IMO, when you make that comparison, there absolutely should not be a difference. If the woman is more unusual for the sake of having an 18 Str, then she is more unusual. So be it. But I can't fathom how the game is made better by making the player accept a 16 Strength in order to play the character.
I can see an argument for role playing or immersion. If something pulls you away from immersion, it lessens the enjoyment for some people.
The problem really becomes, then, that if you allow a 5'1" 110 lb. woman to have a Strength of 18, versus a 5'10" 180 lb. man with a Strength of 14. The woman is far superior to the male in terms of Strength, and her size means nothing in that. To some, that would hurt their ability to feel immersed, and thus role play well. However, if you impose some sort of penalty, woman (or men) may very well feel drawn out of the game, and not feel like they can be immersed.
It just depends. If you really want to look at what good can come from it, I think it's best to weigh all the pros and cons (and assign them appropriate values) and see what comes out on top for the type of game you're trying to make.
As I said before, there is a difference, just not as huge a difference, I believe, as some may imagine. The simple likelihood of choosing to make a strong male fighter compared to a female one probably outpaces, by an order of magnitude, any mechanical penalties you could put in place to create a similar shift in behavior. In other words, any norming of men versus women is probably not only handled, but exaggerated, by the process of character creation itself.
That is currently the ongoing discussion. I'm not heavily invested in any debate, though, just understanding views in the thread.
It's something to work on. It's like the kid at the birthday party who keeps making a big deal about how their parents rented ponies for the party. Sure, they're not a bad kid; they probably don't even recognize how others will respond. But a mentally healthy individual can probably detect that this child's relationship with wealth is different than that of other children at the party. I think a mentally healthy person not only notices, but responds to, the sense that another person is trying to assert their superiority.
I guess I don't feel threatened or belittled when people do this. I usually just find it humorous or I find them irritating. But, I'm not prone to tolerate posturing very well internally. I almost always challenge people that I think are posturing. Huge personal character flaw of mine. Best way to get me to do something? Tell me I suck at something, that I can't do it, etc. Seriously, this is a huge flaw in my personality.
I think that makes it harder for me to grasp related issues. That is regretful, because I like understanding other views
When the message is, "You are weaker than a man. A man would destroy you in physical combat," the question becomes, why is this message being broadcast? I understand the words. What is the significance?
To flaunt, usually. To show your superiority over someone else in that area. Now, I don't usually find the display threatening, unless someone is literally trying to threaten me physically. Mentally, I shrug that person off. Like I said, I guess it's hard for me to connect to opposing mindsets on this matter, which is actually really starting to bug me. It seems like the point should have clicked for me by now, and it hasn't. Thanks for your patience.
I guess why I brought it up at all was that you seemed to imply (I'm guessing I'm wrong here, though) that even this discussion would make women feel violently threatened in the abstract. This seemed off, to me, as this conversation has not seemed to be "we're men, we're bigger and better than females, ha ha" so far.
What if you lived in a world where a couple of times a week, Brock Lesnar wolf-whistled at you on the way home from work?
Well, since girls rarely whistle or shout to me based on my looks (if they do, it's because of the long hair, I'm guessing), I can only compare it to that. I take it as a compliment. I guess I wouldn't feel physically threatened unless they somehow imposed their physical superiority on me.
If Brock Lesnar kept moving in my path, not letting me by, while trying to stroke my hair... yeah, I'd feel nervous and threatened. If he wanted to talk to me about how he was stronger than I was? I'd say I could do that pretty reasonably without feeling threatened.
As exhibits A and B, I present WWI and WWII.
I'm trying to be reasonable, but I can't really take this too seriously. I know that's not much to go on, but I don't see this part of the conversation going anywhere, and I like the feedback so far, and don't want to mess up a good thing.
Of course. Once you change the context, the meaning is different. We are talking about context.
True enough. I'll try to stay on your terms as much as possible. If I sway off those terms, or misrepresent them, forgive me. Just correct me.
