WittyUserName
WittyUserName
WittyUserName

Except, no. That's not true. Plenty of people have gone to crowdsourcing sites to raise money to make their own game because they didn't see what they wanted represented in gaming as it currently stands.

Except outfits like Kotaku aren't critics. They're journalists. Gawker was more than happy to claim journalistic protections for Gizmodo when they posted those leaked images of the iPhone 4 and Apple had some guy's computer seized and threatened with prosecution.

I don't know. You seem pretty touchy to me.

Are you comparing a journalistic endeavor to a message board comment?

Yeah, pretty much.

Or it's almost that the media feeds on controversy and knows that putting her in lights will get a ton of reads/views/etc for their advertisers.

It's funny you should say that! Totillo promised a critical look at her research in the past when an article on her was getting a little heated and, as far as I know, never produced it.

Not only can you take screenshots, as you can in the 3DS version, you'll be able to draw on them with the GamePad! Rad. Eventually you'll be able to share them online, too.

Dubbed the ARES Sandtable, this U.S. Military prototype uses a Kinect, a projector, software, and sand to recreate real-world environments like never before.

There isn't a sliding scale of journalistic ethics. Either these people are journalists or they're not.

Speaking as someone with a BA in Journalism...

Jill was flat and 2 dimensional in the first game. And the third game. And the fifth game.

Barry reappears in Resident Evil 3 in one of Jill's endings. The files in later games say he survives.

Rebecca was 18 in the original game.

"If I had to name the woman character I most disliked in my games it would be Rebecca Chambers. She's submissive, she's not independent. I didn't want to include her but the staff wanted that kind of character in the game, for whatever reason. I'm sure it made sense to them. And in Japan, that character is pretty

Sleep tight, children!

Here's where we seem to stand: Much of the press and the gaming world is repulsed by Gamergate, a movement that is—be it the case that it was the actions of extremists or not—inextricably associated with harassment and that, as much as its roots may be claimed to be about games journalism still suffers the core rot of

Well, that was certainly...a thing. o.O

Here. This should get you up to speed.

The problem is, in making that argument, you're still reducing women to being little more than objects that need special protection because of cultural bias.