• ClimateChangeAnxiety [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    When I was a kid I would always play evil characters, especially remember in KOTOR playing full dark side and the dark side options in that are fully “steal the baby’s ice cream” “kick the hungry dog” kind of evil options. Now doing those things makes me feel guilty sadness

      • Gosplan14_the_Third [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        She’s not though lol

        KOTOR 2 spoiler

        She was both Jedi and Sith in the past, and over time she came to despise the Force and the effect it has on people and pretty much everything else - her goal is to destroy the force and let people have free will (by proxy. She doesn’t care, but that would be the effect, were the death of the force not mean the death of all living beings in the galaxy). Far from a “lol fuck the light side, fuck the dark side, balance is the best” viewpoint.

        She’s far from perfect; a peak Machiavellian with contradictory beliefs - and focused entirely on her feud with the force, completely uncaring of the lives of the people of the galaxy. She is, however, a very fascinating character and it’s a shame the money people rushed Obsidian into an early release date.

        KotOR 2 is still one of my favorite games of all time.

        • Smeagolicious [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          Amazing character with stellar writing (with some of the restored content it’s even better), who is absolutely wrong. I love that she can have complex layered motivations for her actions, can cause players to question why they make certain moral choices, and still be absolutely wrong in the end. It’s great, and I feel it’s missing from a lot of game media.

          • AmarkuntheGatherer@lemmygrad.ml
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            11 months ago

            Except of course, she’s right. Her goal of destroying the force is one of the noblest in the entire franchise. The force takes away people’s free will on an individual level and hurls the galaxy into conflicts that cost billions of lives in a seemingly infinite loop.

            That isn’tto say her ideas are particularly applicable to us. Chosen ones and those individuals worth billions can’t exist in our reality, but do in star wars. We’ve got people who were positioned in critical junctions and could achieve what many others couldn’t, yet Kissinger (rip bozo) wasn’t Nihilus.

            • Smeagolicious [they/them]@hexbear.net
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              11 months ago

              Nah I never got on board with the force as a willful entity that sentient beings like us could describe like such, like a puppet master pulling all the strings. Maybe I’m just crazy but the reading of the force as taking away the agency and willpower of beings doesn’t seem to hold up in the (good) text. The fascination with prophecy and destiny is what led many to destruction, not the force itself. The conflict between light and dark isn’t orchestrated by the force itself, at least, not beyond the conflicts that would arise around such a supernatural power. Balance in the force is the light and not the synthesis/conflict between it and dark. I never particularly liked a lot of George’s ideas but that’s one I can get behind.

              The clone wars gods of the force Mortis arc and the canon obsession with “darkness rising to meet the light” & vice versa just seem overly simplistic and deterministic in the exact way you describe. I’m probably very dumb for wanting to interpret a space fantasy universe through a materialist perspective but the best works of star wars IMO treat the force in line with Yoda’s description of a link between all things that doesn’t determine how lives play out, but simply describes the link between all lives, and the echoes (to take it back to kotor) one’s actions inevitably cause (which has a fun metaphorical & literal meaning).

              The force is a fact of the universe that, by its existence in the cosmology, influences things, but I liked the Qui-Gon school of thought that the “will of the force” wasn’t necessarily a hard deterministic prophecy type thing but the myriad infinitesimal interactions between all things that lead where they will, bringing one to unexpected but (narratively) significant destinations. Or something lol I’m tired

              • AmarkuntheGatherer@lemmygrad.ml
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                11 months ago

                KOTOR isn’t in the new canon anyway, so I feel it makes sense to pick and choose what from the current canon applies to KOTOR and vice versa. I don’t think anyone outright suggested the force being sentient per se. I personally think of its influence more like gravity, both in the sense that it’s a fact of existence and that the work in applies (in the physics sense, not labour) isn’t absolute. This is reflected in the game mechanics, the force rewards the PC for "picking a side”, at neutral the player can’t get prestige classes and max light/dark side points gives bonus attributes.

                Even if we don’t get into the light vs dark notion, the force is definitely pushing people in anti-human directions. In the prequels, every time Anakin asks for advice, he receives some pseudo-buddhist inhuman horseshit, and I don’t think the point was that the jedi leadership were all imbeciles. Hell, even in the OT, it’s clearly said that Luke cannot kill Vader, since he’d fall to the dark side if he indulged his anger in that way. The force is literally telling us killing space hitler bad. The balance (as described by Lucas, not that he was perfectly consistent) is supposed to be all light and no dark, but if human tendencies give rise to the dark side so easily, this balance isn’t a real equilibrium. You can see this in almost all the post-ROTJ stories, the dark side rises back somehow.

                I like Kreia’s animosity towards the force for a very meta reason. All of the idealist idiocy in any of the SW stories, all the individuals that changed the fate of the galaxy had the power to move worlds, can be explained by the Force forcing an idealist reality on the SW galaxy, and that destroying the Force would restore materialism as a fact to the universe, and as a bonus will break the cycle of galaxy-wide conflict.

                • Smeagolicious [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  11 months ago

                  I think that’s a fair interpretation - don’t necessarily agree with it but I get it! I did subscribe to the fan explanation for the Jedi order being absolutely no help to Anakin, basically saying the Order as a construct became ossified and unable to contend with the realities of life and human (or alien) emotions. There’s plenty of good SW media going into how the light doesn’t require to ignore emotions, love, or even killing when necessary, and the restrictions were the result of a millennia old stagnant order.

                  The Light would be the ideal state: beings living in harmony, valuing each other’s lives etc., but I like to think the Dark is “unnatural” in the way of conditions leading to humans making malicious or greedy choices. It’s all a bit metaphorical but the dark is almost always used to represent selfishness and disregard for empathy, patience, etc., but the Dark can be a descriptive term. It can represent the “darkness” and evil choices that humans (or aliens in fiction) are capable of, and the evil they perpetrate in their selfish pursuits creates the Dark. Basically the Dark is the use of the force for “evil”, selfish, or non-empathetic actions, and it acts as a force multiplier (haha), causing a literal cascading descent into evil and madness where it would be more metaphorical IRL. The corruption necessary to accrue billions, and the ease of abandoning human empathy when it is in one’s interest is pretty analogous IMO. I see the idealist nonsense of the dogmatic Jedi philosophy as just as problematic as Kreia does, but I’d be more willing to point to human (or alien) power structures causing it more than the mystical field itself.

                  As with all interpretations of vague and inconsistent media I think there’s no real answer, or at least one that’ll get us to agree 100%, ¯_(ツ)_/¯. All I know is that I used to spend far too much time thinking about fiction like this and this thread’s been a throwback so thanks, good discussion lol

    • Zymi [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      I remember in KOTOR 2 your character has a dialog option that calls out the banality of the evil choices. I forget the exact words, but basically your character laments the opportunities they are provided beyond basic cruelties.

      Found it cuz it was bothering me:

      "These small acts of cruelty bore me - to take money from others, to insult them, to threaten their lives. " "I command the Force, and yet these small cruelties are all life presents me with. "

  • CriticalOtaku [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    When I was a kid, I used to pick all the super outlandish dialogue options just to see how far the game would accommodate absolute incoherence.

    But then they stopped making games like Fallout and started making games like Mass Effect.

    Nowadays I don’t really have time to do novelty runs and I don’t find it fun to play as an asshole so yeah, it’s communism time in Disco Elysium Baay-beeeee! dubois-dance

    (And my Baldur’s Gate 3 character is a goody-two-shoes so now Astarion won’t bang me, THERE ABSOLUTELY ARE BLOODY CONSEQUENCES kiryu-dame-da-ne )

    • GalaxyBrain [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      There was a DnD game I played a while back as a rogue with maxed charisma and smarts who focused more on white collar sorta crime and scams and stuff rather than pickpocketing and sneaking. By lugging around a suit of paladin armor that slowed me down and made me useless in combat, I tricked a village into starting a peasants crusade and went village to village building an army of religiously zealous followers and just kinda did a quest with several hundred peasants at my command.

  • axont [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    There are like 5 games ever that are morally complex. Most games that let you choose between two sides let you pick between a faction of fascists or ineffective cultish hippies. It’s rare for games to present better ideology than those.

    Off the top of my head, I can only think of a handful. Disco Elysium, Fallout: New Vegas, Planescape: Torment, Frostpunk, Caves of Qud, Vampire TMB. All of those have writing that allows the player to explore what good or bad are in the right situations. DE is probably the best I’ve ever seen in a game, an absolute masterpiece that shows you the consequences of the bad moral choices, and yet also explores why you might choose the good ones.

    I haven’t played Baldur’s Gate 3 yet but I’m told the writing is actually pretty good, so I’ll check that out.

      • zed_proclaimer [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        I would say there’s a definite theme of refugees being scapegoated by bigots and xenophobes, and those bigots and xenophobes falling into evil. Kagha, Bahl cultists, the people of Baldur’s Gate, etc. are all blaming everything on the tiefling refugees. There’s a definite positive theme of inclusiveness and not being close-minded

        • KoboldKomrade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          I got a little sad when my character told a bigot to shut up, he told me some bs, and I called him out for being foreign too. (one of the better options given)

          I then blow him up with a fireball after the crowd agrees with me and turns on him. Of course, the game sees it as murder, because they didn’t code it to be different, but damn in my canon that guy is a pile of soot. It kinda sucks that only RPGs like BG3 are brave enough to take the stance of “Remove all bigots by force if needed”, but only because killing Evil McMurderlord is fun. But I’m glad at least they let you say it.

        • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          Yeah, that’s what I mean, it’s basically the same morality as a Dragon Age or a Mass Effect. “Mean people and racists are evil”. Which like, they are, but it’s not particularly deep.

    • Mardoniush [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      Morrowind as well, all the factions suck (except the anti slavers), and hate each other, but complex material systems of oppression and co dependence trap them in a decaying structure and have caused even the more noble institutions to be corrupted. And now that system is no longer capable of defending itself.

      You may or may not be the Nerevarine, and even if you are it’s unclear what that actually means and if it’s prophecy or you taking it “by violence”. But you can use the fact other people think you are to break the cycle.

      Of course once you have there’s no guarantee of anything better on the other side, you’re just some guy, you know.

      • Mindfury [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        Broke: you are the Nerevarine, the chosen, the prophesised

        Woke: you’re just some guy

        Bespoke: the Nerevarine was always just some guy and the Tribunal was always fated to pay for their crimes at the hand of the common man

    • Gosplan14_the_Third [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      Some of the Shin Megami Tensei games are really interesting in that regard, because even as they portray the ideologies in their super-dogmatic form and in some cases as everyone-sucks (including the status quo supporters), games like Devil Survivor 1 or Strange Journey actually have writing so good that they make choosing sides not obvious and feel like they actually have weight on the future of humanity in-universe.

      Others either flop on their face (SMT IV), or have very clear biases (SMT I or II)

      But hey,

      SMT II

      choosing the Chaos ending, allying with Lucifer and the Demons of the Abyss to destroy the Abrahamic God’s flying Noah’s Ark, to free the world’s oppressed and left-to-their-own-misery subclasses from a theocratic, hierarchical dictatorship… leading to a world where both the mutated humans left on the surface after 1’s events and the demons could co-exist in relative harmony - all while rejecting the title of the Messiah.

      …is a great ending and it doesn’t matter if the other two don’t compare.

      (I fucking love this game, I eagerly await the day when the translation of the PS1 port comes out)

    • CloutAtlas [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      Since BG3 exists within the lore of Forgotten Realms, evil isn’t nearly as complex as, say, Disco Elysium.

      Like sure siding with the slavers is easier than siding with the slaves or X Y Z amoral choice may give you an otherwise unobtainable reward for doing strictly the good thing, but it’s not that deep.

      Still, great game

  • Amerikan Pharaoh@lemmygrad.ml
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    11 months ago

    All main quest endings suck ass

    Did you just describe Skyrim? (Seriously, I can’t get behind the major conflict being between Nord ethnostatists and the get of fucking Septim.)

