playfarcry wrote...
I would like to point out something, the fact you mentioned about female players playing ME3 bcoz of blah blah blah (no offfence) doesn't seem entirely correct ..coz no girl into gaming would start playing online coz of ME3 blahs ...but who has already been into gaming recently or long back would definitely buy and play it and i believe they have other bigger reasons to be an online gamer rather than the gender properties of the game.. :happy:
Why not? I did. Gaming online does not equal gaming at all. I hardly ever play online because I don't trust my unstable internet connection. However video games are my primary hobby, almost all of which are offline (eg the Elder Scrolls series, Fallout: New Vegas, Batman: Arkham Asylum, Dead Space, etc)
The only other online games I ever played, were
World of Warcraft (which, despite what stereotypes suggest, also is an even mix of male/female) and, playing still today,
Minecraft. ME3 is the only online MP I reguarly play now.. and I started because it based from a setting I loved, and provided free, and if my connection got shirty I still had SP. It also was relatively fresh, meaning I could learn and grow with the other players instead of trying to break into a world where everyone already knew way more than I did.
So yes. I am a girl into gaming that started playing online 'cause of ME3.
EDIT: No, I am not saying female players every say "I feel especially delicate and ladylike today, so I am playing
Mass Effect 3!" I'm saying that, because ME3 is more accessible (as opposed to many others which actually target male-specific audiences) the multiplayer for it will likely have a more even mix. The whole point of my post is that there is no such thing as the 'gamer girl' - just gamers that happen to be female.
Modifié par Karsciyin, 15 juin 2012 - 07:19 .