Plot Inversions
Inversion gets a point for trying to throw a few plot twists at players.
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Inversion gets a point for trying to throw a few plot twists at players.
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Slothboy said:then, at the end, if you really want to have a "twist" you can show that the girl was actually killed by friendly fire or something. that humans fighting the invasion accidentally hit the building she was hiding in. Then you can have the hero be all sad and conflicted and you can go home pretending that you made something with deep significance.
Because if you are fighting a hopeless war against an unsurmountable threat and the only thing you have to care for dies. Well you will still won't be motivated. But when you realized how much of difference you before you faced the truth and then it all comes together and the confession came out. Russel would have realized that it was just as hard for his friend to hold back the truth but realize it was a small price to pay to rally the people forth and that her death was never in vain and that she would have been proud of him.Slothboy said:Ok, well, I've got kids and I can tell you that this twist is stupid. For all the reasons yahtzee outlined. What would be the sidekick's motivation for not telling the truth early on? I can see initially trying to spare him the tragic truth, but when the guy is obviously going to put himself and his buddy at extreme risk it seems like it would make more sense to come clean.
Now, as a parent, what would have made more sense is that they don't use this as a bullshit afterthought twist, but they use it as the protagonist's motivation for fighting the invaders.
1. Finds daughter dead.
2. decides he has nothing to lose and so sets out on a mission to just kill as many of the assholes as he can.
3. realizes he is actually making a difference.
4. motivation gradually shifts to helping mankind instead of just hunting for vengeance.
then, at the end, if you really want to have a "twist" you can show that the girl was actually killed by friendly fire or something. that humans fighting the invasion accidentally hit the building she was hiding in. Then you can have the hero be all sad and conflicted and you can go home pretending that you made something with deep significance.
Oh God! Please tell me this person told them before they ever.....did anything.Formica Archonis said:I'm reminded of the punchline of a comic, where a brother and sister are split up as infants and meet later in life and fall in love. The one person who knew they were siblings, waiting for the "right moment" to tell them, waits until their honeymoon. I could never tell if it was meant to be a case of gross incompetence or the most amazing dick move ever.
Well, it was a comic (as in webcomic) so doesn't really matter. But the comic was distinctly PG so no specifics on who did what and when to whom.Imp Emissary said:Oh God! Please tell me this person told them before they ever.....did anything.
Leaving kids in cages because they aren't HIS kid? Yeah, that's deep in the heart of prick territory. Hell, it implies that it's not even about human life, it's that someone's stolen his most valuable possession and he wants it back, which is an awful way to think of one's kids.Imp Emissary said:Also, Mr. Protagonist sounds like a prick.
Yes, I know it's not real, but you, me, and Yahtzee all got mad at a fake guy for not saving a bunch of fake kids. Just because something isn't real doesn't mean it can't effect us in some way.Formica Archonis said:Well, it was a comic (as in webcomic) so doesn't really matter. But the comic was distinctly PG so no specifics on who did what and when to whom.Imp Emissary said:Oh God! Please tell me this person told them before they ever.....did anything.
Leaving kids in cages because they aren't HIS kid? Yeah, that's deep in the heart of prick territory. Hell, it implies that it's not even about human life, it's that someone's stolen his most valuable possession and he wants it back, which is an awful way to think of one's kids.Imp Emissary said:Also, Mr. Protagonist sounds like a prick.
Here's a question: Would the plot unfold identically if the guy was a car nut and the aliens stole his car? If so, then the kid is MacGuffin [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacGuffin] of the worst sort - made into a human just to amplify the shock ending.
Yeah, that kind of reminds me of this one scene from Terminator: Salvation, when John Connor's shouting & looking for Kyle Reese, but with each cage of captured humans he finds, he frees 'em & tells 'em to "GET TO THE TRANSPORT" or something like that. Then off he goes on his search for Kyle, and to blow up the factory. Same for Wolverine & those captive mutant kids / test subjects on Three Mile Island in X-Men Origins: Wolverine. And I agree with you guys, that last minute twist did feel like it was written into the story @ the last minute. Not even Shyamalan would pull a twist like that out of his ass. Smelled like it came from somebody's ass, doesn't it?Formica Archonis said:Leaving kids in cages because they aren't HIS kid? Yeah, that's deep in the heart of prick territory. Hell, it implies that it's not even about human life, it's that someone's stolen his most valuable possession and he wants it back, which is an awful way to think of one's kids.Imp Emissary said:Also, Mr. Protagonist sounds like a prick.
Here's a question: Would the plot unfold identically if the guy was a car nut and the aliens stole his car? If so, then the kid is MacGuffin [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacGuffin] of the worst sort - made into a human just to amplify the shock ending.