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Calmar

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Posts posted by Calmar

  1. Can't someone just create a mod that removes the backer characters and the "transphobic joke"? That way the people that don't want it in their game can be happy and the people that still want it in the game can also be happy? I don't think Obsidian should take the time to fix these "problems" themselves, They should focus on the actual problems, you know, bugs that ruin everyone's game.

     

    People want a gritty, violent and 'realistic' world but complain when one dude has prejudices?

  2. I don't agree with the OP, but I like Titan Quest and the video he posted is misleading. Normally, defeated enemies don't fly around much, only a critical hit sends them flying *a bit*. In the video, however, we see a powerful high level character fighting very weak low-level enemies. Naturally he does overwhelmingly high damage to them, causing to be hurled away for unusual distances. 

  3. "Sergeant," asked the old man,

               "I've come to See my son."

    "There," said the sergeant,

               "There he lies across his gun."

    "Across his gun, you say?

               Then Johnny stood his ground?"

    "He stood there like a rock

               until they cut him down."

    The old man left, his John

               part of the battle won.

    "Yes," said the sergeant,

               "John was too damned dumb to run."

     
    Chicken, chicken, chicken;

               Hoorah for Johnny Zero!

    He wasn't worth a **** alive;

               but dead he is a hero...

     
    from The Tomorrow Testament by Barry B. Longyear, p.7

     

  4. please replace the word oreo with the n word in your dumb analogy and tell me if it still works

     

    Basically, it does work. The cucial difference is that one word is charged with strong negative connotations while the other isn't. A word by itself is just a sound that is given a meaning by human use. Every word could be used as insult (as it might happen with mobbing).

    When, for instance, we go back to the olden-timey example of World War I propaganda posted earlier, we find that "hun" is used as a hostile and derogatory term to refer to Germans. It is not difficult to envisage that it could evoke strong emotional reactions a century ago. To-day, however, it is again just a word that doesn't cause even the slightest stir.

  5. Actually, "dark skinned and tribal" (or green-skinned) are the aspects of to-days depiction of Orcs that I quite dislike. I like my Orc to be inhuman and militaristic, a foil to whatever culture's perspective we share in the narrative; not a racist depiction of another culture. But I maintain that it should be avoided to interpret everything in fantasy with the goal to discern some racist undertone, lest we have worlds where every conflict is blurred diluted by a filter of misguided need of harmony. Everything can be misinterpreted into being racist or offensive.

     

    Chief_Orc_Archer.png

     

    You can achieve satisfying orcishness with pale skin.

    • Like 3
  6. I'm fairly positive that Tolkien's idea of the orcs began to develop before any Asian powers or supposed threats began to make any significant appearances in Europe.

     

    Here is an interesting essay on Tolkien's orcs. Note for instance that according to that site, it is "often theorized that Orcs represent German soldiers. There certainly are similarities between them. Orcs are almost caricatures of the German enemy of trench warfare: the hordes of gray, pitiless warriors who overwhelm the brave and outnumbered defenders of the West."

     

    a-1038-100_500.jpg

    ^ That boy looks cooler than racist-stereotype-Japanese-guy in any case.

     

    You can interpret any fantasy race as a racist caricature with more or less effort. What I find more convincing is that the Orcs are inspired by the trench fighter of the Western Front in general - a person who has lost his hope and his humanity in the endless battles of the hellish trenches.

     

    * * *

     

    The discussion here reminds me of a very interesting take on the question whether Watto from Star Wars Episode I is an anti-Semitic stereotype on jewornotjew.com:

    "If a character is designated as Jewish and is portrayed as loving money, having a big nose, being henpecked by women, whatever, that's a negative Jewish stereotype and the creator should be called to task.

     

    But if a character has a big nose and loves money and the anti-defamation league or whoever says that makes him/her Jewish, well, that's not the creator of the character spreading negative stereotypes. That's the Jews themselves."

     

    I think fantasy races should first of all be considered by themselves.

    • Like 2
  7. I think rape would make for a powerful plot device. A high ranking male paladin part of a order gets captured by Bugbears and gets raped turns him fallen and demented. Blames his order for his rape and secretly plots to destroy it by seeking a paladin with slightly rebellious nature and tricking him to further his agenda. If I can suspend my disbelief and not feel like a giant douche killing thousands of humanoids who have families in the sword coast I can handle rape being used in game also.

     

    I think rape is among the most boring devices to establish someone as a villain. Worse are only burning orphanages and kicking puppies.

    Your example is basically a scenario about a guy who's unable to cope with his suffering. That's fine. Having him being a man of virtue and reputation who's raped by monsters looks more like morbid excitement about and fascination with the violence and humiliation itself, as opposed to the effect it had on him.

     

     

     

    Also, I worry about the blithe way you dismiss rape as being easy to sit through. If sexual assault has never happened to you or someone you know, sure it's easy to sit through it without feeling anything. For those with personal experience, or have a loved one who went through it, it's not as easy. I wouldn't recommend just throwing things like that out there because for a lot of people, it can be horrible to sit through, set off a trigger, make them relive their own pain, etc.

