The Guardian did their annual E3 diversity report where they look at characters, speakers, apply the Bechdel test, and compare it to last year's show. If you want to read the two latter categories, they're in the article itself.
EA - Diversity rating: 3/5
Microsoft - Diversity rating: 3.5/5
Bethesda - Diversity rating: 2/5
Ubisoft - Diversity rating: 3/5
Sony - Diversity rating: 4/5
Much more at the link: https://www.theguardian.com/technol...-white-men-conferences?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
On a sidenote for anyone interested, I also created this thread to appreciate some of the diversity in recent and future AAA titles to highlight the progress that's been made.
EA - Diversity rating: 3/5
- Player character diversity: Madden NFL 18 gets a story mode called The Longshot, like FIFA 17's The Journey, and similarly stars a black man: Devin Wade. FIFA 17's Alex Hunter is back for Fifa 18 too. The Battlefield 1 expansion, In the Name of the Tsar, features a Women's Battalion of Death (apparently there were several). Need for Speed Payback lets women take the wheel, Phasma is heading to Star Wars Battlefront II, and BioWare's Anthem will undoubtedly offer gender options for the protagonist. There are a good few female characters on show here, but no games that don't also offer male options. Cooperative prison break game A Way Out, from the creators of Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons, looks interesting, but is also the story of two white guys; the woman of colour in the trailer appears to be an NPC.
- Speaker diversity: No Amy Hennig, no Jade Raymond. EA's stage was dominated by white men. Women only really showed up in videos, often without speaking. Until the bulk of the conference was over, that is, and it was time to focus on Star Wars Battlefront II. On marched the Stormtroopers, led by Janina Gavankar – a woman of colour who plays Commander Iden Versio in the game – in an absolutely incredible custom made dress. And then she went to play the game, while YouTuber iJustine (and some men) commentated.
Microsoft - Diversity rating: 3.5/5
- Player character diversity: While a fair few of the games Microsoft showed off force you to play as a man, quite a few also offer the option to play as a woman: Forza Motorsport 7, PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, State of Decay 2, Black Desert Online, Code Vein, Sea of Thieves, Crackdown 3, and maybe the stylistic Ashen. The extended Anthem demo starred a female character, though knowing BioWare, players will probably also be able to choose a man. However, Microsoft does fairly well this year by offering multiple (well, two) games with female-only leads: Tacoma and Life is Strange: Before the Storm.
- Speaker diversity: Microsoft's stage was similarly dominated by white men, but at least their director of software engineering is Kareem Choudhry. Professional race car drivers Shannon McIntosh and Verena Mei joined them on stage, as did the charismatic Mojang brand director Lydia Winters in a fantastic shirt.
Bethesda - Diversity rating: 2/5
- Player character diversity: Death of the Outsider features Billie Lurk, the badass grizzled boat captain from Dishonored 2, pairing up with gruff and tough assassin Daud. It's refreshing to see a woman of colour starring a title, though she has to share the spotlight with a white dude. Aside from Lurk, there don't seem to be any diverse player characters coming out of Bethesda this year. Wolfenstein 2 has some interesting women around the table in the war room, but it doesn't look like you'll be able to play as any of them.
[*]Speaker diversity: Pete Hines was the only speaker Bethesda thought to bring, leaving most of the focus to the games
Ubisoft - Diversity rating: 3/5
- Player character diversity: The Crew 2 featured a white guy, but he seems so generic that it seems likely we'll be able to customise our avatars for this multi-vehicle motorsport game. The trailer for Skull & Bones, a multiplayer pirate battle game from the team that put naval combat in Assassin's Creed: Black Flag, focused on a female pirate captain fighting off male attackers. Speaking of Assassin's Creed, AC Origins is set in ancient Egypt and thus features lots of people of colour, including the protagonist Bayek. Steep lets you play as a woman or man. And we know that Far Cry 5 lets you choose gender and race for your player character, as well as featuring a black woman teammate called Grace Armstrong. And a dog called Boomer. But the delight of the night was the long-awaited reveal of Beyond Good & Evil 2, which stars a black woman, a white woman, and multiple talking animals, though it's unclear if any one character in this cooperative multiplayer game is the main protagonist.
- Speaker diversity: It was great to see Ashraf Ismail introduce Assassin's Creed Origins, a game he seems genuinely excited about. And on the gender side of things, Ubisoft did pretty well by having a total of three women speak on stage: singer Bebe Rexha during the Just Dance 2018 demo, studio director Rebecka Coutaz to talk about Steep, and narrative director Gabrielle Shrager to join a teary Michel Ancel in talking about Beyond Good & Evil 2.
Sony - Diversity rating: 4/5
Player character diversity: It's unclear whether Nadine or Chloe will be the player character for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, but to see two women, one of whom isn't white, headlining is great. If it were a standalone, full-length title, that would be even better. Female protagonist Aloy returns as the player-character in Horizon: Zero Dawn's The Frozen Wilds, though the cultural appropriation of Native cultures on a white woman still doesn't play well . David Cage's Detroit features multiple player characters, one of whom is a white woman, and one, Marcus, played by actor Jesse Williams, is a person of colour. There are also people of colour among the androids that Marcus liberates. Spiderman's Miles Morales, of black and hispanic descent, is a pleasant surprise, though it's unclear whether he will be a playable character.
Much more at the link: https://www.theguardian.com/technol...-white-men-conferences?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
On a sidenote for anyone interested, I also created this thread to appreciate some of the diversity in recent and future AAA titles to highlight the progress that's been made.