More to the point, even if they have high self-respect, they have a negative self-concept because their daily reality requires them to battle negative stereotypes.
Okay, so I was on the right track.
How would you being a Mexican sitting in a room mostly full of white people, talking honestly and abstractly about the problem of illegal immigration? Would it make a difference if your mother had gotten her hands hit with a ruler when she was a child for speaking her native Spanish at school?
That would be incredibly uncomfortable. I think it can be done reasonably and logically though, without feeling personally oppressed mentally or attacked. I can see how it'd be a very personal issue, though. Interesting comparison.
It's a potentially very interesting and worthwhile journey. The first thing to realize is that many of the things that are most relevant to women, are invisible to men.
That's a starting place, I guess. As far as emotional awareness goes, I'm pretty keen. I have very good and close relationships with a few women. To be able to role play one accurately, however... beyond my hope, I think. It's why I'm kind of stingy on the female NPCs in my game. I really dislike misrepresenting any being, whether they're elves, dragons, or women.
Who knows, maybe this discussion will shed some insight on how I can improve those NPC interactions. I'm not too worried about interactions with the women I know in real life, since we're on very good terms, but any insight helps when it comes to empathizing (which is something I think a lot more people should try to do).
Thanks for the discussion thus far.
RedTonic said:
Not to knock Jameson's opinion, but on some level, I do find elements of male posturing to be threatening. It can make the females among you uncomfortable. It is a reminder of male on female violence, which is sadly prevalent in the real world and still remains a particular fixture of fantasy in occasionally unflattering ways which do no one credit. (Some episodes of Supernatural comes to mind.) Still, we cope--we ignore it, we move on--but I find saying 'no harm done' a little difficult. The posturing gets my back up, personally, but I'm also paranoid and more than a little aggressive.
Oh, no worries on knocking my opinion. I can definitely handle disagreement, especially in areas I'm nowhere near an expert in. Thanks for your insight on this.
I don't believe anyone should necessarily change minor behaviors to avoid any offense, awkwardness, or discomfort--but I do think people should be aware, and moreover, I think people should place finding a sympathetic understanding of others on par with critical analysis. Knowing, or trying to learn, where someone is coming from when they opine on a topic is at least as useful as skewering the holes in their argument.
I think empathy is extremely good for a person to pursue, but sympathy is a good start, too. I am trying to understand your side to this discussion.
But hey, maybe that's just the ovaries in me... I don't honestly think so, though. What I learned formally of sympathetic analysis, I learned from a man. Understanding others' positions helps you find common ground, and can help you bring them around to your position... Or may move you around to theirs. I believe most of us enjoy a certain level of harmony, trolls aside.
I play D&D to kick butt and take names (especially true names), not to be told that my female fighter will result in a suboptimal strength based build and that she'll never compare in a straight test of strength against a male fighter of equivalent level and resources. It's not the game I play. If others wish to play games that tinker with statistical templates for their characters, they may certain play those games. I don't get to make the call on who plays what games, nor do I wish to. (There's that noisome choice thing again.) I don't believe arguing about the relative physical strengths of men versus women is a worthy debate, either. It says little about either sex and more about the cognitive biases of those arguing. Hence, my opinion that RPGs shouldn't enforce these matters in mechanics. Let the gamers decide. Do what's fun, but be fair to the players and the DM.
Well, I think it is a discussion (not argument) worth having, if those involved wanted to use it as a tool. I think it'd be very interesting to have a game with, say, two female players and two male players, where the females picked "realistic" adjustments for one sex, and the males did for the other. I think it'd say a lot in terms of perception of either your own sex or the other sex. Also, trying to make a character and role play that character under those restrictions would be interesting, too.
But, I agree, it's all preference. Don't play it (or try it) if you don't want to. I mean, I'll almost certainly never try the experiment above, but I think a healthy discussion on the topic can be enlightening. Just like role playing games can be. I think it shows us bits of pieces of our mind, or of the world in general, that we wouldn't think of without the game. And that's pretty invaluable.
As always, play what you like
