Media

Product Placement: Creating Women Gamers

Stock quotes in this article:ERTS, VIA, MSFT 

BOSTON (TheStreet) -- According to the folks behind NPD Group's incredibly necessary Gaming Segmentation 2009 report, the percentage of girls and women playing console video games has risen 5% since last year.

That must come as an incredible relief to my sister, who has played console games since using the pause function on my Nintendo(NTDOY) Entertainment System as a psyche-out strategy during games of Super Mario Brothers and Blades of Steel. It must further comfort the dozens of women who joined me at Viacom(VIA)-owned Harmonix's game-testing sessions for Rock Band. It must justify the very existence of PlayFirst Games Chief Executive Mari Baker, whose female user base for habit-forming games like Diner Dash and Chocolatier so desperately needed validation from women, which NPD Group says make up 28% of console users.

PopCap, which produces the Plants vs. Zombies game, has a 65% female audience.

"Historically, there's been this view that girls don't use computers, and women don't play games," Baker says. "Women are just not as interested in blowing things up and seeing blood spatter all over the screen."

While there certainly are women who enjoy destroying a boomer zombie in Left 4 Dead as much as the next person, female gamers rarely fit into the stereotype of the doughy, caffeine-quaffing, online Call of Duty-playing fanboy whose Microsoft(MSFT) Xbox 360 is near meltdown. With female gamers making up 40% of the entire gaming community, according to an Entertainment Software Association study conducted this year, female gamers are becoming increasingly difficult to stereotype.

First off, who says consoles are the best way to gauge female gamers? While NPD Group makes a valid point about the Nintendo Wii and games like Wii Sports (and the upcoming Wii Sports Resort), Wii Fit, EA Active and Ubisoft's(UBI) Rayman series drawing a broader audience to consoles, the demographic turns when you go online. The PlayFirst gamers that made Diner Dash's harried waitress Flo the Mario of "casual gaming" are nearly 70% women, with a median age of 37.

TheStreet Premium Services

Jim Cramer
Jim Cramer's Action Alerts PLUS:
Trade right alongside a Wall Street pro — enjoy access to his Charitable Trust portfolio and be sent trade alerts BEFORE he makes a move. Learn More
OptionsProfits
OptionsProfits:
Get 50+ trade ideas a week from the industry's top options experts. Plus — exclusive commentary on market trends and essential trading tools. Learn More
Real Money
Real Money:
Our team of professional Wall Street Pros — including Jim Cramer, Doug Kass, and Nicholas Vardy — delivers intelligent analysis, timely trade ideas, and colorful commentary. Learn More
Stocks Under $10
Stocks Under $10:
Break into the market with small- and mid-cap stocks... all $10 or less! David Peltier tells you exactly which low-priced stocks he's buying and selling. Learn More
To begin commenting right away, you can log in below using your Disqus, Facebook, Twitter, OpenID or Yahoo login credentials. Alternatively, you can post a comment as a "guest" just by entering an email address. Your use of the commenting tool is subject to multiple terms of service/use and privacy policies - see here for more details.
blog comments powered by Disqus
Dow Jones S&P 500 NASDAQ 10-Year Note
12,393.45 1,310.33 2,827.34 15.81
Oil *
101.78
DOWN
26.41
DOWN
2.99
DOWN
10.02
DOWN
0.44
10 Yr
1.58%
SPDR Gold
151.62
-0.21%
-0.23%
-0.35%
-2.71%
Data delayed 20 minutes

Top Stories and Tools

Articles From

After the Bell

Before the Bell

Booyah! Newsletter

Midday Bell

TheStreet Top 10 Stories

Winners & Losers

We respect your privacy.
Podcasts

Connect with TheStreet