🐱 Asexual gamers explain why representation in games is so vitally important: ‘I’m not broken for once’

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“I’m not much interested in… physical stuff,” says Parvati. Ed’s face slowly widens into a grin as the realisation hits him. He points at the flag behind him. This is what asexual representation looks like.​

“When I figured out that [Parvati] was [ace], it was like getting a surprise birthday party for me,” says Twitch streamer CauseImEd. “It felt like there was somebody there that was there specifically for me”.

Ed was playing Obsidian’s space RPG The Outer Worlds and while he knew the game included ace representation, he didn’t know how. It wasn’t until the character Parvati revealed it in-game that the penny dropped for Ed, a moment captured in a clip and shared on Twitter.

Parvati is a rare example of asexuality in video games. It’s an identity in the LGBT+ community that’s rarely explored – Parvati was the first asexual character Ed had seen in a game. That’s why she had such a profound impact on him.

“Ace representation is something that I kind of expected to be on the back burner when it came to queer rep,” says Ed. “ I always thought [it] would just be in the background, and we never were really going to have that discussion for maybe a few decades.”

So what is asexuality?​

Asexuality, shortened to ace, is – like many queer identities – a spectrum. In essence, asexuality is not experiencing sexual attraction to people of any gender. But there’s a spectrum of being sex indifferent and sex repulsed. And that can change depending on the sexual act, whether feelings are reciprocated, or it could change over time.

Yet with asexuality so under-represented across media, it’s frequently misunderstood – especially when media as a whole is so often sexualised. Ed, for instance, only came out as ace earlier this year.

“I always knew what I was, but I didn’t know the word for it,” he says. Instead he had the feeling “that you’re different to everyone, you’re broken, you’re not right, there’s something wrong with you because [sex] is such a big part of life and society and everything that if you are not a part of this, then you’re obviously not right.

“When I actually started meeting ace people and understanding and really learning more about myself, it was like everything clicked in place and finally made me feel that I’m not broken for once.”

MoniDoesStuff, one half of the Geek HerringTwitch account, feels similarly.

“I didn’t even really know asexuality existed until 2020 so by the time I came out as ace, I was 36,” she says. “When I grew up there was zero representation, no mention of asexuality anywhere and as a teenager you mimic what others do, and think that’s how it’s supposed to be and just hope at some point your body and your mind will catch up.”

It was only through extensive personal research that she discovered she was asexual. Had the games she played included ace representation, it may have planted a seed earlier on. Instead, representation is a rare occurrence.

As she says: “When you have no ingredients, you can’t bake the cake that you want but instead have to go with what everyone else is telling you, which is why it is so important to equip people with the perfect set of ingredients so they can bake theirfavourite cake.”

More representation, in gaming and other media, would allow ace people to identify and feel comfortable in their sexuality much earlier.

As Twitch streamer and Rainbow Arcade member Dubu says: “Sex and romance are such huge factors in everything from films to games, so having asexual representation that we can connect to is so validating and exciting to see.

“It needs to be accurate and not seen as an obstacle or ‘illness’, but something that is normal and valid.”

Yet asexuality is certainly misunderstood in gaming. Take a game like Mass Effect, for instance, a game that’s lauded for its romance options. Surely if you’re asexual you can just choose to not partake in those relationships, right?

“Being ace isn’t just choosing not to be [sexual],” says Ed. “It’s not even having that kind of option to just be like, ‘no’”.

And in Mass Effect, saying no is surprisingly difficult. “I did try quite literally doing nobody. I think I accidentally bedded two people,” jokes Ed. “I tried playing Renegade and being the biggest piece of sh*t I could, and I think I bedded the reporter.

“As funny as it is, it’s quite a good metaphor for [asexuality] because for a lot of people sadly the whole ‘no means no’ thing is very misunderstood. A lot of people just don’t quite register [being ace], they think it’s an excuse or maybe you just haven’t met the right person.”

Parvati as asexual representation​

Parvati is a good example of asexual representation because she’s so honest. The first companion you meet in The Outer Worlds, she’s naturally restless and easy to warm to.

But as she opens up about her potential relationship with another woman in the game, her anxiety about sex is revealed. As much as she yearns for Junlei the engineer, she gradually voices concern to the player about how her lack of interest in “physical stuff” might be perceived.

It’s even entirely possible to miss these nods to Parvati’s sexuality, should you choose to opt out of certain conversations with her.

For Ed, what struck a chord was how anxious Parvati was in opening up and how she discussed past relationships. “Even people that she thought loved her when it came down to it, if she couldn’t provide the thing that she assumed was such a vital part, then they didn’t actually want to be with her. And that really hit home,” says Ed.

This isn’t asexual representation as just ‘no sex’. This is a character who’s open and honest about her specific identity. For ace people, it’s incredibly powerful and validating.

One downside, though, is that Parvati never describes herself using the term “asexual”. Perhaps this is intentional, reflecting Parvati’s own uncertainty. But for Ed it was a small disappointment.

“I loved everything about her, but if she’d actually said the word then anybody who may have still been questioning who played the game could go and look it up and learn,” says Ed.

What asexual representation is out there?​

Parvati aside, there is very little asexual representation in gaming.

“The first time I saw any was in the game Arcade Spirits, one of my favourite games, where there are routes with aromantic/asexual representation,” says Dubu. “They give you the option to choose if you are interested in dating or not and seeing that option made me so incredibly happy.”

They also recommend Ace in Space, a narrative game about an asexual character who experiences romantic attraction with a robot. Moni is also keen to play this, as well as experience Parvati in The Outer Worlds herself.

“I don’t know if it’s even for me but the representation alone makes me want to dive into it,” she says.

So, if there’s so little asexual representation out there, what would good representation look like?

“I would love for games to show the entire spectrum of sex-positive, sex-neutral, and sex-repulsed asexuals in games,” says Moni. “Being asexual doesn’t mean you can’t be filthy, or you never have a conversation about sex ever, or that everything about sex makes you uncomfortable. There’s more about us than just not having sex, so I’d love for video games to explore that.”


Dubu is also keen to see a diverse range of identities. “I would love to see more diverse representation of other asexual umbrella identities, and more acespec routes in visual novel games, where you don’t have to date one of the options, but can choose to stay friends,” they say.

“For me, I often dislike when there’s anything inherently romantic/sexual, so being able to play games where I can just have a good time going through the story would be amazing.”

Ed suggests a potential narrative. “I would really love a character that you actually see go through the same experiences that I and other people did where they’re growing up in a society that’s very sex forward and they try to go along with it, but find that they can’t, and they struggle,” he says.

“The good rep would be somebody who goes through the experience, grows up, and learns about it having gone through the experiences, which shows what people really go through and struggle with and why these people are repressed in their own way.”

Tackling this kind of narrative is certainly uncharted territory for gaming. But the possibilities of interactive storytelling lend themselves to exploring a diverse spectrum of identities. Asexuality deserves to be one of them.
 
“The first time I saw any was in the game Arcade Spirits, one of my favourite games, where there are routes with aromantic/asexual representation,” says Dubu. “They give you the option to choose if you are interested in dating or not and seeing that option made me so incredibly happy.”
Was this fuck born on a schizo ass? I never played a game that had forced romances.
They also recommend Ace in Space, a narrative game about an asexual character who experiences romantic attraction with a robot. Moni is also keen to play this, as well as experience Parvati in The Outer Worlds herself.
Still recommending shit with romance. Lmao.
 
There are way more games without anything explicitly sex related than there are games where sex is unavoidable. Well, most games in the "no sex at all" category are made for children, but this isn’t a problem since most genderspecials are into children’s media anyway.

Anyway, this made me chuckle:
more acespec routes in visual novel games
Friendo, the main appeal and goal of visual novels is to date and fuck the girl/guy you find the most bangable. That’s literally why the majority of those games exists in the first place.
 
Persona 3, if you wanted to complete any of the opposite-sex social links.

...but that's literally the only example I can think of.
Been years since I've played persona 3, but I recall that even if you complete the social links with girls, the relationship never goes beyond friendship, and I think only Yukari actually says she has romantic feelings for the protagonist (maybe Mitsuru as well, but I honestly can't be bothered to look).

And from what I've read, in Persona 5 you can chose if you wanna a girlfriend or not.

Also, big press X on the Mass Effect thing, if you don't want to pursue a relationship with anybody, you just don't, they are side quests basically, either this person is lying or doesn't know how to read the obvious dialogue trees.

“For me, I often dislike when there’s anything inherently romantic/sexual, so being able to play games where I can just have a good time going through the story would be amazing.”

Tons of games are like that, you can't possibly be serious about you complain when even most games don't feature relationships, unless you are bothered that princess Peach bakes cakes for Mario.

Ed suggests a potential narrative. “I would really love a character that you actually see go through the same experiences that I and other people did where they’re growing up in a society that’s very sex forward and they try to go along with it, but find that they can’t, and they struggle,” he says.

Would you like a foot massage and some refreshments while we are at it? If you wanna a story about your life, write it yourself, no one else cares. this minority struggle representation isn't fun without compeling characters or story, and if you don't have the talent to deliver either, then you don't get to bellyache about people who DO have the talent but want to tell other stories that they like more.

And representation of the "aces" do exist:


Except, you know, its a shitty dating sim with third rate deviant art presentation. If representation by itself was the goal, the article would be about this game alone, and not this whining about lack of representation when you champion a effort for great reconition.

But representation ain't the goal, they want validation by being special, and validation being a big fanfare popular game, and that ain't happening because no one gives a shit if you don't want to fuck. it isn't that hard to avoid sex you know, incels do that effortlessly.

Because when I play my vidya, I don't need Teedus to yell at Yuna "I am romantically attracted to you, but sex is icky!"

Actual sex seldomly comes up at all in video game narratives, unless its actual porn.

The only game I ever recall, aside from Wrpgs like Mass effect, Witcher and Dragon age, with actual sex display is Xenogears, and it is just a next morning scene with one character in the bed and the other ready to leave.

The vast majority of the narrative driven games in Japan (at least the mainstream ones) are targeted at kid and young teens, and most you get is some innuendo and very seldom you get a kiss.

I mean, shit, you mentioned Tidus and yuna from FFX, and from memory, I think they are the only protags from the entire series that actually had a kissing scene.

No, wait, FFIX had a kiss at the end as well, shit, I guess "CauseImEd" won't be able to play it as well... bummer.
 
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Was this fuck born on a schizo ass? I never played a game that had forced romances.

Still recommending shit with romance. Lmao.

I think he wants a game where you can just friendzone everyone then call yourselves an ace couple.

Ace locking a romance option in an AAA game will just annoy the fuck out of everyone else. People already get annoyed when someone is gay or straight locked.

Been years since I've played persona 3, but I recall that even if you complete the social links with girls, the relationship never goes beyond friendship, and I think only Yukari actually says she has romantic feelings for the protagonist (maybe Mitsuru as well, but I honestly can't be bothered to look).

And from what I've read, in Persona 5 you can chose if you wanna a girlfriend or not.

Also, big press X on the Mass Effect thing, if you don't want to pursue a relationship with anybody, you just don't, they are side quests basically, either this person is lying or doesn't know how to read the obvious dialogue trees.



Tons of games are like that, you can't possibly be serious about you complain when even most games don't feature relationships, unless you are bothered that princess Peach bakes cakes for Mario.



Would you like a foot massage and some refreshments while we are at it? If you wanna a story about your life, write it yourself, no one else cares. this minority struggle representation isn't fun without compeling characters or story, and if you don't have the talent to deliver either, then you don't get to bellyache about people who DO have the talent but want to tell other stories that they like more.

And representation of the "aces" do exist:


Except, you know, its a shitty dating sim with third rate deviant art presentation. If representation by itself was the goal, the article would be about this game alone, and not this whining about lack of representation when you champion a effort for great reconition.

But representation ain't the goal, they want validation by being special, and validation being a big fanfare popular game, and that ain't happening because no one gives a shit if you don't want to fuck. it isn't that hard to avoid sex you know, incels do that effortlessly.



The only game I ever recall, aside from Wrpgs like Mass effect, Witcher and Dragon age, with actual sex display is Xenogears, and it is just a next morning scene with one character in the bed and the other ready to leave.

The vast majority of the narrative driven games in Japan (at least the mainstream ones) are targeted at kid and young teens, and most you get is some innuendo and very seldom you get a kiss.

I mean, shit, you mentioned Tidus and yuna from FFX, and from memory, I think they are the only protags from the entire series that actually had a kissing scene.

No, wait, FFIX had a kiss at the end as well, shit, I guess "CauseImEd" won't be able to play it as well... bummer.

In Wild Arms 2 I think there's a scene that fades to black and is basically the night Ashley's twins are conceived.

But I haven't played many games outside of some dating sims where sex was included. But a ton of games have main characters paired with each other or NPCs because it's popular and relatable. People like to root for the couple to be happily ever after when the big bad is defeated.

Does The Sims have any ace options? I've only had romances. But given how woke the game is now I can't imagine they'd leave the aces hanging.
 
Representation in media shouldn't ever be a concern of yours, because you should have a strong enough sense of self to exist entirely independently of any media you consume. Anyone who calls for representation of some otherwise unrelated characteristic (ie. Why it's important that one of my paladins fighting satan is acehet) is probably a shallow loser doing narcissistic projection.
 
But I haven't played many games outside of some dating sims where sex was included. But a ton of games have main characters paired with each other or NPCs because it's popular and relatable. People like to root for the couple to be happily ever after when the big bad is defeated.

