm not facing discrimination".
I understand. Thanks for the answer. I think he ment it more in the way that he doesnt discriminate between people just because they have a different skin color. As that he personally dont care what skin color people have and that it is a non-issue for him. Hes just speaking from his point of view, at least that is how i understand it.
 

Seeds

Member
Video game journalism seem to focus on issues that give them hits as opposed to actually trying to solve a problem. With how thing are in the US right now I'm not surprised they're focused on gender equality and presentation.
 

Kinyou

Member
The OP complains that the black guy from FFXIII is too stereotypical, but also that the Black avatar doesn't act black enough. Seems like a tough balance to strike.

I guess the solution would be to get more black people involved in the design process.
That part confused me as well.
 

Orayn

Member
"I don't see race" is a way to sidestep the issue and is completely disingenuous to those who are daily reminded of their race due to discrimination. Its basically "I don't see race because I'm not facing discrimination".

Furthermore, when people try to suggest "ignoring race" as a solution to racism, it's basically the equivalent of treating all medical problems with "thinking healthy thoughts." A broken arm or a virulent infection only has as much power as you give it, you know?
 

sn00zer

Member
Tearaway had a surprisingly diverse cast of dialects and cultures, and was very accommodating to different skin colors
 
It would be nice to play as a Black protagonist without the stereotypical ties that the media portrays them as. Black/minority characters do get to play pretty good supporting roles, but I would like to see Naughty Dog or another big game studio use a Black protagonist for one of their main IP's.
 

Zomba13

Member
AC3 and AC3 Liberation both had minority leads and it was a super cool thing to do. Shame both games sucked. I was super excidted for the Vita game but it has a shitty frame rate, looks grimy, the audio just seems bad (bad samples, low quality) and the game itself was boring. Even missed out (from what I played) on really characterising Aveline. It starts with her as a kid, loses he mother somewhere and just jumps skips all the development of her until she is an adult and already an assassin.


I still do want to know how 'blacks talk' and 'blacks act' and examples of it being racist and being correct. Obviously doing a pallet swap of a white character to black isn't acting black enough for some people and some games go too far (apparently Sazh in FFXIII).
 
It should be noted here thought that being of Native American ethnicity, or even still closely culturally tied does not prohibit you from engaging with modern American society.

This is true, I live in a small town in British Columbia Canada, and the second largest demographic here outside of white people are First Nation Native Americans. The Majority of them dress just like everybody else around here.
 

raphanum

Member
What was that acronym from The Wire? BNBG - Big N***o, Big Gun. So it seems like game developers are using the stereotypical representation of African-Americans to create their characters.

Just to add:
Bunk is also one of the investigators of Stringer Bell's murder, during which Bunk uses the acronym "BNBG" - Big Negro, Big Gun - to sum up witness Andy Krawczyk's stereotypical description of the murderer.
 
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