Jump to content
Hostul a fost schimbat. Daca vedeti serverul offline readaugati rpg.b-zone.ro sau 141.95.124.78:7777 in clientul de sa-mp ×

Video games are the new runway. Coveted fashion brands are loving it


CouldnoT
 Share

Recommended Posts

A photo of the virtual band K/DA from the "League of Legends" game wearing Louis Vuitton.

Louis Vuitton dressed the virtual band K/DA from the “League of Legends” game in designs pulled from its 2014, 2015 and 2019 collections.
(Louis Vuitton / Riot Games)
 

With COVID-19 numbers spiking around the globe, the gaming world certainly appears more promising than real life. Just ask Shannon Hall Pereira, who enjoys playing dress-up in the fictional world of “Animal Crossing: New Horizons” when her 6-year-old son isn’t hogging the video game.

“I dress very opulently in the game,” said Hall Pereira, who owns a fashion marketing and sales agency in Los Angeles. “I love having crazy hair and a big poufy dress. I wear sneakers with it. In my head, this is what I would want to wear. Where would I wear it? I don’t know.

A digitized version of Jane Fonda for a Gucci campaign.
Games content creator Luke Clarke, a.k.a. Grimcookies, re-created Gucci’s Off the Grid ad campaign featuring actress Jane Fonda. Players can download virtual versions of the Gucci bag and sneakers for free in “The Sims.” The digitized Jane Fonda is not available for play in the game.
(Gucci / Grimcookies / Harrie)

Exploring an island paradise built precisely to one’s specifications in a game like “Animal Crossing” might be a worthwhile and creative distraction for many, and several fashion and beauty companies, including Louis Vuitton, MCM and Tatcha, are eager to connect with and harness the enthusiasm that Hall Pereira and thousands of other worldwide have shown for this intersection of gaming and fashion.

 

Keep in mind, the video game business is small compared to the apparel market. Data research firm Statista said that with a projected decline of nearly 29% from last year, U.S. apparel revenue will total almost $256 billion in 2020.

However, the U.S. games industry is one of the strongest sectors in the pandemic economy.

In the first nine months of 2020, sales of video game hardware, content and accessories grew 21% to $33.7 billion over the same period in 2019, according to the NPD Group. With the holiday releases of the latest PlayStation and Xbox consoles, video game spending is expected to reach $13.4 billion in November and December, up 24% from the same time a year ago. The market research firm also estimates that there are now 244 million video game players in the U.S., or 30 million more than in 2018.

The fashion crowd wants to ride this upward trajectory and develop relationships with new and future customers. Indie designers including Collina Strada’s Hillary Taymour and L.A. designer Mila Sullivan as well as storied brands such as Balenciaga, Gucci and Gillette are accelerating fashion’s crossover to electronic games. A few are creating their own button mashers, while others are collaborating with popular video-game titles, including “Animal Crossing,” “The Sims,” “Tennis Clash” and “League of Legends.”

A one-of-a-kind shirt by Mila Sullivan served as inspiration for an avatar's outfit in "Animal Crossing: New Horizons."
(Mila Sullivan)

For their part, game makers are diversifying digital wardrobes not only to reflect players’ interests but also to enliven fans’ cosplay. Once players obtain the software and equipment needed to play a video game, they can get stylish extras for their virtual mini-mes for free — or with in-game points and add-on purchases.

Nook Street Market has replicated a one-of-a-kind shirt by Mila Sullivan for avatars in "Animal Crossing: New Horizons."
Nook Street Market’s version of the Mila Sullivan shirt.
(Nook Street Market)

With the pandemic upending in-person fashion shows and traditional sartorial marketing, “designers want to tap into the cachet of games and the strength of that audience and make themselves relevant in a new high-tech world,” said Van Burnham, a former fashion designer and author of “Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age 1971–1984” and its sequel, which she will self-publish next year.

Noting how many so-called hypebeasts who obsess over fashion are also gamers, she added: “The prototypical nerds have evolved to a point where they are very style-conscious. It’s cool to play games now.”

There are so many ways — recent and upcoming — to play dress-up in the virtual life. On Dec. 6, Balenciaga is launching the allegorical adventure game “Afterworld: The Age of Tomorrow,” which will double as a reveal for its fall 2021 collection. Set in 2031, the imaginary world could be germane today with COVID-19. After beating the game, the player is rewarded with a real-life breathing exercise in a virtual utopia.

 

Gucci is no stranger to the video-game world. Having outfitted “Tennis Clash” avatars in its double-G logo and installed a retro-style arcade on its own app over the last year, the famed Italian brand recently picked up the pace for its gaming ventures. As part of November’s Guccifest, Collina Strada and Gareth Wrighton each premiered short films influenced by video games. In “Collina Land,” viewers can use their keyboards to maneuver models-turned-avatars around five different environments, including a neon-tinted Underwater World. (As Gucci put it, Wrighton’s “The Maul” is “a trailer for a video game that doesn’t exist.”)

 

A prestige skin designed by Louis Vuitton's Nicolas Ghesquière for the game character Senna in "League of Legends."
(Riot Games)

Before Guccifest, Gucci gave away virtual versions of its eco-friendly merchandise to whoever wanted it in the latest edition of “The Sims.” The brand connected directly with the artists who go by the handles of Harrie and Grimcookies, commissioning digital replicas of a multi-tiered treehouse, sneakers, backpacks and other accessories from Gucci’s Off the Grid collection.

“I didn’t really believe it at first, because you’re wondering why Gucci would want to be in ‘The Sims,’” said Samantha Henderson, the 34-year-old London-based graphic designer known as Harrie. In the first week after the Oct. 21 release of the fashionable freebies, Henderson said players downloaded around 13,000 copies of the modern treehouse she had designed for the computer game.

 

A photo of the "The Sims 4" fashion pieces from Gucci and artists Grimcookies and Harrie.
Gucci has partnered with artists Grimcookies and Harrie to re-create its eco-friendly fashion accessories and a treehouse in “The Sims 4" computer game.
(Gucci / Grimcookies / Harrie)

The status symbols were big scores for her too, because “unfortunately, I can’t quite afford Gucci right now,” she said.

Tatcha, the luxury skin-care brand coveted by celebrities, has also explored the virtual realm. After canceling a trip with influencers to Kyoto, Japan, at the outset of the global pandemic, Tatcha unveiled a dream destination dubbed Tatchaland in “Animal Crossing,” where some 2,000 visitors have checked out its virtual skin-care lab, hot spring spa and other Japanese locales. The project was “a great pivot, if you will, for 2020,” said Sarah Henry, Tatcha’s chief marketing officer.

For "Animal Crossing: New Horizons," Tatcha has created an island called Tatchaland as well as an outfit with Alo Yoga.
(Tatcha / Alo Yoga)

According to Dan Manioci, head of marketing and communications for MCM’s Americas business, MCM had a pleasant “Animal Crossing” experience of digitizing a $495 jacquard skirt and a $750 velour track jacket, among other items from its fall and winter 2020 collection.

“In terms of gaming, we are looking at opportunities into next year,” Manioci said. “It’s important for us to be pioneers in that [digital] space.”

MCM's "Animal Crossing: New Horizons" avatars sport items from its fall and winter 2020 collection.
(MCM)

Looking toward next year, gamers have until Jan. 28 to earn enough points for high-end skins, or in-game looks, designed by Louis Vuitton and Aape by A Bathing Ape in the fighting-and-strategy-heavy PC game “League of Legends.” In the game, a fierce sharpshooter named Senna blasts her Louis Vuitton-monogrammed cannon, while the French fashion house’s flower logo is illuminated under her feet. Also, for DJ and samurai Yasuo, a force shield emanates Aape by A Bathing Ape’s simian logo.

Given how popular special skins have become, the blurring between fashion and gaming was inevitable. “The new economy of games,” Burnham said, “is meshing with the fashion world, and the way those drops are executed, in a really synergistic way.”

Fashion designers also have the power to elevate a gamer’s style. As part of Louis Vuitton’s landmark partnership initiated last year with “League of Legends,” which counts 8 million concurrent players daily worldwide, the luxury label appealed to an untapped audience with Instagram filters, a bespoke case for the esport championship trophy and a capsule collection that included colorful luggage tags, graphic tees and silver biker jackets.

When the deal was announced, Louis Vuitton Chairman and Chief Executive Michael Burke described it in a statement as “an unprecedented opportunity to bring our historical commitment to merging innovation and tradition with our spirit of adventure to a new generation.”

 

A prestige skin designed by Aape by A Bathing Ape for the "League of Legends" game character Yasuo.
(Riot Games)

In September, “League of Legends” launched a streetwear collection with Aape By A Bathing Ape. Also, at fall’s League of Legends World Championship Tournament in Shanghai, pop star Lexie Liu serenaded spectators in a Senna-style ensemble by Louis Vuitton, which also gifted logoed duffle bags to several athletes.

“We’re looking at doing a couple of collaborations like this a year,” said Christian Bayley, director of consumer products and licensing at L.A.-based Riot Games, which makes “League of Legends.” “This is somewhat normal and expected in music and sport, right? I think it will be that level of natural and normal in gaming.”

A closer look at a prestige skin designed by Louis Vuitton's Nicolas Ghesquière for Senna in "League of Legends."
(Riot Games)

Despite fashion’s intensifying presence in their domain, some gamers feel sheepish about prioritizing aesthetics over points. On Reddit, 55,500 people have joined a community called Fashion Souls, where they bond over the armor they’ve tricked out for the characters they role-play in the action game “Dark Souls.” In a mission statement, Fashion Souls’ organizers reassured members that “some folks will sacrifice stats for a phresh look and that’s OK!”

When Kitfox Games previewed a dress with pockets in its new dating simulator-meets-monster killer game “Boyfriend Dungeon,” “a lot of women were like, ‘Oh, my God, yes!’” said Victoria Tran, communications director at the Montreal-based studio. “It makes people connect to the game more.”

