Sep 292012
 
(Competitive gaming is here to stay. It’s a part of who we are as people.)

As mentioned in a previous aricle, one of the main reason people choose to game is competition. Competition is the heart and soul of the London 2012 Olympics right now and it has sold thousands of seat for a premium, just to get people to see the action from a relatively close distance.

Competition fuels sports like Baseball, Basketball, Football, and Soccer, and it makes its greatest players a part of history by cementing them in Hall of Fame collections and archives.

Electronic Sports are the natural progression of competition. eSports already sponsors huge tournaments and has a number of its own leagues including the MLG (Major Leage Gaming) and the IGN Pro League.

Gaming has long since left America as a past time for the few and now it’s part of the fabric of the mainstream. Here are some stats to get you thinking:

  •  49% of U.S. households own a dedicated game console, and those that do, own an average of 2
  • Consumers spent $24.75 billion on video games, hardware and accessories in 2011.
  • 72% of households play computer or video games

Source: Entertainment Software Association (US statistics)

Gaming is here to stay and competition is simply in our blood. E-sports is taking advantage of that with games like:

  • Starcraft
  • League of Legends
  • Mount and Blade
  • World of Warcraft
  • Street Fighter
  • Popular FPS games like Call of Duty

 

Source: Entertainment Software Association (US statistics)

Female Gamers

On a slightly different topic we’ll explore the role of Women in Gaming and relate it back to E-Sports. Popular culture assumes male players make up the vast majority of gamers and that most gamers are just kids in their teens. We hear about the Call of Duty player with his Microphone on who sounds like he isn’t a day older than 12 and we look at the
most popular gamers and see lists of guys thinking that’s the norm.

Nothing could be further from the truth:

  • 42% of gamers are women
  • Women aged 18+ represent a greater portion of game-playing population (37%) than boys aged 17 or younger (13%)
Source: Entertainment Software Association (US statistics)

Women love gaming just as much as anyone else. Speaking from personal experience, without advertising gaming, gaming in front of, or suggesting gaming as a past time, my own sister has become a devout video game player and has done so thanks to her Nintendo D.S.

The experience and pleasure it brought to her in her childhood remains with her and she sees it as a natural hobby, like tennis or rock climbing.

She’s not the only female to enjoy gaming and although we tend not to mention it very much, Female gamers make up a huge piece of the gaming industry and share in it nearly as much as guys do. They outnumber those teenage gamers nearly 3 to 1, as you saw from the above statistic.

Harrassment

This is where the tone has to get more serious because we’re dealing with real live people here. Because women will inevitably be a part of the community of gamers and because they’re already a large portion of gamers, there is the possibility of a clash occurring between insensitive jerks and their innocent victims.

It turns out the eSports gaming community has a lot of insensitive jerks. I’m not going to name names because you’ll find them in the links provided below, but simply put, these aren’t a few minor deviants here and there; the gaming community has an epidemic of whiny and abusive males that can’t professionally be around female gamers in a proper way.

There is a whole site dedicated to showing proof of harassment against female gamers called FatUglyorSlutty. Female Gamers take pictures of the types of harassment they receive and get a chance to pwn their idiotic aggressors. Here are some examples:

 

It was actually extremely hard trying to post pictures up since most of
the examples were too toxic to be widely distributed. These pictures are
actually the mildly bad ones.

Change Still Needed

The issue of women being harassed by gamers isn’t  new and hasn’t been getting better. Here’s an article from a year ago complaining about the problem. Not much has changed since then.

Grace, one of the creators of the site Fatuglyorslutty,  says:

“I feel a little sad. For some of the ones that I feel are really blatantly harassing it seems to me that maybe there should be something harsher for it, but maybe not everybody agrees and maybe not even Microsoft agrees.”

Microsoft has chosen not to aggressively combat harassment and many of the users featured on fatuglyorslutty are still active and still allowed to continue harassing others.

This past February Kotaku covered one such insensitive jerk actually recording his ongoing sexual harassment of a female gamer. The issue went viral and the initial reaction from the said jerk was that it was perfectly o.k. He even admitted that he harassed the female gamer and when he was asked “Can I get my Street Fighter without sexual harassment” the jerk responded with:

“You can’t. You can’t because they’re one and the same thing. This is a community that’s, you know, 15 or 20 years old, and the sexual harassment is part of a culture, and if you remove that from the fighting game community, it’s not the fighting game community—it’s StarCraft. There’s nothing wrong with StarCraft if you enjoy it, and there’s nothing wrong with anything about eSports, but why would you want just one flavor of ice cream, you know? There’s eSports for people who like eSports, and there’s fighting games for people who like spicy food and like to have fun. There’s no reason to turn them into the same thing, you know?”

He’s right about it being part of the culture, but he’s dead wrong in saying we have to enable it and allow it to thrive. It needs to be quashed and he needs to grow up and stop acting like an immature @#%#$. That’s just me speaking frankly. :D :)

Just to remind everyone that there hasn’t been enough traction and change in dealing with this problem, the BBC made a documentary recently in June of this year titled “Guns, Girls, and Games”. It discusses the issue of Sexual Harassment in the Gaming community and comes along with an article detailing the problems women face when just trying to compete or play games on an equal stage as men.

~~~~~~~



Personalized View

On a final point it was helpful to get a personal view from one such female gamer that has gone through this, was deeply involved in the eSports arena, and can speak first hand about the issues Females face.

Hafu is a well known female gamer who has openly discussed some of the challenges that come with being a female Gamer. While writing this article she was actually Gaming live on Twitch.tv with 500+ followers watching in the wings and commenting in her chat room.

Some of her achievements include:

World of Warcraft

1st - MLG Orlando 2008

1st - MLG Dallas 2008

1st – NA Blizzard Regionals 2008

3rd - Blizzcon 2008

Bloodline Champions

1st - Dreamhack Summer 2011

She’s a top player in her field and wants to be known firstly as a top gamer and secondly as a female. In this way she rises against her male competitors instead of being told she’s just a good “Female” gamer. On the contrary, she’s a great Gamer period regardless of either gender.
When I asked her, “What one point should male gamers take to heart, before they make insensitive statements against women in gaming?” , she had this to say:

“I think the overarching problem is that people act with impunity behind
the anonymity of the internet. Furthermore, it is much easier to talk
smack to pixels than it is to someone’s face. I wish people would
remember that behind each avatar and username, is a person.”

 Final Thoughts

She makes a strong point here. If we would all remember that a real person and a real life is in front of us, that our words are powerful and can do a lot of harm, and that we need to be responsible and mature in how we act, we will never want or desire to harass anyone regardless of their gender.

You can help stop this epidemic next time you pick up a microphone and hear someone blasting off inappropriate comments to women. Tell him to politely, “shut his insensitive mouth”, and leave it at that. In time things will change because we, as gamers, and decent human beings. have to make them change, for the betterment of our sisters in gaming.

 

http://img52.imageshack.us/img52/272/immortalphoenixheaderco.png

www.ImmortalPhoenix.net

Nov 192011
 

If you have taken a fair amount of time to play any multiplayer game online, you have likely seen the best and the worst that the gaming community has to offer. Unfortunately, there are groups of people out there that find it acceptable to harass their fellow gamers. Jenny Haniver of Notinthekitchenanymore.com decided to take a stand against this and documents her interactions with these mouthbreathers on her website, creating a showcase of dialogues to show the world what some gamers have to deal with. Jenny took some time to have a Q&A with us, here is what she had to say.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Josh Knowles: Ok, so for those uninformed. Who is Jenny Haniver?

Jenny Haniver: I’m a 23 year old female artist who also happens to be a video gamer. I’m in my senior year of college, about to graduate with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree with a sculpture emphasis.

Josh Knowles: Awesome, so you created the website notinthekitchenanymore.com, how did that get started?

Jenny Haniver: It all sprung from an art installation I did at my college in the fall of last year. My installation featured a welded sculpture that held two Xbox controllers (one pink, one blue). The controllers had MP3 players installed inside them, and headsets attached to the MP3 players, allowing the viewer to interact with the sculpture by listening to audio while reading the banners placed around the room. The banners contained phrases from the transcripts of audio I had recorded while playing Call of Duty on Xbox live. The pink controller played audio that is somewhat typical of a woman’s experience gaming online, and the blue controller played more male-based audio.

Jenny Haniver: The website is essentially and extension and continuation of that project. I’ve continued to record audio while I game, and I now upload that audio to my website for a wider audience to listen to and experience.

Josh Knowles: With the two experiences that were recorded from the initial project, were people surprised at the differences between the two?

Jenny Haniver: Definitely. While many people who are active in the gaming community are generally aware of the fact that female gamers sometimes face some pretty sexist behavior, people outside of the community tend to have no idea this kind of thing is occurring. So it’s a little jarring to experience it for the first time, for outsiders.

Josh Knowles: I’ve noticed on the site that you are very clear that this is not a way to complain, but more of a method to create awareness. How often does the sexist behavior spill over onto the site?

Jenny Haniver: Actually it hasn’t at all, yet. The comments made on the site are overwhelmingly positive at this point. The sexist behavior is, however, tends to be exceedingly prominent in the comment sections of the articles that have been written about the site so far. I document those comments on the “Case in Point” page of the website.

