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BadMoon

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I thought this was an interesting article. :rock

On a Tuesday night in a San Francisco nightclub, Torrie Dorrell makes a very personal revelation to the gathered crowd: "I'm a full-on gamer, and my husband hates me."


"Cassie" is one of the characters who occupies the online world of "The Agency."

more photos » In fact, Dorrell spends so much time gaming, she has risen to the level of "officer" in a "guild" playing "EverQuest 2" online.

More and more, husbands and boyfriends are playing second fiddle to computers and consoles as 38 percent of gamers are female, spending an average of 7.4 hours a week playing, according to the Entertainment Software Association.

Dorrell isn't just one of these female gamers, she also works in the industry. As the senior vice president of global sales and marketing for Sony Online Entertainment, she has made a career out of her passion for games.

"Women are out there in significant numbers playing MMOs, action games, first-person shooters," Dorrell explains. "What is lacking in the equation are women behind these games."

In an effort to balance that equation, Dorrell and her colleagues at SOE have created G.I.R.L., Gamers In Real Life, a scholarship program to attract more young women to careers in game development.

"Go to any video game convention and it appears quite obviously that there are more men than women in the industry," says Courtney Simmons, public relations director for SOE, who helped spearhead the G.I.R.L. program at the company's San Diego headquarters.

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Speaking to an invitation-only crowd at that San Francisco bar, in town for the recent Game Developers Conference, Simmons was joined by several other women from SOE to announce the details of the program, a partnership with The Art Institutes. The program, the first of its kind, would give the winning female student currently enrolled at an Art Institute school $10,000 toward her tuition and a paid internship at one of SOE's development studios.

However, this is not the first time the issue of women in the video game industry has been addressed.

Simmons, who enjoys playing video games with her three children, believes that women are being "gamed down to," because, she says, "there is a lack of understanding about how women play."

Studies and sales data have shown that women are more likely to play hand-held casual games, such as the Nintendo DS, along with social oriented games such as "The Sims," where women make up more than 55 percent of players.

Though the number of women who play games is high, they represent just under 12 percent of the industry, according to the International Game Developers Association. By diversifying the work force, developers can create products that appeal to a wider audience.

Simmons wants to see "more women making games," she says, "making more games that women want to play."

More than 60 percent of female students enrolled in game design programs at The Art Institutes said they believed male dominance in the industry is a deterrent to women pursuing a career in gaming, according to a survey commissioned by SOE. It's a statistic that's mirrored in the student body at the school's campus in San Francisco.

"I get excited when there's, like, two or three girls in my class," says Nhaty Ngo, a third-year student finishing up her studies at the Art Institute, but she says the numbers appear to be growing with each new freshman class.

The number of women working in the industry is also on the rise. Sherry Floyd, a game designer at SOE's Seattle studios, is part of the team developing "The Agency," an espionage-themed first-person shooter set for release later this year. "I honestly don't think it's a gender issue," she continues. "I think it's a marketing issue." Watch the women behind "The Agency" »

Floyd is just one of a number of women who are contributing to nearly every facet of "The Agency's" development, from modeling and texturing to illustration and animation -- far more than the current industry standard and part of a concerted effort on the part of the game's lead developer, Matt Wilson.


The game features a strong, female lead character named "Cassie," who while being as tough as her male counterparts, is also attractive without being as overly-sexualized as other female game characters, such as "Lara Croft."

"I know everybody is looking for the big 'ingredient' we need to get [the female] market," says Floyd. "Honestly, if we just make good product, everybody will play it." E-mail to a friend

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I thought this was an interesting article. :rock

On a Tuesday night in a San Francisco nightclub, Torrie Dorrell makes a very personal revelation to the gathered crowd: "I'm a full-on gamer, and my husband hates me."

One word for that guy: GAY

If that guy passes, I'll marry her, BUT

d_7387.jpg
 
I think it would be great to meet a chick into gaming. Shared interests are always a good thing as long as it's not one or the other trying to force their way into what you like to "humor" you and they actually don't enjoy the activity.

I don't seem to come across too many women into gaming or collecting.
 
Any woman I meet is gonna learn real quick that with me, comes my collection, and my gaming. If they have a problem with either 'don't let the door hit your ass on the way out'.

And Nick, word brother :cool:
 
Any woman I meet is gonna learn real quick that with me, comes my collection, and my gaming. If they have a problem with either 'don't let the door hit your ass on the way out'.

And Nick, word brother :cool:

:rock:rock:rock:rock:rock Yea, my brother's wife, she said she was into all this cool stuff, then the marriage license passed and she HATES it. It really pisses me off that woman do that, but oh well. Nobody's doing that to me I'll tell you that. Like you said, You don't like it, get the f-out.
 
I gotta admit, that was one cool thing about my ex, she liked playing video games with me and loved my collectibles. She even enjoyed just watching me play sometimes.

Too bad that's where the compliments end :monkey1
 
I gotta admit, that was one cool thing about my ex, she liked playing video games with me and loved my collectibles. She even enjoyed just watching me play sometimes.

Too bad that's where the compliments end :monkey1

:rotfl:rotfl:rotfl:rotfl:rotfl I could add something REALLY dirty, but I'm not going to
 
My Ex, infact 2 of my Ex's loved Games, the first i lovingly refer to as 'psycho tits' liked that game with a little skinny alien running about, cant remember the name of it.Abe springs to mind?? It was many years ago and was popular at the time.

My last Gf liked allsorts of games,fighting/tomb raider, many many games plus she collected vintage Star Wars figures, so albeit different things we both collected something which was great.

If you can find a partner, any partner, that enjoys similar hobbies etc then you're off to a great start.
:rock
x
 
I don't want women playing games, because once they start they will kick all of our asses. Its just genetics. :monkey2
 
And that is why I love my girl. She's recently ordered 600$ worth of stuff from SSC< wants me to get a WII, and is looiking forward to saeeing Mass effect when she gets back from Korea in decenber :)

Oddly enough, I'm lost MOST of my intrest in console gaming now that she's not here to watch them.
 
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