rionaleonhart: final fantasy x-2: the sun is rising, yuna looks to the future. (don't cross me)
Riona ([personal profile] rionaleonhart) wrote2010-08-03 04:10 pm

Yes, I've Genuinely Been Waiting For This Age To Make This Entry.

I turned twenty-two a few weeks ago, and so it seems an appropriate time to post about something that's been troubling me: the ages of female characters in the Final Fantasy series. And videogames in general, and media in general, really, but I'm using the Final Fantasy series in particular to illustrate this problem.

About a year ago, [livejournal.com profile] rimon made an entry asking about the sorts of female characters people wanted to see in videogames. Considering this made me realise that, whilst I could easily name a few significant male videogame characters over thirty, thinking of female characters in the same age range was considerably more tricky.

Curious, I looked up all the humanoid main-party characters in the main-series games from Final Fantasy IV to Final Fantasy XII, disregarding characters such as Fran, who is more than fifty years old but looks much younger on account of not being human.

The ages of the male characters ranged from five to seventy.

The ages of the female characters ranged from five to twenty-two.

I love the Final Fantasy series, but this is ridiculous. Beatrix from IX is twenty-eight (and awesome!) and Edea from VIII must be over thirty, but both of these are temporary party members, playable only very briefly. Permanently playable male characters over the age of twenty-two, meanwhile, include Edward, Edge, Yang, Cid (IV), Tellah, Galuf, Locke, Edgar, Sabin, Setzer, Cyan, Strago, Vincent, Cid (VII), Barret, Amarant, Steiner, Wakka, Auron and Basch. That's at least one playable male character older than the oldest female characters in the entire series (Aeris and Lulu*) in every one of these games bar VIII.

And that bothers me. Why do the women always have to be young and pretty? I do love most of the ladies of Final Fantasy, and I don't think for a moment that they're there solely to be attractive; they're characters, with strengths and flaws and insecurities and roles in the plot. But they're limited in age and appearance, and there's no reason for them not to be as physically varied as the men.

I'm not saying that videogames have to stop having young, pretty women in their casts, but would it be too much trouble to include the occasional female character who deviates from that template? Really, now. I don't want to feel that I'm going to be past saving the world from a giant flying whale in a mere twelve months.


* I always thought Lulu was around thirty. I was astonished to realise she was only twenty-two. I mentally age both Lulu and the eighteen-year-old Quistis up eight years when I'm playing their games.

Lulu doesn't look twenty-two, so why make her twenty-two? There's no reason for her not to be thirty. Wakka doesn't look twenty-three, either, so he could have been aged up as well had their romance been a concern.

And, of course, in Final Fantasy X-2 Lulu is twenty-four and, ta-da, no longer a playable character. TWENTY-TWO IS THE ABSOLUTE CUTOFF FOR LADIES TO HAVE ADVENTURES. HERE, HAVE AN EIGHTEEN-YEAR-OLD INSTEAD. I do like Paine very much, but the way in which Lulu is sidelined does seem a bit odd.

[identity profile] teh-kween.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 03:42 pm (UTC)(link)
I couldn't possibly comment on FF, because I've never really played it (I know, I know - for shame), but I've always thought something similar about Dynasty Warriors.

The men are all fantastically varied from their sizes and ages to their facial hair and voice acting, but the women are all hotpant-clad teens or twenty-somethings who fall into one of two categories - 'sparky', headstrong, squeaky-voiced irritant who you feel obliged to smash in the face with a pole-axe until she learnes her place, or a languid, sultry, door-mat of a woman, who is fighting for her husband's cause.

For the most part, I understand that the novels which form the basis for the series were incredibly male-led and that there aren't so many women to pick out of the narrative...but, ffs, you've made all of the characters MAGICAL anyway, why not go a bit further with the artistic license and have a female character who is strong in her own right and not just fighting for/beside her husband?

Even the weapons they're given annoy me - Yue Ying gets a bow and arrow. The Qiao twins fight with fans. Zhen Ji fights with A MAGIC FLUTE. It was only in DW6 that she was upgraded to a chain whip. Still wears a sarong and a bra, though. Excellent stuff.

You'd never see a male character fighting with a flute, and even when they're given a seemingly 'girly' weapon (for example, Zuo Chi fights with a cursed deck of cards, and Zhuge Liang with a 'war fan'), their power is upgraded to compensate. The cursed deck is probably the most powerful weapon in the game, with that bloody war fan coming a close second - it lets him fly! It shoots lasers! The fans wielded by the Qiao twins, by comparison, do neither of those things.

Wow...turns out this gets on my nerves more than I'd previously thought. Oh well :)

[identity profile] thorne-scratch.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 03:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Agree very much, though I'd always thought Edea to be rather older than 30-- I was reckoning her to be in her forties at least (based on vague guesses at timeline stuff and Cid's appearance), and chalked her appearance up to sorceress powers and fabulous bone structure.

But, it's been a long time since I played FF8, and I don't remember if they actually gave out the number of years in between living at the orphanage and GARDEN, and what have you!

