J. Valjean
BANALITY
Hey everyone. While Mortal Kombat is my favorite game series (along with Command & Conquer and Killzone), I feel an honest debate with others fans should be brought up in order to settle a big question not only with MK but with many games of our time. It is that of misogyny.
Many of us know Grand Theft Auto as the flagship game for violence against women, or rather, as the game that was put on the spot for it. I want to share an experience. Prior to playing MK9 for the first time and then buying it, I watched a few LiveStreams of players who got the game early. After cycling through some Tag and single player ladder matches, the player got onto the Fatality Trainer. Of course I wanted to see this, what MK fan doesn't want to see the new installments of ogreish finishers?
The first fatality was Noob, of course, and the kid picked Jade to finish. Alright, so some angst leftover from the UMK3 days I guess. But then he picked Kung Lao, and his victim was Mileena. Scorpion, with Sonya as a victim. Then, Kano and Kitana. Then, back to Mileena. It got so bad that I and a couple other viewers pointed out his misogyny and deep-seated perversion. But most viewers were like "yeah! haha!" or "**** yeah, awesome". Some were even like "that's hot". Am I a pansy to say that's kind of creepy and ****ed up?
Then, on DeviantArt, looking for signatures and avatars, I came upon this one kid "TheInsaneDarkOne". I won't lie, he is talented, but his drawings (comissioned!!) are all of some big, muscular MK guy beating/killing a female character. One set of pictures, he draws Sub-Zero sexually molesting Mileena. And I looked at the comments for these pictures, and they were all like "sweet", "that's sexy", "awesome", etc. Really? Is it just that isolated- that DeviantArt is full of sick creeps, or is this a sign of something the gaming community ought to look at?
(http://theinsanedarkone.deviantart.com/)
I love MK as much as the next guy. I've been following it for years; it was the first video game I played as a child and it remained fixated on my schema of video games throughout years. But sometimes, it creeps me out how far certain people will go. You can say that MK is in fact being egalitarian. That's a valid argument- but valid doesn't mean true.
Yes, MK has strong feminine characters like Sonya, Jade, and Kitana who take control and get things done. And yes, MK operates on the idea that women are equal to men and thus, we have women and men ninjas of equal strength and talent kicking the crap out of each other. BUT let's look at reality-> physically, men are at least 3-4x stronger than women. The effects of a real man-woman fight are devastating and there are 1 in 4 women in the US who experience abuse at the hands of men (I think that's an old statistic). While in the MK universe, Mileena and Scorpion may be of equal strength/skill, in the real world, there are abusive fathers and husbands and boyfriends beating on their girls and there is no such equal "strength or skill".
What the game experience of a man v. woman fight brings is desensitization. It desensitizes men and women to the realities of misogyny and the violence against women. And in that desensitization lies less empathy, in the long run, for victims, and such cultural plague. It's very similar to the effect Eminem's lyrics have. And it's a desensitization that we can't afford to bear, because women and girls face hardships that men will never know and the reality of misogyny is something we can't dismiss. How many of you guys/girls have noticed this about MK, or about some people playing it that seem to enjoy this aspect of it? I was legit creeped out by that dude- he was like doing five, six, seven fatalities all on women. Personal problem of his, yes. But the ability to do things like that on a mass marketed game.... what does that have to say about society?
If any of you guys want to know more about this desensitization effect, Jackson Katz has an article on Eminem on his website. Mr. Katz is a speaker on women and gender issues that tours nationally and also researches. He and Dr. Thomas Keith, PhD, contribute to each others work sometimes. There are two good videos you can catch online: "Tough Guise" on masculinity and violence by Jackson Katz, and "Generation M" by Dr. Keith on misogyny in music and pop culture.
http://www.jacksonkatz.com/eminem2.html
And I'm not a WGS major.
Many of us know Grand Theft Auto as the flagship game for violence against women, or rather, as the game that was put on the spot for it. I want to share an experience. Prior to playing MK9 for the first time and then buying it, I watched a few LiveStreams of players who got the game early. After cycling through some Tag and single player ladder matches, the player got onto the Fatality Trainer. Of course I wanted to see this, what MK fan doesn't want to see the new installments of ogreish finishers?
The first fatality was Noob, of course, and the kid picked Jade to finish. Alright, so some angst leftover from the UMK3 days I guess. But then he picked Kung Lao, and his victim was Mileena. Scorpion, with Sonya as a victim. Then, Kano and Kitana. Then, back to Mileena. It got so bad that I and a couple other viewers pointed out his misogyny and deep-seated perversion. But most viewers were like "yeah! haha!" or "**** yeah, awesome". Some were even like "that's hot". Am I a pansy to say that's kind of creepy and ****ed up?
Then, on DeviantArt, looking for signatures and avatars, I came upon this one kid "TheInsaneDarkOne". I won't lie, he is talented, but his drawings (comissioned!!) are all of some big, muscular MK guy beating/killing a female character. One set of pictures, he draws Sub-Zero sexually molesting Mileena. And I looked at the comments for these pictures, and they were all like "sweet", "that's sexy", "awesome", etc. Really? Is it just that isolated- that DeviantArt is full of sick creeps, or is this a sign of something the gaming community ought to look at?
(http://theinsanedarkone.deviantart.com/)
I love MK as much as the next guy. I've been following it for years; it was the first video game I played as a child and it remained fixated on my schema of video games throughout years. But sometimes, it creeps me out how far certain people will go. You can say that MK is in fact being egalitarian. That's a valid argument- but valid doesn't mean true.
Yes, MK has strong feminine characters like Sonya, Jade, and Kitana who take control and get things done. And yes, MK operates on the idea that women are equal to men and thus, we have women and men ninjas of equal strength and talent kicking the crap out of each other. BUT let's look at reality-> physically, men are at least 3-4x stronger than women. The effects of a real man-woman fight are devastating and there are 1 in 4 women in the US who experience abuse at the hands of men (I think that's an old statistic). While in the MK universe, Mileena and Scorpion may be of equal strength/skill, in the real world, there are abusive fathers and husbands and boyfriends beating on their girls and there is no such equal "strength or skill".
What the game experience of a man v. woman fight brings is desensitization. It desensitizes men and women to the realities of misogyny and the violence against women. And in that desensitization lies less empathy, in the long run, for victims, and such cultural plague. It's very similar to the effect Eminem's lyrics have. And it's a desensitization that we can't afford to bear, because women and girls face hardships that men will never know and the reality of misogyny is something we can't dismiss. How many of you guys/girls have noticed this about MK, or about some people playing it that seem to enjoy this aspect of it? I was legit creeped out by that dude- he was like doing five, six, seven fatalities all on women. Personal problem of his, yes. But the ability to do things like that on a mass marketed game.... what does that have to say about society?
If any of you guys want to know more about this desensitization effect, Jackson Katz has an article on Eminem on his website. Mr. Katz is a speaker on women and gender issues that tours nationally and also researches. He and Dr. Thomas Keith, PhD, contribute to each others work sometimes. There are two good videos you can catch online: "Tough Guise" on masculinity and violence by Jackson Katz, and "Generation M" by Dr. Keith on misogyny in music and pop culture.
http://www.jacksonkatz.com/eminem2.html
And I'm not a WGS major.
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