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Do you play as the opposite sex in games?

I played as Lara Croft in the Tomb Raider trilogy Crystal Dynamics did before the reboot. I also whooped some ass as Kitana in Mortal Kombat II back in the day and as Mileena in Mortal Kombat X.
I also preferred playing as Evie Frye over Jacob in Assassin's Creed Syndicate because I felt she was quicker.
 
I preferred Evie over Jacob as well, probably because Jacob was more brawler while Evie was stealthier. It didn't hurt that Evie wasn't bad to look at.
 
What about games where you are forced to be female like Tomb Raider or Nier Automata? I know most people won't be upset with no choice there but I have bumped into people that have avoided those games just because of the no male option.
It really amazes me that there are still people that sexist out there today.
I always like the old Tomb Raider games, but I love the reboot, although I've still only played the first one. Also loved Horizon: Zero Dawn, and liked playing as Evie Fry in Assassin's Creed: Syndicate.
 
It really amazes me that there are still people that sexist out there today.
I always like the old Tomb Raider games, but I love the reboot, although I've still only played the first one. Also loved Horizon: Zero Dawn, and liked playing as Evie Fry in Assassin's Creed: Syndicate.

I haven't played Horizon Zero Dawn... I just can't get into any of the Assassins Creed games.

But yeah I've even met people like that that won't even buy a game if the main character you play is a girl. People are strange.
 
There was another one for PC in the early 2000s that I loved called Oni, in which you played as a female agent with advanced fighting skills and a mysterious past. The combat mechanics were really fun. I always wished there had been a sequel, as well as a multi-player option.

Now I have to go find a used copy somewhere and see if I can get it to run on today's computers.

Kor
 
I don't have a problem using either male or female avatars. Back in my FPS days, I usually picked a female toon because they typically were a smaller target on screen. As for MMOs, I have some names that I use for toons that date back to my 70s D&D days and each of those names has a specific sex associated with it. And a particular play style and fantasy race as well. A Male elf scout-type, a female halfling assassin-type, etc.
 
There was another one for PC in the early 2000s that I loved called Oni, in which you played as a female agent with advanced fighting skills and a mysterious past. The combat mechanics were really fun. I always wished there had been a sequel, as well as a multi-player option.

Now I have to go find a used copy somewhere and see if I can get it to run on today's computers.

Kor

That was an enjoyable game. I managed to get it going on Win7, but haven't had a serious try with win10 yet. I think it's time.
(There's a patch needed though https://wiki.oni2.net/Installation#Windows_2 )
 
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Makes no difference to me, if it's a game like Diablo 3 or Mass effect i usually play through as all female then all male charactors, hell back in the day we played as simple squares or oblongs or a snake, but never a circle, that would just be sick. :p
 
Makes no difference to me, if it's a game like Diablo 3 or Mass effect i usually play through as all female then all male charactors, hell back in the day we played as simple squares or oblongs or a snake, but never a circle, that would just be sick. :p

Umm, I'm guilty there:shifty:. I seem to remember liking wizball back in the old spectrum days.
 
I assume this just means when there is a choice?

I played as a woman on KOTOR on my second attempt, there were subtle differences.
 
My brother and I play both male and female characters. For us, it doesn't matter. Variety is fun.

Some of our friends feel the same way. A few of our friends don't like playing female characters because they like to imagine themselves as the character going to save the day. It was more fun for them. A few of them always make themselves in character creator. Another's favorite type of game are FPS and he loves feeling like a badass. They can't project themselves onto female characters, so they are just playing a game instead of saving the world, thus making it less fun. I think the only times we did that was Double Dragon 2, Super Mario Bros 3, and Contra. We had issues too when we were little kids. I think the first female I played was Princess Peach in Mario 2. It was a rental and we want to go as far as we can before returning it, and she was the easiest. After that, it doesn't matter anymore. Mostly we see it as, we are not our characters, but playing through our characters' stories, like reading a book or watching a movie. In a way, the heroes and us gamers both save the day.

