Why is Blizzard still OK with gender inequality in World of Warcraft?
In most games I play, from World of Warcraft to Star Wars: The Old Republic, I make an effort to play mainly female characters. Unlike other males who play female characters, this isn't for cosmetic reasons; I'm not one of those dudes who can't bear to stare at his male character's butt for multiple hours a day. (How this is ever an argument that makes sense to people, I don't know.) This was a conscious decision on my part a few years ago, when I started to become aware of the discrimination faced by female characters.
See, when you make the decision to make a female character, you're intentionally and unintentionally signing up for a number of things. First, you are intentionally signing up to play a female character. This could be because you identify as female, because you prefer the look of female characters, or any number of other reasons (including the butt one). What you're unintentionally signing up for goes further.
You're unintentionally signing up for jokes made at your expense in a raid, like when my priest hit 85 and did BH in leveling gear, and my low HPS was mocked because I was a girl playing WoW. You're unintentionally signing up for harassment, for the catcalls and people begging you to talk in Vent, like you're a rare species of bird they'll only be able to hear once. You're unintentionally signing up to be victimized by other players because you dared roll something other than male at level 1, and you didn't know there'd be consequences for that choice.
Those forms of sexism aren't anything new to the World of Warcraft, but thankfully they're largely limited to the immature playerbase and not the game's creators. Unfortunately, Blizzard has its own gender issues to work out, and some of them are made clear by just rolling a female character.
Gender inequality in my World of Warcraft? Can't be!
Yesterday morning, a forum post on the Mists of Pandaria Beta Feedback forum highlighted some of the sexism players are unintentionally signing up for when they sign on to their female character. Ji Firepaw, an NPC you meet on the Wandering Isle who goes on to become leader of the pandaren Horde faction, greets female characters in a very creepy way, saying "Hello, friend! You're some kind of gorgeous, aren't you? I bet you can't keep the men off of you! Join me! You and I are going to be good friends!" To men, he instead says "Hello, friend! You've got a strong look to you! I bet you're all the rage with the ladies! Join me! You and I are going to be good friends!"

What's worse is that these aren't the only problems foist upon a player for choosing to play a female character. The most prominent issue, as old as girls in games themselves, is the armor issue, where game developers turn a torso-covering breastplate into a chainmail bra when it's on a female character. In this case, women who didn't want their female warriors to tank in metal bras and panties weren't really considered. Likewise, for some reason, male characters were never forced to wear chainmail underwear when the same item appeared as pants on a woman.
Seriously, why does this still exist?
My question, though, is why is this a thing? Why is it that developers are fine providing women with an unequal and often worse game experience? Why are developers OK with allowing female PCs to be harassed by male NPCs or requiring them to wear totally impractical armor pieces? It seems easy enough to make a game that isn't gender insensitive -- all you have to do is treat female and male characters equally. If you want people to have chainmail bra and panties, make the same piece as objectifying on a male character as it is on a women. If you're going to have a creepy dude running the pandaren race for the Horde, make his interactions equally creepy if you're a male PC -- or better, don't make them creepy at all, and have him remark on how strong your female pandaren look.

Unfortunately, it's the best idea I have to go on, because I can't otherwise fathom why unequal gender experiences still exist and are still being supported in the World of Warcraft.
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Reader Comments (Page 7 of 21)
eel5pe Apr 3rd 2012 5:01PM
Yeah. And who reads quest text anyway?? =)
Dude Apr 3rd 2012 4:14PM
I can't relate to this no matter how much I try, maybe it's too much America but beer 'n babes is where it's at.
llcjay2003 Apr 3rd 2012 4:34PM
Not only that, but plenty of women seem to be fine with embracing that idea. If revealing clothing was not being worn in real life, it would not exist in a video game. Don't give me this BS that there are no non-revealing options for armor. Just like in real life, people have a choice on what to wear.
cvs003 Apr 3rd 2012 4:49PM
As Alex posted in a comment earlier, there's a difference between choosing armor and being subjected to sexism, as in the dialogue by Ji. I choose to dress my female characters (and myself IRL) modestly. Just because some women decide to wear skimpy clothes doesn't mean we all want to. I wouldn't be complaining if Ji said something to the males like, "You're looking extra flabby, why don't you lay off the honey buns? Fatty." Then both dialogues would be genuinely funny rather than sexist.
llcjay2003 Apr 3rd 2012 5:33PM
And once again, my point is that you have the choice. If you don't like it don't do it.
scartian.wow Apr 3rd 2012 4:15PM
I barely even skimmed through this just because of the title. Either Josh is trolling or he really needs to get a life.
ukwest Apr 3rd 2012 4:14PM
Whatever the header image is for this article my companies firewall and filter system freaked on it.
Sedna Apr 3rd 2012 4:15PM
Seriously, why is this still a thing? Why does my female cloth wearer, but not my male, get thigh-highs and midriff armor as quest rewards? Why in God's name is my badass ladypanda getting judged not on the sheer quantity of asskicking she can generate but on how attractive she is? Looking sexy doesn't kill bosses.
