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I'm A Female Gamer and Here's Why I'll Never Play a Grand Theft Auto Title

I don't want to play Sexual Harassment: The Game. I'm already playing it in real life.
Samantha Pugsley
Sep 5, 2014 at 3:00pm | 188 comments
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I haven't played any of the Grand Theft Auto games. 
 
When I told my husband I wanted to write a piece about how as a female gamer, I could never play a title in this franchise, he looked at me in horror and said, "If you think you're getting online hate now, it'll get ten times worse if you write this." 
 
He's right. Even by talking about it, I'm breaking some kind of unwritten rule among hardcore GTA fans. Just ask Carolyn Petit who wrote a review giving GTA V a 9 out of 10 and still received a mountain of hate followed by a petition to have her fired for pointing out some transphobic elements. Unlike Petit, I haven't played GTA V, or any GTA game for that matter. This isn't a well-rounded, thoughtful review. Having never played, I have no right to do that. Instead, this is about why I, as a female gamer, feel like I'm not allowed to play it. 
 
image
 
GTA is no stranger to controversy. From the "Hot Coffee" scandal to gratuitous violence, those who play the series know they are in for some amount of sensitive material. And if that was the extent of it, I'd probably be a fan. I'm no stranger to MA ratings and adult themes. I like a good helping of violence in my games and I like when my character can have sexy times on screen. And honestly, I like the drama of controversy. Sometimes, I'll play a title just to see what all the fuss is about. Really, I should fit perfectly in the GTA demographic. So why after five installments, have I avoided playing a single title? 
 
The answer is overtly simple: I'm not a cisgender male and the series is completely inaccessible to anyone who isn't a cisgender male. As a woman gamer, I've had to learn to ignore lots of unsavory things in the games I play, like the most unsavory thing of all: a lack of female playable characters. But some things I can't ignore because they are so blatantly hateful and GTA is rife with these elements. Rockstar Games has basically developed a series that is completely dependent on misogyny, transphobia, and violence against women for its success. Fans of GTA have come to expect and even enjoy these qualities, but these same qualities keep minority gamers at arm's length.  
 
I'll focus on GTA V since it recently started some new controversy with its GTA online "rape mod." I'm not even joking: GTA V Online lets players rape other characters. While Rockstar Games didn't create the mod, they haven't removed it either. And as Bustle so eloquently explains: "This “rape trolling” is a symptom of a larger problem that GTA set up for itself long ago: pervasive and flippant attitudes toward sexual ownership. Players previously relished in the idea of being able to treat prostitutes and strippers like property, and game designers made it part of the fun." 
 
You see, I don't want to play Sexual Harassment: The Game. I'm already playing it in real life. I can't jog outside because the last time I did, a man yelled from his slowing vehicle, "Bet you're going to need a good f**k after that run!" I have to time my errands so that I'm home before dark because the threat of abduction and rape in a nighttime parking lot is very, very real. Whenever the doorbell rings and I'm home alone, panic sets in because there's a chance I'm about to be face to face with someone who wants to hurt me.
 
Since I've had to deal with issues like this since puberty, you'll forgive me if I don't want to play a mini game where a burly male protagonist gropes a female stripper as many times as he can before the bouncer catches him. (Oh, and if he does it long enough, his reward is he gets to have sex with her.)
 
I don't want to see billboards advertising perfume that will make me "smell like a bitch" or hear a radio ad telling the audience to "use women like urinals." And I certainly don't want to watch a prostitute service an alpha male playable character only to have him beat her over the head with a baseball bat after the deed is done. Let's not forget one of the newest features of GTA V: The ability to kill all topless women, not just prostitutes. And if that's not enough, it's possible to take a picture of their naked corpses on your camera phone afterward for further misogynistic enjoyment. 
 
image
Actual in-game billboard. 
 
And if the sexism and sexual violence isn't bad enough, there's more. GTA V makes it abundantly clear that they also have a problem with transgender people. GTA V offers a heavy helping of transphobia seen everywhere from perfectly rendered bulges outlined in pink miniskirts to the in-universe delivery service sporting this offensive pun: "POST OP: No longer just mail" as if gender-confirmation surgery is somehow funny. Seriously, who at Rockstar Games is writing this disgusting material? 
 
Perhaps the worst part is that these issues carry over into the gaming community. A large part of the GTA fan base are men who subscribe to many of the ignorant notions brought up by the game. Remember Carolyn Petit? She's transgender. It's impossible to go and read the comments on her review without wanting to vomit.
 
Of course, they aren't focusing on the things that she said about the game (which again, were largely positive) but are instead attacking her personally because she's trans. Many of the comments are scary similar to negative dialogue that exists in-game surrounding transgender people. It's hard to deny the rampant misogyny that exists among GTA players when it's all laid out so obviously in the comment section of Petit's review. If you aren't a cisgender male gamer, it's not a safe community to interact with. 
 
