Wait, Mei is considered fat? I always assumed her bulk was due to the huge cold weather gear she wears. It's hardly flattering like the skintight outfits D.Va or Tracer wear.
LoL most notably and in smaller scale you have Twitch drop events that are Pride-themed along with other in-game items and whatever. It should also be understood that to big companies LGBT-characters are good marketing assets. UPlay can have an event with R6 characters (I don't know if there are openly gay operators, but the girl power definitely is there), EA Origin can have one etc.Which of these games has had a pride event?
I dunno. Sounds a bit cynical that it would actually be more about a culture war instead of companies making and marketing their toys. Imo, the typical "angry gamer" seething against diversity still does that because of genuine dislike for the marketing focus that shifted to unimportant stuff, while injecting woke lore and characters is done because it's a beneficial bottom line to have in the non-zero sum game these companies play with their biggest online service mp games.Except the people who make the fuss about "diversity" are more often than not the fans, whether they're decrying "forced diversity" or celebrating it.
Yes, to play a free online video game. Not take up heroin or join a terrorist organisation. Have some perspective.Those kids still made a choice sadly.
This is Mei with winter gear:Wait, Mei is considered fat? I always assumed her bulk was due to the huge cold weather gear she wears. It's hardly flattering like the skintight outfits D.Va or Tracer wear.
So you've cited one IP, and various IPs that "could" have one.LoL most notably and in smaller scale you have Twitch drop events that are Pride-themed along with other in-game items and whatever. It should also be understood that to big companies LGBT-characters are good marketing assets. UPlay can have an event with R6 characters (I don't know if there are openly gay operators, but the girl power definitely is there), EA Origin can have one etc.
There's plenty of people like Geeks and Gamers and The Quarterpounder in the world, the "angry nerd" stereotype is a stereotype that has plenty of reinforcement in reality. While it's absolutely true that companies do market "diversity" and "inclusiveness," at worst, it's irritating. Angry fanboys, on the other hand, are quite happy to resort to harassment, even death threats - we saw it in Ghostbusters 2016, we saw it in the Star Wars sequel trilogy, we saw it in Rings of Power, etc.I dunno. Sounds a bit cynical that it would actually be more about a culture war instead of companies making and marketing their toys. Imo, the typical "angry gamer" seething against diversity still does that because of genuine dislike for the marketing focus that shifted to unimportant stuff, while injecting woke lore and characters is done because it's a beneficial bottom line to have in the non-zero sum game these companies play with their biggest online service mp games.
I do have perspective. They're playing a shitty sequel that is worse than the original game with way less content, less features, characters locked behind shitty season passes and DLC, worse default costumes, punishes people with pre-paid phones, and yet is another "high quality AAA game" that is either broken, unfinished, missing modes with false promises that take longer than they should to complete and is only worth something because it's "free". Yeah, not worth this man's time. You want that shit, go right ahead. I am not going to stop you.Yes, to play a free online video game. Not take up heroin or join a terrorist organization. Have some perspective.
Agreed.Also, all this angst about various details being made canon or revealed or what have you in comics or cinematics, you all realise you’re getting angry over the stuff that would have been in the manual right? Like if Overwatch had a manual with the character roster in it, things like Tracer’s girlfriend and Reaper’s wife would be in there because that was where we used to put all the background fluff for these games.
Everytime they write lore that's more about its link to real world inclusivity/diversity politics than anything else. R6 has the girl power framing cinematic. LoL's roster is pussified to an absurd degree with most of the new champs being female or pretty boys (Bel'veth is a nice counter to this trend despite being female, tbh) on top of all the queerness. Apex Legends with its GSM characters and sexual liberalism. OW was set to do this as soon as cries for diversity were heard back in 2015 and they did push the envelope when it comes to globetrotting diversity rosters and the other games have followed suit.Also, what's an example of "woke lore" in the IPs mentioned?
The games talked about here are different, though. The lore-to-gameplay ratio isn't fixed and it's totally possible to make things a win-win for multiple demographics. Some of the outcry must be related to the perceived culture war, I reckon so too, but I highly doubt the companies are also in that fight, when a competition in the market makes much more sense. It's why I personally don't really care that gaming companies do this even though I'm not a fan of our socially progressive politics.Angry fanboys, on the other hand, are quite happy to resort to harassment, even death threats - we saw it in Ghostbusters 2016, we saw it in the Star Wars sequel trilogy, we saw it in Rings of Power, etc.
Who? Because certainly not Overwatch. And I find that very suspect considering that many of the games mentioned have no (real) link to the real world.Everytime they write lore that's more about its link to real world inclusivity/diversity politics than anything else.
What cinematic? Sisters in Arms? I didn't see any "girl" power there, not unless your definition is "girls shooting people." Which, as operators in Rainbow, is kind of your job description.R6 has the girl power framing cinematic.
I really don't have time to go through LoL's entire champion roster, so sure, okay. By my eyes, girls and pretty boys were always part of the setting (Ashe, Katarina, that fox girl character), but meh.LoL's roster is pussified to an absurd degree with most of the new champs being female or pretty boys (Bel'veth is a nice counter to this trend despite being female, tbh) on top of all the queerness.
What?Apex Legends with its GSM characters and sexual liberalism.
First, you need a source for "cries for diversity," because while there's certainly people that view media purely through identitarian lenses, you need to verify a source for that.OW was set to do this as soon as cries for diversity were heard back in 2015 and they did push the envelope when it comes to globetrotting diversity rosters and the other games have followed suit.
