primeira vez que eu vi Ragnarok achei essa só uma interação fofinha e meio sexy entre um casal, agora que eu sei o quão forte essa diaba é, essa cena ficou engraçadíssima
Con todo lo de God of War hay que recordar cuando se anunció que The Witcher 4 sería protagonizado por Ciri, salió el PROPIO AUTOR diciendo que en su historia Ciri siempre fue la protagonista, y aun así los onvrecillos llorones le pusieron a caldo. AL AUTOR.
Whenever a game creates a protagonist female character men start whining. Women have been playing games with male protagonists for years and can embrace and connect with them but men can't do the same for women. They make it clear in every way that they don't see women as humans
@ShadowRainNyx@onyxicca you thought that would insult me? how precious, it’s like seventh grade again
now talk to a wall cause i have better things going on over here
See that's the thing... You want to play as a man and the rest of us wants to play a good game. The gender of the protagonist doesn't guarantee that it's good. The contents of its story, characters, and gameplay determine that.
I think people flatten the genderlocked protagonist debate too much.
In Elden Ring, choice matters because you are not a fully fixed person. You are a Tarnished and the game lets you decide what kind of myth you want to become.
In PoE, genderlocked classes feel different because the class is an archetype. You are stepping into a voice, silhouette and fantasy tied to that role.
But a fixed protagonist in a story driven game is another thing entirely. That kind of game is not always asking “who do you want to be?” Sometimes it is asking “can you inhabit this person’s point of view?”
Not every game exists to let us live our own fantasy. Some games can teach empathy by making us sit inside someone else’s story.
But that only works when the character is written with dignity, not as a stereotype, fantasy object or empty shell.