Twintelle’s Hair Is an Act of Resistance
Why We Should Look Up to ARMS' Only Black Woman

ARMS, Nintendo’s new fighting game for the Switch, is set to release June 16, but has already found a following thanks to its colorful cast of fighters. From an international pop star, to a slime-like lab experiment, to a robot cop and his robot dog, ARMS’ cast of fighters injects a large amount of personality into what could have been just a silly fighting game. But not all characters have found a positive response. Despite the praise, some fans are disappointed in Twintelle, the only fighter who is a Black woman.
While the other characters use their arms to fight, Twintelle is the only fighter to use her springy hair for combat. Over on Mic, Tanya DePass addressed why having the game’s only female fighter of color box with her hair feels insensitive to the realities of Black women who wear their naturally curly hair. Black hair is still cited as being unprofessional for work or school, so having a woman of color be the only fighter to use her hair as a weapon further perpetuates the weaponization of Black hair.
DePass’s argument is completely valid, and while there are certainly other people of color who agree with her sentiment, I can’t help but feel incredibly empowered whenever I play Twintelle. To me, Twintelle’s stretchy hair deconstructs the notion that her hair is weaponized. She isn’t fighting against her hair, she fights alongside it.
Black female athletes are often criticized for their blackness. Tennis star Serena Williams’s muscular physique has been used against her for years. Gabby Douglas was sixteen years old when she became the first Black gymnast to earn a gold medal in the Individual All-Around, but her success was met with bad takes on her hair. Misty Copeland is the first Black ballerina to become principal dancer for the American Ballet Theater, but to do that she had to outperform white dancers whose looks are traditionally viewed as delicate and soft.
Yet despite the vitriol, these athletes have gone on to become the best in their respective sport. During a Ted Talk interview with Gayle King, Williams admitted that when she was younger, she didn’t like her muscular body and wanted to change it. But after winning the US Open, she “realized that my body helped me reach goals that I wanted to reach.” She concluded that the criticism surrounding her body doesn’t bother her anymore. “I’m okay with it as long as I love myself,” she said.
I get the feeling Twintelle doesn’t just love herself—she absolutely adores herself, and if love is an act of resistance, then Twintelle’s adoration for herself is liberation. When it comes to her body and hair, she flaunts them. Her outfit looks like something you would wear on a night out rather than in a fighting match; While other fighters start the match in a hunched position, as if ready to spring forward and fight, Twintelle stands poised, her hands on her hips, which are cocked to one side; Even when she loses, she shrugs. She’s a movie star, why should she care about a few losses? She may not look like the athletic type, but she is because of her ability to control her hair.