solidd said:
Ive brought this topic up before, but its come to my attention once again through more media coverage. Basically, theres this 'Baroness' - Susan Greenfield - and she's done all this 'research' into gaming and young minds. One of her statements was as follows: "..well when you read a book, you care about the Princess [who you're trying to save], but in a game, you don't care at all, do you?" To which news reporters and talk show hosts ignorantly nod their heads and agree. Um..on behalf of the gaming community, do you have any clue what the hell you're talking about??! What are your thoughts guys, I come here, to you because this is a great forum for gaming discussion, especially of this sort.
It is many of our personal experiences that those who are not gamers are very quick to decry anything potentially good about games, and claim they are of no real use. This is a perfect example. Games, if done well, can make you more attached to characters in the game than eny other media ever could, because you are in their world. You interract with them, you change the world around them and yourself, and you can choose to fight to protect them.
Like the citizens in Half-Life 2. They are so eager to follow the One Free Man that they can't sit still for more than a few seconds without following you once again, and despite as annoying as it is, even these copy-pasted characters tug at my heart-stings again because they are trying their best to keep you alive.
Then there's Aeris/Aerith from Final Fantasy 7.
Your teammates in Call of Duty 4 are a GREAT example. (I hated seeing Gaz, Griggs and the others die... not to mention the pilot of the helicopter that you very much die trying to save)
Oh, and all your AI partners in Left 4 Dead. Okay, they're annoying, they can get in the way, they do things you don't want them to, and yet they heal you with their medkits and pills even though their own health could be even lower than yours is. You really don't want to see those guys die. They're annoying, but they're trying to help. In fact, I played the L4D2 demo for the first time, we were a short distance from the last safe house in the demo, we were all on low health, but Nick was on his 'third strike' and was killed. I actually caught myself saying "Nick, no!" under my voice. I'm not kidding.