     

     

    I agree with you, but at the same time I wonder if violence and war (tried and true story devices) don't have the same effect on those who had to endure them in real life.

  8. To me, the Icewind Dale series is a great experience *because* it is so linear - all focus is put on its plot and atmosphere, like in an interactive book (th ebox and cut scenes even *are* books).

     

    Baldur's Gate 1+2 are great games, in comparison, but the experience derives from the sense of freedom created by the numerous side-quests, not from the pretty straightforward and simple main story.

  9.  

    I see no point in Mage being Sorcerer. Cipher is like Sorcerer, albeit with a unique set of 'spells' (and whole lot different source for their powers).

     

     

    Soul Magic is supposed to be tough to handle or grasp so the Mages help themselves by deciphering complex codes, embedding them in those specially prepared tomes. Nothing lame about that, they are cool in that they are the only ones who can manipulate the vast, chaotic soul magic and bring it in some orderly form.

     

    Ciphers seem like psionics to me, mostly mindy powers, not the stuff you find on the standard wizard spell list.

     

     

    If you don't want to learn your spells from nerdy books, they automatically end up mindy, don't you think? Where else should your spells and your knowledge of them come from? Unless you are happy to play a druid or priestess as a wizard. 

  10. Doesn't give a ****?  --  "Waylaid by bandits?  That's nice, I'll leave you to that.", "I don't know... that cave's kinda far..."

    Noble-raised? -- "Are you kidding?  There's spiders in there.", "I don't suppose this backwater ghetto has a decent inn, hmm?"

     

    If you had ever had the joy of running a tabletop rpg for characters whose concept is basically 'I boycott the game', you wouldn't propose such dialogue options. Just hit the 'Farewell'-option everytime someone talks to your character. :ermm:

     

    Bsides, from the looks of it, noples in Eternity are warrior-elite and rulers, not fancy layabouts who spend their days wasting money and attending diner parties...

    • Like 1
  11. Don't you think you're getting a little bit too much involved over a non-existent matter? I mean, turning to biology to explain a desire to see love relationships between 2 almost faceless bunch of pixels in a random video game, come on.

    Is this not enough to enjoy it when the writers want to do so and design the story accordingly? There are plenty alternate medium or even games to get your romance on. Why is nobody besieging CDProjekt or Eidos Montréal over this?

     

     

    Personally, I am not particularily interested in PC-game romances, but by your logic, there needn't be any kind of relationship or interaction whatsoever between "almost faceless bunch of pixels in a random video game".

    • Like 1
  12.  

    Or, y'know, "pick a merit at the price of a few attribute points in chargen/pick a flaw for a few extra points", like in, say, literally every tabletop RPG ever?

     

    It's a good system.

     

    The alternative is to not balance the two, so that you can just pick 7 merits and -5 flaws and be an uber-person. Given the two choices, I'd go with balanced "merits" and "flaws" (whatever their names).

     

    The games that don't let you pick them separately tend to just pair them up anyway, a la Arcanum or Fallout.

     

    "You get this good thing, but also you kind of suck like so..." etc.

     

     

    In my experience it means "pick a flaw that's irrelevant to your character and gain extra points. I've seen a few melee fighters with a crippling penalty on the ranged attacks they never made, or cowardly wizards who flew from monsters they wouldn't have attacked in close combat anyway...

     

    The only kind of flaws I respect are the ones that actually hinder you.

     

    Besides, aren't combat injuries going to mar characters in PoE?

    • Like 1
  13. Methinks that's when you stopped reading the damn books!

     

    Aragorn and Arwen not fantasy nonsense romance?

     

    An entire species  - gobblins and orcs - who exist only to hurt stuff?

     

    An entire species - elves - who are only good and never evil?

     

    It's funny that you react so angrily, because no matter how much you dislike me, or the LotR books, or Tolkien in general, and no matter how much you question my ability to read and comprehend them, you a) indeed did not read my post very carefully because I b) never talked about the books in the first place. My example was the films.

     

    And no matter how much the films may deviate from Tolkiens work, visually they "[t]ake reality as a baseline" in a considerably large degree; as I originally said, the swords, armour, &ct. seen there may be at times a bit outlandish in appearance, but they do not look outright ridiculous, or unwieldable for the most part.

     

    You are free to disagree with me, but at least I am among those who have concrete examples for what they consider mature in a fictional setting.

     

    Also, there is a good reason why orcs are (apparently) always evil, but that doesn't belong in this discussion.

    • Like 1
  14. As far as I can tell, mature means there are few joyful events and places more time is wasted on explicit violence, drugs and soon-to-look-dated nudity. But I admit that I dislike the concept of 'mature' games because of thet cooler-than-you flair they try to evoke.

     

    Besides, here is an interesting discussion of a mature roleplaying game. (It's mature content, so only click if you are mature).

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