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Sexuality in Role-Playing Games, by Ashley M. L. Brown

Trudy Barber salutes the scholarly insights gained without recourse to her inner hobbit (not a euphemism)

Published on
July 30, 2015
Last updated
July 30, 2015
Review: Sexuality in Role-Playing Games, by Ashley M. L. Brown

It鈥檚 not often that you find descriptions of things such as 鈥淪avage Genitalia鈥, taken from a gaming book鈥檚 list of 鈥渟pecial powers鈥 and involving 鈥渇ourteen-inch barbed penises鈥, in scholarly writing 鈥 but you certainly do in Ashley Brown鈥檚 well-written thesis. In this compact, precise work, she explores the interesting and sometimes libidinous world of erotic role play in table-top games such as Dungeons and Dragons and online gaming such as World of Warcraft.

With a few throws of a (possibly 20-sided) dice, Brown lays out sexy concepts such as the multiple framing of players鈥 roles in 鈥渂ounded space鈥, and introduces the mechanism of 鈥渟eduction checks鈥 and developing affordances of 鈥渆fficient sex鈥 in game play. Perhaps inevitably, the book鈥檚 language is reminiscent at times of Sheldon Cooper鈥檚 in the ever-popular sitcom The Big Bang Theory, with sexuality, play and the notion of 鈥渇un鈥 served up in a style as academically dry as a Rich Tea biscuit; nevertheless, each chapter is carefully honed and succinctly written. There is little in the way of tedious referencing, the appropriate theorists (Michel Foucault, Johan Huizinga, Roger Caillois, Sherry Turkle) are contextualised, and Brown鈥檚 research methodology 鈥 an ethnographic study of online and offline role players鈥 sexual eroticism, conducted through focus groups, interviews and game play 鈥 is well explained, ethically considered and executed.

Brown sees her work as different from 鈥渃ybersex鈥 research, although it might have been productive to explore the key discussions in cybersexology and offer a surer standpoint from which to contrast it with hers. Instead, she takes a more personal approach to the participants in her study, believing that an arm鈥檚-length approach would hinder their responses rather than encouraging them 鈥渢o feel comfortable and not to feel that they would be judged personally when discussing erotic role-play with me鈥. Accordingly, she creates a character for herself, a 鈥淏lood Elf holy priest鈥, and is able to mine some rich qualitative data via her own sexual in-game role play experiences. But in adopting such a character as a way to gain confidential responses from participants, she finds herself confronting the classic researcher鈥檚 dilemma about the pitfalls of becoming part of your own research.

There appears to be a slight sexual naivety on Brown鈥檚 part that surfaces during more personal descriptions 鈥 and a fairly ageist view of sexual activity through role play and play-as-sex generally. For example, 鈥渟pin the bottle鈥 was very popular in the 1970s among mature swinging couples (along with strip poker and naked Twister), rather than merely a game played by experimenting adolescents, as Brown suggests. More generally, though, we see her working hard to grapple with the problems that intimate sexual baggage brings to both online and offline discussions. She develops strong assessment, reflection and interpretation skills to qualify her arguments, and weighs the shortcomings of taking a binary approach to online and offline research.

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On being invited to review this work, I fleetingly envisaged myself needing to sit outside a hobbit hole, reading about stereotypical geeks, wearing a hessian kirtle, pointy ears and big hairy feet in order to really get to grips with it. Fortunately, this wasn鈥檛 necessary. I am happy to say that this is an exemplary piece of academic work that is beautifully structured and makes a valuable contribution to the interpretation, exploration and future development of games studies.

Trudy Barber is senior lecturer and course leader for media studies and entertainment technology, University of Portsmouth.

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Sexuality in Role-Playing Games
By Ashley M. L. Brown
Routledge, 156pp, 拢85.00
ISBN 9781138812550
Published 10 March 2015

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