Male characters emphasize their strength because men WANT to be strong. female characters emphasize their sexuality because men want to look at sexy women. No, men do not play female characters because they want to feel sexy. That's completely ridiculous.
You obviously are not familiar with WOW and MMORPG's in general. There are many men who plays as women. It's pretty disturbing actually.
Yeah. I have...started playing STO. (Please no fleet invites. I don't have the time and am more interested in the Foundry.)
At least personally, I have some guesses about who plays what characters, judging by the appearance of the character.
In-proportion character, male: Odds favor "male," simply because these could be guys playing as "themselves" or an avatar of themselves, but could also be a female who doesn't want the BS judgments associated with a female character--or propositions from the more boorish of the male players. Or even a female whose self-image, for multiple reasons, follows a more "masculine" type--a woman who would prefer not to be distinguished in a group from "one of the guys." She may well have designed the character to be attractive, too, but she is not objectifying him. She hasn't created the character to be gawked at.
In-proportion character, female: I would suspect that of all female characters, these are the most likely to actually be played by women. There may also be some men playing these characters--but you can guess that they are probably
not boors. These may be men who expect realism in stories. Scantily-clad characters won't be designed by these men because they have an eye on functionality and appropriateness to the story (i.e.--that lack of armor/clothes wouldn't fly in the environments the character has to go into, so put the lady in a proper, useful uniform like a guy would wear). However, if this character is scantily clad, that is a completely different scenario. Almost certainly a guy, and probably a boor.
Note: In-proportion female characters
can be attractive. They do not have to be hags. The type of beauty you see in such a character is more what I'd call elegance and/or gracefulness, rather than raciness.
Out-of-proportion character, female: Yep. That's a guy in disguise. A guy who wants eye candy. A woman is almost certainly not going to play this character. Odds become even more vanishingly small when this character is scantily clad.
Out-of-proportion character, male: This one's tough to call. Odds this impossibly ripped character is a guy who wants to play Rambo. But it
could be the beefcake factor, too. This is not anywhere near as common as the problems with female characters, but it can occur.
Just my personal opinions, and I could easily be wrong. And for all of these, there could be more possible reasons than I've suggested.
As far as STO, it does allow for creation of
somewhat exaggerated characters, but they do seem to have imposed limits on the players, at least in the breast size department. I wouldn't say the characters get any more out of proportion than Barbie (which
is exaggerated, but Barbie is less of an offender than certain anime or MMORPG/video game characters), and if you are uncomfortable with playing a female character that is exaggerated, you are provided the freedom to create one that has much more reasonable proportions. I know I've mentioned breasts as the example of an exaggerated feature in multiple cases here, but STO seems to allow you to give a female CO or bridge officer proportions all the way down to a B or A cup, which I really doubt a lot of video games would allow as an option, judging from the pictures I've seen. (Maybe a Mass Effect player can tell me if the ME series is an exception, with FemShep?)
The clothing situation for women is a bit more disheartening (especially on the KDF side, and I think we know why that is--the KDF demo is skewed more towards guys), but even if you play an Orion female KDF, if you pick carefully, you
can put together a reasonably practical outfit that you could imagine would actually protect a female warrior captain in combat. That's certainly better than many MMORPG's out there can say for themselves.
The women's formal clothes are a bit of a disappointment on the Fed side. I would've liked to see an evening gown option to pair with the men's formal suit, rather than only miniskirts and skimpy tops. (Overall, though, I'd say the off-duty clothes just aren't very well developed anyway, and this is rather understandable given that more attention had to be given to uniforms since that's what you spend the vast majority of your time wearing.)
I wonder if, in order to cater to their audience, STO had to be a little more "grown up" when it comes to gender stereotypes? That could actually say something good about us Trek fans.
