Apr. 18th, 2016

rynling: (Cecil Harvey)
This morning I came across an interesting and well-argued essay defending Tidus...

http://femhype.com/2015/10/13/tidus-video-games-answer-to-toxic-masculinity/

What bothers me about Tidus, however, is not that he displays emotions, but rather the intense focus that the game places on him. "This is my story," he says at the beginning, but it's not; it's actually Yuna's story. Sure, Tidus is in a difficult situation, and I understand that he's hurt and confused, but so is Yuna. Lulu and Rikku are going through incredible trials of their own; but, like Yuna, we don't get to see their stories from an inside perspective. By placing Tidus and his trauma at the center of the story, the game is mandating that we care about his pain and emotional development more than we care for the female characters. Because the player-protagonist characters of Final Fantasy VII through XII are also male, it's difficult not to view the privileging of Tidus over the female characters as being representative of a broader privileging of the emotions of men over the emotions of women.

Meanwhile, I apparently somehow still care about Final Fantasy X fifteen years after its release.

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