Posted June 11, 2014
When a game give me the choice between a male and a female avatar, I always choses the female. For some reason, a female avatar feels more natural to me. Which is kind of wierd, with me being a guy.
Now, the strange thing is that I don't feel any inclination towards having titties or wearing frilly dresses in real life. I mean, if I had some overarching desire to be a chick, it would kind of explain it.
I think it has something to do with the distance the player has to the avatar in 3rd person perspective. I wouldn't choose a female avatar in a 1st person shooter. Another perspective is that players always take the role of radically different personas. Theres a world of distance between the psychopath killer in Hotline Miami, the macho hero in Duke Nukem and the naive boy in Little Inferno. Yet, as a player, I can effortlessly swap between those roles. Since there is such great distance between who the player are and the role he plays in the game, it might not be all that mysterious if some player prefer avatars of the opposite sex.
But generally, I prefer games that doesn't let the player choose between different avatars. I think the strength of games such as Duke Nuk'em 3D, Portal and They Bleed Pixels is that the games creators has decided on a single main character, created specifically for the games universe.
Now, the strange thing is that I don't feel any inclination towards having titties or wearing frilly dresses in real life. I mean, if I had some overarching desire to be a chick, it would kind of explain it.
I think it has something to do with the distance the player has to the avatar in 3rd person perspective. I wouldn't choose a female avatar in a 1st person shooter. Another perspective is that players always take the role of radically different personas. Theres a world of distance between the psychopath killer in Hotline Miami, the macho hero in Duke Nukem and the naive boy in Little Inferno. Yet, as a player, I can effortlessly swap between those roles. Since there is such great distance between who the player are and the role he plays in the game, it might not be all that mysterious if some player prefer avatars of the opposite sex.
But generally, I prefer games that doesn't let the player choose between different avatars. I think the strength of games such as Duke Nuk'em 3D, Portal and They Bleed Pixels is that the games creators has decided on a single main character, created specifically for the games universe.