Define a well written straight character first. I honestly have no idea what that means either. All I know is what the much smarter people tell me... and also that I'm a hack at artistic evaluation.
Common Sense? On my internets?!TKretts3 said:I'd guess just write a character well, and make him gay/make her lesbian.
I'm gay and I really don't see the difference between gay/lesbian people and straight people other than their orientations. Their attitude, personality, beliefs will all come from what they experience in life. Yes, being gay/lesbian may open up some more experiences, but being gay/lesbian in itself isn't going to automatically make someone act a certain way.
EDIT: Oh, and one more thing. If you're writing a character that just runs around yelling, "I'M HERE, I'M QUEER, GET USED TO IT" 24/7, tells everyone that they are gay as a first sentence, and never drops the subject, then you're doing it wrong.
My girlfriend made a great point when she made a guide on how to Roleplay Death Knights in WoW;RJ 17 said:What do you consider to be a "well writen gay character"?
It's a decently portrayed character who, in his or her romantic relationships just so prefers the same sex.RJ 17 said:snip
I disagree, not that I am saying he was bad. But I do think that Veronica from Fallout:NV was much better, and if you haven't played the game I just think it added a bit more to the character. In that in mass effect for the most part everyone if fine with it, but in Fallout:NV some people are not.FelixG said:Whamo, homerun!ScrabbitRabbit said:Cortez sounds like a good example to me. A well written gay character is just a well written character who happens to be gay.
Cortez was the best written homosexual character I have encountered so far.
To be honest, I actually thought that Traynor was much better in this regard, The insecurity she feels being so far out of her depth, serving on the Normandy during a Reaper invasion, shines through clearly. However, she's never annoying, because she puts a brave face on things, and actually becomes an invaluable asset to the team. She was just generally a very well written and well acted character, with only a few subtle hints as to her sexuality, and only when relevant.RJ 17 said:I decided to make this topic in response to a topic that I (and a lot of you, my fellow Escapists) posted in the other day that questioned why there aren't more homosexual characters in games.
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/read/9.387320-Poll-Games-arent-gay-enough?page=1
In particular, the OP brings up this point:
This brought me to the question that is in this topic's title: "Just what IS a 'well writen' gay character?"I mean, I'm not exactly a champion of political correctness, but that kind of horrifies me that 2012, we only have ONE well-written gay guy in the whole mainstream gaming spectrum. 0 well-written lesbians.
I think it's a good and valid question. Is it not enough to simply state that Shepard's shuttle pilot is gay and have him struggling over the loss of his husband? Is HE not a "well writen" gay character? Just what exactly are you looking for in a well writen gay character? Should they be flamboyant stereotypes like limp-wristed interior decorators? I'd argue that it's enough to simply have it in a character's background that they're gay - the way it is with Cortez - rather than having it be their sole defining characteristic.
Cortez, as a character, is a top-notch fighter pilot that stayed on with the Normandy and became the shuttle pilot. A vital member of the crew, he fearlessly drops Shepard's squad off in some of the hottest battlefields in the war and genuinely worries for Shepard's safety. An upstanding soldier in the Alliance, and all-around just a good man. Oh, and he's grieving over the loss of his husband.
While the grieving is a major part of his story, it has nothing to do with his homosexuality. He could just as easily have been grieving over the loss of his wife or his child or something. That his lost loved one was his homosexual partner really isn't important to his story, it's just another detail about him as a character...but not the ONLY detail about him as a character.
Soooooo yeah. What do you consider to be a "well writen gay character"?
I like your point about "Good guys want to save the world and get the girl" while "Bad guys do it because they're evil people."b3nn3tt said:I'm pretty much going to agree with the vast majority who have already posted and say that a well-written character that happens to be gay is a well-written gay character. I think the larger problem is that most characters in gaming aren't well-written in the first place, and tend to fall back on easy stereotypes and tropes. How many protagonists' sole driving force is saving the world, or rescuing a loved one? How many antagonists do what they do for a reason other than 'for teh evulz'? Because it's easy to fall back on character traits like these, is it any wonder that gay characters are often written as steretypical?
Basically, writers should make sure that all characters are fully fleshed-out and well-written with no regards whatsoever to their sexual orientation. From there, they can decide which charatcers, if any, need their orientation defined for story purposes, and work from there.