    • CrushKillDestroySwag@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      In my opinion, the Dragonborn - a supernaturally powerful reincarnation of a god who has been given a task to avert Ragnarok - should be above the civil war conflict. What does it matter which group of nobility Skyrim’s peasants pay taxes to for the next couple of decades? We’re tryinng to stop the end of the world - I always told both Tulius and Ulfric to their faces that they’re idiots.

      • TheLastHero [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        Seriously, where was the option to stab the faction you helped in the back and take power for yourself? After you win the war for them you just go back to looting zombie burial sites like a loser.

      • booty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        What does it matter which group of nobility Skyrim’s peasants pay taxes to for the next couple of decades?

        The taxes don’t matter, what does matter is putting forth a unified front next time the turbo-fascist Thalmor-controlled Aldmeri Dominion tries to invade. As the Thalmor themselves put it, it really doesn’t much matter who wins the war, all that matters is that the war ends. Either side winning is bad for them.

      • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
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        11 months ago

        They also should be above pickpocketing the literal clothes off of every back in Skyrim because it makes them giggle, but they aren’t the Dragonborn Skyrim needs, they’re the Dragonborn Skyrim deserves.

      • ItsPequod [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        Hmm, I dunno about this one, I think I’d take the mostly multi-ethnic Empire over the Nordic ethno-nationalist fascists who are set up to weaken the Empire by the other ethno-nationalist fascists, the Thalmor.

        Critical support for the Empire?

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          Critical support for the Empire in their war to stop the Thalmor from dancing atop the tower and unmaking the Arena of Nirn.

          We can do communism after we stop the mythopiec dream-engineers from ripping reality apart and throwing us all screaming in to the eye of Sithis.

        • Saeculum [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          The Empire is an extractive regime funnelling wealth into the imperial core of Cyrodil at the expense of the provinces. Not only that, but the provinces are extorted for the majority of the manpower of the imperial legions, with the officer core being made up of the Cyrodilian nobility.
          The Empire knowingly permits slavery amongst it’s subjects, and it’s history is one of a succession of revolts.

          The proto-fascist Stormcloaks are preferable to the extant fascism of the Thalmor and the mature imperial project of the Empire because it still has the potential to move in a less harmful direction, as the feudal regimes of the west and south of Skyrim do not share most of the exclusionary value of the northern holds.

          • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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            11 months ago

            Pretty sure they abolished Slavery following the Red Year in Morrowind, as the Dres that were the biggest reserve of support for slavery were all eaten by the Argonians when they bulked up on Hiist sap so the Hlallu king had enough influence to end the practice without the possibility of a Dres-Redoran-Indoril uprising.

            Also, Ulfrick is a huge dork and is not good enough at break-dancing to defeat the Thalmor in the one arena that truly matters. He’s also presumably racist towards monkeys, and we’re gonna need the Imga if we’re going to pull this off. Even with Numidium Tiber Septim could only force a draw with the old Altmer. What chance do we have without a bunch of ballet-doing gorillas?

            I really think our best chance is quickly putting down the Stormcloak revolt then using the death of Emperor Mede to steer a charismatic Bosmer leader on to the throne, then use mixed loyalties in Valendwood as a lever to break Elsweyr off from the Dominion. If the Empire can demonstrate that it’s a credible challenger to the Dominion we can probably get the Hist on board purely through shared interest in maintaining the status quo of reality, then start constructing Battlespires in the northner parts of the Tamriel in preparation of eventually invading Summerset Isle from the one direction they’re not expecting; space Oblivion!

            If we can figure out where Vivec fucked off to and assemble a strategic mythic alliance of Paarthunax, Vivec, the Mane, the Dragon Born, the Nerevarine if they’re still around, and whatever other quasi-divine pro-existing legends are wandering around I think we have a good chance of yelling “TAMRIEL EXISTS” loud enough to deafen the Aldmeri high wizards to all other possibilities.

          • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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            11 months ago

            Tamriel is not a capitalist country, the Empire is not characterized by a peculiar imperial extraction regime, just a continental system of legal suzerainty and tributaries ala the Ming or Tang. bethesda is very confused which vibes they wanted to evoke, so they’re aesthetically romanesque, but the content of client kings and psuedo-feudalism is not Roman whatsoever. they’re even on-paper against slavery, the most roman thing ever.

            • ComradeRat [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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              11 months ago

              Tamriel is not a capitalist country, but imo it seems pretty clear the province of Cyrodiil is a province wherein the capitalist mode of circulation prevails and enjoys the patronage of a continent-spanning empire to extract various luxury/exotic goods from periphery areas for profit.

              In Morrowind, this was ofc very, very clear (East Empire Company, monopoly on Ebony, paper contracts, co-opting local rulers, etcetc its all very British empire).

              In Oblivion we see the imperial core which is suitably saccharine on its surface but horrifying just below (e.g. the murderous countess of Leyawiin, the feeding of prisoners to vampires in Skingrad, Bravil’s general horribleness, beggars everywhere, etc.)

              In Skyrim we see a part of the Imperial core (but not the core-core) 200 years after the Empire suffered its greatest crisis, defacto collapsed and ‘returned’ with a tiny portion of its territory (notably missing: the sugar plantations of Elweyr, the Ebony mines of Morrowind and Hammerfel; the tropical trees of Black Marsh i.e. the areas from which the majority of wealth would have likely been extracted).

              Also I’d note that client-kings was very much characteristic of early Roman expansion (although definitely not so much the periods of higher imperial power). Pseudo-feudalism isn’t really descriptive of what we see in any of the TES games imo; Oblivion uses titles such as ‘count’, but so did/does capitalist Britain.

            • Saeculum [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              11 months ago

              You can extract resources without being capitalist. Unlike the historical Chinese dynasties, the imperial core territory is not self sufficient, they are entirely reliant on resources and manpower from the provinces to maintain control over their holdings.

              • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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                11 months ago

                You can extract resources without being capitalist

                yeah like the Romans. but Oblivion, Skyrim, and Daggerfall offer basically no evidence for that besides an aesthetic affinity between the Empire and Romans. Morrowind has more of that character and a nativist resistance streak, but the Empire can’t even implement the ban on slavery there, so it’s clearly tenuous.

                Unlike the historical Chinese dynasties, the imperial core territory is not self sufficient

                after however many thousands of years of Lore there is for Tamriel, “core territory” surely expands. the “core” of the Huang He was good agricultural land in very remote times, but lacked mineral resources. once the agricultural produce of the valley state(s) grew enough to enforce influence over more expansive territory and bring those into the fold. after a really long time, huge swathes of land beyond the chief rivers of China are ‘core’ and we call them self-sufficient.

                even if Cyrodiil itself is insufficient (which i kind of doubt on paper, cause they had to give them farms and mines, rivers and hills for gameplay variety) the whole continent is the integrated economic system we’re talking about, and this is acknowledged even by the rebels in Skyrim with their “Talos made the empire” type shit. it’s also supported with the games calling all the disparate ‘countries’ of Tamriel “provinces”, the common language being spoken between the whole continent, and the long history of unification.

                • ComradeRat [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  11 months ago

                  yeah like the Romans. but Oblivion, Skyrim, and Daggerfall offer basically no evidence for that besides an aesthetic affinity between the Empire and Romans.

                  I’d argue this is intentional; the Septim Empire consciously mimics the Reman empire’s aesthetics to bolster its legitimacy.

                  after however many thousands of years of Lore there is for Tamriel, “core territory” surely expands

                  I wanna point out that Tamriel the continent has existed for thousands of years, but the Septim Empire of a United Tamriel lasted only around 400 years, and during a large part of that was consumed with internal conflicts, outright civil wars and failed Akaviri adventures.

                  Before the Septim empire, there was a thousand year interregnum of warlords under a nominal akaviri potentate. Before that, there was a Reman empire for a few hundred years which nominally controlled the entire continent except for morrowind, but the extent of its control on the Summerset Isles was getting tribute.

