nuttynutifications:

A trend I’ve seen in positive female armor examples… I find neither good nor bad but just thought-provoking… In many of positive female armors, the ladies have a long, often untied and fancy (even sexy) hair. That kind of hair is usually very impractical in battle (blinds, someone can grab it), and while dudes can sometimes have freely flowing long hair, long hair is mostly girls’ thing in pop culture. Your thoughts, what is the okay-ness of giving a lady warrior long fancy hair, and why?

Largely we don’t address the long hair issues because the solution is pretty straight forward (as shown by the-hero-dies aka Kevin Warren):

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As for the okay/appropriateness – it generally depends on the consistency and suspension of disbelief.  It’s common practice in all kinds of media to have named characters go without helmets do they can be easily recognized and in more than a few productions the men have equally impractical hair styles.

When it becomes a problem is when products signal that some men are practical and/or warriors by giving them close cropped hair styles and then give women with equal responsibility fancy hair styles because they have an arbitrary checklist of traits all women need.  Such as:

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Then it’s terrible because it showcases the double standard, objectifies women and destroys the visual story telling by mixing the messages on what a character’s appearance is supposed to tell us.

– wincenworks

Gifs from this Regretroid Music Video

A trend I’ve seen in positive female armor examples… I find neither good nor bad but just thought-provoking… In many of positive female armors, the ladies have a long, often untied and fancy (even sexy) hair. That kind of hair is usually very impractical in battle (blinds, someone can grab it), and while dudes can sometimes have freely flowing long hair, long hair is mostly girls’ thing in pop culture. Your thoughts, what is the okay-ness of giving a lady warrior long fancy hair, and why?

Largely we don’t address the long hair issues because the solution is pretty straight forward (as shown by the-hero-dies aka Kevin Warren):

image

As for the okay/appropriateness – it generally depends on the consistency and suspension of disbelief.  It’s common practice in all kinds of media to have named characters go without helmets do they can be easily recognized and in more than a few productions the men have equally impractical hair styles.

When it becomes a problem is when products signal that some men are practical and/or warriors by giving them close cropped hair styles and then give women with equal responsibility fancy hair styles because they have an arbitrary checklist of traits all women need.  Such as:

image
image
image

Then it’s terrible because it showcases the double standard, objectifies women and destroys the visual story telling by mixing the messages on what a character’s appearance is supposed to tell us.

– wincenworks

Gifs from this Regretroid Music Video

Chaos Dragon and Gender Flips

whereismywizardhat submitted:

You know, in the adaptation from one medium to another, Gender flips happen.  Most of the time, it’s actually to balance out a mostly male cast with some female characters, which is good.

Here’s what’s not good

This is from the anime Chaos Dragon, an adaptation of the light novel series based upon Gen Urobuchi and Kinoko Nasu’s tabletop game sessions.  This is Lou Zhenjie, Urobuchi’s character.  Notice the difference, beyond the genderswap, in how the character is treated?

It’s pretty terrible.

And people tell us that the parodies we feature are too ridiculous… I tend to think they’re not ridiculous enough!

– wincenworks

Chaos Dragon and Gender Flips

whereismywizardhat submitted:

You know, in the adaptation from one medium to another, Gender flips happen.  Most of the time, it’s actually to balance out a mostly male cast with some female characters, which is good.

Here’s what’s not good

This is from the anime Chaos Dragon, an adaptation of the light novel series based upon Gen Urobuchi and Kinoko Nasu’s tabletop game sessions.  This is Lou Zhenjie, Urobuchi’s character.  Notice the difference, beyond the genderswap, in how the character is treated?

It’s pretty terrible.

And people tell us that the parodies we feature are too ridiculous… I tend to think they’re not ridiculous enough!

– wincenworks