First, none of that is "woke" lore. And if it was, an entire swathe of media is suddenly "woke" if the criteria is a setting where people aren't discriminated against for sexuality, or LEDCs are better off then. FFS, Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare could be considered "woke" by that criteria for instance (certainly Infinite Warfare would be), but how often do you see CoD being called "woke?"Bear in mind that wokeness is a descriptive term here. People that want woke lore (non-traditional gender roles, GSM-representation, Afrofuturism and other uplifting of contemporary underdeveloped countries/regions) mostly overlap with people that want extended backstories to these characters and settings anyways.
Sure, okay.The games talked about here are different, though. The lore-to-gameplay ratio isn't fixed and it's totally possible to make things a win-win for multiple demographics. Some of the outcry must be related to the perceived culture war, I reckon so too, but I highly doubt the companies are also in that fight, when a competition in the market makes much more sense. It's why I personally don't really care that gaming companies do this even though I'm not a fan of our socially progressive politics.
Everything exists in the real world. You are the kind of person who wants to elaborate on in-universe reasons for everything, but I'm not talking about that at all, so, whatever.And I find that very suspect considering that many of the games mentioned have no (real) link to the real world.
I maybe jumped to conclusions with this one (a streamer paraphrased the idea). So I looked it up and there is quite a lot of extended lore in the game's "quests" that sometimes albeit rarely hint at the characters sleeping with each other from time to time.Also, "sexual liberalism?" Where?
The Playbook. R6: Siege is a good example because it began as a very 'dude-shooter', but has since expanded its roster with a lot of women. I find it the funniest because it's pretty grounded, and you could do an irl paintball team game like that in 2022 if somebody got the millions for it, but only in a video game would it have women competitors. That's the woke part. But I'll write it one last time: it's fine. Like, I also enjoy females in these rosters from a design point of view.What cinematic? Sisters in Arms? I didn't see any "girl" power there, not unless your definition is "girls shooting people." Which, as operators in Rainbow, is kind of your job description.
-You've sidstepped the question, so let me repeat it - you've claimed that "everytime they write lore, it's more about its link to inclusivity/diversity politics than anything else." You haven't specified "who" (Blizzard? Riot? Ubisoft), nor given an example. I'll throw you a bone and point out that the dev post on Espercanca for Overwatch did delve into the development side of things, but contrast that with other updates such as the Kiriko cinematic, or the Yokai short story. Where, in any of these, is there a case of characters going on about the politics you describe? And while I'm not as familiar with LoL as OW (but still more than the "Clancyverse"), I find it very surprising to hear the claim that the mountains of lore are focusing on the things you're claiming.Everything exists in the real world. You are the kind of person who wants to elaborate on in-universe reasons for everything, but I'm not talking about that at all, so, whatever.
-So some of the Legends sleep with each other some of the time. Um, okay...am I meant to be surprised? Because I'm not, there's clear implied, if not outright confirmed ships I'm familiar with for the setting (heck, I've dabbled with it myself). And how is any of that "woke?" Sexual permiscuity isn't new, either in fiction or reality.I maybe jumped to conclusions with this one (a streamer paraphrased the idea). So I looked it up and there is quite a lot of extended lore in the game's "quests" that sometimes albeit rarely hint at the characters sleeping with each other from time to time.
I watched the cinematic in question, I didn't get any sense of "girl power" there. Both teams have both genders on them, no attention is drawn to the sex of any of the female characters, etc. If the definition of "girl power" is that the main characters of a cinematic are female, then that's an awful lot of 'girl power' in the world. And as for girl competitors...you have Rainbow operatives already working together across both genders, you really think they're going to worry about that in a paintball match? If that's "woke," then the game became "woke" the moment female characters were allowed.The Playbook. R6: Siege is a good example because it began as a very 'dude-shooter', but has since expanded its roster with a lot of women. I find it the funniest because it's pretty grounded, and you could do an irl paintball team game like that in 2022 if somebody got the millions for it, but only in a video game would it have women competitors. That's the woke part. But I'll write it one last time: it's fine. Like, I also enjoy females in these rosters from a design point of view.
No. That's been my point in the thread.Um, okay...am I meant to be surprised?
Wait, Mei is considered fat? I always assumed her bulk was due to the huge cold weather gear she wears. It's hardly flattering like the skintight outfits D.Va or Tracer wear.
Mei is considered "fat" by Chinese and Asian standards, not by Western nor American. BTW, the pictures don't work.This is Mei with winter gear:
https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/overwatch_gamepedia/images/d/d0/Mei-portrait.png/revision/latest?cb=20170314224825
And this is Mei with a stripped down version of it:
https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/overwatch_gamepedia/images/d/da/Mei-ow2-portrait.png/revision/latest?cb=20191104081317
If she's "fat" in either of these images, then please tell me what's "thin."
I was going to post this in the general news thread. What an Overwatch thing to do.The PvE that Overwatch 2 advertised itself on, that justified the existence of an Overwatch 2 in the first place, even though it wasn't in the release version of the game...
has just been cancelled.
Even mentioning an Overwatch 3 is gonna take some massive brass balls that I don’t think even Blizzard's hubris would trick them into thinking they had.Oh its like GTA 5's heists. That were supposed to be added in to the SP game lol.
That were only added in Online, and to the next gen versions (which were not given as upgrades as has generally been standard) so you literally had to buy the game a second time.
Except in OW's case I guess maybe never. Unless they have you buy OW 3 for them.
Battleborn always looked pretty bad to me, but that 2D animation they put out for the game will always stick with me.Gearbox should just revive battleborn as a major flex on blizzard. Came out same month as OW1, with PvE missions and hero progression and no cash shop iirc.
Overwatch Immortal tba next Blizzcon (do they still have those )Even mentioning an Overwatch 3 is gonna take some massive brass balls that I don’t think even Blizzard's hubris would trick them into thinking they had.
Like even uttering the word ‘three’ in those hallways at the moment is likely to get them grabbed by the Dai Li for tea at Lake Laogai.