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Video games are spotty at getting Black hair right. Black artists are forging ahead to fix that

Video games are spotty at getting Black hair right. Black artists are forging ahead to fix that

CBC20-04-2025
Black characters were largely missing from the video games Fūnk-é Joseph played growing up — or portrayed as a negative stereotype — and typically depicted in just one or two ways: with an afro or a short haircut.
"It was hard to see characters that looked like me," the 26-year-old said in Toronto.
It was only five years ago that they recall being able to — for the first time ever — create a playable character that actually looked like them. Their avatar in the game Animal Crossing: New Horizons had freeform dreads up top, fade on the sides and the right skin tone.
"I was pretty excited. But then it got me reflecting on, 'Why hasn't this been a thing before? And why haven't other people been doing this?'" said Joseph.
The game industry has since made strides in featuring Black characters, but Joseph — now a video game designer and director of indie studio Play Underground Games — still admits to scrutinizing new releases.
"Every time a new game comes out with a character customization, I'm looking for those things."
Portraying Black hair authentically hasn't seemed top of mind in many video games and digital media productions, but Black-led initiatives helping designers and developers better understand Afro-textured hair and hairstyles are driving change behind the scenes, aiming to expand authentic representations and spark innovation.
Like Joseph, A.M. Darke similarly recalls earlier gaming culture defaulting to a handful of Black hairstyles. Since Black representation of any kind was so rare, meagre efforts got a pass, she told Day 6.
"They're not quite right, [but] your standards and your expectations are already so low."
When she started working on developing digital characters herself, however, she got a shock: not only were 3D resources and imagery depicting Black hair scarce, but harmful, racist caricatures ("straight out of Jim Crow [era], like minstrels and mammies") were also what regularly turned up.
That spurred her into action. She's since created a free, open-source database of 3D models showcasing hairstyles created by Black artists.
She's also collaborating with computer science colleagues at Yale University to define different characteristics of tightly coiled, Afro-textured hair and create algorithms for animating these features.
The team published their work in a recent study and presented it at an international computer graphics research conference in December.
"A lot of times games are approximating Black hair, but they don't recognize exactly what details should be attended to fully communicate that this hair was done with care," said Darke, an artist and associate professor in performance, play and design at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Darke pointed to the release of Marvel's blockbuster film Black Panther in 2018 as a pop culture inflection point: "We have that iconic moment where Michael B. Jordan is onscreen and he just looks so cool ... His hair in that film is iconic."
She hopes her tools can inspire a better understanding of Black hair overall and open more game designers and digital artists up to creating myriad new possibilities.
"Hopefully when people start to see the different features of Black hair, then they start to understand how they can sort of remix things and create different styles instead of just saying, 'Here's one and that's been done right, so let's just copy and paste it everywhere,'" she said.
"I have high hopes for what Black hair representation will look like in the next few years."
Digital depictions 'the new frontier'
In the real world, there's been tangible progress in removing the stigma surrounding naturally textured Black hair, says Toronto professor Cheryl Thompson, so it makes sense the digital world "is the new frontier for this conversation."
Since they're programmed by people, "algorithms only do what they know to do ... They're reproducing information that's known," explained Thompson, an associate professor at Toronto Metropolitan University and author of the book Beauty in a Box: Detangling the Roots of Canada's Black Beauty Culture.
That's why it's vital to have Black people involved as creators bringing their lived experiences and knowledge to producing content, she said, which goes further than simply the inclusion of Black characters.
That deeper level of involvement fosters more nuance and authenticity, like knowing a cut isn't complete without keen attention to the edges (or hairline), Thompson noted. Or that if a Black woman wears the same hairstyle as a Black man, the texture will differ since she's more likely to have used a chemical relaxer — which permanently loosens one's coils — at some point.
"You're just not gonna know that unless you know that," she said.
Thompson believes that over the past decade, we've grown more receptive to recognizing that a diversity of voices contributes to digital innovation.
"And creativity — it breeds innovation. It's going to make you better to see what other people are doing," she said.
Normalizing Black hair in digital spaces
Making games is incredibly hard work, game designer Joseph noted, so access to tools that help artists, designers and developers more authentically animate Black hair is terrific. But creators must know resources like this are available in the first place, they added, and the industry must support them.
"Normalizing just the existence of Black people and Black hair, you create a better ecosystem where people are more understanding," Joseph said, adding that video games are a great way to teach people about the world.
"It's amazing when you're playing a fantasy game and you see shreds of real life in that — it makes you reflect and you connect those things."
However, Joseph agrees that inclusion means more than just a detailed coif.
"I'm wary of people just like putting in hairstyles to throw us a bone and for us to not care about anything else," they said.
"Hair is just one facet of the wider issue of representation."
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MOVIES: Liam Neeson's diversion into silly comedy and three alternatives

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Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account After completing work on his 2019 dramedy Dolemite Is My Name (in which he played pioneering Black filmmaker Rudy Ray Moore), the Oscar-nominated actor was going to return to Studio 8H to host Saturday Night Live for the first time since leaving the late-night sketch comedy show in 1984. Then he was going to star in a long-awaited sequel to his 1988 comedy classic Coming to America . After that he was going to hit the road for his first standup tour in almost four decades. Once he completed all those tasks, the 64-year-old father of 10 was headed to one place: the couch. The comedy legend made it partway through that list. The standup tour never happened. He also didn't make it to the chesterfield. But his return as King Akeem Joffer in 2021's Coming 2 America reminded him he still knew how to make audiences laugh. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Shortly after the film became a streaming hit for Prime Video, Murphy found himself being presented with a series of movie roles he couldn't say no to, including last year's Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F , which saw him returning to his Beverly Hills Cop franchise for the first time in 30 years. Murphy swore to himself that would be his last action role. But then he was offered The Pickup , a new heist pic that casts him and fellow SNL alum Pete Davidson as two armoured truck drivers who find themselves having to protect their load from a group of ruthless criminals led by Keke Palmer. 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On a recent Saturday afternoon, Murphy was eager to reflect on how he impacted the action-comedy genre and reveal the one thing he doesn't want to see happen in his career again. The Pickup reminded me of some of the action films I grew up watching in the '80s, like Beverly Hills Cop and 48 Hrs . Did you see this as a throwback movie of sorts? 'No, but people have said to me, 'This reminds me of those movies.' And it's because of me. I'm in those movies (laughs). It's like when they forgot I'm funny. 'Oh yeah, you were funny.'' Eddie Murphy and Pete Davidson in a scene from their new action-comedy 'The Pickup.' Photo by Prime Video Watching The Pickup and seeing how it blends action and comedy made me really realize that you kickstarted that whole action-comedy genre. 'I know it sounds pretentious if you don't know the history, but I kind of pioneered (the genre). The very first action-comedy movie is 48 Hrs . Before 48 Hrs. there were no movies where you had action and comedy. Serious cop movies with people getting killed and bad guys and comedy. That didn't exist before 48 Hrs. Then after 48 Hrs. came Beverly Hills Cop . Then the genre just exploded … all the cops were saying things like, 'Yippee ki yay, motherf—er' and 'Hasta la vista, baby.' All the cops had one-liners and they started mixing action and comedy. But the root of all those pictures is 48 Hrs. Every action comedy.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy in '48 Hrs.' Photo by Paramount Pictures It's funny, because the last time we spoke, you recounted to me how you invented the mic drop in the first Coming to America . 'I did! The very first mic drop, you know when I was doing the press on Coming to America 2 and I said that, people were like, 'No you didn't.' But yeah, you look back … Randy Watson in Coming to America … He's the very first person to drop the mic. His performance is so amazing that he's dropping the mic. That's the very first mic drop. But I feel like Chubby Checker. He's still around and he thinks his Twist song started everything. ' Twist and Shout is mine!' … I feel like Chubby Checker, defending myself. 'I started the mic drop!' 'I started the action comedy!' 'I'm Chubby Checker!'' Eddie Murphy in a scene from 'Coming 2 America.' Photo by Amazon Studios When we spoke last time, you told me you had a whole plan. It was all mapped out. You were going to release Dolemite Is My Name , then host SNL , star in Coming to America 2 , then do a standup tour and then it was going to be the couch. But you've done a lot more than that. You starred in You People and Beverly Hills Cop 4 and coming up we have Shrek 5 . So how are you seeing this chapter of your career? This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'We've got Shrek 5 , there's a Donkey cartoon we're doing with just the Donkey character. I'm getting ready to do a film about George Clinton and Funkadelic, it's the George Clinton story and I'm also the new Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther . I'm going to be in a new Pink Panther . So I had planned to do those things, and then go to the couch, but we're having such a ball (laughs). These good things keep presenting themselves and keeping me out there.' Is there anything left you still want to do as an actor? 'I just want to do good work. I have things that I don't want to do any more. I don't want to make anymore bad movies. I've made a lot of movies just for some money. But the movie's s— and you have this big cheque, and years later, many years later after the money's spent, that bad movie is still out there playing on HBO or one of the movie channels. I don't know what it is, but it always seems like any bad movie I did is showing around these great movies. You'll see Raging Bull and Die Hard and then it'll be Pluto Nash . 'Why are they showing this one?! Why are they showing this?!'' T he Pickup will be available to stream on Aug. 6 on Prime Video. mdaniell@ Read More Recommended Video Sunshine Girls Toronto & GTA World World Tennis

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