Faith McCarron, on 14 May 2015 - 03:42 AM, said:
What about Heavy Metal pilot Rhonda Snord? I haven't looked majorly into it, and while she's a father's daughter the father does die and she goes on to lead the merc unit herself.
http://www.sarna.net/wiki/Rhonda_Snord
The strong-types I typically see, sadly, aren't big in 'history' but little footnotes.
In the 80's there was a lot of butch women popular across the Japanese animes that heavily influenced Battletech. Then in the 90s the whole 'badass' woman thing fell apart, with few hints to them such as this art.
But after that... well, I hate to say it but some feminist movements came about, and depicting women as badasses or with masculine traits was "sexist" and vulgar. Unfortunately this had some truth to it, because said badass women were also given very shapely bodies especially toward the late 90s and early 2000s (not in Battletech per sé but in general, scaring people off from making attempts. See Lara Croft-esque oversexualization of strong characters).
There was a youtube video in which a heavy gender biased was shown not for the physical but for the mental, where villians are often given feminine traits despite being male, and heroines are given many masculine traits despite being female... inherently implying that imposed feminine traits are 'evil'. Something that many aren't even necessarily aware of when they see it, as said feminine traits simply denote 'arrogance,' 'self-importance', 'me over you', 'beauty over all else', the list goes on and on. I really wish I knew where it was but it's been a long time since I've seen it. Put a lot of perspective on things.
An interesting example of defeating the feminine traits are evil stereotype also comes from anime. In Bleach, there's
a character who is obsessed with beauty but is not evil; though anyone watching it would assume the character to be gay despite the character's sexuality being completely unknown throughout.
In Valkyria Chronicles (the game, not sure about the anime), there's equality issues explored to great length, to the extent that there's a
misogynist and a man-hater... and most entertaining is forcing the two to work together. The woman's
man-hating trait (despite her appearance, she's in her late 20s; the game had a weird way of showing age) is known from the get-go (she's into girls and comments things like "It's our own secret garden" when accompanied by other women and "Ew, boys!" when near males not to mention pasted right on her traits at the start) while the man's misogynist (woman-hating) trait is vastly hidden (he's a loner that seems to have with issues about women) until you surround him with women (discovered entirely by accident; evidently "women get in the way"). I forced the two behind the commander character's tank. Him, being a lancer (anti-tank) to support the tank in its anti-tank operations. And her, an engineer, to fix the tank and keep the lancer reloaded. The character barks (voice quips/phrases/dialogue) that came up as their traits conflicted with each other was actually comical. Solving their issues isn't actually possible, but they did work together and while the distractions impaired their abilities they were able to get the job done. Beyond this, however, VC also had 'good' characters on the 'bad' side, 'bad' characters on the 'good' side, and the most evil person of all was actually an allied ambassador for the Federation, while the 'evil Empire' right down to the leading prince
Maximillion, despite his ruthlessness was also a great advocate of ignoring social rank and giving opportunities to all who showed potential. Noble intentions, interesting though not necessarily evil methods, unfortunate results. The strong heroines and
villianess (who is a hero to her own side and is in no way evil) are given somewhat badass traits without losing the fact that they are women. Though of the most interesting note, the main character
Welkin Gunther, was given a small number of subtle feminine traits to his personality which has actually made him more interesting because of them, breaking a lot of common Japanese and Western molds for "heroes."
I'm afraid that unfortunately, it is unlikely to find a truly strong Battletech woman as the franchise wasn't really marketed to them. Rhonda Snord seems like the bet I'd place though if one does exist.
Though I highly think it should be marketed to women as well for the number of BT / Mechwarrior fans on the female side is surprisingly high (of 40 or so BT fans I know, 17 are women; 4 of them you'd never even think it'd interest them). A woman I've known online for 15 years recently told me she liked tanks. "What about tanks on legs?" "Battletech, Front Mission or Heavy Gear?" "O_O"
Edited by Koniving, 16 May 2015 - 03:45 PM.