(Anonymous) 2010-08-03 03:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Not to generalise or anything *cough* but couldn't this be applied to most games/tv series/comics/films/etc/etc? Certainly to the ones aimed at a mostly male audience. Or at least so comics/games like to pretend. The Games Industry is a bit like a 10 year old boy clutching a controller and telling the girl who just whupped his ass at Mario Kart that she cheated and that 'girls can't play games!'

(Anonymous) 2010-08-03 04:01 pm (UTC)(link)
PS I agree with the person above. I'm heading towards 30 now and yeah I'd still sign up to be a super hero.

And now to stop leaving mysterious anonymous comments on your post. ;)

[identity profile] dracothelizard.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 04:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Obviously, only men play these type of adventure games, and obviously men only want female playable characters that're young and attractive.

Or at least, that's what some of the people responsible for the games seem to think :(. Which is why loads of RPG games were marketed with sexy ladies in metal bikinis wielding swords on the cover. Because only MEN play these games, and MEN want sexy ladies!

Which leads to this kind of nonsense. (http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2009/07/14/evolution-of-evony-video-game-ads/)

[identity profile] eclective.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 04:43 pm (UTC)(link)
...Celes in FF6. Also one of those characters I could never, ever see as 18. I mean, what the everloving cheese?

Admittedly, I've noticed that FF characters are in general younger than they have any right to be to be doing what they're doing (and this is also a trend in RPGs in general), because (and the FF dev team have explicitly said this) they want to appeal to a younger audience. But at least you DO get older male characters. You do.

You know what really strikes the point home? Try to imagine having a seriously older female sage in your party, a la Tellah from FF4, without the entire gaming community cracking up and laughing. That's how ingrained this is.

[identity profile] ladyofshallnot.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 04:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Sometimes I think most Final Fantasy character ages are determined by throwing darts at a board that has the numbers 15 - 21 written on it. Playing through XIII, I would have sworn that Fang was at least 25, but according to the internet she's 21.

As far as I'm concerned, Ashe should also be older than 19. It's like they write 'older' women and then get all alarmed and confused.

[identity profile] th-esaurus.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 05:04 pm (UTC)(link)
O HAI PATRIARCHAL SOCIETY.

There is a super interest thing in film theory which is the Male Gaze. Basically, most media assumes that the 'gaze' of the film (that is, what we see as an audience AND what we see as someone who empathises with the protagonist) is a) male and b) heterosexual. Thus much of what we see in the media - even if made by females or via female protagonists - is geared towards straight men. So, young, attractive, available women (there is also a whole bunch of awesome stuff in this theory about the technique of that gaze, how women and men are shot on camera, how they dress, present themselves, etc). Think of women's magazines. Think of how many women's magazines (geared towards straight women) feature photoshopped, conventionally attractive women in mildly-to-overtly alluring poses. It's a lot. A whole lot. Why? These are women we are meant to empathise with, but they are most often presented in a 'you want to sleep with me ;D' context.

ANYWAY IT'S INTERESTING. And. Really fucking sad. But basically the world is ruled by straight white middle-aged men and there's nothing much we can do about it the end? WOO.

[identity profile] teh-kween.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 05:25 pm (UTC)(link)
'HER WEAPON IS... ANOTHER BOW' would be hilariously rubbish.

And yet, that is in fact the case. No, really - she hits people with it. Which rather begs the question, WHY NOT JUST GIVE HER A SWORD?

...ahahaha, what?

In the novels he's a famous strategist, so he's supposed to be sort of...thoughtful and clever. But this doesn't go any way towards explaining why his enemies are so afraid of - they have pointy weapons and magic lightening on their side. What chance do tactics have against that?
Therefore, logically, the only choice to reconcile this was to give him totally batshit powers. When he's up in the air, you can't bloody touch him. And those lasers hurt man. They hurt.

(Anonymous) 2010-08-03 06:44 pm (UTC)(link)
When you save the world and everybody declares you President of Everything, I expect you to change this, starting by making it mandatory for every story to have at least awesome female over the age of thirty. :D

(Anonymous) 2010-08-03 06:48 pm (UTC)(link)
I am sorry to butt in, but I think the male gaze theory is stupid.

I mean, it exists, but a couple generations after women have started being part of the film industry, I think it'd better change. (There was recently some discussion I read about the female gaze and the Twilight movies, and while I have never seen the Twilight movies and I hear they're terribly sexist, I have to admit there is a lot of shameless male shirtlessness there.)

Please don't sound so defeated about it! It makes me sad.

That is all.

[identity profile] th-esaurus.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 06:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't believe it is EVERYWHERE AND EVERYTHING, but I think, personally, it's predominant in the media. But it's only a theory! I just thought it seemed relevant to this post...

[identity profile] timydamonkey.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 08:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Anybody, official or not, who says Lulu is 22 is a filthy liar. She's a very pretty lady, yes, but she is not that young. No way.

