Glasgow Uni Study Shows Gender Bias In Video Game Dialogue

Glasgow Uni Study Shows Gender Bias In Video Game Dialogue

Researchers have found a significant gender bias within video game dialogue after carrying out the largest-ever study of in-game dialogue, published today.

The research, published in the journal Royal Society Open Science, analyzed more than 13,000 video game characters and found that in games, men speak twice as much as women.

The study, led by Dr. Stephanie Rennick at the University of Glasgow and Dr. Seán G. Roberts at Cardiff University, performed the first large-scale test of gender imbalance in the dialogue of 50 role-playing video games (RPGs).

It discovered that, on average, games include twice as much male dialogue as female dialogue. Of the games studied, 94% had more male dialogue than female dialogue, including games with multiple female protagonists like Final Fantasy X-2 or King’s Quest VII.

gender bias within video game dialogue
More Than A Decade To Catch Up

However, the bias isn’t just with protagonists—the same imbalances were found in minor characters and persists even when taking into account player choices about protagonist gender and optional dialogue. The study also found the proportion of female dialogue is slowly increasing. If this trend were to continue, it would still take more than a decade to reach parity. Furthermore, there were few characters in non-binary gender categories: only 30 out of 13,000, or about half as much as in real life.

Dr. Rennick, a Research Associate in Philosophy, at the School of Humanities at the University of Glasgow, said:

While we expected to find a larger proportion of male dialogue overall, we were surprised to discover how few games—just three of 50—had more than 50% female dialogue. Players seem to share our surprise: when surveyed, they anticipated the general pattern of more male dialogue, but overestimated the number of games where women spoke the majority of the time.

Bechdel Test

The study also found imbalances in who characters speak to. Male characters tend to talk to other male characters, but women talk to other women less than expected by chance, even factoring in the number of lines and female characters. This is similar to the pattern seen in many films that fail to pass the Bechdel test.

The study suggests that the imbalance in dialogue is partly caused by the imbalance in the number of characters. Researchers suggest that the simplest way for gam developers to address the imbalance is to add more major and minor female characters. However, the researchers warn that more dialogue doesn’t guarantee better gender representation. There can also be bias in the content of dialogue, not just who speaks it. For example, female characters are more likely to apologise, hesitate or be polite, perpetuating stereotypes about gendered behavior.

“Around half of gamers are female, but they experience a lot of abuse and exclusion. More diverse representation is being called for by players and developers. So we hope that developers will consider addressing the imbalances we found in order to create more inclusive games.

Dr. Roberts, Lecturer at the School of English, Communication and Philosophy at Cardiff University
Making Games More Inclusive

The study’s resources are open-source, and the team hopes to work with programmers and gamers to expand the study to discover ways of making games more inclusive.

You can find and download the gender bias within video game dialogue study directly from the Royal Society.

Photo by Ke Vin on Unsplash

gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue
gender bias within video game dialogue

gender bias within video game dialogue

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