Posted February 11, 2016
I don't find it that surprising. There's actually a tradition of female snipers (or at any rate long-range combat) in Western society that stretches back millennia. To name but a few examples:
Priestesses of Artemis/Diana, goddess of the hunt, were archers;
Medieval noblewomen were allowed to learn archery to participate in hunts and for castle defense;
The Russian female snipers of WWII;
Annie Oakley.
I think that it's just a carry-over into the gaming world from real-world considerations. As an average-sized woman, I'd much rather be facing Andre the Giant from behind a sniper scope 500 m away than from a 1-m distance.
Priestesses of Artemis/Diana, goddess of the hunt, were archers;
Medieval noblewomen were allowed to learn archery to participate in hunts and for castle defense;
The Russian female snipers of WWII;
Annie Oakley.
I think that it's just a carry-over into the gaming world from real-world considerations. As an average-sized woman, I'd much rather be facing Andre the Giant from behind a sniper scope 500 m away than from a 1-m distance.