oldskool steampunk is so much better
you cant really have top hats in cyber
and everyone loves tophats
you cant really have top hats in cyber
and everyone loves tophats
Snow Crash is more of a deconstruction of Cyberpunk though, sort of an early post-Cyberpunk if you will. And Altered-Carbon would probably fall in the realm of dystopic post-Cyberpunk as well.MatsVS said:First, let's get one thing clear:
Cyberpunk is not just science fiction with advanced technology, it's science fiction set in the close future, with equal focus on sociology and psychology. Usually this is exemplified by a contrast between the advanced technology and decrepit living conditions.
Cyberpunk: William Gibson (Neuromancer), Neal Stephenson (Snow Crash, The Diamond Age), Richard Morgan (Altered Carbon) & Ian McDonald (River of Gods, Cyberabad Days)
[...]
Steampunk is better. When you pick anything Cyberpunk, it's a cold computerized world. When you look at steampunkish contraptions, it's basic ingenuity and fun to look at.The Bum said:Lately I've been re-playing Bioshock and watching Star Trek on TV, and it got me thinking which is better, Steampunk or cyberpunk? So i figured i'd pose the question to you, my fellow escapists.
Personally i like Steampunk better because we are geting closer to cyberpunk every day and it's starting to seem...ordinary.
Well yeah, cyber punk is futuristic where everything is powered by "energy cores" and whotnot and is all crome and shiny.Daxter343 said:There's a difference?
Shit, that's a good point. I think you just explained my entire preference for steampunk.The Bum said:Personaly i like Steampunk better because we are geting closer to cyberpunk every day and it's starting to seem...ordinary.
but the inclusion of the plasmids make it a little Biopunk as well...Icy Lemon said:Bioshock isn't really steampunk though, it's more art deco.Daystar Clarion said:I like both, Ghost in the Shell is a perfect example of cyber punk and Bioshock for steam punk.
I can't decide!
Personally I prefer cyberpunk.
Does no one know what Cyberpunk is anymore? it doesn't have to do with setting or whether something is shiny or not, it has to do with themes and ideas surrounding the effects of technology in society, which means that the best cyberpunk doesn't need a huge over the top city or androids, all it needs is the ideas and theme that arise because of technology... take for example my favorite show Serial Experiments Lain the setting isn't futuristic, if anything it's less futuristic than today, but it's still one the purest forms of cyberpunk because the way it handles it's vision of the internet and how it blurs the line between reality and fiction, which is a heavy cyberpunk theme... now look at something say, I dunno, Pinocchio, it really doesn't seem cyberpunk but it encompasses several of the same themes that are present in cyberpunk, like for example the main characters crisis of identity. does this make it cyberpunk? no, because it lacks the technology element but my point is with a little revision it could easily be cyberpunk...ohellynot said:Well yeah, cyber punk is futuristic where everything is powered by "energy cores" and whotnot and is all crome and shiny.Daxter343 said:There's a difference?
Steam punk is steam powered and made of brass and much better