To an extent, video games also reflect shifts in society. In “Goodbye Volcano High,” KO_OP Studio’s upcoming game about teenage dinosaurs falling in love before a meteor destroys their life, players can paint red and purple eyeshadow, along with mascara and eyeliner, on a nonbinary pterodactyl called Fang.

"Goodbye Volcano High" reflects hip fashion and contemporary topics in a fictitious dinosaur world.
Designed by a team that includes LGBTQ+ members, “Goodbye Volcano High” reflects hip fashion and contemporary topics in a fictitious dinosaur world.
(KO_OP Studio)

Saleem Dabbous, KO_OP’s studio director in Montreal, said: “For us, [the scene] was specifically about reflecting how stylish young folks are these days, particularly with access to the internet and YouTube and things like makeup tutorials.”

Fans want to be part of the artistic process. In the dating simulation game “Monster Prom,” players can make mods, or alterations, that add custom outfits and special effects. Julián Quijano, founder and creative director of Beautiful Glitch, the Spanish studio that produced “Monster Prom,” said fans have crafted hundreds of themes, including one inspired by drag queens.

Moreover, authenticity can prevail in a realm regarded as make-believe. Nicole Cuddihy recalled how as a child in Oregon, she was ashamed for having a benign skin condition called keratosis pilaris. To show how normal the tiny bumps are, the 24-year-old illustrator placed red dots on her “Animal Crossing” avatar. “Honestly, it looks cute on the character,” said Cuddihy, who now lives in London. “It gives her more personality and makes her look unique.”

Gillette Venus' work with artist Nicole Cuddihy for "Animal Crossing: New Horizons."
Gillette Venus worked with artist Nicole Cuddihy to create various skin tones and body types that players can use in “Animal Crossing: New Horizons.”
(Gillette Venus / Nicole Cuddihy)

Marketers for Gillette Venus had a similar idea. They asked Cuddihy to create a custom line of 264 designs, reflecting 19 skin and body types in eight tones, including acne, cellulite and prosthetic legs. A Gillette Venus representative said 20,000 copies of the booklet showing the beach-themed “Animal Crossing” characters and free codes have been downloaded from the Boston-based company’s website.

The last thing Gillette Venus wanted to do was to “stick a shaver [in the game] and have the avatar start shaving,” said Anthony van Dijk, the company’s senior brand director. “Gaming is a source of escape. It’s a source of entertainment. We all know that in these times we could use that. At the same time, everybody should be proud of how their skin appears.”

 

For Luke Clarke, who makes a living as a custom games content creator under the moniker Grimcookies, collaborating with Gucci on “The Sims” was “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

“The reason ‘The Sims’ was perfect for this is high fashion works,” the 22-year-old said from Melbourne, Australia. “People make goofy Sims that are larger than life.”

Power up


Here’s a list of mobile, PC and console titles that have a strong fashion game.

 

“Afterworld: The Age of Tomorrow”
Launch date: Dec. 6, 2020
PC and mobile
Free
Quick look: Set in 2031, this allegorical adventure game doubles as a presentation of Balenciaga’s fall 2021 fashion collection. Players try to beat the game so the hero avatar can become a Master of Two Worlds, and the winner is rewarded with a real-life breathing exercise in utopia.

MCM's "Animal Crossing: New Horizons" avatars.
(MCM)

 

For "The Sims 4" computer game, Gucci partnered with artists Grimcookies and Harrie to re-create its fashion accessories.
For “The Sims 4" computer game, Gucci partnered with artists Grimcookies and Harrie to re-create its fashion accessories.
(Gucci / Grimcookies / Harrie)

Gucci “Off the Grid” X “The Sims 4”
Launch date: Oct. 21, 2020
PC
$39.99
Quick look: Custom content creators Harrie and Grimcookies digitally replicated a treehouse and accessories from Gucci’s eco-friendly Off the Grid collection, which players can add for free to the latest computer version of “The Sims.” The designs can be used with the fashion pack released by Moschino in 2019.

A prestige skin designed by Aape by A Bathing Ape for the game character Yasuo in "League of Legends."
(Riot Games)

“League of Legends”
Launch date: 2009
PC
Free with in-game cosmetic purchases
Quick look: While helping their five-person team destroy an enemy’s base in a fantasy-based world, players try to earn 100 prestige points and obtain an exclusive skin designed by Aape by A Bathing Ape or Louis Vuitton.

 

“Love Nikki-Dress Up Queen”
Launch date: 2015
Mobile
Free with in-app purchases
Quick look: Claiming more than 100 million players worldwide, this addictive game features a character named Nikki, who styles fashion items ranging from Belle Époque dresses to goth get-ups.

 

latimes.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, LuisVasile said:

Very interesting, I think League Of Legends is the coolest game even if it sometimes makes you lose your mind.

A good game indeed, and as you can see they are integrating fashion ads without even noticing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.