You don't even have to take my word for it. Straight from the mouth of the creator, GTA V's concept is entirely rooted in "masculinity." He's talking about the lack of female playable characters (another problem but one that needs its own article), but it goes so much deeper than that. The sexism, the violence towards women, the transphobia; they all combine to create this twisted definition of masculinity. Beating up a sex worker, groping a woman until you "win her over," insulting a trans woman -- Rockstar Games considers these masculine qualities.
 
When they say that masculinity is an essential part of the story, I think it extends to their ideas of what the GTA community should look like. They are deliberately pushing women away from these titles to create this weird "no girls allowed" mancave environment. And it's working, at least for me.
 
I'll gladly step away from the franchise in favor of my mental health. The threat of sexual harassment, violence, and disrespect for no other reason other than my gender weighs down on me no matter where I go. I don't need to experience it in a fictional universe.
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      • RaspingHerWords 3 days ago
        I had never played a GTA game until the most recent release, and personally, I love it. I love the character for Online that I modeled after myself. And while I played through the whole game, I mostly play online. And I avoid doing things like going into strip clubs, beating up prostitutes, and if something I don't like comes on the radio, I skip to a different station. ( Just like I do irl with a lot of stupid morning shows that can also be pretty sexist. )There's a lot that you can really avoid doing if you don't feel comfortable doing it.
        Yes, there's a lot of misogyny in the game, but a lot of it is avoidable. ( Though not so much in story mode. ) I'm a cisgendered married bisexual female, and I enjoy GTAV a lot.I don't see any shame in that.
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        • grybns 3 days ago
          I've played 2 GTA titles, but I skipped GTA V for the same reason you've skipped all of them. I have limited time in my day and the older I get, the less of it I want spent seeing sexist / transphobic / racist content.
          A very similar franchise I haven't given up on yet is Saint's Row. Same type of offensive, hyper-masculine, open world game (was originally a GTA clone basically). And yeah the most recent title still has problematic elements. But I like that you can play as a bad ass fuckin hyper-masculine WOMAN and it's literally the same game. And, their team is listening to feminist critics and trying to do better.
          Here's what their creative director had to say recently about the recent Anita Sarkeesian video that called Saint's Row out for misogyny:
          "I actually think she's right in this case." He went on to say that he believes the Saints Row series developer has improved in its treatment of women over years but said they still have room to grow. "I think that we tried to go and carry ourselves with respect, and try to respect sexuality and respect gender as much as we can, and sometimes we fail but hopefully we'll do better and continue to get better." (source: interview in The Escapist).
          Just shows that even games that are just "supposed to be offensive" can do better and be better. Wish GTA would follow suit.
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          • Elle Squared 3 days ago
            I hope Jog Fuck Guy gets his face eaten by rats.
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              • Guest 3 days ago
                I'm not a "gamer", in fact I'm so miserably bad at anything that isn't Angry Birds that it's embarrassing and I haven't seriously sat down to play a console game for any length of time since Super Mario. But I used to work in a place that sold games, and I remember one of the GTA games had come out and all my guy friends were so stoked about it. I went over to their house while they were playing it, and it was one of the ones where you could beat the hooker to death to get your money back and they were just laughing their asses off like it was the funniest thing ever and trying to get me to play it too. It honestly made me reevaluate my friendships with them; like who are the people who find it enjoyable to beat a hooker to death, even playing make believe? Of course, they claimed it was all in fun and that I was without sense of humor. But seriously?
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                  • Samantha Pugsley > Guest 3 days ago
                    I'm really over the "it's just a game" or "it's just for fun" thing. I'm fine with that most of the time but I think there's a line and GTA crosses it. It isn't funny when it elevates to such an extreme level of hate.
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                      • Greater Cornholio > Samantha Pugsley 2 days ago
                        So you don't play any RPGs in which you kill other characters?
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                          • Guest > Greater Cornholio 2 days ago
                            IMO GTA crosses a line with the beating hookers to death and the raping. It's the difference between an RPG where you kill characters to move the story along and that one guy who always insists on playing a chaotic evil character and doing fucked up stuff because it's "in character" and enjoying it a little too much and you wonder if he has girls chained in his basement.
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                              • Lora > Guest 2 days ago
                                What if beating hookers to death progressed the story line? Would it be okay then? Why is the rape more problematic than the murders? I feel that those elements are disgusting to add to games, but I'm not sure I have an airtight argument against them when copious quantities of murder and a seemingly careless attitude toward it is cultivated or included in games.
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                                  • Guest > Lora 2 days ago
                                    So my reference to the rape and hookers is based on watching my friends play GTA whatever…and the hooker beating is the thing that they were most enthused about doing. In fact, they pretty much went straight to it. There appears to be an entire group of the gaming population who was really excited about that feature and who enjoy playing the game that way. Which, I'm sorry, but is problematic. If it were a war game that let you burn women and children alive "just for fun" would that be something that we'd be acting like it was no big deal?
