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Tired of booth babes, developer says Tokyo Game Show has become the Hostess Club Game Show

8 Comments
By Casey Baseel, RocketNews24

As has become the norm at the Tokyo Game Show, attendees at this year’s event were greeted at many booths by attractive models in revealing costumes. But even though Japan is relatively okay with open admiration of the human physical form, there’s one industry figure who takes issue with the practice.

Hiroshi Matsuyama is the president of software developer CyberConnect2, the company behind the "Naruto Ultimate Ninja" video game franchise, and which previously produced cult classic "Tail Concerto" and the ".hack" RPG series. While Matsuyama was pleased with the high level of energy and excitement on the show floor this year, he wasn’t always happy about why the crowd was getting amped up.

He explained why in a recent post to his blog, Zetsubo Kinshi (“Despair Prohibited”), which he opens by asking the question “How about we stop with the Hostess Club Game Show?”

“Even looking back at just the last few Tokyo Game Shows, I feel like things are escalating every year,” writes Matsuyama, in reference to the amount of skin being shown by booth babes at the four-day event. “Originally, I think exhibitors dressed up models in costumes to recreate the atmosphere of their games’ worlds, and by borrowing the models’ power, they were able to produce an exciting vibe,” he recalls.

“Recently, though, aren’t the models’ outfits too revealing?” he asks. To Matsuyama, the whole thing has become a case of the tail wagging the dog.

“Since when did the Tokyo Game Show become something that draws crowds because of models showing a lot of skin? Wasn’t it supposed to be an event where people came to learn about new games before they went on sale, and were even willing to buy tickets to be able to do so? Is software so powerless now? Can we not get people to pay attention to us without offering them something other than games at our booths?”

It’s worth pointing out that Matsuyama enjoys a plum position in the game developer world. Not only does his company’s cash cow, the "Naruto: Ultimate Ninja" series, benefit from being a tie-in with one of the most popular anime and manga in decades, it’s published by Bandai Namco, one of the true titans of the industry, with a massive marketing budget. CyberConnect2 is also involved with the upcoming "Final Fantasy VII" remake, another project that comes with a huge amount of built-in fan enthusiasm and interest. As such, it’s a lot easier for him to look with disdain at promotional ploys that have little or nothing to do with the game itself than it would be for someone helming a less bankable franchise. It’s also not like exhibitors at the Tokyo Game Show only use female models to beckon passersby with come-hither glances.

Matsuyama isn’t uniformly and prudishly opposed to any and all sexiness, though. As a matter of fact, he praised this year’s booth for Sega’s "Yakuza" series, which regularly features women dressed in hostess club-style cocktail dresses. Not only were their outfits less revealing than the costumes seen at many other booths, they fit with the game’s setting of Japan’s criminal underworld and adult entertainment enterprises. He also clarifies that he bears no ill will towards the models themselves, but the exhibitors employing them in this manner.

“Let’s stop with the Hostess Club Game Show. Let’s stop fishing for customers by having beautiful women expose their bodies,” pleads Matsuyama. “We haven’t and that’s why the number of kids in attendance is down, and why all you see are middle-aged men coming to the show.”

Sources: Hiroshi Matsuyama blog, Twitter via Jin

Read more stories from RocketNews24. -- All the beautiful booth ladies of Tokyo Game Show 2016【Photos】 -- Tokyo Game Show opens, already offers VR mannequin boob-groping 【Photos】 -- This new convenience store isn’t so convenient for the blind…

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8 Comments
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“Let’s stop with the Hostess Club Game Show. Let’s stop fishing for customers by having beautiful women expose their bodies,” pleads Matsuyama.

Good luck with that!

1 ( +1 / -0 )

That girl has a tattoo - she must be a gangster.

-3 ( +0 / -3 )

“Let’s stop with the Hostess Club Game Show. Let’s stop fishing for customers by having beautiful women expose their bodies,” pleads Matsuyama. “We haven’t and that’s why the number of kids in attendance is down,

OR... the reason is that the cost to attend the show has risen above the budget of your average kid. I guarantee that if given the choice between having to "suffer" through booth babes talking about a game or listen to a bunch of ojii-san talk about a game, kids are going to prefer the former to the latter. Yeah, I don't see your average teen saying to themselves, "What?! MORE women in glorified swimsuits?! Will the assault never end?!"

OR... Matsuyama's group refused to employ the eye candy spokes-models this year and the number of visitors to his booth dropped considerably. If so, then this is just "sour grapes" on his part.

1 ( +2 / -1 )

This topic needs more photos.

3 ( +3 / -0 )

This seems to be the norm in all of Japanese pop-culture and it has kinda gotten out of hand. You seemingly can't sell a game, movie or especially anime without cute girls and/or titties. It's a bit ridiculous.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

FadamorSEP. 23, 2016 - 10:29PM JST OR... the reason is that the cost to attend the show has risen above the budget of your average kid.

I think the likeliest case, judging from what I've heard in US cons, is that content producers are sick and tired of putting thousands of hours of blood, sweat, and tears into perfecting their product, and then not getting any attention, while the booth next door with a garbage product gets tons of foot traffic because they paid some college girls to not wear much.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

This reminds me, at the last Auto Show in Anaheim, Hyundai had some beautiful eye-candy. I don't remember what their cars looked like.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

"Tired of booth babes"

That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

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