Treblaine said:
Still on the discussion on non-lethal takedowns: I can't help but get the impression that you are disagreeing with me despite singing from the same sheet.
My argument, to clarify:
Realism is a bullshit excuse for 'why things happen in video games'. I am agreeing that the primary reason Price doesn't 'bonk' people over the head to subdue them is a narrative choice on the part of the writers. It presents Prices job as a violent one, it suggests that warfare isn't pretty etc etc. I dislike the discussion of video games searching for any semblance of realism beyond the superficial and aesthetic. Almost all video game gameplay, in its very essence, is unrealistic.
As for the misrepresentation of particular parts of the world; I do not bring up Africa some attempt to involve myself in what you identify as a popular debate or stance on the subject. It is because untill you reminded me of 'Africa' the game, I was under the imprerssion that all it served as in video game narratives was a war torn backdrop.
You make a good point about the depiction of Europe in war games, one that is hard to dispute. I use the term Africa to not only refer to the continent and its countries, but its peoples and cultures. It isn't just the environment which creates representations of social or national identity, it is the people too. Africa is rarely drawn upon for positive cultural reference. Europe, and the west, have plenty of video games to pick from in which, despite a conflict usually forming the central narrative hook, the environment and people are portrayed in all kinds of different ways.
And to risk steering an already off topic conversation even further I have to point out, for the sake of clarity,that I of course note that Africa is not the only under or misrepresented area of the world. It just seems the most apparent in recent years. I guess thigns like this aren't dissimilar to the large ammount of critical and academic material dealing with the negative representation of 'the Orien't and 'the Arab' in twentieth century cinema.