                                    I can understand in the context of an RPG, and my understanding of those are from playing the kind you sit at a table and roll dice for, that say you might have to kill a non player character in combat or because that person is going to kill you and because it's part of the story that the person leading the game has designed. But that is different from say a player who insists on running around the imaginary village beating people to death and raping people just for his own personal enjoyment. If you were sitting at a table playing an RPG with someone who seemed to take unhealthy delight in beating ANYONE to death for no reason, or raping even an NPC, you'd be giving that person the side-eye and wondering what the hell was wrong with them. I feel the same way about what I know about GTA. Why even make it an option to randomly beat anyone to death, just for the sake of doing it? Who are the people who find that fun? And who are the women who don't get why some women might find it objectionable that a gaming company is churning out what basically seems to be a violent crime simulator for gross dudes to get off on doing gross things? Are we really that excited by driving an imaginary car around that we have to be like "oh, you don't HAVE to have sex with hookers and then beat them to death, so it's not that bad."
                                    I admit that the idea of any adult sitting in front of a game console hitting a button over and over again is pretty much lost on me in general, so maybe there's something that I'm not getting. But is there not some other imaginary car driving game that does not include the senseless mayhem option that people could play? And do we really think that those GTA titles are so popular because people like driving the fake car, and not because they're taking some enjoyment out of the violence?
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                                      • Guest > Lora 2 days ago
                                        And sorry, my long-winded reply was actually for Greater Cornholio, and I should clarify that I did not know you could beat other people to death in the odious little game, because my particular friends went right for the hookers.
                                        As for would beating a hooker to death be OK if it moved the story along…sorry, but kinda no. Because what the hell game would have that as a goal? Who would be the people that think that is fun? I have a real problem with the whole idea.
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                                        • Greater Cornholio > Guest 2 days ago
                                          You don't have to kill hookers. You can but you don't have to. You can also kill any fucking body else in the game. Anyone. Why is the life of a prostitute worth more than all the other characters? I can rob an old man blind and then beat him to death with my bare hands. Where's your outrage about that?
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                                            • Anna Wilson > Greater Cornholio 2 days ago
                                              Well, the fact of the matter is that sex workers are significantly more likely to be murdered and assaulted- and have people are those murders as "justified" somehow- than nearly any other demographic in our culture. It's not funny in a video game because that's a very awful fact of rape culture playing into their life.
                                              Then again, I don't play violent video games or watch violent movies, it's too upsetting for me and I'm never entertained with gameplay like that.
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                                      • D. 3 days ago
                                        In fairness, the first two GTA games (which most people forget about) were pretty innocuous. They were top-down driving games where you'd steal cars and just drive around town blowing shit up. The trend you're talking about didn't kick in until GTA 3 and the subsequent titles.
                                        As for the subject matter, yeah, it's sexist and offensive, and unapologetic about that fact. You're right that basically, they aren't targeting female gamers. Their demographic isn't just non-female gamers, but rather gamers who want to engage in a particular type of male power fantasy.
                                        While I think the content of the games is deserving of criticism, though, I don't think any developer is obligated to make games that cater to all markets. If Rockstar wants to sell to the hyper-masculine-fantasy crowd, whatever. Don't buy it if you don't like it.
                                        I guess my point here is....so what? You've basically said "I don't like it!" Ok. Go ahead and don't like it. You're already voting with your wallet, which is about as much as any individual consumer can do.
                                        But it's not like any of this is some big secret within the gaming industry. For that matter, it's not like any of this is a secret outside of the industry. The GTA franchise is well known to be rife with this stuff. So, all you've done is basically say "Look at the bad stuff in this game!" about which lots of people were already aware.
                                        I'm not saying this isn't worth decrying, but I think it's more important to do that in context, particularly when you're dealing with a game already well-known for its misogyny and ultraviolence. GTA as a franchise is part of a spectrum of gaming that caters to a particular vision of masculinity. It's at a pretty far extreme on that spectrum, but I think the spectrum itself is far more interesting as a subject.
                                        For example, what do games like GTA V, or Wolfenstein, or HALO say about what is masculine or feminine? How do they compare to games like Mass Effect, or Saints Row 3 and 4, or whathaveyou? Is there something about particular genres that skews them in one direction or the other? (setting aside obvious issues like professional sports games, which are single-sex by league) Are certain games "gendered" based on the type of game, or is it more about the content? Are there genres that are uniquely masculine or feminine by design?
                                        This is an interesting topic in a big sector of the economy, but merely saying "The stuff in GTA V sucks!" doesn't exactly break new ground.
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                                          • Samantha Pugsley > D. 3 days ago
                                            You're completely right. There are definitely other topics hiding inside this broader one (many of which I'd love to write about and may in the future). I disagree with you on one thing though. I think we can do more than just vote with our wallets and that is speak up. It may not be super interesting or "breaking new ground" as you mentioned but it's important none the less. I want to introduce this topic to the xoJane community. There are more women gaming or thinking about trying gaming than ever before. I hope they'll click through some of these links, learn about the issues, and then make decisions about how to spend their own money.
