by Steve » Mon Nov 14, 2011 3:52 am
All kidding aside, I believe airsoft in general, and airsofters in specific are why this is a mostly male hobby.
I've had my significant other comment a number of times about the bruises that I've come home with. Generally, visible bruising on women is less socially acceptable than visible bruising on men.
Gear is a significant outlay. It's less of a deal to loan a guy friend gear than it is to lend it to a female friend. See, gear that should be "unisex" really isn't. Men and women are flat-out built differently. Leaving aside the obvious sex-linked characteristics (breasts, genetalia), women carry weight differently. Don't believe me? Try on a men's backpack versus a women's backpack at REI. Us guys tend to do fine with heavy weight up closer to our shoulders, while women tend to do better carrying the weight closer to the hips. What is only sort of uncomfortable to a guy can be downright painful for a female.
As a corrolary to this, guys can bond into a "tribe" mentality fairly easily. I imagine women do this as well, although large groups of women unsettle me, so I don't spend a lot of time researching this. But cross-gender dynamics generally run to sexual liking between male-female pairs rather than non-sexual liking. As the old joke goes, guys tend to have two types of female friends: those they have slept with, and those they have not slept with (yet). So, when a guy and a girl spend time together, there tends to be a modicum of sex-based liking there, regardless of whether either of them intend to act on it. As such, guys tend to try to impress women more than they try to impress men, or at least they try differently. Guys outside of that pair try to impress the woman. And it gets more than a bit ackward, as airsofters in general are not exactly known for being a group that is smoothe with the ladies.
All in all, having guys introduce women into a mostly male group of airsofters tends to be uncomfortable for everyone in attendance.
So, what's the likely solution? More female players. As in, just like it is less difficult for a guy to drag another guy into the hobby, I imagine it would be easier for a female to drag another female with her. Additionally, CQB fields. Most fields have rental gear available, which means that people can try out the hobby without the immediate pressure to buy a ton of gear, or the concern that you are going to frag your buddy's kit. It's a shorter-duration investment to try the hobby out.
I don't ever imagine airsoft drawing large female crowds, however. Gender role stereotypes put shooting other people with plastic pellets pretty squarely in the gender-role male camp.
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