Josh Knowles: From everything I’ve heard and read, you have the patience of a saint. How do you stay so levelheaded with some of the ridiculous things people say?

Jenny Haniver: Overall I have incredibly thick skin, and I’ve been exposed to this so much that I basically don’t give a shit anymore. I’ve been gaming online pretty seriously since 2007, and I’ve become largely immune to this behavior by this point.

Josh Knowles: My wife won’t play games online anymore due to the treatment that she received. What sort of advice to you have for gamers that have turned away from the online multiplayer experience?

Jenny Haniver: Tune it out, mute people, report them. Don’t let the assholes get to you, because they are truly a minority. The gaming community is largely made up of amazing people who can become great friends if you’re willing to stick through the rough patches of running into rude jerks. Just keep your chin up until you find a group of friends you can game with on a regular basis, they make a world of difference.

Josh Knowles: On, the lighter side of things. I’ve heard that you are quite good at Call of Duty games. Is it icing on the cake when you take a top spot at the end of a match that has these type of people in it?

Jenny Haniver: It’s a pretty mixed bag for me. On the one hand, yes, it is incredibly satisfying to have a bunch of people flip out because you destroyed them and they didn’t expect it at all. But on the other hand, it’s kind of insulting that it’s considered THAT unusual and debasing to be “beaten by a woman”.

Josh Knowles: How often do the nonparticipants of this behavior step in when they hear it happening?

Jenny Haniver: If I’m playing with my friends, they step in every time and throw it right back at the person in question. If I’m in a lobby by myself and someone starts verbally harassing me, I don’t believe I’ve ever had another random player step in and tell the other person to shut up.

Josh Knowles: As far as gaming goes, are you strictly a Call of Duty player, or do you get into other games as well?

Jenny Haniver: I absolutely play other games! On the Xbox 360, I really enjoy the Bioshock and Deadspace games series, and I’ve played a fair amount of Halo as well. Loved Borderlands too, and can’t wait for the next installment. I still play Pokemon on my Nintendo DS (a lot), and sometimes I’ll even bring out my original Play Station to play Final Fantasy 9 or Legends of Legaia.

Jenny Haniver: And Minecraft, on my PC. I LOVE Minecraft.

Josh Knowles: Excited for the “release” tomorrow?

Jenny Haniver: Yes, but I won’t have time to play for a week, because Saturday is the opening of gun deer hunting season in Wisconsin, and that takes priority over everything else!

Josh Knowles: Has the site created opportunities to meet any influential members of the gaming community yet?

Jenny Haniver: I’ve had some amount of contact with people who run/work for gaming websites, which has been pretty interesting and informative. Hopefully as my website grows, I’ll have the opportunity to meet more and more people who are key players in the gaming community.

Josh Knowles: So, a question we always like to ask here. What was your favorite game of all time?

Jenny Haniver: I’m going to have to go with Bioshock. It’s the entire reason we ended up buying an Xbox 360 in the first place. I kept seeing commercials for it and I HAD to play it, so we picked up a console when it was released. The storyline and visual effects blew my mind. It was how I got into console gaming again.

Josh Knowles: So, I take it that you are looking forward to Bioshock Infinite

Jenny Haniver: Yes. A millions time over, yes. I thought Bioshock 2 was great, and I have high hopes for Infinite as well.

Josh Knowles: Do you have plans to continue the site after College?

Jenny Haniver: If at all possible, yes! I don’t know what job I’ll end up in, but hopefully I’ll still have free time to dedicate both to gaming and running the website. It’s become pretty important to me, and I have a number of readers who seem to feel the same way.

Josh Knowles: So, what would you hope that readers are able to take away when they visit the site?

Jenny Haniver: If they’ve experienced the same thing, a sense that they’re not alone. And hopefully people get the sense that you don’t have to be crushed by the rude or ridiculous things people say sometimes. It’s easier to brush those things off if you have a sense of humor about it. And if it causes some people to think twice about spewing hate when they game online, that would be great too (although not entirely expected)

Josh Knowles: Any parting words for the normal members of the gaming community? Any shout outs of thanks to anyone else?

Jenny Haniver: To the gamers out there who don’t treat their fellow gamers like shit, kudos to you- you’re the ones that make gaming with others worth it. I’m so grateful to all of the friends I’ve met and that I’ve been gaming with for the last few years, there are so many of them I couldn’t name them all individually without taking up a ton of space- but the GEZR clan knows who they are.

Josh Knowles: Awesome! Thanks for taking the time to talk to us today!

Jenny Haniver: No problem, thanks for having me!

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I’ll tell you this, next time you hear a fellow gamer being harassed. Be the bigger person, step in and help them out. It doesn’t matter if they are male or female, gar or straight, black or white, they are a gamer and most likely trying to enjoy themselves. If we can all take a stand against that type of crap, I assure you, we would have a plethora of additional gamers to share our experiences with.

Once again, thanks Jenny for taking the time to talk with us!