{"id":269510,"date":"2021-06-20T12:00:40","date_gmt":"2021-06-20T17:00:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/?p=269510"},"modified":"2022-01-11T13:13:14","modified_gmt":"2022-01-11T19:13:14","slug":"i-replayed-barbie-horse-adventures-wild-horse-rescue-after-15-years-and-it-was-a-trip","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/i-replayed-barbie-horse-adventures-wild-horse-rescue-after-15-years-and-it-was-a-trip\/","title":{"rendered":"I replayed Barbie Horse Adventures: Wild Horse Rescue after 15 years, and it was a trip"},"content":{"rendered":"
Everyone has their favorite game from growing up. For some, it was\u00a0<\/span>Super Mario Sunshine<\/span><\/em>, or\u00a0<\/span>Ocarina of Time<\/span><\/em>, or maybe\u00a0<\/span>GoldenEye<\/span><\/em>. What was my favorite game growing up, you ask? Well,\u00a0<\/span>Barbie Horse Adventures: Wild Horse Rescue<\/span><\/em>, of course.<\/span><\/p> It was only a matter of time before I outed myself as a reformed horse girl on the internet. I started horseback riding as an extracurricular when I was in third grade and continued through the end of middle school. I always forget it was such a big part of my life. I think because I repressed all the embarrassing stuff, like pretending to be a horse on the playground. At least if I have to admit to this, it’s under the pretext of having a sweet job where I get to write about video games.<\/span><\/p> Anyway, it was only natural that that love of horses crossed over into my gaming. My siblings and I had a few different consoles growing up, from a Gameboy Advance to a Wii to an Xbox 360. Of all of the various consoles we had, though, I’d say the PS2 was the most formative for me. This is in part because I spent the most time playing on that console, shoring up my allegiance to the PlayStation brand.<\/span><\/p> <\/iframe><\/p> While my brother and our neighbor friends were playing Fallout<\/em>, Halo<\/em>, and Star Wars Battlefront<\/em>, I would often sit and watch. I can’t quite remember why I never played for myself, but I think it was a combination of unfamiliarity with dual-stick controls and the underlying belief that those games weren’t for girls.<\/span><\/p> I was raised in a fundamentalist Christian family in the heart of the South, and although I don’t recall anyone explicitly telling me I couldn’t play those games, I never really did. I certainly felt drawn to things that were “made for boys,” but there was also an intense pressure to present as femininely as possible. I found a sort of workaround, though, because I would watch Power Rangers<\/em> and say my brother “made me” or watch him play Bioshock<\/em> under the guise of spending quality time with him.<\/span><\/p> Naturally, the games I played all fell into one of two categories: being under the umbrella of traditionally “girly” intellectual properties like High School Musical<\/em>, Hannah Montana<\/em>, or of course Barbie<\/em>, or being about a traditionally feminine occupation or role, like Cooking Mama<\/em> or Disney’s Princess Magical Dress Up<\/em>.<\/span><\/p>