""""""""""""""""Narrative"""""""""""""""""Much of the Codex's anti-romance stance is actually more about being "anti-people-who-really-like-romances". There's a narrative that BioWare's romances attracted a "bad crowd" that the studio destroyed itself by pandering to. Romances are seen as something that people have a tendency to care about to the exclusion of other things.
I sincerely doubt that Codex posters are 'afraid' of romance. More likely, they despise the cack-handed romances that generally plague the medium. Most games don't come close to having good writing, and romances are especially difficult to write well.Can someone explain to me why the Codex is so afraid of romance in video games? RPGs are, above all, about inhabiting a character in a fictional world; there's even PnP RPGs which have almost no combat at all.
It's clear that the focus in C2077 is creating a realistic world and placing you in it, giving you the option to interpret your character and develop them as you see fit. Romance is an integral part of the human experience and therefore it makes a lot of sense to have it in the game.
Even if you consider the cyberpunk source material in literature, there's almost always romance in the books. There's romance in Neuromancer, Snow Crash, Schismatrix, etc.
Communities like bioware's were already on their little heterophobic hysteria trips (and had people like Gaider encouraging or even leading the behavior) before the codex popped its cherry .The Codex was against romances way before the social justice movement made mandatory gay relationships part of the genre.
I think commie is conflating two related but separate things. The Codex was against romances way before the social justice movement made mandatory gay relationships part of the genre. Codexers thought romance was killing BioWare long before any of that stuff was around. Even today when people talk about cringeworthy RPG romances with terrible fanbases, they're more likely to be thinking about Aerie from BG2, not the gay Jersey Shore-looking dude from ME3 who nobody even remembers anymore. The SJW stuff supercharged anti-romance sentiment but did not cause it.
Why? Why does it has to be an rpg? There tons of visual novels for that crap.For me, romance in RPGs is an important thing
I know your kind, you all wish that.I think commie is conflating two related but separate things. The Codex was against romances way before the social justice movement made mandatory gay relationships part of the genre. Codexers thought romance was killing BioWare long before any of that stuff was around. Even today when people talk about cringeworthy RPG romances with terrible fanbases, they're more likely to be thinking about Aerie from BG2, not the gay Jersey Shore-looking dude from ME3 who nobody even remembers anymore. The SJW stuff supercharged anti-romance sentiment but did not cause it.
please make sure your hatemail is creative if this confession compels you to send any my way.
I know your kind, you all wish that.
On the other hand, even if they are storyfags, they prefer the narrative style of PS:T that was based on character development, which is antithetical to choose-your-waifu pandering that reached its final form in Mass Effect 2.
PS:T had romance. Only gameplayfags complain about romance in videogames.
For fucks sake get laid people.
And because most videogame writers have the maturity of horny, blue pill, sjw, cuck teenagers raised by crazy single mothers so you will see the most cringe of the cringe. On real life, you know half of the time you like your partner and the other half you wish to strangle her with your bare hands many people look to videogame as sources of unquestionable validation, so waifus can't be bitches.I sincerely doubt that Codex posters are 'afraid' of romance. More likely, they despise the cack-handed romances that generally plague the medium. Most games don't come close to having good writing, and romances are especially difficult to write well.Can someone explain to me why the Codex is so afraid of romance in video games? RPGs are, above all, about inhabiting a character in a fictional world; there's even PnP RPGs which have almost no combat at all.
It's clear that the focus in C2077 is creating a realistic world and placing you in it, giving you the option to interpret your character and develop them as you see fit. Romance is an integral part of the human experience and therefore it makes a lot of sense to have it in the game.
Even if you consider the cyberpunk source material in literature, there's almost always romance in the books. There's romance in Neuromancer, Snow Crash, Schismatrix, etc.
Thanks for reminding me of the biggest shit taken on a whole questline. Wow, they really shat their britches and all over Dijkstra.that quest is fucking shit and ruins dijkstra
Common Infinitron, there was a time where people were making walls of text the size of the China's Great Wall about how Tali's sweat tasted like, if those people were really as demanding on gameplay as they were horny degenerates, we would actually see good gameplay for a change.Much of the Codex's anti-romance stance is actually more about being "anti-people-who-really-like-romances". There's a narrative that BioWare's romances attracted a "bad crowd" that the studio destroyed itself by pandering to. Romances are seen as something that people have a tendency to care about to the exclusion of other things.
Can someone explain to me why the Codex is so afraid of romance in video games? RPGs are, above all, about inhabiting a character in a fictional world; there's even PnP RPGs which have almost no combat at all.
It's clear that the focus in C2077 is creating a realistic world and placing you in it, giving you the option to interpret your character and develop them as you see fit. Romance is an integral part of the human experience and therefore it makes a lot of sense to have it in the game.
Even if you consider the cyberpunk source material in literature, there's almost always romance in the books. There's romance in Neuromancer, Snow Crash, Schismatrix, etc.
I don't mind romance, but it's hard to do well
I don't mind romance, but it's hard to do well
You just need the right people to do it: