Poll: Video Games and Sexual Preference

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Meggiepants

Not a pigeon roost
Jan 19, 2010
2,536
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The Madman said:
Steam doesn't carry the Baldur's Gate series actually. The best place to pick the BG series up would either be by buying the 4in1 box set re-release that's easily enough found from a variety of places or from GOG if you just want to buy it cheap online.


Whatever the case, if you do pick the series up let me know and I can recommend some mods to improve the experience and make first-impressions easier. Baldur's Gate 2 is generally agreed upon to be the highpoint of the series, but the first game isn't bad by any means and there are a couple amazing pieces of community work which update and improve the original so that it compares more favourably to its renowned sequel.

Personally I still consider the Baldur's Gate series overall to be my favourite rpg experience. Playing from the very start all the way to Throne of Bhall is something to be remembered, and the cast of characters you'll meet along the way unforgettable.
Thank you for the information. :)

I didn't realize Steam didn't have these. I had to go to GOG for a compatible version of Planescape Torment when I wanted that, so I have an account with them. I'll check out the 4 in 1 though seeing as how Amazon has it for a pretty good price. I'll have to see if it will work on Windows 7, though, since I no longer have an XP machine.

In any case, thanks again for the info.
 

oplinger

New member
Sep 2, 2010
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meganmeave said:
The Madman said:
Steam doesn't carry the Baldur's Gate series actually. The best place to pick the BG series up would either be by buying the 4in1 box set re-release that's easily enough found from a variety of places or from GOG if you just want to buy it cheap online.


Whatever the case, if you do pick the series up let me know and I can recommend some mods to improve the experience and make first-impressions easier. Baldur's Gate 2 is generally agreed upon to be the highpoint of the series, but the first game isn't bad by any means and there are a couple amazing pieces of community work which update and improve the original so that it compares more favourably to its renowned sequel.

Personally I still consider the Baldur's Gate series overall to be my favourite rpg experience. Playing from the very start all the way to Throne of Bhall is something to be remembered, and the cast of characters you'll meet along the way unforgettable.
Thank you for the information. :)

I didn't realize Steam didn't have these. I had to go to GOG for a compatible version of Planescape Torment when I wanted that, so I have an account with them. I'll check out the 4 in 1 though seeing as how Amazon has it for a pretty good price. I'll have to see if it will work on Windows 7, though, since I no longer have an XP machine.

In any case, thanks again for the info.
works fine on windows 7, no tweaking at all needed. ....I just installed it again to confirm >_> so I know I'm not lying to you XD

I fully agree it's a game you need to play.
 

mireko

Umbasa
Sep 23, 2010
2,003
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oplinger said:
works fine on windows 7, no tweaking at all needed. ....I just installed it again to confirm >_> so I know I'm not lying to you XD

I fully agree it's a game you need to play.
If you're on the DVD version, did you have any trouble with the widescreen mod? I've heard there's a version incompatibility.



That said, it does work just fine on W7, there's also a nice list of very useful mods.

[sub]Running the game at 1920x1080 on a normal monitor makes it look like your perspective is from low orbit, though.[/sub]
 

oplinger

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Sep 2, 2010
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mireko said:
oplinger said:
works fine on windows 7, no tweaking at all needed. ....I just installed it again to confirm >_> so I know I'm not lying to you XD

I fully agree it's a game you need to play.
If you're on the DVD version, did you have any trouble with the widescreen mod? I've heard there's a version incompatibility.



That said, it does work just fine on W7, there's also a nice list of very useful mods.

[sub]Running the game at 1920x1080 on a normal monitor makes it look like your perspective is from low orbit, though.[/sub]
I have the good ol' 4 CD version. but I don't use any mods for it actually. I did use the widescreen mod a while ago...but since you said DVD version..i suppose my feedback is useless? :p It worked fine.
 

Meggiepants

Not a pigeon roost
Jan 19, 2010
2,536
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oplinger said:
works fine on windows 7, no tweaking at all needed. ....I just installed it again to confirm >_> so I know I'm not lying to you XD

I fully agree it's a game you need to play.
Well, for $18 and with two enthusiastic recommendations, I guess I can't really go wrong. I just ordered it.

Thanks for confirming it works on 7. :D

mireko said:
That said, it does work just fine on W7, there's also a nice list of very useful mods.

[sub]Running the game at 1920x1080 on a normal monitor makes it look like your perspective is from low orbit, though.[/sub]
And thank you for the link. :)
 

mireko

Umbasa
Sep 23, 2010
2,003
0
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oplinger said:
mireko said:
oplinger said:
works fine on windows 7, no tweaking at all needed. ....I just installed it again to confirm >_> so I know I'm not lying to you XD

I fully agree it's a game you need to play.
If you're on the DVD version, did you have any trouble with the widescreen mod? I've heard there's a version incompatibility.



That said, it does work just fine on W7, there's also a nice list of very useful mods.

