Electronic Arts VP says women ‘too big an audience to ignore’

Sharon Knight - VP of Europe Online for Electronic Arts - Image 1Electronic Arts, the same micro-transaction advocates who love going multiplatform, also sponsored the recent Women in Games Conference that is being held this April. Electronic Arts’ VP of Europe Online, Sharon Knight, said in that same conference that ignoring the female gaming audience is “a great waste.” And before you get any bright ideas, she’s addressing that to all the game publishers out there, and not you, bub.

Considering Electronic Arts had realized the potential growth of the female gaming bracket last year, this new comment by an EA exec is a big step up from saying that the games industry was “failing women.” But consistent with their views, Knight’s stand on game development was similar to COO David Gardner’s: make games that cater to both men and women.

Now we’ve said it’s all about catering games to gamers, and just not males in general. So it’s fair to say that catering games to women only is also a definite no-no. Creating “pink” games still leaves the concept of female gamers open to stereotyping and that’s not healthy. Knight reiterated Electronic Arts’ stand on the matter:

If you look at how other media forms have tapped into women, for example, you don’t see movies and music being exclusive to men. Women enjoy all forms of entertainment. We [at EA] want to avoid making ‘pink games.’ Women enjoy many of the same features in gameplay as men do. The way EA sees it is there’s a lot of untapped potential out there.

Take for example, The Sims: Sims creator Will Wright never developed The Sims with women in mind. In fact, it was supposed to cater to the “core” of gamers at the time: males. But when it came out, look who ate up all your afternoon gaming pleasure. Women are slowly crawling in to gaming, and not just on the casual side.

EA seems to be advocating that developers should contribute to the growing trend, introducing new ways of getting girl gamers hooked to the concept of gaming. Soon enough, they’ll make great deathmatch opponents, RTS allies, MMO guild mates and a fresh breath of air in gaming-related conversations.

Start making small ripples, and soon enough, all those tiny ripples will make bigger waves. Make enough waves, you brew up a storm. So it’s not a surprise that Nintendo’s broader market crusader, the Wii, gets another special mention. Knight commented:

The Wii levels the playing field. You don’t embarrass yourself–you can grab it and right away start having fun. … [Wii games] don’t require the same investment to learn and to master how to pick up and play [as other consoles’ games].

Via GameSpot

Sharon Knight - VP of Europe Online for Electronic Arts - Image 1Electronic Arts, the same micro-transaction advocates who love going multiplatform, also sponsored the recent Women in Games Conference that is being held this April. Electronic Arts’ VP of Europe Online, Sharon Knight, said in that same conference that ignoring the female gaming audience is “a great waste.” And before you get any bright ideas, she’s addressing that to all the game publishers out there, and not you, bub.

Considering Electronic Arts had realized the potential growth of the female gaming bracket last year, this new comment by an EA exec is a big step up from saying that the games industry was “failing women.” But consistent with their views, Knight’s stand on game development was similar to COO David Gardner’s: make games that cater to both men and women.

Now we’ve said it’s all about catering games to gamers, and just not males in general. So it’s fair to say that catering games to women only is also a definite no-no. Creating “pink” games still leaves the concept of female gamers open to stereotyping and that’s not healthy. Knight reiterated Electronic Arts’ stand on the matter:

If you look at how other media forms have tapped into women, for example, you don’t see movies and music being exclusive to men. Women enjoy all forms of entertainment. We [at EA] want to avoid making ‘pink games.’ Women enjoy many of the same features in gameplay as men do. The way EA sees it is there’s a lot of untapped potential out there.

Take for example, The Sims: Sims creator Will Wright never developed The Sims with women in mind. In fact, it was supposed to cater to the “core” of gamers at the time: males. But when it came out, look who ate up all your afternoon gaming pleasure. Women are slowly crawling in to gaming, and not just on the casual side.

EA seems to be advocating that developers should contribute to the growing trend, introducing new ways of getting girl gamers hooked to the concept of gaming. Soon enough, they’ll make great deathmatch opponents, RTS allies, MMO guild mates and a fresh breath of air in gaming-related conversations.

Start making small ripples, and soon enough, all those tiny ripples will make bigger waves. Make enough waves, you brew up a storm. So it’s not a surprise that Nintendo’s broader market crusader, the Wii, gets another special mention. Knight commented:

The Wii levels the playing field. You don’t embarrass yourself–you can grab it and right away start having fun. … [Wii games] don’t require the same investment to learn and to master how to pick up and play [as other consoles’ games].

Via GameSpot

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