Well, folks, itâs happened. The gaming industry has finally hit the point where your camera can be shamed for bad behavior. Stellar Bladeâs latest patch, Update 1.009, has gamers clutching their metaphorical pearls (or controllers) as a groundbreaking new feature punishes players for trying to get a little too close to the gameâs protagonist, Eve. Gone are the days of carefree virtual ogling â welcome to 2024, where even cameras need consent. đ
LOL Eve kicks the camera now when you try some freak shit pic.twitter.com/0aOPFL2ClM
— zombieâŧī¸ (@unlockedzombie) November 19, 2024
The controversial update introduces a mechanic where, if players attempt to sneak a peek under Eveâs skirt, the camera is violently pushed away by the character herself, accompanied by a dramatic screen shake. For those hoping this was just a quirky bug â nope. Developers have confirmed that itâs intentional. According to sources, this mechanic was ÂĢinspiredÂģ by a similar feature in Nier : Replicant, where Kaine would kick the camera away if players got too nosy. Nostalgic homage or creative plagiarism? The internet is debating â but letâs face it, nobodyâs debating nicely.
A Patch to Save Humanity or a Fad Thatâll Die by the Next Update ?
Of course, the Twitterverse (or X-verse for the Elon enthusiasts) exploded with commentary. Some users hailed this as a progressive step toward respecting women in games, tweeting things like :
ÂĢFinally, a game that doesnât pander to the male gaze ! đĢļ Bravo, devs!Âģ
Others were, letâs say, less enthusiastic :
ÂĢNext update, Eve will come out of the screen and slap you for mansplaining!Âģ
The true pièce de rÊsistance came when a particularly creative troll photoshopped a green-haired, plus-sized Eve wearing Crocs and wielding a tofu sword, captioned :
ÂĢStellar Blade 2 : Revenge of the SJWsÂģ
But letâs talk about the elephant in the room. Did this change come purely from artistic innovation, or were the devs cornered by those ever-dreaded ÂĢspecial interest groupsÂģ ? Unverified ÂĢreliable sourcesÂģ (aka someoneâs cousinâs uncle who works in QA) claim feminist activists deemed the skirt-peeking mechanic ÂĢ outrageously degrading. Âģ Of course, this raises the obvious question : Who even ÂĢnoticedÂģ this feature in the first place ? Asking for a friend.
Whatâs Next ? Skirts, Screens, and a Feminist Takeover
As if banning virtual voyeurism wasnât enough, rumors are swirling about the next patch. According to completely unconfirmed but highly entertaining speculation, skirts may be removed from the game altogether. Eve will reportedly receive a new ÂĢempoweredÂģ design : green hair, dad jeans, and a BMI worthy of the Renaissance. Donât forget â her dialogue is also being rewritten to include daily affirmations and quotes from bell hooks.
Naturally, the gaming community is thrilled. One sarcastic Steam review reads :
ÂĢ10 / 10, canât wait for Eve to shame me for my male privilege in 4K Ultra HD.Âģ
Still, one has to wonder : is this what the developers envisioned when they began working on a futuristic action-RPG about saving humanity ? Or have they simply bowed to the whims of an audience that â letâs be honest â probably wasnât going to play the game anyway ?
The Verdict : Fun Police or Evolution in Gaming ?
At the heart of this uproar lies a deeper question : What is the role of player freedom in games? Should developers have the right to ÂĢpunishÂģ curious players for engaging in what has always been a harmless bit of Easter egg hunting ? Or is this mechanic a clever, meta-joke meant to parody its own audience ?
For now, one thing is certain : Stellar Blade has become a battleground, not between humanity and alien invaders, but between two warring ideologies. And much like the in-game camera, the rest of us are stuck being jerked around in the chaos.
Stay tuned for Patch 1.010, where Eve files a restraining order against the player. đ
Finn McFrame, celebrated satirical mastermind and self-proclaimed “Emperor of Irony,” started his illustrious career as a cinematographer, where his expertise in capturing every single frame of a squirrel stealing a baguette earned him accolades at obscure film festivals.
Born in the glamorous town of Boring, Oregon, Finn grew up with dreams of being a Hollywood director until he realized that satire, not cinema, was his true callingâor at least the one that let him sleep until noon.
Finn McFrame: changing the world, one satirical lens flare at a time.



