So does gender stereotypes exist because of marketing or does marketing exist to conform to already established gender stereotypes?
Chicken or egg?
And whoopie, many in the gaming community, including a great number of GAF, hates them for it.
This is very true. The Wii was a hard time for many of us. D:
Instead of marketing to what people think women want, they should just make great games that aren't based off of tightly research market statistics. I think that's what a lot of people want, but know they can't really have.
It shouldn't have to be dudes = gore, guns, swords, violence, nudity, competition and skill all the time and it shouldn't be chicks = health, socialization, puppies, fashion and no competitiveness. There are obviously games that hit the perfect neutral ground.
Horror games: Girls love horror, guys love horror, fear is universally ingrained in all of us....why not look into that and see if you could scare men and women equally?
Party games: Just adding Peach in as a playable character in the new Mario made me immediately need the game. Everyone likes to party and girls will play any game if they can sit down and play it with the people they love. If you ask a girl to play a game with you they will if the game accounts for female characters.
Puzzles: Girls love puzzles and dudes love puzzles...it's as simple as that.
Animal Crossing, Minecraft, The Sims etc...Those are games that can reach everyone without causing much animosity. It really doesn't seem like rocket science to me as to why these games appeal to everyone as gender neutral.
On a side note....there are plenty of dudes who don't play games or feel unwelcomed by them. I have guy friends who don't game, and since they don't play games, they are often bad at them when they do play. This discourages them more from joining in on the fun. Same goes for a lot of girls since they've most likely never played much beforehand.
On the flipside...since I may be considered a "hardcore" female gamer, I know plenty of girls who love playing games. Everything from Mario to Zelda to Call of Duty to Assassin's Creed. Hardcore Resident Evil and Final Fantasy girl gamers. They're everywhere. Here's how they were created...it's rather simple. Someone, most likely a dad, brother, friend or boyfriend, played a game in front of them while they watched. It eventually became an extremely strong memory or bond that they shared with someone they cared about...and that eventually fostered there love for "hardcore" games. That's what happened with me, and I can't imagine my life if I hadn't fallen in love with this medium. It makes me sad that other girls are turned away from it because of silly things like "marketing." All that really needs to happen is a welcoming hand to help them join in and have fun.