Is any of that Tangible? I'd expect Mario to be the king by now if it was...
Is any of that Tangible? I'd expect Mario to be the king by now if it was...
I'm...almost certain that this reply was not meant for me. Otherwise, I'm incredibly confused.
Mario is the "Men are supposed to be unpaid bodyguards for women, all while expecting nothing in return" trope.
Really now?
Yeah....
I'm partial to pantless, female Raidens. So...yeah. :X
I suppose. But if internet trolls are the threshold, maybe they should avoid all media...
(Skimpy...clothes. Like what most real women like to wear, and more so during the most fertile points of their menstrual cycles?)
I'm gonna assume this was it, and reply to it:
Well, acting like one of her tropes (female in distress who can't handle internet trolls, as shown by her blog post) has paid off big time.....
If these women's roles were reduced to laying on their backs and being fucked, then yeah. I'd have to agree with you on the sexism part.
He might have meant as it was being used in the original video. She was using common tropes (found in other media, as well as in....well, real life) and saying that they were examples of misogyny.
I have to admit, it's a little weird seeing folk from my school on Kotaku. Good for them though! :)
Haha. Thanks. :P
Seems like playing the damsel in distress really worked out for her. 9_9
Still not sure why I bothered writing all of this.
Went to see what all of the hubbub was about, so I'm watching the video.
I'd think that'd fuel their movement...
As a war vet with PTSD, and who doesn't always get to opt out of "triggers", I would recommend anyone that sensitive to internet comments get some 1-on-1 therapy, if they really can't cope enough to deal trolls.
I read through the comments and I didn't see much of anything like that.