Logical arguments haven't stopped them before.j-e-f-f-e-r-s said:Still, don't let me get in the way of the "JRPGs are teh evilz" mob.
Well, the way mutations and such happen is very unrealistic, and it defies reality, but compared to pretty much any JRPG, it's far more realistic.Dege84 said:Fallout is actually very plausible even now, even if we're strictly referring to humanity. We have the capacity to turn into savager animals than we already are, not caring about others' fate as long as we survive, doing it by all means necessary, most of us aren't remotely friendly if set loose from the "shackles" of society. A nuclear fallout would bring the best which is coincidentally the worst in our species. As for the weaponry, you can never know...Slayer_2 said:Fallout is far more plausible than final fantasy. Not to say it's plausible, but there was a time when something SIMILAR could have happened in real life. Fallout 3 just changed it up a bit.
Ofcourse.Radiation not mutating anything like it does in Fallout (it does mutate by the way,just not in the X-men way,more like in the Cancer ward way) but teenagers unleashing aspects of their psyche by shooting gun-like objects to their heads to fight demons? REALISM PERSONIFIED.Jung would be so proud to see his work mutil- errr 'interpreted' like this.Jazzeki said:i'm sorry but i really feel like the same should be said about fallout. you think fallout is realistic? seriosuly? i know comic books for generations have told us otherwise but radiation is in fact not this magical force than can do bloody anything. if you get hit by a nuke you die you don't get turned into an imortal zombie. and no it doesn't mutate freaking everything. fallout's "realism" is laughable.Ramanthes said:The more you try to defend your argument with Persona,the more you fail in doing so.It is not realistic at all,despite being set a real-life-like setting.Try Parasite Eve.It's plausible (that is,plausible if you have no idea about biology),it's set in f-ing New York,and you play a cop.Ok you play a magical-blonde-japanese-but-in-truth-totally-american cop,but still.And it's still borderline insane compared to Fallout,even though it's much more plausible.Phoenix_XIII said:Persona. That is all I have to say.ryanxm said:Have you ever played a JRPG? nothing against them but, well they are the definition of unrealistic.
And WRPG's aren't any more realistic.
you say persona doesn't make sense? why? because it doesn't follow the rules of a world you allready know? because a group of teenagers can save the world? since when did we get an arbitary age limit on world saveing? and why is it more plausibel that random guy survives a freaking head shot only to the becomeing the deciding force in a fullscale war that can even end in him declareing himself king? what made the courier so special that you don't bat an eye when he becomes the greatest person ever but the second it's a teenager who should be in school he simply should not be able to do shit. heck in persona at least we have something makeing the children in question special. there's a reason they can do the stuff they do. but it's not realistic to you because you need to have the setting explained because it's new rather than simply guess everything because you have seen it before. as i've said earlier it's not more realistic it's more relatable.
final note on this i love both fallout and persona but if anything i'd call persona realistic. at least everyone i meet there act like humans even if a bit weird.
I don't think that the games ever specifically state that the blue hair is natural, though, so clearly that isn't an indicator of realism.CannibalRobots said:Blue is not a natural hair color, so...
Yep, they're right.
The social interactions in WRPG's like Fallout or Oblivion are probably more like real life. Secondly, in Persona 4, there is a TV channel that murders people. I think WRPG's are more realistic. Although they still ain't realistic.Phoenix_XIII said:http://thesilentchief.com/2010/08/05/bethesda-western-rpg-more-realistic-than-jrpgs/
Read the article and then read my post.
*Waits*
Oh? Done? Okay.
ARE YOU BLOODY KIDDING ME?!
Have you ever heard of Persona?!
What do you all think?
I think what really is at play here is "Immersion" not "Realism". Simply put, the West are currently utterly curbstomping the East when it comes to Immersion in games. Which is probably a major factor as to why Yahtzee hates JRPGs so much.james0192 said:I agree with Bethesda tbh. For two reasons:
1. Western RPGs have a more realistic Aesthetic - it feels like a 'real' (albeit alternate) world.
2. Western RPGs seem more 'sensible' than JRPGs to me. It's like they have defined their worlds by a set of rules and parameters and everything fits within in them logically. Whereas JRPGs sometimes feel like they were being made up as they were going and that they don't have to make logical sense.
By realistic I don't think Bethesda mean true to real life but in that they feel like those worlds could exist.
That could've happened but the problem is that by Fallout 2 most radiation had already started to go away, so you would assume that by the time Fallout 3 takes place which is 200 years after the bombs fell then a lot of radiation would be gone. However, in Fallout 3 there is radiation everywhere and it can still be found in large quantities even in all of the water sources.YunikoYokai5 said:The only thing I can think of for the soil and water is that rain has managed to get airborne radiation and transferred it into the ground. From there, the water flowing through the soil has transferred that radiation from one spot and dumped it in a new area, concentrating it even more if it already had radiation in it.