1. What is your opinion on girl gamers?
They're... gamers? I don't tend to distinguish; in my experience they can be every bit as competent as male gamers.
I'll note at this point that of the 7 corps I've been in, 5 have had female members (of the remaining two, I still interacted with female members of an alliance or bloc on a regular basis). Of those 5, in every case there was a woman in some form of a command or director position. So, pretty early on in EVE I was hit with the point that you don't judge someone by their sex, but by their rank in your corp. Coming off of my Halo experience (see question #5), that was actually a pretty enjoyable angle for me.
2. After finding out an opponent or teammate is the opposite gender, do you feel different about them?
I don't really think so. As said above, EVE has deeply impressed on me the idea that you don't judge someone by their gender, but their personality and capabilities. Doing so can lead to meeting some nice, smart, seriously capable people - and failing to do so will make the same rather angry at you.
3. Do you feel gamer girls are their own clique within gamers as a whole?
At times. This can be motivated by outside pressure or hostility, but also at times by the self-motivated desire to "better" than anyone else. This can happen to any group, but does occasionally happen "simply because". I will note that this behavior can at times cycle back in a feedback loop, where they will get more negative attention
because they stand out. However, I don't think that this is related to gender differences, so much as it is the habit of the internet to make fun of any group that promotes themselves as "special" or "different".
4. Do you feel there is a rivalry or alliance between the genders in the gaming community?
I don't think one can definitively say either way, because that would suggest the genders are absolutely unified in either direction - this is, of course, absolutely untrue. I think the vast majority of gamers simply don't care and would rather focus on meeting their game-objectives; if that counts as an 'alliance' then I guess I'd go with that. There are, naturally, a few who insist there's some kind of rivalry, but they are few and the gamer community is vast.
5. Do you feel sexism is an issue, and if so, have you experienced it?
Yes. Yes it definitely is. Before going any further, I'll split my answer into the separate issues of
directed sexism and
casual sexism.
Directed sexism - when someone experiences an extended personal attack aimed directly at them as an individual, based on their gender - is rarer than you might think, but it does happen. In some cases, it is entirely unwarranted; this forms the vast majority of these cases. It is also the only kind of sexism I can say I have even remotely experienced, as two female EVE players I know have gone through it and it was extremely unpleasant for both of them, yielding the two or three people who I continue to harbor a deep hostility to in EVE. Suffice to say I have a very low tolerance for it. In other cases, equally unfortunately, it can be exacerbated by the 'victims' themselves - for instance, Mintchip. Use your gender to personally enrich yourself, post nude photos online, then act surprised when people bring it up? WHO'D HAVE THOUGHT!
I will note that the prevalence of this varies significantly by game. Before I came to EVE, I played a lot of Halo 2 - which fully lived up to its reputation as a game in which speaking with a remotely female voice would unleash a hail of catcalls and unpleasant comments. I, for one, found this frustrating more than anything else - I came here to play a game, not listen to a bunch of people display how many sexual euphemisms they can come up with - but in retrospect I can understand how much worse it could be for the people on the receiving end.
Casual sexism is far more common. I'm talking about using sexually derogatory phrases, making crude jokes, posting pornography in game or game-related sites, anything which is not a directed, specific attack but could still make someone of a specific gender feel uncomfortable. I don't think one can go on the internet without experiencing this, and it does in fact run in both ways - male and female. Thing is, gender's hardly the only thing to be targeted: Religions, races, countries, mental disorders, tones of voice, poor spelling - the internet has decided nothing is sacred and all shall be mocked and denigrated. Whether this is a good or bad thing is an entirely separate discussion which I will not get into here; my point is that the casual sexism is not anything especially significant compared to the others. It can merit an eyeroll and frustration, but I don't feel going into apoplexy over it contributes either.
"Eve is well known as a male dominated game, with approx 95% of players being men. This has led to the long running joke/tagline "there are no girls in eve (or on the internet)". What sort of impact do you think this has on female Eve players, or women just starting to play the game? For those of you who are female Eve players, have you encountered this often? Do you feel a need to 'prove' that you are female, or do you prefer to just get on with playing the game?"
I can't answer the latter part, obviously, but I'd file the former under what I referred to as 'casual sexism' above - and then promptly go on to note that it's hardly the only kind of joke you run into on the internet or EVE. In my personal opinion, giving serious ear to that kind of thing isn't real helpful and if you can't learn to ignore it then you're going to have a rough time on the internet in general. Trying to "prove" that you are female isn't real helpful; trying to prove that you're a competent, smart, capable person who deserves respect is.