[sub]Running the game at 1920x1080 on a normal monitor makes it look like your perspective is from low orbit, though.[/sub]
I have the good ol' 4 CD version. but I don't use any mods for it actually. I did use the widescreen mod a while ago...but since you said DVD version..i suppose my feedback is useless? :p It worked fine.
Ah, I meant the pack with BG1, TotSC, BG2 and ToB on four separate DVDs.

Anyway, the big fixpacks are definitely worth it, imho. [small]Even if I did end up spending an hour and a half installing and configuring all of them last time..[/small]
 

oplinger

New member
Sep 2, 2010
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mireko said:
oplinger said:
mireko said:
oplinger said:
works fine on windows 7, no tweaking at all needed. ....I just installed it again to confirm >_> so I know I'm not lying to you XD

I fully agree it's a game you need to play.
If you're on the DVD version, did you have any trouble with the widescreen mod? I've heard there's a version incompatibility.



That said, it does work just fine on W7, there's also a nice list of very useful mods.

[sub]Running the game at 1920x1080 on a normal monitor makes it look like your perspective is from low orbit, though.[/sub]
I have the good ol' 4 CD version. but I don't use any mods for it actually. I did use the widescreen mod a while ago...but since you said DVD version..i suppose my feedback is useless? :p It worked fine.
Ah, I meant the pack with BG1, TotSC, BG2 and ToB on four separate DVDs.

Anyway, the big fixpacks are definitely worth it, imho. [small]Even if I did end up spending an hour and a half installing and configuring all of them last time..[/small]
Usually how it goes with me and mods, is the mod will do something I like, but it's a compilation of things I don't care for. So I usually ignore mods all together D: ...except the mod that makes BG1 run in the BG2 engine. That was pretty cool all around.
 
Mar 26, 2008
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I really think this is a non-issue. I don't play games to get my freak on. And even if, as a straight male, I was forced in a game to play a gay character who has a gay relationship / sex I really wouldn't think much of it because it's a game; it's not my life.

If it was a game like Mass Effect 2 or Oblivion where the character is a bit of a tabula rasa and the only relationship options were contrary to my sexuality, sure I'd think it would be good if they could include my sexual preference, but I'd roll with it and choose accordingly.
 

Wayneguard

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Jun 12, 2010
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meganmeave said:
Hell, I'd hit on something without a heartbeat if the music and lighting were right.
lulz

OT: I really don't think this is an issue in the context of Dragon Age 2 because you can pursue roleplay any sexuality you want. There really isn't a need to predefine it in cc (unless you REALLY wanted to role play and wrote up a little bio like in baldurs gate lol)
 

Meggiepants

Not a pigeon roost
Jan 19, 2010
2,536
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FenrisDeSolar said:
There should really not even be a need to choose your sexuality.

But if you were allowed to choose sexuality, do we choose from straight/bi/gay?

What about transexuals? Pansexuals? Asexuals?

Should we include fetishes in our character sheets? Feet, food, bondage?

My answer to this matter is a huge resounding "No."
You aren't choosing your sexuality per say, rather your sexual preference. If you are pansexual or asexual, then choosing from a set of choices that would say, male/female/both/none would still work for you in a game like Dragon Age.

Even if you are a foot fetishist, you are likely going to have a preference for the sex of the owner of the feet. Just because you are a fetishist, doesn't mean you can't prefer just males or just females. But again, if you don't really care what you're hitting on, like myself, then you would choose "both" as it allows for the greatest flexibility.

oplinger said:
...And what? transmit the information to other party members through ESP? How would they know? They'll whip out your character sheet and confirm before they hit on you! Or you can wear a neon sign! "I AM GAY"

...All ridiculousness aside, the idea is sound, however it makes no sense when applied.
I've thought on this some more overnight and I think I have a better example than the one I originally argued with. You do typically choose a trait about yourself that isn't physical and immediately identifiable when you are playing table top D&D, your alignment. Most people don't go around with signs on their chests saying they are Lawful/Good. But this information is less about what they other people in your D&D group know about you, and more about what the DM knows about you. Other player characters may pick up that you are Lawful/Good by your play style, but the DM is the one that plans the game around his or her players. Companion characters in a video game like DA are not like your friends sitting around a tabletop game. They are more like the NPCs a DM would control. A good DM, imo, takes your character and tries to challenge you based on what you have chosen you character to be. Just like in ME, where you can choose some of your history, the DM, or the Bioware writers in this case, give you an encounter based on your past, whether you are a spacer or what not.

Making a choice like this in character creation, allows the developers to better tailor a game to what you might be looking for.

Again, I still don't think it's necessarily an ideal situation, but I don't think it's unprecedented either.
 

II2

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Mar 13, 2010
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In gameplay, by virtue of action taken, sure.

In character CREATION, no.
 