                  I also think that the imperial core of the Septim and Reman empires is likely not just cyrodiil, but likely extends to High Rock and Skyrim (empire of (tamrielic) man after all). It should also be noted that not the entirety of Cyrodiil, High Rock or Skyrim benefits from being “imperial core” to equal extents (c.f. beggars) or at all (e.g. goblins, reachfolk, orcs). In historical imperial cores, the benefits of imperialism trickle down, so to speak, to the imperial core’s relative poor rather than being spread to the imperialised so i would assume this to be the case here

          • ItsPequod [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            11 months ago

            The proto-fascist Stormcloaks are preferable to the extant fascism of the Thalmor and the mature imperial project of the Empire because it still has the potential to move in a less harmful direction

            We’re gonna push King Ulfric left, any day now he’ll allow the Dunmer out of the ghettos of Windhelm and the Khaijit to trade inside the walls!

            • TraumaDumpling [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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              11 months ago

              ‘ghettoes’ lmao this is blatant imperial propaganda, they have like 1/3rd of the city, stone walls, doors, lights, everything. there are 3 streets in the city and they have an entire one of them, theres like the inn and the graveyard and the blacksmiths house and the castle as the entire rest of the city, there are literally more dark elf homes than nord buildings. all of the homeless are men, not elves. and this is during a civil war in their literal revolutionary military capital. any other political power would have treated the elves worse in the same situation. even other elves would probably not let dark elf refugees shelter in their military capitals during a war in which the dark elves loyalty was in question. Ulfric will personally recruit you no matter what race you are, he literally doesn’t care as long as you fight the imperialist invaders. this ‘stormcloaks are racist’ narrative is the most baby-brained surface level read of the situation. literally 2 guys in the city are racist, one of them homeless and mentally unwell, not any of the leadership, and the person they are harassing literally turns out to be related to an imperial spy if you look into it.

              • CloutAtlas [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                11 months ago

                The warcry “Skyrim belongs to the Nords!” Is in itself a racist warcry that erases native Snow Elves (and Falmer) existence, as well as the pagan Reachmen of the south west (who are A: native to the Reach and B: not Nords!)

              • ItsPequod [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                11 months ago

                Oh how generous of the Nords to allow them 1 whole alley in their city where they cannot tread otherwise, whereas in Solitude any Man or Mer may walk the streets unhindered! Indeed, that you hold parts of Skyrim to be more progressive than Windhelm is such that they retain some tradition and loyalty to the Empire! To suggest the Nords are not racist is to lay bare how the Empire, after losing to the Thalmor do not treat the Altmer in such contempt as the Nords do the Dunmer for no good reason at all save Nordic Supremacy!

                • TraumaDumpling [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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                  11 months ago

                  ‘1 whole alley’ its literally a third of the fucking city, they have more houses than the nords do! they can travel anywhere they want! they have thicker walls and bigger houses than the high street in whiterun! and every city in skyrim bars the khajiit traders, they are literally all fences. not all khajiit, just the ones that are travelling merchants. the fact that the empire just accept the altmer’s fascist rule is not an argument in their favor, but the opposite - the altmer literally want to unmake reality. every single one of them believes in the necessity of this, it is their religion and the elder scrolls series is honestly written based on some weird racial/ethnic lines

        • KobaCumTribute [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          The Empire left Hammerfell out to dry, and the Stormcloaks want to ally with them to keep fighting the nazi elves. Like all the factions are vile monarchist shits, but a national liberation movement that’s explicitly fighting for solidarity with other nations in their struggle against omnicidal elven fascist imperialism seems like the lesser evil compared to an imperial machine that is itself ruled by compradors collaborating with the omnicidal elves.

  • TheDialectic [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    Every DND game I end up just trying to do comunism. Evil king needs to be replaced with a good king? Nah, hand out rings of free food/water to the peasants until the monarchy collapses.

  • SpiderFarmer [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    I got a game recently where you play the begrudging assistant of the bad guys. It’s one of the few games where going with the outright evil choices rewards you heavily. I can’t bring myself to do it.

  • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    11 months ago

    I agree with the last commentor in this old tumblr screen. I don’t enjoy being cruel to others, even just video game characters. I made myself once for Dragon Empire and just felt bad since I’m neither a sadist nor a massochist.

