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Meet Super Dad. His name is Mike Hoye. By day he is a tech entrepreneur in Toronto. By?night (and, well, sometimes during the day too) he is a video?game-hacking Super Dad who transforms famed game heroes into game heroines ... all for the sake of his young?daughter.
Hoye has been playing the beloved video?game?"Legend of Zelda: The?Wind Waker" with his daughter Maya. She is three-and-half years old (or as she likes to say, "fweee"). And?"Wind Waker" is currently her favorite game.
But if you're not familiar with the "Legend of Zelda" games or "Wind Waker," then know this: The?protagonist?in this grand?action-adventure is Link. And Link?is a boy.?Except when he isn't???which is when he's in Hoye's house.
You see, Hoye has hacked the famed Nintendo game and given Link ...?well ...?a sex change.?
"What inspired me to actually do it was when Maya started to identify the kid on the screen as herself, and started?putting herself in that role," he explained during a chat via email.?
Hoye has been playing video games for most of his life. But these days gaming is?something he and his daughter can do together. Though the controllers are still a bit big for Maya's?hands, "She's been sitting next to me and telling me where to go exploring next since she was about two years old,"?Hoye?says.
For Maya,?"Wind Waker" is "a gorgeous playable cartoon on the big screen," he explains. In the game,?Link sets out on a grand adventure to save his little sister who has been kidnapped. But much of the game's?story and the dialog plays out as text on the screen. And so,?knowing how much Maya loves to imagine herself as the hero,?Hoye had been feminizing all the?references to Link as he read the text to her.
But trying to do that on the fly was no easy task.?And so Super Dad got an idea: He would hack the game and?modify its?code so that Link is always referred to as a girl.
"He" is now "she." "My lad" is now "milady." And as you can see from the screenshot above, "boy" is?now "girl."
"I'm not having my daughter growing up thinking girls don?t get to be the hero and rescue their little brothers," Hoye explains on his blog?here, where he has described exactly how he changed the game?and offered his patch for free?so other Super Parents can change "Wind Waker" if they like.
Hoye?says it took?"about three solid days of work, spread an hour or two at a time over the last few weeks" to change Link to a girl for his own girl.?And yes,?Maya is only just now learning to read and so perhaps she can't yet fully use or appreciate what a wonderful gift her father has given her.
More importantly, what Hoye has done is addressed, in his own way, a much larger issue in gaming: the lack of strong female characters, not to mention the treatment of women gamers (see InGame editor?Todd Kenreck's video on that below).
"That women get treated terribly by every part of the gaming industry???as protagonists, in games' storylines, in gamer culture in general???is beyond debate, and completely inexcusable," he says. "I wanted to change this game for my own reasons, to make my daughter happy. But there's a much larger point to be addressed here, and I think we're at a watershed moment in the community where this sort of behavior is getting called out for what it is."
Indeed, as a long-time gamer,?he says having a daughter of his?own has?made him look at his favorite hobby (and many other things)?differently.
"It changes the way you look at the whole world," he says. "But yes, I feel like I need to pay special attention to the things she and I do together. Dad's favorite pastimes, whatever they are, shouldn't treat women like second-class citizens."
With his own daughter entering the world of gaming,?I asked him how he'd like to see the industry and the hobby?change. In response, he pointed to?BioWare's decision to let gamers choose to be either a male or female version of the Commander Shepherd protagonist?in the "Mass Effect" games???a powerful?character who is treated no differently whether played as a man or a woman.
"In the most general sense, I'd like gamers to have the choice to be whoever they want, and to have that choice treated with respect, whatever it is," he says.
Winda Benedetti?writes?about video?games for NBC?News. You can follow her tweets about games and other things?on Twitter?here?@WindaBenedetti?and you can?follow her?on?Google+.?Meanwhile, be sure to check?out the?IN-GAME?FACEBOOK PAGE?to discuss the day's?gaming news and reviews.
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