I know you're better than this, Blizz.
StClair Apr 3rd 2012 9:10PM
Are they, though? Really?
Butts Apr 3rd 2012 4:15PM
I have played a number of female characters and never have been harassed or heckled for it.
Saeadame Apr 3rd 2012 4:17PM
Odd, maybe you made it really obvious from the get-go that you were actually a guy? Even then, though, a friend of mine who always plays girl characters gets called "gay" - or something more derogatory that I'm not going to write - all the time because he plays female characters.
Probably just haven't run into those kind of people - lucky you.
Breska Apr 3rd 2012 4:21PM
Like Saeadame, I'm a guy (and a straight one, for what it's worth) who mostly plays female characters, because I get a kick out of bucking the stereotypes.
I've never been called gay for this (and it's a good thing too, or else your tank or healer may suddenly vanish at an inconvenient moment), although the occasional "Female dwarves? I thought they were a myth!" makes me chuckle.
Klausse Apr 3rd 2012 4:15PM
Sorry, got distracted by the blood elf pic. No wonder she can't stand up straight!
Daisyfizzi Apr 3rd 2012 4:16PM
I play exclusively female characters and am female myself. I have NEVER had anyone act inappropriately or proposition me in game(nor give me free stuff either). If I screw up in a raid I own up and take the (usually) good natured ribbing that ensues (wiping the raid when I healed a tank after forgetfully 'baconing' Valithra Dreamwalker and accidentally starting the event... not my finest hour). I do talk on vent, but again, haven't received any weirdness from my guildies.
I also love the plate bikinis. Maybe it's because my dwarfadin looks hideously awesome wearing them, but it truly doesn't bother me one iota. As for Mr. Creepy Panderan, I find it kinda funny. I'm certainly not offended by it. I am a little annoyed by Tyrande 'Malfurion's shadow' Whisperwind and her lack of kick-assery in WoW, but mostly because it's such a departure from her earlier incarnation.
I guess what I'm trying to say is not all male WoW players are hormone crazed wierdos, some female gamers actually like the dodgy bikini armour and life's too short to worry about Mr. Creepy Panda:)
Daisyfizzi Apr 3rd 2012 4:19PM
I should add, I almost exclusively play dwarven lasses where class/race combo allows, perhaps this is why I've never had to deal with creepy comments/inappropriate attention... just a thought.
emberdione Apr 3rd 2012 4:32PM
Well, lucky you. Just because it hasn't happened to you, doesn't mean it doesn't happen.
My guild is about half women, most of whom flocked to our guild because we forced the males to be respectful. Once they found a guild where they weren't going to hear all that crap, they stayed.
Pryn Apr 3rd 2012 4:41PM
Moar dorfladies! Its nice that you've never had to encounter these situations in your playing Daisy, maybe the dwarf is something to do with it, perhaps its also related to how much time you spend with your guildies v's the 'great unwashed'.
Within my own guilds I don't experience this sort of abuse/favouritism/sexual attention, but it is something that has happened when in a wider setting or changing guilds. I'm very confident and outgoing and a real talker RL - but still experience has taught me to wait a while before speaking on voice chat with a new group, and I'll never use a public or pug voice chat. Ever. Could be specific to having an accent that some find appealing with a female voice, and sure its easy to avoid it by remaining quiet, but its a shame it has to be that way.
Its great you haven't encounter this sort of bull at all, but I think you're probably a minority and its important that we not take away from those who do experience it in an ongoing basis.
Jass Apr 3rd 2012 6:08PM
What Daisy said. As a woman, I've been playing almost exclusively female toons since the beginning of Wrath. I don't think any pugs have ever made the assumption that I'm a woman or if they have, they haven't said anything about it. My guild has several female raiders and I haven't encountered any sexism in guild.
Sexist WoW players are mainly young adolescent boys or blatant trolls. And let's face it, these are two demographics that spend a lot of time on MMOs. And I do see them in trade chat. I'm not saying "deal with it, ladies," but female WoW players can avoid these people the same way male players do: /ignore dumb people and join a guild that screens for immaturity.
arcadiasilver Apr 3rd 2012 9:02PM
You're very lucky. My time in WoW (vanilla player, here) has not been so nice. I've been forced to leave a guild because a guild mate openly propositioned me to strip on webcam for him, in raid and the guild leader told me to "lighten up" when I got angry. I've been stalked and harassed by strangers because the found out I was a female player. I've been mocked, insulted, and harassed by people I was healing, tanking for, and out dpsing. Just last week, I had a rather uncouth comment leveled at me when healers let me die on normal Rag 10 about "don't you have unlimited rage with PMS?" I get asked to repeat angry responses to unwelcome comments because "I sound sexy when I'm angry". The harassment is there, and many women experience it.
blinkman987 Apr 3rd 2012 4:16PM
Because it's a consumer product and there isn't much accountability for gender equality in the marketplace?