    Yes, they are not real and I’m not judging those that do evil runs. My brain isn’t wired that way, however, and is prone to feeling empathy, even towards the non-sentient, scripted bundles of pixels and data.

    • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      It turns out when the options are Comically Evil and Generally Decent, most people will choose the latter. The Mass Effect devs reported that 90% of people chose the “good” route in that game.

  • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    When I played Goldeneye 007 as a kid, I would massacre all the civillians and scientists, reset the map, then do it again. scared

  • SerLava [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    The problem is they BARELY actually let you do self-interested evil. It’s all just pointless cruelty, often with nothing but downsides. Doing bad shit should push you towards doing more bad shit because people stop trusting you

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      11 months ago

      Yeah I noticed the path of least resistance option was to be heroic and good for the best rewards and friends. The actual min-maxed optimum route for XP and items is full clear mass slaughter of all that exists. There’s not an easy self-interested lawful evil route

  • zed_proclaimer [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    BG3 just needed more time to cook unfortunately. The endings all suck, not because they are bad endings it’s because they don’t exist. It just ends suddenly. There’s a massive hole of missing content right at the end and it’s not hard to write, everyone knows what they want to happen with their party and maybe a bittersweet twist. Act 3 just really starts to break down part way through it, despite it being quite beautiful of an area. You can tell content was hacked out of it, there’s weird missing chunks and it doesn’t play like Acts 1 or 2 at all

    • Trudge [Comrade]@lemmygrad.ml
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      11 months ago

      Larian has a history of doing that, so I don’t trust them to finish the game even if they were given more time. They probably would’ve made Act 1 and 2 even bigger instead.

      • zed_proclaimer [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        Definitive Edition fixed all the holes in DoS2 so I think Larian will mostly patch it up eventually, maybe in a year after release.

        Even with a weak act 3 the overall game rocks and just acts 1 + 2 are easily worth the sticker price

    • Robmart
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      11 months ago

      Classic Larian. Don’t worry, the special edition or whatever it is called will fix that. The same thing happened with DOS2.

  • space_comrade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    That’s why I never finish my genocidal empire Stellaris playthroughs, it just feels bad, I’d rather implement full galactic communism.

    • zed_proclaimer [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      I love abducting billions of people with that one ability though. You don’t even have to make them slaves, you can just give them full citizenship afterwards. You will join my space communist society whether you like it or not. Very T’au like.

    • barsoap
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      11 months ago

      Eh when I’m playing essentially Tyrannids I’m going to eat everyone (Bonus: Be plantoid or fungoid to confuse the vegans). Though I wonder what I’m going to eat afterwards, then.

      My favourite playthrough ever has been a Tree of Life one, though: Tried to go tall but being insufficiently boxed in I also went wide, ludicrous tech and economical advantage leading to species afraid of their other neighbours bending the knee diplomatically left and right even though Tree of Life gets a hive mind opinion penalty. Never relied on them for economy or defence (mine or theirs), let them have full autonomy short of waging wars, backing them in defensive wars but not requiring them to back me, making them completely loyal very very quickly. Another big blob formed in the meantime, an overlord with lots of dissatisfied and scared vassals – well that’s an easy one, they pretty much all swore secret fealty to me and then rebelled, my fleets guaranteeing victory and their lasting autonomy (short of starting wars). Left over were the sleeping empires, arrogant as ever and guilty of their own aggressions past or present, and a military dictatorship not reachable with diplomacy, technologically and militarily vastly inferior but the game just insisted on them declaring me rival and there’s no peaceful way around a -1000 opinion penalty. And thus I declared aggressive war for the first time, exactly three times: I cracked open the empires, assimilating their technological and biological distinctiveness, and force-vassalised the dictatorship which got over it quickly. Defeat the crisis and done and dusted, the hive mind could rest having made sure that all those individuals stopped fighting. A full galaxy of vassals with completely incompatible ideologies living peacefully side by side, fulfilling the sleeping empires’ goals of unification and preservation for them.