RangerDave wrote:
I tend to find explicitly feminist critiques annoying and off the mark, but I gotta say, I think I agree with that article to a large extent. There are tons of male Mary Sues out there, but no one calls them such. Batman, Luke Skywalker, Neo, Harry Potter, Flash Gordon, Conan (or basically any of Schwarzenegger's characters), Rambo, Jack Ryan, Paul Atreides, etc.
As DE said, male wish-fulfillment characters tend to highlight different qualities than female wish-fulfillment characters, but my understanding is that it's the unrealistic wish fulfillment aspect that makes a character a "Mary Sue", not the particular qualities that define the wish.
*ETA Paul Atreides to the list, 'cuz damn if he ain't a perfect Mary Sue.
Harry Potter actually comes close. I don't know all the characters you mention that well (specifically, my entire exposure to Conan is one movie, where he's anything but a Marty Stu, and I never watched Rambo), but none of the others fit into the Marty Stu mold. Want some Marty Stu examples? Drizzt comes close. Elminster. Cadderly Bonaduce...see a pattern? There's a reason for this: RPG characters are INTENTIONAL Mary Sue/Marty Stu characters: they represent their creator, who
tries to make them as effective as possible, and tends to see them through overly idealized goggles. Give them a bit of system mastery, and they'll have the game mechanics to back up their Mary Sue. Now, gods forbid, they write a story about them...complete with clichéed angsty elements, and...*shudder*
The Mary Sue feels like a fan-fic wishlist of everything the author wants to be (or, in some cases, their idealized person.) It has nothing to do with gender. However, it is most common in fan-fiction, and most fan fiction has female lead characters, because most fanfic writers are female.
Edit: Never read Dune, but Atreides is listed particularly eggregiously on TVTropes - as a
God Mode Sue