monstachruck
monstachruck
monstachruck

Doesn't see what all the fuss is about.

What's a "TV", and why is it necessary? Netflix, Hulu and free streaming sites FTW.

I am going to start making all my life decisions based on soap operas. This should be fun. I'll see you after my full face transplant.

I used to play a lot of video games- mostly platform games- on Nintendo as a kid when we could afford to buy or rent them. In college, I bought myself an X-box 360 and burned through my savings account to catch up on all the goodies I missed.

I think that part of the problem is that random rts match ups end in some of the worst experiences. I don't know if it's the time investment or what, but people go nuts. I'm super down for some SoASE, but hell will freeze over before I join with an unvetted stranger; I'm not playing six hours to be yelled at for being

Could it be that women are less vocal in gaming communities due to the longstanding scrutiny and exclusion they have experienced when attempting to do so? That doesn't mean they aren't there, bro.

From a girl who has played all the Starcraft games, all the Age of Empires games (currently work at a studio headed by one of the producers of several AoE games) and many other strategy titles you have assumed women don't play, I suggest you broaden your horizons and stop making stupid assumptions about what

I grew up playing many "boy" games as my brother was the one to introduce me to gaming when I was about 11 or 12. We played the shit out of command and conquer, which led to me appreciating starcraft today. But I also played Final Fantasy at a young age which led me to enjoy Fable, Oblivion, Skyrim. And I also evolved

I am a woman and I have played video games since I was a child, as have many of my female friends, my sister and my cousins. With the exception of multi-player shooters (Counter Strike was boring), we have played (and successfully beaten) pretty much all kinds of genres you can think of. GTA games, Dragon Age, Fable,

You sound so open minded and curious, and then you go and say something like no girls like RTS. That is not at all true. It is popular among some women just like any other genre. Personally, Command and Conquer and Age of Empires were some of my first games!

I'm a 38-year-old woman. Currently playing Skyrim on PC for the first time. (Yeah, I know I'm late to the party, but I was writing a dissertation). I actually didn't know it was so female-friendly until I started playing it, but I have to say the gender-neutrality of the game was a very pleasant surprise and

I like pretty much every rpg that square has made, WoW, diablo, civilization, and then some more kid stuff like Mario.

I quite Fallout 3 GOTY Edition that my sister gave me for a birthday because it freaked me out too much. :( Sorry to break your study!

Fallout. Everybody frickin loves Fallout. I have yet to meet a person, man or woman, who has played Fallout and not gone on to buy and play the sequels.

Serious female gamers enjoy having characters that are strong, confident, and capable. Just like serious male gamers. They enjoy being the subjects, not the objects, of a story. They enjoy having choices about how their avatars or characters look, whom they love (or don't), whether they're good or evil or in between.

The studies do include casual gaming so part of that fifty may just be playing Farmville and Bejeweled. But it monumentally short sighted not to at least attempt to draw those women into more involved gaming. Open-world stuff is really popular with women-gamers. Everyone seems to be involved in the Sims, WOW, and/or

Women in my life are currently loving or have loved the following games: