this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2024
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This is a bit of a rant, but please try to stick with me through the whole thing

So recently OSRS (Old School Runescape) has joined a list of games that have replaced "Male or Female" with "Body Type A or Body Type B" with you selecting your pronouns secondary.

And it made me furious, but I had to sit down and ask why such a small meaningless thing that I only see during the character creator pisses me off. After all, isn't this giving a seat at the table for Gender Non-Conforming/Non-Binary individuals?

So I tried thinking about this issue from the perspective of a Non-Binary individual. See I myself am female (Transgender MTF for what it's worth), so the only thing I'm ever going to pick is the female option unless I'm doing a challenge run where I try to roleplay Guybrush Threepywood (Mighty Pirate!) while playing Fallout 3...

That's when I realized why I absolutely hate Body Type A/Body Type B

This is not a solution to a problem, this is highlighting the issue.

As a woman, I look at "Body Type A or Body Type B" and think "Well, I'm a woman, not a Body Type B, and isn't it kinda misogynistic that the secondary option is the female one? Like A+ for Men, B- for Women?"

As someone is very much not cisgender, I look at it and go "Well, isn't every FTM going to pick Body Type A with male pronouns while MTFs like myself go with Body Type B with female pronouns? Who outside of a Far Right Troll trying and failing to be funny is gonna pick the buff bearded dude and select the she/her pronouns?"

It was only when I went "Let's pretend I don't exist in a male/female binary and see how I feel about it." that I realized why I absolutely DESPISE Body Type A/Body Type B

Because when I look at it from that angle, I realize that if I am a non-binary individual, my options are to look like an overly buff dude but occasionally NPCs will refer to me as a They/Them, or like an overly curvy chick who again sometimes gets called They/Them....

That's when I realized why Body Type A/Body Type B doesn't do it for me.

Games that do this aren't being progressive or inclusive, they're changing the color of the cup that my drink comes in and pretending it's an entirely new beverage.

I realized that if the choices in Body Type were something like

A - Buff Dude

B - Slim Dude

C - Fat Dude

D - Skinny Androgynous Individual who doesn't need a bra/binder

E - Fat Androgynous Individual who doesn't need a bra/binder

F - Skinny Androgynous Individual who requires bra/binder

G - Fat Androgynous Individual who requires bra/binder

I - Curvy Chick

J - Buff Chick

K - Fat Chick

L - Slim Chick

Maybe have also an option for a big buff masculine dude who has big tits, because that's just how he rolls, I dunno just thinking aloud here....

My point is that gaming could abandon "A/B" in favor of something more like an actual spectrum of Height, Weight, and Gender Presentation instead of just awkwardly renaming the binary? I wouldn't get so up in arms about gender replacing body type.

I don't know what more I have to say on this. I guess it's just a revelation I had about something in gaming that bothers me..

So, wider gaming community. What do you think? Am I onto something or is this all crazy talk?

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (2 children)

Games that do this aren’t being progressive or inclusive, they’re changing the color of the cup that my drink comes in and pretending it’s an entirely new beverage.

The thing is... if you use "dude" and "chick" in the body type descriptions you're implying gender identity. There may be better options that "Type A" and "Type B" but dude and chick ain't it because it simply means male and female.

In a very flexible system, you could use more granular options like "wide shoulders", "wide hips", "boobage", etc, to freely mix+match everything. It's also expensive to develop and even more expensive to create clothing for and a gazillion times more expensive to make really good-looking clothing for (fabric folds and flow aren't easy). From a developer's perspective, looking at the work involved really makes you want to say "We'll just tell the player they're now Geralt of Rivia and that's it".

I think for most games the appropriate choice would be to have an early radio button, saying "male/female/it's complicated", the first two options hiding every enby option including pronoun selection. That's right-out trivial to do and just good UX. And yes the body types should be called male and female, you already selected "it's complicated" so it's clear that when you're selecting a body, you're selecting a body, not identity.

As to laziness: Eh. Noone's going to start a research programme on how to do things in an optimal way for a re-release. Someone had a look at the code and assets and thought "hey we can support separate pronouns and bodies without doing anything more than providing an option" and that's exactly what they did, using the extent of knowledge and consideration that was already in-house. Yep, it very well can happen that if you take your foot out of one thing, you put it right into another.

As to "primary/secondary": One of the options has to be to the left, or on top, of the other. Ain't no way around that. I mean you could put option B on the left of option A to cancel things out but now you're being confusing. More importantly you can make it so that none is selected by default.

Am I onto something or is this all crazy talk?

Yes and no you're being quite personal, and I include your perspective shift into the POV of others in that, about things that will never make 100% of the people 100% happy because technical reasons. The perfect is the enemy of the good and all.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

"Why do we have to be Universe B?! You be Universe A and we'll be Universe's 1!"

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago

This, but unironically.

If they were labeled something like masculine or feminine, buff or curvy, or anything that doesn't imply a hierarchy that would have been an improvement.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

"Dude and Chick" aren't terms I'm saying they should use instead, I'm saying Body Type A and B come across as disingenuous and better terminology could be used. "Masculine" and "Feminine" would work, as you can be masculine without being male. I'm a short-haired tomboy who strongly prefers she/her pronouns, I'd be considered "Masculine, but not male" even if I was cis!

Heck I myself am in a relationship with a cisgender male who presents feminine with many of his behaviors, but that doesn't make him less of a man aynmore than being masculine makes me less of a woman. We're all adults here we know that pink can be for boys and blue can be for girls, this isn't kindgergarten in the 80's anymore.

In fact let's take a look at how Old School Runescape handles it. This image is.. not great..

Why is the term "Body Type A" and "Body Type B" present at all when there are clear pictures of the two options that speak for themselves? It feels like just going out of the way to include "the corporate approved buzzwords intended for maximum synergy with the brand!"

That's not the only problem with the UI as we're still seeing rigid reinforcement of the gender binary.

The example picture of the more masculine build has a beard and the example picture of the more feminine build has a skirt, as if to reinforce gendered stereotypes while trying to avoid using the word gender, which is a mixed message at best.. And to really draw the point, she/her is located just under the feminine option, and he/him is under the masculine option as if to imply these are the "correct" options.

The message this gives off is "Look, we call these A and B, but you and I know what's really going on here eh fellow cisheteronormative? Gotta check off that box for corporate"

When the message they should be giving off is "He, she, they... whatever, it's all good. All we have is that you have fun playing our game and try not to let anyone else tell you who you're supposed to be!"

I agree we should be more inclusive, but we should do so in a way that feels less insulting and backhanded.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 months ago

Why is the term “Body Type A” and “Body Type B” present at all when there are clear pictures of the two options that speak for themselves? It feels like just going out of the way to include “the corporate approved buzzwords intended for maximum synergy with the brand!”

"Type A" and "Type B", I assure you, are not things corporate or marketing came up with. This is programmer speak for "I don't want to name it but can't call it foo and bar either because normies will be seeing it".

As said: This is a re-release. The game and its assets was originally never designed to support anything but a strict binary, but the pronoun vs. body type thing was trivial to do, so they did it. And then for some reason avoided "male" and "female" because face it that sounds like a good idea especially if you're not overthinking it and the labels were left in because probably also easier to do. Or just didn't consider the alternative.

That is: You're assuming intent when there's simply economy of action. You might call it laziness, but then the people who did that release had 10000 other things to do besides that.