{"id":7829,"date":"2011-10-20T09:00:26","date_gmt":"2011-10-20T08:00:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=7829"},"modified":"2011-10-20T09:00:26","modified_gmt":"2011-10-20T08:00:26","slug":"awesomewatch-or-things-which-are-awesome-right-now-by-jenni-aged-24-34","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/10\/20\/awesomewatch-or-things-which-are-awesome-right-now-by-jenni-aged-24-34\/","title":{"rendered":"Awesomewatch (or, Things which are Awesome right now, by Jenni, aged 24 & 3\/4)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Here’s a bunch of geeky, fandom and feminism-relevent things I’ve
been enjoying lately. We’re hoping to turn this into a regular feature,
and our ed, Miranda, has called it
Awesomewatch<\/strong>, presumably knowing of my love of watching Chris
Packham and team harass the nation’s wildlife every week on
Autumnwatch<\/strong>…1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n
About a hundred years behind the rest of the entire internet,
I’m playing
Mass Effect 2<\/strong>, and I’m enjoying it so, so much. I
want to book a week off work just to complete it, and game all day
long.<\/p>\n
You play Commander Shepard, who can be a man or woman, and
it’s amazingly refreshing to be able to play a female war
hero (either way, you’re pretty famous, after saving the
galaxy in
Mass Effect 1<\/strong>). It’s great to be able to play
this female character who inspires so much respect in her
colleagues, military and civilian – everywhere she goes,
even big scary warlike aliens are afraid of her. My
Shepard’s a not-very-physically-intimidating blonde, so
it’s kind of fun.<\/p>\n
I love the team-building aspects of the game, too. You have
to persuade people to join you, and keep them happy and
loyal throughout the game. You can play as a good guy or a
bad guy, and some of the choices the game gives you (allow
genocide to continue for the good of the galaxy?) are
brilliant to play through. As writer and fellow Garrus
fangirl Jennifer
Williams<\/a> said in her
review<\/a>:<\/p>\n
Bioware seem to specialise in making the sort of games
where you have to put the controller down for a bit and
have a really good think about the consequences of your
actions.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Several articles<\/a>
have been written on how feminist-friendly the game can
be, some on
this blog<\/a>, so I won’t go into too much detail
here except to add my name to the many reviewers
recommending it. Even if you don’t play many games,
you should try this one. I’m running it on my
laptop; you can check
here<\/a> whether you can run it on your
computer…<\/p>\n
Mass Effect 3<\/strong>, out next summer, looks like
it’ll be even better. They’re promising to
use a female Shepard in the marketing drive, and
although there were lesbian options2<\/a><\/sup>
available for Shepard to romance in
Mass Effect 1<\/strong> and
2<\/strong>, in
3<\/strong> male Shepard will be able to
romance some of the guys, too. I’m not
sure why these things weren’t done before,
but I feel like Bioware is at least a company
that listens to what its fans want. I’ll
be checking out their
Dragon Age II<\/strong> next (another game
highly recommended by geeks and feminists!)
while I wait impatiently for
ME3<\/strong>…<\/p>\n
<\/a>I
didn’t buy many of the comics that
came out of the DC52<\/strong><\/a>, but I did have
to pick up Paul Cornell’s
Demon Knights<\/strong>, because
I’ve enjoyed his
Doctor Who<\/strong> episodes and
his
Captain Britain<\/strong>
comics before.<\/p>\n
As much as many DC52 comics
have been a disappointment,
(Harley Quinn loses
half her costume<\/a>!
Catwoman wants to show you ALL
HER BRAS. ALL
OF THEM<\/a>. Amanda Waller becomes
skinny<\/a>! Disabled
character Oracle walks<\/a>,
becomes Batgirl! DC comics
manage to become
even less<\/em> diverse!) I
still have to say, this one
looks promising.<\/p>\n
Demon Knights<\/strong>
is set in the Middle
Ages, and Paul cites
Dragon Age
II<\/strong> and
‘the medieval
Magnificent
Seven’ as points
of inspiration. Much
like my old favourite
Secret
Six<\/strong>,
(sadly, sadly,
outrageously<\/em>
cancelled for the
DC52,) it seems as
though it will
star protagonists
who range from
reluctant
antiheroes
who’d rather
be at the pub, to
absolute bastards
who are just along
for the fun of it,
saving the day and
arguing and
falling in and out
of bed with each
other while they
do it. My
favourite kind of
heroes.<\/p>\n
Promisingly for
the fans of this
blog, it also
looks as though
not only will
four of the
seven
‘knights’
be of the female
persuasion, but
the main baddie,
the Questing
Queen, is also
very much a
lady.<\/p>\n
It’s hard
to judge an
entirely new
comic on just
twenty pages,
but this issue
made me laugh,
and made me want
to know a lot
more about all
seven of the
main characters,
which is pretty
much what I want
in a first
issue.<\/p>\n
It’s also
extremely
quotable:<\/p>\n
We find the
source of the
problem, and
we throw
dragons at
it.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
The
Mary
Sue<\/strong><\/a>
is
really
awesome.
It’s
like BoingBoing<\/a>
for
fangirls.
They
always
have the
news
first.
Trailers,
casting
decisions,
I
don’t
know how
they get
there so
fast.<\/p>\n
<\/a>
I’m
enjoying
the
way
they’ve
named
it
after
Mary
Sues<\/a>,
as
well.
It
feels
like
a
challenge.
That
word<\/a>
that
gets
thrown
at
the
woman
in
a
fandom
work
who’s,
y’know,
not
supposed
to
be
there.<\/p>\n
There’s
slash
references<\/a>
and
feminism<\/a>
and
science<\/a>
and
fun
things
on
Etsy<\/a>
and
Hipster
Harry
Potter
fanart<\/a>
and
the
gender-bent
Justice
League<\/a>
and
lists
like
10
Things
That
Could
Happen
If
You
Pretend
to
Be
A
God<\/em><\/a>,
10
Couples
Who
Are
Badass
Together<\/em><\/a>,
and
10
Fictional
Universes
We’d
Like
to
Live
in
Based
on
Food
Alone<\/em><\/a>…<\/p>\n
It’s
a
bit
addictive.<\/p>\n
My
feminist-inclined
friend
Hannah,
who,
when
recently
invited
to
a
‘Tarts
and
Vicars’
party,
dressed
as
a
Bakewell
Tart.
Because,
well,
what
is
a
‘tart’
anyway?<\/p>\n
Game: Mass Effect<\/h2>\n
Comic: Paul Cornell’s Demon Knights
#1<\/h2>\n
<\/h2>\n
Blog: The
Mary
Sue<\/h2>\n
\n<\/a>Battlestar
Galactica<\/strong>‘s
Starbuck
features
on
the
logo
above,
but
you
get
a
different
geeky
lady
character
every
time
you
refresh
the
site.
You
can
read
about
their
logo
design
and
why
they
picked
those
characters
here<\/a>.<\/p>\n
And
finally,
under
“also
awesome”:<\/h2>\n
\n
Space
Batman<\/del>
alien
Garrus
has
caught
my
eye.
He
was
on
Shepard’s
team
in
Mass
Effect
1<\/strong>,
and
their
dialogue’s
adorable
in
a
kind
of
equals-and-comrades-under-fire
kind
of
way.
“There’s
no
one<\/em>
in
the
galaxy
I
respect
more
than
you,
Shepard<\/em>.”
Bless.
[↩<\/a>]<\/li><\/ol>