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                                              • D. > Samantha Pugsley 2 days ago
                                                In a general sense, I agree with you. For women who are curious about getting into gaming, it's worth knowing what's out there -- warts and all. I guess I just find it hard to believe that anyone could be unaware of the stuff that's in the GTA franchise at this point. They've actively courted controversy (much like the people who made Call of Duty did with that "Kill civilians in an airport raid" level a few years back), likely as a means of ginning up sales, and it's made national news.
                                                I don't begrudge anyone voicing their opinion on this stuff, of course, but I guess I'd just be surprised to learn that women here were ignorant of the general problems with GTA V and its predecessors. Maybe they don't know the specifics (which you did touch on in the piece), but they probably know the general contours of the objectionable content.
                                                The thing is, the gaming industry is changing. Sure, the big AAA titles get a lot of press and support console launches and stuff, but there's a thriving indie-gaming scene, including games driven by kickstarter. Whole genres have come back to life that were thought to be dead in the water (e.g., adventure gaming) in no small part to women entering the gaming market in larger and larger numbers. And none of this even begins to scratch the surface of mobile gaming.
                                                If this is to be the first in a series of articles on the gaming industry as experienced by women, then I'm all for it. As a starting point, it's good. I just hope it isn't the last word on the subject, since there's a ton more to say.
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                                              • EarnhardtsCaprice > D. 2 days ago
                                                I will also add that GTA 2 was actually banned in countries due to it's level of violence which was rare at the time. Amazing because now we would just laugh at it.
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                                                • dmZ 3 days ago
                                                  I don't think it's just GTA, and I don't think it's just women who are sick of the gaming culture. I know many men who have basically given up either on playing or on playing online (unless they are in a private group of people they know), because even adult men don't want to hear some 13 year old yell about how they're going to butt rape everyone.
                                                  I think one of the saddest things is that gaming is an industry that is trying to get elevated to an art form, like film or literature, but the blatant sexism, homophobia, and sheer violence is going to prevent them from reach that goal. It particularly can't reach that point if there isn't free discussion and critique of the games, including feminist critique.
                                                    see more
                                                  • Marissa Caranna 3 days ago
                                                    Don't forget the fact that most female characters who are not prostitutes, strippers, or just generally living scenery are all portrayed as annoying nags who live to bother and control their henpecked boyfriends/husbands (who are usually cheating on them with aforementioned prostitutes, strippers, and general living scenery).
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                                                      • Hellsbells 3 days ago
                                                        In my late teens I decided to stop pouring money in to an industry that did not want me. I've stayed away from sports for a similar reason.
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                                                        • Slamnflwrchild 3 days ago
                                                          Good Lord its a fucking game. If its so inaccessible to women, why do I enjoy it?
                                                          Also the perfume on the billboard is Le Chien. French for dog... so ya know that makes sense
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                                                          • Regina Savage 3 days ago
                                                            I've played GTAV and I don't agree with a lot of what's being said here. While its easy to take the violence, the sexism, the transphobia, etc at face value I really don't think the game's creator's mean for it to be taken that way.
                                                            And since I've actually played the game, I think the world of GTAV is meant to be a parody of our society, not an accurate reflection of it. For instance, the beers in the game are called Pisswasser (Piss Water in German) or Dusche, which might even be a play on "bro" culture. One of the 3 main characters in the game (Trevor) allows you buy and dress him in women's clothing.
                                                            The aforementioned billboard is selling a perfume that is called Le Chien (The Dog), which is obviously not meant to be negative towards women.
                                                            Some of the female characters are portrayed as nags, the games do feature some more interesting characters. GTAIV featured Karen, who dates the player's character because she's an FBI agent looking into illegal activity. There's another character, Kate, who you can take on dates but won't have sex before marriage!
                                                            So this whole article is a whole lot of hyperbole. Yes, there are violent, sexist, misogynist and trans-phobic elements to the game. But there are a lot of fun puns, word play and tongue-in-cheek social commentary that you would obviously have to PLAY THE GAME to understand.
                                                            As for the lack of female characters; you're forgetting that he game follows a story which is based on those characters. And when your main consumer base is young men, they want to be the alpha male because that's what appeals to them. If you play in online mode, you can make your own avatar and make her as feminist as you like.
                                                              see more
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