I think FFX-2 (which I wrote a little about yesterday as I played the very beginning) is the biggest offender, as, at least at the beginning, it seems to go the route of, "You know these well rounded female characters from FFX? We're gonna dress them up and have them singing? You like fanservice, right?" Which I would imagine Yuna would shy away from and Rikku might nick all the change of anybody trying to do such a thing when their back is turned...

Most games seem to have such an issue with female characters. Just trying to think of anything I've played with stereotypes of women of any kind in them... I suppose you could argue Digital Devil Saga does, but I don't mind it there, as it's pretty well done. There are five main playable characters, part of a Tribe - one is a woman. She is a kickass magic user (and healer for some people, but I find her best to use offensively). She's pretty, she's young (but no younger than the rest of the cast) and very emotional. But it makes sense there in that a) it's a game about people who are essentially emotionless drones becoming cannibal demons and awakening to emotions and thoughts they'd never knew about. I'd be worried if somebody -wasn't- reluctant about the circumstances, and she has a lot of resolve and can be more of a badass than the men when the time calls for it. Perhaps a bit stereotyped for it to be the girl, but I dunno, it makes sense in context. (Here's the cast (http://i.ytimg.com/vi/IzbP1Zqtv34/0.jpg), she's the woman on the far right.)

Nocturne's going against stereotype slightly by having its female be the person obsessed with the strong prevailing over the weak...

Character ages though... I really can't think of many older women having much of a presence in games at all. I guess there's Queen Brahne in FF9, but she's kind of a psycho. The Persona games, while teenage focused, do occasionally have older characters: iirc the Hierophant social link in Persona 3 is with an elderly man and woman, and the Death social link in Persona 4 is with an old lady...

It really is quite bothersome. Mind you, I'd still like to see a cast of somewhat realistic looking characters: give them some flaws in their appearance, please! Bonus points if they don't care about their appearance, or, if they're a girl, they don't care about getting into a relationship of some sort (this goes for TV too).

Hmm...
ext_235416: (DW: Ace - the professor's apprentice)

[identity profile] littlemoose.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 09:51 pm (UTC)(link)
You've just reminded me of a BBC (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-10749012) News report that made me want to smash everyone in the gaming industry in the mouth with every feminist tome I can find. (Except 'A Room of One's Own'. It's too light.) The industry does not and will not believe women play these kind of games, which means they think it's fine to carry on being wilfully sexist because the little ladies are never going to see it. It's the kind of attitude that sees 'fashion designer' and 'pet doctor' games being marketed to young girls alongside pink versions of the consoles and it makes me genuinely angry bordering on HULK SMASH territory.

[identity profile] twilit-wanderer.livejournal.com 2010-08-03 10:11 pm (UTC)(link)
It carries over into their MMO, too, which seems very strange to me. There is no reason for you to not be able to create an older female avatar! One has a lot more options and ways to tweak appearances than the other, but you still can only really make the males appear to be obviously out of their late teens/early twenties.

Off the top of my head, the only Square game (possibly only game at all) I've played with playable "older" (if over 22 is old, we're all in trouble) women is Chrono Cross (which has a wide age range to go with its huge cast of characters (http://chrono.wikia.com/wiki/List_of_Chrono_Cross_characters)). Even considering that a fair portion of the games I've played don't feature [controllable, since Ōkami is otherwise full of them] human characters at all, that's pretty sad.

[identity profile] owlmoose.livejournal.com 2010-08-04 01:52 am (UTC)(link)
Here via Image (http://renay.dreamwidth.org/profile)renay (http://renay.dreamwidth.org/), and this is a great catch; I can't believe I never really noticed it before.

To go off on a tangent about Lulu, the whole "Lulu is 22" thing in canon bothers me so much, not only because she looks and acts so much older, but because it's directly contraindicated by canon -- when she's talking with Wakka about the Sin attack that killed their parents, she says "I was five, then." In the context of the conversation, this statement strongly implies that she was older than Wakka, because she can remember her parents but he has no memory of his. So I don't care what Ultimania or the game booklet says; if Wakka is 23 (which is game canon, not just documentation canon), Lulu has to be at least 24. Which makes so much more sense.

Aaaaand, that was a rant from a random stranger, sorry. But in a way, it helps illustrate the point: the game developers are so desperate to keep its female characters young that they ignore their own canon to make it work.

[identity profile] wounded-melody.livejournal.com 2010-08-04 03:00 am (UTC)(link)
I would kill to see a FF game with an older female swordswomen, with *gasp* greying hair.

[identity profile] wounded-melody.livejournal.com 2010-08-04 03:00 am (UTC)(link)
*swordswoman
(tired, sorry)
ext_66844: (Default)

[identity profile] renaissanced.livejournal.com 2010-08-04 03:08 am (UTC)(link)
What really makes me mad is it seems like FFs have such great potential for female characters! Some have strength, others wit, etc. But inevitably they always end in sex appeal. Which is not bad, but the inevitability is what slays me. :C

And of course their age. I would love to see a female version of Cid.

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