The Right Opinion
Misogynist Video Games
Culture Challenge of the Week: Misogynist Video Games
Karen's nine-year-old son came home from a birthday party at a locally owned "family fun" center with plenty to tell. The party was great, especially the laser tag and the pizza. But he didn't like the arcade games, one in particular.
"It had, like, men hitting girls. Beating them up and killing them. I didn't like it."
Karen was appalled, first that a facility that depends on family patronage would even have such a game, and second, that this violent, misogynist game was being used by young children.
While she was proud of her little boy's good instincts, who had been so disturbed to tell her, she was devastated at the on-screen violence that he witnessed-and recalled with exacting detail.
Karen, for her part, felt powerless to protect her son. It had never occurred to her that such a "game" could have been part of a family restaurant at a supervised birthday party. Is there any place truly safe for children?
When Karen complained to store employees, they displayed a disturbing lack of concern, replying that parents should supervise their children better if they did not want them playing the games. Karen resolved that, absent some changes, her son would no longer attend parties in that facility.
Was she over-reacting? I don't think so.
Real-world violence brutalizes women and girls here and in other cultures. It's tragic. And sensationalizing it, or worse, making a game about it, only guarantees that it will grow. And America seems headed in that direction.
The Parents Television Council produced an excellent report in 2009 on the spike in TV shows that depict violence against women and teenage girls. Indeed, the overall increase in violence against young girls and women far outstripped the increase in general TV violence. Worse, the violence towards women was more graphic than ever, showing beatings, rapes, torture, and worse.
Research shows that repeated images of violence towards women-even virtual images-normalize the violence and desensitize viewers to it. Worse, gaming allows the viewer to "try out" those behaviors on the screen, to experience the rush of adrenaline while they simultaneously overcome their natural inhibitions against hurting women and girls.
Last month, the video game company Gearbox Software held a press conference touting its new, much-anticipated release, Duke Nukem Forever. That the press conference was held in a rented-out strip club should tell you something. The pre-release game segments are raunchy-no surprise-but the game also features a multiplayer segment called "Capture the Babe," which was not pre-released. Reviewers, however, have described the segment as a take-off on the children's game Capture the Flag.
But instead of a flag, the player kidnap a woman and slaps her around a bit if she resists in fear.
How to Save Your Family: Speak Up
Many parents pay no attention to the content of video games they allow in their homes. It's way past time to smarten up and protect our children from the adults who seek to manipulate them and their world views through "innocent" games.
And unless we speak out, our children may be exposed to such trash when we least expect it-in stores, arcades, and in the homes of their friends.
Karen took the right steps to defend her son's innocence-and to insist on respect for women. She asked that the game be removed from the open area, and when employees refused, she vowed to take her business elsewhere.
She also opened a conversation with the parents who hosted the birthday party-who had been completely unaware of the situation. Like Karen and the vast majority of other parents, they never thought to check on the video games' content because they assumed that a "family fun" arcade would be safe for, well, families.
Even though the particular employees that Karen contacted proved unresponsive, Karen isn't stopping there. She has a conversation scheduled with the manager. She's going to let him know that the restaurant's family-friendly reputation is on the line and that she plans to notify other parents of the problem.
Finally, within our own families, let's celebrate the dignity of women and uphold a standard that insists on respect for all women -- even characters in a virtual world.

9 Comments
Richard Ryan
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 12:53 PM
It`s a sick world out there and getting worse.Fox channel`s two and a half men for example makes a hero out of such scumbags as Charlie Sheen, and most of the other stuff on that particular network is not much better.I personally refuse to watch any of their programming.I had a wonderful mother and grew up putting women on a pedistal.I understand that women are human like the rest of us, but they are still wonderful, and should be treated with respect.Since we have sat by and let the federal government take religion out of everything, this about all that we can expect.Richard RyanLamar,Missouri -Birthplace of Harry S Truman
Lance
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 2:01 PM
You'll have to not watch CBS instead of Fox. That's where Two and a Half Men is broadcast...
MSW
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 2:15 PM
That's true Richard. When God is pushed out, Satan swaggers in.
Emcee
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 5:03 PM
The decline in the excellence of American Society in all areas, from freedom--to slavery; from the best education in the world to its current low position; from world leadership to follower; began when the American people allowed the Government to throw God out of the Educational System: "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge; Fools despise wisdom and instruction." ---Proverbs 1:7 [NASB]
Richard Ryan
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 5:08 PM
Here in Lamar,Missouri channel 14 is the Fox network and that`s where two and a half men come on after the Fox 14 news.Richard RyanLamar,Missouri - Birthplace of Harry S Truman
Michelle
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 9:18 PM
I'm so relieved that there are other people as ticked off about this BS as I am- enough to do something about it- however "small". As a female soldier- I took hits from other country's men's (esp. mid. east) perverse ideas of how women- American women specifically- "desire" to be treated. Probably, partially to blame: our lame Hollywood movies obsessed with sex and violence. I've had more than my fair share of close calls. Nothing too tragic- just enough to light a fire in me.
Howard Last
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 11:09 PM
The only TV show that I would go out of my way to watch was Red Skelton. Yes I know it he been off the air for more than 30 years. When someone asked about not telling off color jokes he responded, "Why would I tell a joke you can read on a bathroom wall".
Darrell Keith
Wednesday, April 6, 2011 at 11:14 AM
Don't forget that Grouch Marx said that a comedian that had to use dirty jokes to be funny wasn't funny. Quit calling the A-Shirt (undershirt with straps like a tank-top) are called "women-beaters". Now those are popular like male-bashing jokes. Remember when ethnic jokes and some ethnic and nationality lables became unacceptable? What did we replace them with?
Army Officer
Wednesday, April 6, 2011 at 7:28 PM
Strain at a gnat; swallow a camel.Pixilated violence? Really? How about real violence?Men and boys are FAR more likely to be the victims of real, actual violence than women and girls. Ms Hagelin seems okay with that.About 4% of heterosexual relationships have domestic violence. In half of them the violence is between mutual combatants. Of the remainder, women are the primary aggressors in a ratio of about 70%/30%.In other news, women initiate 70% of divorces and the guy typically loses primary custody of his kids and has to pay the woman who had him ejected from his own house for the privilege of seeing his own flesh and blood. I say privilege because if she interferes with visitation nothing happens to her in nearly every case.Pretend violence against cartoon characters?Yeah... that's WAY more damaging to kids than mom hitting dad with a frying pan and then getting the cops to arrest him for domestic violence.Thank you Rebecca Hagelin. Thank you so much for bringing the important topic of pretend violence against pixelated characters to our attention. /sarcasm offI'm not defending the games, by the way, but I call horse-pucky on the idea that they become bad when the pretend victims of the pretend violence are pretend females.