![]() To me, opinions are fine, shaming crosses the line.What starts out as an odd quest to deliver a letter by the player turns into a tragic backstory for the boy named Emil. Factor in our social media climate and we end up in bigger fights. I get the impression that fantsy leaning people are attracted to art careers more and the grounded side may be more likely to become critics which causes clashes like this. ![]() One side likes real world logic applied to most everything and the other fancies fantasy that's not constrained to real life, current culture views. My best guess as to why this happens so often is there are two distinct groups that look at art differently. It saddens me art like 2B brings out such negative language against characters like her. I'm not a fan of shaming for sexy designs. 2B's design isn't a mistake that should be corrected, it's a strong part of the whole. ![]() I understand not liking it but It's obvious the game did well. But it seems to me given the high likelihood of finding such visually pleasing and appealing, it may be rooted in something like some sort of uncomfort either at the notion of expressing potentially sexual drives so openly or it could be uncomfort at being made to feel such toward fictional characters or objects.Ĭlick to expand.It seems weird to me to put so much negative emphasis on something so many people clearly enjoy. Perhaps it is indeed an opinion of personal taste the dislike of fan service. While the characters in games are objects and lack shading realism, geometrically they are quite realistic. Women dress sexy to attract men, men seem to prefer women when they do so unless in a society bound by prudish norms. Still if some people would prefer some characters were in sexier clothing, it would be odd for them to always avoid the fan service costumes. I guess more conservative clothing could be offered as a dlc. But I think it is interesting that some people would find something appealing and even arousing but yet despite liking it, even a lot, avoiding it. Some people do not appreciate such elements in their entertainment. This is no hentai game or porn game, but I can see people taking issue with fan service. I mean I dont see how people could see her design and mistake it as a sexual gaming experience. 2B's hot as fuck, doesn't mean I would like people to go around and pretend that that is the sole focus of the game she's from. I am not sure why you are arguing this, as I never assorted the contrary. Your second paragraph seems to be arguing that most people would find women (in this context, 2B herself) attractive. However, the main point of NieR is not arousal, which is my whole point - that the game being is being falsely represented. That doesn't mean I have some issue with my sexuality, maybe that's just not how I want to use it. If the main point of your game is that it's supposed to be arousing, I'm probably not going to play it, and I am certainly not going to invest my money/time in it. This has to do with people not wanting to invest money/time into a sexual gaming experience. This has little to do with people being afraid of expressing their sexuality. ![]() The whole point of my argument is that NieR is not a " weird japanese robot sex game", so people are doing a disservice by representing it as one with these "2Butt" memes and everything. So you are saying that my friends would be foolish to write the game off because of the memes surrounding the character, and then dismiss the game in the exact manner that I am fearful people will. What does this post even mean? It's literally a contradiction.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |