On Being Deliberately Offensive

Yahtzee Croshaw

New member
Aug 8, 2007
11,049
0
0
On Being Deliberately Offensive

Hatred is a game that is deliberately trying to be offensive. Forgive me if that's obvious to you, but it apparently slipped by some people.

Read Full Article
 

maninahat

New member
Nov 8, 2007
4,397
0
0
I think people were mad at Game of Thrones, not because they really liked the character and didn't want them to be raped, but because they felt the rape was a tasteless, unimaginative and inappropriate plot device that didn't fit.

Onto the subject at hand - I can't be mad at the likes of Hatred. It is trying so very hard to be edgy and inappropriate, it comes across like the real people it is based on; desperate, sad, and try hard. I don't think Game of Thrones was trying to cause a moral outrage with the show, they just inserted rape because they thought it was suitably dramatic. Hatred tried to go for moral outrage however, much like Postal games do; they want to be bad taste and crass because that's what the idiot, delinquent kid does in class for easy attention.
 

Thanatos2k

New member
Aug 12, 2013
820
0
0
But perhaps it waits in vain; it hasn't escaped my attention that the popular discourse on Hatred seems to have abruptly ended with its release.
Because the screaming moralizer's goal was to prevent it from being released. They failed. So they slunk back to their Twitters and Tumblrs to prepare for the next horrible thing that must be stopped lest society fall apart.

I think people were mad at Game of Thrones, not because they really liked the character and didn't want them to be raped, but because they felt the rape was a tasteless, unimaginative and inappropriate plot device that didn't fit.
If you think it didn't fit, it would require you to be some kind of blind lunatic who hadn't watched Game of Thrones up until that point. Like many who poured out of the woodwork to try and criticize it.
 

Rylot

New member
May 14, 2010
1,819
0
0
maninahat said:
I don't think Game of Thrones was trying to cause a moral outrage with the show, they just inserted rape because they thought it was suitably dramatic.
Granted I've never gotten into Game of Thrones or the books but I think the point he's making is that getting mad at a show that for five seasons now has been about fan favorite characters getting rapped and killed for rapping a fan favorite character is as silly as a getting worked up over a game that is trying so very hard to get people worked up.
 

LucBen999

New member
Jan 27, 2010
4
0
0
Great article, but I disagree that Hatred was under no threat. The game got an undeserved AO rating for having violence milder than MKX or even the Tomb Raider reboot, which features similar (and often more brutal) executions with firearms, with the ESRB pretty much admitting to political pandering under the excuse of "taking context into account". Besides, the game getting put back on Steam was the result of a not trivial campaign complaining to Valve about its removal, don't doubt for one second that without the backlash Hatred would have remained banned.
 

Phasmal

Sailor Jupiter Woman
Jun 10, 2011
3,676
0
0
Yes, I thought the reaction to Hatred was rather strange. It was obviously peddling the `2edgy4u` thing and was rather well received by people who indeed are 2edgy4u. Getting mad at it is just kinda what it wants? And it was taking itself far too seriously to be anything but funny to me.

And as an aside, I stopped watching Game of Thrones because I am an insufferable book snob about it and the way in which it was changing things from the books just got under my skin (of course now it's caught up to the books I'm in a bit of a pickle).
 

TheYeIIowDucK

New member
Mar 22, 2011
21
0
0
maninahat said:
I think people were mad at Game of Thrones, not because they really liked the character and didn't want them to be raped, but because they felt the rape was a tasteless, unimaginative and inappropriate plot device that didn't fit.
Yeah, pretty much. I'm not one of those who cried for GoT's shutdown, but when I saw the episode I literally started laughing at the scene. The way they chose to focus on some unrelated character's comically stupid facial expressions was just dumb.
 

hermes

New member
Mar 2, 2009
3,865
0
0
maninahat said:
I think people were mad at Game of Thrones, not because they really liked the character and didn't want them to be raped, but because they felt the rape was a tasteless, unimaginative and inappropriate plot device that didn't fit.
Actually, it fitted extremely well.

A passive character whose most defining characteristic is being silent while she is dragged around and abused, marries an aggressive character whose most defining characteristic is being sadistic and evil to the point of being close to a mustache twisting villain. Under the circumstances, I would say abuse and rape are implicitly obvious. Given how both the books and the show depicts violence and sexual content, that scene was shot almost tame.

People hated it because it was not in the original content. George R.R. Martin writing uncomfortable material == Groundbreaking genius; Benioff & Weiss writing uncomfortable material == flamewar material.
 

Namrok

New member
Mar 10, 2015
4
0
0
TheYeIIowDucK said:
maninahat said:
I think people were mad at Game of Thrones, not because they really liked the character and didn't want them to be raped, but because they felt the rape was a tasteless, unimaginative and inappropriate plot device that didn't fit.
Yeah, pretty much. I'm not one of those who cried for GoT's shutdown, but when I saw the episode I literally started laughing at the scene. The way they chose to focus on some unrelated character's comically stupid facial expressions was just dumb.
I think by this point, most people clearly perceive the double bind there. Focus the camera on the rape, and you're catering to the "male gaze", or showing gratuitous violence against women or some nonsense. Focus the camera on an observer so you can see the rape through a 3rd party's reaction, and now you're not focusing enough on what rape does to a woman, and instead focusing on how a filthy insensitive man feels.

There is really no winning with the sorts of people who want to be offended by everything.
 

Thanatos2k

New member
Aug 12, 2013
820
0
0
TheYeIIowDucK said:
maninahat said:
I think people were mad at Game of Thrones, not because they really liked the character and didn't want them to be raped, but because they felt the rape was a tasteless, unimaginative and inappropriate plot device that didn't fit.
Yeah, pretty much. I'm not one of those who cried for GoT's shutdown, but when I saw the episode I literally started laughing at the scene. The way they chose to focus on some unrelated character's comically stupid facial expressions was just dumb.
It wasn't an unrelated character though, if you have seen the latest episode. To say it was pointless is ignoring the context before and after. There was a definite purpose to the scene, regardless of what the screeching brigade who have only seen one scene of one episode would like you to believe.
 

zerragonoss

New member
Oct 15, 2009
333
0
0
Overall I pretty much agree with you on internet arguments, except for the fact that I don?t think the people yelling loudest are the extremists, those are actually far rarer than they seem. What you hear the most are people yelling about the extremists on the other side. This makes the echo chamber all the worse. You are not hearing the loudest arguments said by the other side because that is the only thing that makes it over the wall. You are sending people out to hand pick the augment that proves your point the best, and bringing it back to play on loop in your sound proof enclosure.
 

Silentpony_v1legacy

Alleged Feather-Rustler
Jun 5, 2013
6,760
0
0
I really don't see what was supposed to be so offensive about Hatred. Or better yet, what made Hatred more offensive than half the games out there.
Yeah, you kill innocent people. But you do that in every GTA, every Saints Row game. Hell, one could make the argument that you kill innocent people in Bioshock Infinite, Rage, all the Fallouts.
It doesn't seem to be a unique selling point.
 
Jan 12, 2012
2,114
0
0
Small typo in the article:
It reminds me of the response to that one recent episode of Game of Thrones in which one of the 'innocent' characters who had thus far gotten through most of five seasons without being successfully maimed, raped or murdered - which, in Game of Thrones, is up there with getting three winning scratch cards in a row - was forcibly married to one of the villainous characters and sexually brutalized As predictably as the tides, certain kinds of people immediately hit the social networks to demand that the show be taken off the air, or at least pledge to stop watching.
The period is missing between "brutalized" and "As".

zerragonoss said:
Overall I pretty much agree with you on internet arguments, except for the fact that I don?t think the people yelling loudest are the extremists, those are actually far rarer than they seem. What you hear the most are people yelling about the extremists on the other side. This makes the echo chamber all the worse. You are not hearing the loudest arguments said by the other side because that is the only thing that makes it over the wall. You are sending people out to hand pick the augment that proves your point the best, and bringing it back to play on loop in your sound proof enclosure.
Well said. This should be a sticky on the top of every GID thread.
 

Redd the Sock

New member
Apr 14, 2010
1,088
0
0
zerragonoss said:
Overall I pretty much agree with you on internet arguments, except for the fact that I don?t think the people yelling loudest are the extremists, those are actually far rarer than they seem. What you hear the most are people yelling about the extremists on the other side. This makes the echo chamber all the worse. You are not hearing the loudest arguments said by the other side because that is the only thing that makes it over the wall. You are sending people out to hand pick the augment that proves your point the best, and bringing it back to play on loop in your sound proof enclosure.
It's hard to pin down. Extremist has no real definition or objective standard to measure, so it comes out as a deflection when someone else has done what one side claims it isn't about, yet hasn't made an effort to shout down themselves. Using Hatred as an example, cultural critics are always saying no one is trying to take away or change our games, yet here were people trying to do just that to a game, and it was hardly the only example of such a batch of complaints being taken seriously and causing changes or edits to or limited removal of a piece of media. No one had the brains to tell these people to stop what they were doing to stop feeding the stereotype about those delivering cultural criticism really being moral censors (hey dumbass, we just want more variety so stop proving their fears right) which more often than not just places doubt that in your silence, you actually support the extremists.
 

Phrozenflame500

New member
Dec 26, 2012
1,080
0
0
Thanatos2k said:
If you think it didn't fit, it would require you to be some kind of blind lunatic who hadn't watched Game of Thrones up until that point. Like many who poured out of the woodwork to try and criticize it.
I thought that rape part fit the universe, I just thought it was regressive character development considering how much time they spent finally trying to make Sansa an active character last season. They seemed to be hyping up giving Sansa some actual agency in the plot before immediately going "lol nope victim again" and relegating her as Cersei's Joffery's Lysa's Littlefinger's Ramsay's chew toy. It's entirely realistic giving the context of the setting, but I still felt it was bad storytelling on top of an already bad character regardless.

Anyways, on the actual content of the article, I agree. I mean, I'm as social-justicy as they come but the blatant controversy bait of Hatred seemed obvious when it was first announced. It should never have been a hot button issue that it became, and garme jurnalists who denounced it and the e-warriors who defended it are equally stupid for buying so hard into the ruse.
 

CaitSeith

Formely Gone Gonzo
Legacy
Jun 30, 2014
5,374
381
88
Silentpony said:
I really don't see what was supposed to be so offensive about Hatred. Or better yet, what made Hatred more offensive than half the games out there.
Yeah, you kill innocent people. But you do that in every GTA, every Saints Row game. Hell, one could make the argument that you kill innocent people in Bioshock Infinite, Rage, all the Fallouts.
It doesn't seem to be a unique selling point.
Does it matter at this point? If you didn't see it in the trailer, you'll do it even less with the real game.
 

Darth_Payn

New member
Aug 5, 2009
2,868
0
0
"paradoxical feedback loop" sounds like something out of a Doctor Who episode.
I loved today's takedown of loudmouth extremists of both sides of the political spectrum, and the echo chambers that allow them to thrive.
Phrozenflame500 said:
Thanatos2k said:
If you think it didn't fit, it would require you to be some kind of blind lunatic who hadn't watched Game of Thrones up until that point. Like many who poured out of the woodwork to try and criticize it.
I thought that rape part fit the universe, I just thought it was regressive character development considering how much time they spent finally trying to make Sansa an active character last season. They seemed to be hyping up giving Sansa some actual agency in the plot before immediately going "lol nope victim again" and relegating her as Cersei's Joffery's Lysa's Littlefinger's Ramsay's chew toy. It's entirely realistic giving the context of the setting, but I still felt it was bad storytelling on top of an already bad character regardless.

Anyways, on the actual content of the article, I agree. I mean, I'm as social-justicy as they come but the blatant controversy bait of Hatred seemed obvious when it was first announced. It should never have been a hot button issue that it became, and garme jurnalists who denounced it and the e-warriors who defended it are equally stupid for buying so hard into the ruse.
It sounds to me that like the people who watch Game of Thrones are getting fed up with all the raping and murdering of likeable characters like it's the only thing that show is about. They want something more and to see the worst characters get what they have coming. It's becoming this slow, dark, joyless slog to get through, and the fans are realizing "Oh my god, everything the show's critics say about it are right!"
 

Cid Silverwing

Paladin of The Light
Jul 27, 2008
3,134
0
0
I despise Hatred for what it represents. It's the tired and predictable come-back against the anti-fun Nazis that want ALL games banned. This is not how you refute the extremist dipshits. If the game was going to make a point that anti-fun Nazis need to fuck off, could it at the very least have been an actually FUN game to play, rather than a pretentiously goth-monochrome top-down shooter featuring a disgustingly stereotypical punk whose literally only defining trait is misanthropy?

You don't defeat the stereotypers by pretending to be stereotypical, you're just being the thing you're trying to refute, which goes nowhere. We gamers have wanted to get RID of this retarded stereotype that we're all Columbines and Sandy Hooks just waiting to happen for [insert Faux News pseudoscientific reasoning here].
 

Phrozenflame500

New member
Dec 26, 2012
1,080
0
0
Darth_Payn said:
It sounds to me that like the people who watch Game of Thrones are getting fed up with all the raping and murdering of likeable characters like it's the only thing that show is about. They want something more and to see the worst characters get what they have coming. It's becoming this slow, dark, joyless slog to get through, and the fans are realizing "Oh my god, everything the show's critics say about it are right!"
There was a great post on the book's Subreddit which claimed that the show has moved from refusing to cheat to help the good guys win to cheating to make the good guys lose. I liked the idea of good-intentioned characters losing because of their own tragic flaws, but contriving unrealistic scenarios just to get the edgy rape/gore scenes in is cheap and against the spirit of the material.
 
Mar 24, 2015
16
0
0
I have to disagree with Yahtzee's defense of the GoT rape scene. Not because I have a problem with the scene, because I haven't seen the episode. But I don't think his argument in general holds water.

There are many storytelling devices that will always get an emotional reaction out of the viewer, regardless of how well told the story is. Killing an innocent dog, for example. Rape is one of those devices. You could have the most poorly written, 2-dimensional character ever, but if you show them being raped people will react strongly. In fact, many lazy artists will use rape for exactly this reason. As a result it's really hard to make a rape scene that doesn't feel exploitative or manipulative, because so many rape scenes are exploitative and manipulative. A rape scene getting a rise out of it's audience only means the audience is human, not that the scene was tasteful or worked in the story.

Also, I don't buy the argument that this is okay purely because GoT is a story where awful things constantly happen to the characters. GoT is more than that. Yes, it takes place in an incredibly harsh and unforgiving world, but it still tells an engaging character driven story. If it was just bad things happening to good people it wouldn't be nearly as popular.