Here’s what I learned about Poison:
Poison’s first appearance in Final Fight featured her and a palette swap character named Roxy as recurring minor enemies for the player to fight… According to the book All About Capcom Head to Head Fighting Games, the characters were originally planned to be female, but were changed to male transvestites (or more specifically newhalfs) due to the suggestion that “hitting women was considered rude” in America and the concern that feminist groups would sue.Let’s take a moment to digest this fact — which, given that it came from Wikipedia, could potentially be an untrue fact. Some employee at a Japanese video game company thought that an effective way to skirt — ha! — the issue of the American reluctance to wale on women would be to simply say that the things that look like women are actually effeminate men who had surgery to become women. This is an example of cross-cultural communication breaks down.
Assumptions and presumptions — some made by me, some made by them:
- Americans have a problem hitting women, but people in Japan apparently don’t. (My assumption.)
- The problem lies not in the fact that hitting women is immoral but simply rude. (Their assumption.)
- Hitting transsexuals, however, is fine. (Theirs.)
- Americans — as of 1989, when Final Fight hit arcades — either are fine with transsexuals or are fine with them in a context where hitting them is appropriate. (Theirs.)
- There is nothing strange or wrong about taking a given work — in this case, a video game — and making the only prominent female character a transsexual. (Theirs.)
- American feminist groups would bother to sue over a game in which a male character was allowed to strike a female character, even if that female character was villainous and part of a street gang. (Theirs.)
- Perceived American hang-ups about hitting women were apparently ignored by Capcom staff by 1991, when the company released Street Fighter II, which featured female fighter Chun-Li. (Mine.)
- Japanese people have radically different attitudes towards women and transsexuals. (Mine.)
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Apparently Capcom didn't bother to research other company's games, since Americans had been beating up Linda with abandon in Technos' Double Dragon since 1987.
ReplyDeleteThat's a good point. Perhaps Capcom was more concerned about seeming "rude"?
ReplyDeleteVery interesting. Of course it's okay to hit someone different! Ugh!
ReplyDeleteWhoa. Ok, now that's hilarious. In a way, I'm glad this game is so unintentionally not PC. If anything, this little mistake should be hailed as a shining beacon of hope for open dialog.
ReplyDeleteWith that said, my opinion of Capcom's marketing and legal team just dropped about 10 notches.
hi
ReplyDeletebye
ReplyDeleteyeah
ReplyDeleteAs a matter of fact, yes, Japan DOES have VERY different views of women and transexuals. Women are typically seen as inferior to men and transexuals are something to be laughed at.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous: I hope you're kidding. Americans are hardly more enlightened about these matters.
ReplyDeletemaybe don't use slurs so freely?
ReplyDelete