Casual Shinji said:
Phoenixmgs said:
Though weren't slaves basically thought as inanimate objects themselves? Using black people as slaves was thought as "ok" because they were seen as at best sub-humans to basically animals (with janky science even) so they were treated like a horse would be. That's so far (I gotten as far as Jericho) how I've seen androids being treated in the game. The hatred has come from upsetting the status quo.
I guess, yes and no. Not an expert on that point in history, and it's a touchy subject. But even with that comparison the game doesn't make sense. I'd assume during that period of slavery black people weren't protested against, and probably not even that hated, since their place in society was one of subjugation; there was no real "need" to hate them. It probably wasn't till slavery was abolished that the hatred toward them by many in the white community really reared its head.
And that's where
D:BH is trying to come from, eventhough these androids are owned products with no say in anything. That's the status quo. It'd make sense that people let their fear and hatred get to them once these androids started to form a Union and demand equel rights and independence. It'd be really cliched, but it'd make narrative sense.
At the start of the game you don't see these protestors and android haters actually going after the shops where these androids are sold. And if they're so belligerent toward these androids and beating them up on the street, why aren't they doing the same to the meriad of automated busses driving around? They serve the same function and take jobs away from humans. Why just the humanoid machines? For the sake of easy racism analogies. And it gets even more obnoxious toward the end.
Over the weekend I finished D:BH and I gotta say it is rather heavy handed in the analogies. But the problem with it, as with most David Cage writing it would seem, is that it is far too forced. People in the world hate androids because the plot has no stake if they don't, when frankly there isn't any real reason to do so.
Sure the game makes a display to show people homeless without jobs because the androids have supposedly taken away those jobs. But the game also then shows that humans do a lot of jobs better, doctors, lawyers, entertainers, etc. This is a world that should be great for people because the androids will do all the shit that they don't want, street sweeping, cleaning, etc. Leaving people left to study and get good jobs. Plus if androids were so abundant, surely computer programmers, and bug fixers, and customer service techs on this androids would be a huge industry. The game even shows that humans do the physical repairs and maintenance on the droids, though it also shows droids fixing themselves because every android part is apparently plug-and-play.
The point is, David Cage doesn't understand how to make conflict believable and thus the conflict and racial overtones are all over this game like a fucking barbell. It's forced. Markus had no reason to start a huge rebellion, the whole deviant thing was an error in programming and most of the androids were forcibly "freed" by Markus. Most androids in normal households, would not have gone deviant and Markus essentially starts a rebellion based on the bad experiences of a few dozen androids in Jerhico.
So really it's just a bunch of bogus contrivity to make a story.
That being said, it was a decent enough game with decent enough characters to make me want to see how it ends.
A few of the "twists" made me feeling like I was watching a M.Night Shamalyan movie. The revelation about the little girl, the "No I'm the real me" at the end with Conner. All of it just seemed put there for no reason.
The choices in the game are also fairly bad. I never felt like any of the choices were hard ones to make. Most boil down to either to the good idea or the very very very very bad idea. I would have liked to see a bit more middle ground when it came to things like that. Do you want to save your partner, or let the fucker die to catch the fleeing robot? Do you want to be safe in a car or sleep with the crazy robot? Should you save all the people or just one of the people? Almost every choice is so jarringly obvious you might as well have put "Do the good thing" or "do the evil thing" on every one of them just so you could at least direct people to whichever ending they are going for.
All in all, I had a decent time playing D:BH despite rolling my eyes constantly. I have no desire to ever play it again, and will probably just watch a let's play on Youtube to see the ending I didn't end up with. Hopefully I can get decent trade in credit for the game and can buy something that has more entertainment value, like Hyrule Warriors on the Switch. I need a reason to turn that fucking thing on anyway.