The game world is expanding and the possibilities are endless. Over the years, the game has made great progress by expanding it to many different platforms. Smartphones, tablets, and next generation consoles are just a few of the many possibilities. This expansion has expanded players' demographics and changed the way of playing today. Demographics expanded and the game became more sophisticated, but the game seems to have a regular theme. Whereas ethnic minorities and women are weakened by stereotypes, white men account for the majority of the heroes of video games.
Stereotypes are also common in video games. There, women are drawn as stereotypes like "sexual girls" or sexual objects (see Gender representation of video games). According to the survey, it is known that ethnic minorities are most often drawn as a stereotypical role such as athletes and hooligans (see ethnographic expression of video games).
What is sex stereotype? Gender stereotypes are extensive awareness or generalization of women and men's behavior, traits, and roles. Female stereotypes include the need for emotion, protection and protection. Men's stereotypes include rationality, willingness to career, strength. These assumptions seem to be negative (eg women are irrational, men are not sensitive) or benign (eg women are developing and men are leaders). However, all stereotypes may be limited
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Gender stereotypes are general attributes and prejudices about attributes, characteristics, or women and men should have, or women and men's role to play. Gender stereotypes are harmful because women and men increase their abilities, pursue careers, and limit the ability to choose to live. Gender stereotype means assigning specific attributes, characteristics or roles of individual women or men to others just because they are part of a social group of women or men. The stereotype of gender is illegal in that it causes infringement and infringement of human rights and fundamental freedoms.
6 Extensive gender stereotypes distinguish between the characteristics (eg, warmth, parenting) of a stereotype female community and the characteristics (eg, ability, self-confidence, confidence) of a stereotype male agent. According to social role theory, gender stereotypes are caused by three overlapping factors: housewives and employees, distribution of gender in paid occupation, and high and low roles. Social role theory thinks that perceptors deduce features from the observation of role-constrained behavior, so when groups tend to concentrate on a specific role, they are stereotyped that these roles will follow Accept. As these roles change, the stereotype of gender should also change (Diekman & Eagly, 2000). In the fictional depiction of workers in urban areas and breeders of children, role-based stereotypes imitate the fixed idea of sex and probably streamline sex distribution into social roles (Hoffman & Hurst, 1990). This framework of gender role is similar to ours, but so far it applies only to men and women.
Models of (often mixed) stereotypes: ability and warmth are derived from perceived states and competition, respectively