v1c70r14
Educated
Video games never had good writing and never will, games just aren't a good medium for storytelling. The pedigree of roleplaying games makes them extra bad for telling stories with, slimmed down wargames can't be used to tell the story of Beowulf authentically. Whatever the setting is or how you write the non-player characters it will always be set dressing for playing around with plastic toys and rolling dice. Myth is incompatible with the mechanical.
It's honestly pretty sad that these sorts of threads keep cropping up, even if the industry wasn't a propaganda arm of the ruling ideology and even if the writer had cut her teeth on history and real-world mythology, channelling lived experiences and the wisdom of age through the stroke of her quill, it would still not end up that great. What you want is the impossible, a contradiction. Some ask for these fantastical settings but get mad if they don't feature chests to loot, dungeons to crawl and monsters to slay. They will gnash their teeth if the player isn't getting stronger with each level up and if their itemization quasi-gacha addiction isn't sated. Others namedrop Tolkien but seem to never have read his work. Others still ask for great writing and then fume up when the game presents them with text.
The stink you smell isn't all from the Blackrock sponsored writing teams or incel basement dwellers that have never touched grass or absorbed entertainment deeper than a Marvel movie. It comes from RPGs too. You might as well yell at slot machine manufacturers to read more myth and folklore.
It's honestly pretty sad that these sorts of threads keep cropping up, even if the industry wasn't a propaganda arm of the ruling ideology and even if the writer had cut her teeth on history and real-world mythology, channelling lived experiences and the wisdom of age through the stroke of her quill, it would still not end up that great. What you want is the impossible, a contradiction. Some ask for these fantastical settings but get mad if they don't feature chests to loot, dungeons to crawl and monsters to slay. They will gnash their teeth if the player isn't getting stronger with each level up and if their itemization quasi-gacha addiction isn't sated. Others namedrop Tolkien but seem to never have read his work. Others still ask for great writing and then fume up when the game presents them with text.
The stink you smell isn't all from the Blackrock sponsored writing teams or incel basement dwellers that have never touched grass or absorbed entertainment deeper than a Marvel movie. It comes from RPGs too. You might as well yell at slot machine manufacturers to read more myth and folklore.