Choosing a male or female can be random or for a reason. We generally pick which character if we think they look cool, or the most fun to play. Spending hours on a game, it's best enjoy it and like the character you are playing, wheter it's play style, aesthetics, or character personality. Like Gauntlet for the NES, we both pick the elves because they were the most fun. The others are too slow for us to enjoy. Another version was much faster, so we picked Warrior and Valkyrie because they were more fun. Brawl Brothers (SNES) we were the main guy and the ninja, because the other guys were slow for us and the girl's special attack wasn't as useful. Some of our friends like playing big tough guys. In Ghost Recon (Xbox) in split screen mode, we couldn't tell which squad was talking. Who's under attack or attacking? Finally, we made one of our squad ful of guys and the other full of girls, so we can which squad is doing whatever. In fighting games like Street Fighter, we try to play a lot of characters, to know their strengths and weaknesses. In Borderlands, I like Mordecai because of Bloodwing, and Borderlands 2, I play Axton. In World of Warcraft, we were on a PVP server to play with our friends. We made our guys look like twins in looks and similar names to hopefully confuse our player enemies. Well it confused our friends too. Waiting for a tank and healer for instances suck. We made a tank and healer next, without similar names, and the healer female to avoid confusion. Sometimes are reasons are kind of funny, like in D&D arcade, we picked Fighter and Elf because we like swords.
 
Most of the time, since there's way too many games out there with male-only protagonists, but I'll make exceptions occasionally for the sake of storytelling. For instance, in my last "canon" playthrough of the Dragon Age series, I ended up doing a male Cousland, since it resonates more in Inquisition if Morrigan's son is YOUR son, and a male Hawke in 2 since A: better voice acting IMO (especially the sarcastic lines) and B: the Isabella romance. Of course I stuck with my usual Solas-romancing, anti-establishment female elf mage for Inquisition. :p

I also feel like a male protagonist makes more sense for KOTOR 1 (hint-hint wink-wink), but I'll always go female for KOTOR 2.
 
I prefer to play female characters for a few reasons:
1. If I'm going to be watching a character for a long game playthrough - and let's face it, that *does* often especially mean a lot of mileage watching the character's rear while they're walking or running around - then to be frank, I'd rather have the view be something pleasant to me. And that's usually female characters.
2. Programmers often subconsciously or intentionally give female characters actual gameplay advantages. Most of the female characters in Mortal Kombat I-III had very slightly longer legs. Playing as Sonya Blade and using all leg sweeps was how I beat Goro the first time.
3. In online games, people will give you stuff. I'm not above using that advantage. I never lie about my IRL gender, but I also never get in any hurry to volunteer the information, either. ;)
 
My STO character is female. For some reason I had an idea who I wanted her to be and went with that.
I have started playing Mass Effect Andromeda as a female since you're technically playing the sister and not a different variation.
 
Mostly I pick male characters. If I play through twice I'll often go male first time and female second time.

In tabletop RPGs I pick male a lot because of the stigma of male characters who play female characters being really weird and immature about it.

In video games, besides knowing I'll identify more with the romance options, I don't trust male video game writers to write female characters. You tend to either get female characters who are 'men with boobs' or you get female characters who are designed around male gaze. Those kinds of female characters don't interest me. I'd be much more interested in a realistic strong female.

Even in Mass Effect. If I'm playing a female character I try to imagine "Feminized version of myself". But the romance options for females in these games are usually awful. Either they are aliens that are so different from humans you wonder if they're even anatomically compatible and can't imagine any actual human female being attracted to them, or they're humans but weak-minded beta males like Kaidan. They even made the bisexual telepathic-sex beings look distinctly female.
 
I started playing Minecraft before Alex was introduced. When she was, players were randomly assigned either Steve or Alex. I got Alex. I don't think there are any functional difference between the two, as you cannot change between them, or at least not easily. I've not looked into it recently.
 
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