Sex in Video Games…Part 4

The weird thing is that violence, including hyper, ultra macabre and sinister violence, is routinely expected and accepted in video games while the mere presence of sexuality causes the entire conglomerate of Wal-Mart to universally ban any game that includes the slightest whiff of penis and vagina.
Part of this could be because people still consider video games to be toys. However, the majority of video game players are adults between 18 and 49 years of age. What’s more, is there is a growing number of female gamers breaking through the normally male only ranks of gaming. These new gamers come seeking a story that they can lose themselves in and not points or new weapons for their characters. Sexuality in new games need not be the juvenile discovery of hidden breasts in some secluded area of a dungeon but rather can be as complex or at least as seemingly complex as real human sexuality.
Take for instance the character of Morrigan in Dragon Age. This is a character that uses her sexuality to manipulate your character in real terms during the game. While you develop real, legitimate feelings for her she begins to use this weakness to her advantage. Well, whether it is to her advantage or is legitimate love is up to you as the PC, however this type of role-playing with another character is almost unheard of in video games. This is a shame because the exact same questions of love, betrayal and lust are all over the pages of popular fiction, sci-fi, fantasy and great works of dramatic plays. Why is there a sudden drop off of human experience when it comes to video games?
One of the reasons is that many players seem to think that the inclusion of sexuality in games is lame. My question to them is why is violence OK when sexuality is not? Perhaps it is because of some residual puritanical upbringing that equates things related to the body with with sinful acts. Most gamers, who spend the big bucks, are all adults and these gamers appreciate some elements of romance in their quests. This is fully supported by the sheer number of romance and sexual mods for open ended games like Oblivion, Morrowind, Neverwinter Nights 1 and 2, Dragon Age and Fallout 3. Game makers can either address this at the conception of the game or risk a “Super Blow Job Mod” for Fallout 3.
And my question is “Why not?”. If these adult themes add to the storyline then they are by definition not gratuitous. An erotic plot-line can only be offensive if it is out of place and unexpected and that is entirely left to the writers of the game. I think, personally, it is high time that people stop being afraid of a little sex in a game that features realistic collision physics for splattered organs and chill out for two seconds. Think of each game as a virtual novel and perhaps we can advance video games beyond Grand Theft Auto and Madden 10. Of course, then again, I am just a perv.
-Andrew DeWitt
Sex in Video Games…Part 3
Now, we seem to be approaching some amount of maturity concerning sex in video games. Games like Mass Effect and Dragon Age treat sex in video games with a certain amount of reverence. And I ask why shouldn’t they? If sexually charged themes are enough to motivate entire plays of Shakespeare like Romeo and Juliet, Othello and even the hilarious and bawdy Mid Summer Nights dream (and keep in mind Midsummer is a play where a Fairy Queen is broadly hinted at being fucked by a dude with the dong of a donkey) , then why can’t a video game, with its cast of SAG/AFTRA voice actors, writers, programmers, story board artists and producers not treat sexuality with the same amount of respect as a 1400’s sitcom writer?
I, for one, think it’s ridiculous that nerds on message boards taunt people who enjoy romance and sec in video games that feature “rag doll physics for all intestinal based slaughterings”. What is more pathetic? While many of you will see posts of people claiming that anyone playing a game with sexuality just “need to get laid” what does that say about the countless millions who get to murder thousands upon thousands of realistically slaughtered digital victims? Why is murder and death viewed as normal but virtual sexual narrative viewed as lame or pathetic? I don’t get it.
Sex is crucially important to almost all life on planet earth and as a result you would think that sex would be a common theme in entertainment. But as we have seen, sex treated with maturity, intimacy and respect, is the exception to the rule in most video games. Game makers have a literal powder keg sitting under their laps that they rarely explore. That is until rpgs from game makers like Bioware came along…
Continued in Part 4…
-Andrew DeWitt
Sex in Video Games…Part 2

However, recently companies like Bioware have figured out that sexuality can actually be used to assist in story telling! How shocking?! Do you mean to say that the same techniques that authors, artists, and filmmakers have used for decades to centuries have some merit after all? Well consider the fact the all humans, regardless of gender or sexual preference think about sex all the god damn time then I would think that someone who is creating some form of narrative experience would consider sex as part of the many different potential plot lines to entice people into enjoying the experience.
Role playing games were some of the first video games to treat sexuality with a paintbrush other than that of a snickering adolescent obsessed with seeing boobies on his computer. The problem with this approach is that it takes time. You cannot simply shoehorn in sex into a video game or it becomes sophomoric and juvenile. This is immediately apparent in games like God of War where your character can run up to topless chicks and bone them for in-game bonuses.
…more continued in Part 3.
-Andrew DeWitt