Vivace-Vivian

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Apr 6, 2010
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As awesome as it might be it would also be unrealistic. Not every gay person anounces it outright, so changing the game just because someone 'knows' through some astral power would not exactly fit.
 

nodanaonlyzuul

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Mar 16, 2011
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Buchholz101 said:
I think Bioware is playing it just right, just because a male character decides to flirt with your male character doesn't mean you have to flirt back. If it makes you uncomfortable, then you can just imagine how your main character feels and BAM--you've got immersion.

Remember, you can always just say no.
I'm with you on this. I enjoy immersion in games. In real life there is no "sign" of someones sexual orientation. You could always guess, but you never really know for certain in all cases. And just like in real life, you can always say "no" or "not interested". Done.

It really isn't that big of a deal.
 

RedEyesBlackGamer

The Killjoy Detective returns!
Jan 23, 2011
4,701
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oplinger said:
Radeonx said:
oplinger said:
...All ridiculousness aside, the idea is sound, however it makes no sense when applied.
In a game such as Dragon Age where they have multiple voice actors doing multiple lines for one situation, adding/removing romance lines from them isn't that much of a stretch. It makes perfect sense from a preferential standpoint.

OT: Good idea.
But how would you let your companions know without telling them? The option becomes meaningless in an immersion kind of way. You'd have to tell them you're gay, or straight, or tell them you're not interested in putting that there....or you'd be willing to give it a shot....

If they just -know- ....that's just kind of creepy, do you -smell- gay or something? How would you make it work?
It would work. Bioware would just rewrite companion's preferences. They already did it with Anders. If you play a guy, canonically he is gay, if you pick a girl he is straight. So what would be the problem?
 

veloper

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Jan 20, 2009
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I don't need any romance in games, so I don't need this.
Sofar they've all been pathetic cutscenes.
Non-issue.
 

Valkyrie101

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May 17, 2010
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meganmeave said:
As we have seen from other threads, and if you have played the game you probably know this, being nice to Anders means at some point early on, he's going to flirt with you regardless of your gender. You get three choices at that point, two flirts and one, "Hey dude, I ain't into you that way," kind of response.
Easy, have a strong negative response expressing disgust. More choices, and homophobes get to blast gays in-game.
 

oplinger

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Sep 2, 2010
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meganmeave said:
oplinger said:
...And what? transmit the information to other party members through ESP? How would they know? They'll whip out your character sheet and confirm before they hit on you! Or you can wear a neon sign! "I AM GAY"

...All ridiculousness aside, the idea is sound, however it makes no sense when applied.
I've thought on this some more overnight and I think I have a better example than the one I originally argued with. You do typically choose a trait about yourself that isn't physical and immediately identifiable when you are playing table top D&D, your alignment. Most people don't go around with signs on their chests saying they are Lawful/Good. But this information is less about what they other people in your D&D group know about you, and more about what the DM knows about you. Other player characters may pick up that you are Lawful/Good by your play style, but the DM is the one that plans the game around his or her players. Companion characters in a video game like DA are not like your friends sitting around a tabletop game. They are more like the NPCs a DM would control. A good DM, imo, takes your character and tries to challenge you based on what you have chosen you character to be. Just like in ME, where you can choose some of your history, the DM, or the Bioware writers in this case, give you an encounter based on your past, whether you are a spacer or what not.

Making a choice like this in character creation, allows the developers to better tailor a game to what you might be looking for.

Again, I still don't think it's necessarily an ideal situation, but I don't think it's unprecedented either.
So would that mean you earn gay points? o.o;

From what I remember about playing D&D as long ago as that was, you also had alignment objectives to meet for your characters. You also weren't bound by your alignment, and you could act however you wanted. It'd just change your alignment as time went on. Also sometimes your class kinda shows off what alignment you are. Lawful/Good warlocks generally don't exist..

Still we run into the problem of...why even have the option though. What sort of challenges would the DM face you with? We still have the issue of how everyone else int he DMs world knows you're gay.

I do suppose having an encounter from your past would add to it though. Like you walk into a village and there's your old gay lover... But that'd be the only encounter I can think of. Well...without being controversial, like having your parents kick you out of the house and disown you, or being stoned to near death by your home village for being filled with satan or something.

But, having the ex-lover tell people, or make it really obvious is kinda similar to my dancing monkey shaped memory core >.> ...although it brings up a few more issues. How could you react to them? With a checkbox you're locked into that ex, with dialogue options you can play it off, divert attention, remind everyone how straight you are, or dive in for a sloppy wet tongue kiss. All of which would more readily define your character, and show off your sexual preferences in different ways. Overall I think the dialogue options would be better than checkbox. ..Unless we also have to define our perfect gay lover at the beginning of the game after character creation. Or pick one in the prologue out of a set of them. and...

No see, then it'd be better to not have the checkbox too, because then you can make it the same for straight people, and have a village be more realistic than just having 3 guys standing where 3 girls stand, you could pick for yourself....

Okay, um.....okay, the initial idea here was to get the squeamish people to have an option that wouldn't let the icky gay people make passes at them...Something tells me they'd rather break immersion than know someone's gay or not. >.> so maybe that's how we can justify this checkbox of sexuality?