Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series

This study focuses on the relationship between the impression a character makes on players of a game and the percentage of hetero and homosexualistic fan fiction that uses that character, particularly in the case of femslash works in homosexual fanfiction, which have not been well-studied. An agency...

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Main Author: Tetsuya Matsui
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-12-01
Series:Cogent Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2453084
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author Tetsuya Matsui
author_facet Tetsuya Matsui
author_sort Tetsuya Matsui
collection DOAJ
description This study focuses on the relationship between the impression a character makes on players of a game and the percentage of hetero and homosexualistic fan fiction that uses that character, particularly in the case of femslash works in homosexual fanfiction, which have not been well-studied. An agency/experience model was used as a measure of the impression a character makes on the player. The games analyzed were two games belonging to the same series with different characteristics. One is ‘THE IDOLM@STER Cinderella Girls,’ and the other is ‘THE IDOLM@STER SHINY COLORS’. ‘THE IDOLM@STER Cinderella Girls’ is a game in which the characters do not grow in the storyline and the interaction with the player is not very in-depth. I defined such games as synchronic story games. ‘THE IDOLM@STER SHINY COLORS’ is a game in which the characters grow in the story and reveal much of their inner life through interaction with the player. I defined such games as diachronic story games. Agency and experience were measured for the characters in each of these two games in a questionnaire survey on the web. At the same time, the percentage of hetero and homosexualistic fan fiction in fan fiction for each character posted on the web was investigated. The results showed a significant correlation between character agency and the percentage of homosexualistic fan fiction for the synchronic game, and for the diachronic game, there was a significant correlation between character experience and the percentage of homosexualistic fan fiction.
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spelling doaj-art-02e5250721b44fb5b9afbee395199b4f2025-01-15T09:18:28ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862025-12-0111110.1080/23311886.2025.2453084Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER seriesTetsuya Matsui0Program in Media and Product Design, Department of Design and Engineering, Kagawa University, Takamatsu, JapanThis study focuses on the relationship between the impression a character makes on players of a game and the percentage of hetero and homosexualistic fan fiction that uses that character, particularly in the case of femslash works in homosexual fanfiction, which have not been well-studied. An agency/experience model was used as a measure of the impression a character makes on the player. The games analyzed were two games belonging to the same series with different characteristics. One is ‘THE IDOLM@STER Cinderella Girls,’ and the other is ‘THE IDOLM@STER SHINY COLORS’. ‘THE IDOLM@STER Cinderella Girls’ is a game in which the characters do not grow in the storyline and the interaction with the player is not very in-depth. I defined such games as synchronic story games. ‘THE IDOLM@STER SHINY COLORS’ is a game in which the characters grow in the story and reveal much of their inner life through interaction with the player. I defined such games as diachronic story games. Agency and experience were measured for the characters in each of these two games in a questionnaire survey on the web. At the same time, the percentage of hetero and homosexualistic fan fiction in fan fiction for each character posted on the web was investigated. The results showed a significant correlation between character agency and the percentage of homosexualistic fan fiction for the synchronic game, and for the diachronic game, there was a significant correlation between character experience and the percentage of homosexualistic fan fiction.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2453084Fan fictionhetero fan fictionhomosexualistic fan fictionslashfemslashmind perception
spellingShingle Tetsuya Matsui
Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series
Cogent Social Sciences
Fan fiction
hetero fan fiction
homosexualistic fan fiction
slash
femslash
mind perception
title Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series
title_full Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series
title_fullStr Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series
title_full_unstemmed Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series
title_short Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series
title_sort mind perception and fan fiction a survey using the idolm ster series
topic Fan fiction
hetero fan fiction
homosexualistic fan fiction
slash
femslash
mind perception
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2453084
work_keys_str_mv AT tetsuyamatsui mindperceptionandfanfictionasurveyusingtheidolmsterseries