Does The Sims have any ace options? I've only had romances. But given how woke the game is now I can't imagine they'd leave the aces hanging.

Well, in a setting of a action/adventure story, romance are usually used as a boon for the story, a extra motivation for the protagonists, or even a reward for their struggles and a promisse of a happily ever after.

Thta is why in these sort of stories you don't see the character actually engaging in a relationship, as in, they become a couple and behave as one, but mostly stay in that limbo of "will they, won't they" to keep the audience invested.

Stories about couples romances are usually about their relationship being rocky, each having trouble to communicate, jealousy, you know the drill. And in a videogame setting that wouldn't work very well, because it is hard to mesh the woes of a relationship with the world ending cataclysm that the heroes need to stop, you know, priorities.

And it isn't like they havent tried to make a game about being a couple, like last year's Haven:

capsule_616x353.jpg


It is about a couple that flees their planet to escape a authoritarian goverment, and crash lands in a hostile savage planet and now need to survive.

The whole concept pitch for this game was about showing a mature depiction of a relationship, and so you explore the panet and do chores like any other couple, and they get along fine, and you know, they spend time togheter in their love "haven"

2cka6cpd5KxSvunMaTHJLN.jpg


Also, it is fucking BORING. Gameplay is the biggest ofender, but this whole depction of a relationship, while cute and all, it gets real boring real fast because , well, I know what is like to wash dishes with my girlfriend... it is just washing dishes.

Having a companion that you love is great and all, but it doesn't make it great entretainment, and the story is so commited in showing a "mature relationship" that it forgets that mature also means mundane, the highs and lows of love is for teenagers, the juvenile are the ones that think they are the first ones to ever be in love, or having their hearts broken, but a "normal relationship" is just that, normal.

Either way, I gave up on Haven a few hours in and never came back. I would give it some break over being very, VERY low budget, but a lot of the dullness of the game came from design, not the lack of cash.
 
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I mean, most games don't have sexual themes at all. Wouldn't every character in all those games be asexual?
I used to think like that.

Then gays said they had to explicitly make everyone gay because people who aren't spoken for are de facto straight. Unconfirmed/nonsexual can't possibly be asexual.

Those asexuals were erased by gays, and yet they're still retarded enough to be part of the glbtqqiap* that erased them.

Literally retarded.
 
Been years since I've played persona 3, but I recall that even if you complete the social links with girls, the relationship never goes beyond friendship, and I think only Yukari actually says she has romantic feelings for the protagonist (maybe Mitsuru as well, but I honestly can't be bothered to look).

And from what I've read, in Persona 5 you can chose if you wanna a girlfriend or not.

Also, big press X on the Mass Effect thing, if you don't want to pursue a relationship with anybody, you just don't, they are side quests basically, either this person is lying or doesn't know how to read the obvious dialogue trees.



Tons of games are like that, you can't possibly be serious about you complain when even most games don't feature relationships, unless you are bothered that princess Peach bakes cakes for Mario.



Would you like a foot massage and some refreshments while we are at it? If you wanna a story about your life, write it yourself, no one else cares. this minority struggle representation isn't fun without compeling characters or story, and if you don't have the talent to deliver either, then you don't get to bellyache about people who DO have the talent but want to tell other stories that they like more.

And representation of the "aces" do exist:


Except, you know, its a shitty dating sim with third rate deviant art presentation. If representation by itself was the goal, the article would be about this game alone, and not this whining about lack of representation when you champion a effort for great reconition.

But representation ain't the goal, they want validation by being special, and validation being a big fanfare popular game, and that ain't happening because no one gives a shit if you don't want to fuck. it isn't that hard to avoid sex you know, incels do that effortlessly.



The only game I ever recall, aside from Wrpgs like Mass effect, Witcher and Dragon age, with actual sex display is Xenogears, and it is just a next morning scene with one character in the bed and the other ready to leave.

The vast majority of the narrative driven games in Japan (at least the mainstream ones) are targeted at kid and young teens, and most you get is some innuendo and very seldom you get a kiss.

I mean, shit, you mentioned Tidus and yuna from FFX, and from memory, I think they are the only protags from the entire series that actually had a kissing scene.

No, wait, FFIX had a kiss at the end as well, shit, I guess "CauseImEd" won't be able to play it as well... bummer.

Cecil and Rosa kiss when she's cured of her fever in FF4 as well. In the sequel to FF4 Edge and Rydia have kids, and so do Cecil and Rosa. Oh hey. They have their asexual character in that game. Kain. Although when he was a villain he might have been banging the air elemental boss. She looked down to fuck and got mad when he got his memory back.
 
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