Asita said:
Swarles said:
Can you maybe elaborate a bit? An example, perhaps? Not to be rude, but an answer that effectively boils down to "they exist" doesn't really answer the question of "what are they".
Of course. To start off there's offshoots like the Queercore scene which is somewhat intertwined with the punk scene but has it's own unique identity with specific zines, art, and experimental film as well as large focus on a more "in your face" brand of activism. Honestly if we have games like
Sunset Overdrive which advertises itself as a sort of punk rock shooter I don't think there's any reason not to incorporate at least a bit of that culture in it anyway.
Or you could go at it stereotypically and incorporate things like camp, drag, disco and Madonna but it really probably wouldn't go over all that well.
Even just looking at history and incorporating some LGBT stuff even if it is just references.
I'm not trying to say I want all this stuff in games and I don't think all of it would work but what I am saying is that there is a culture surrounding it and even just using it in passing reference can give more depth. It also can't be entirely focused on these things though, you can't just have a gay character who's into kitschy things and say "Yeah, that's it, there's our character."
VVThoughtBox said:
Why do we need gay protagonists? What about gay villains and side characters?
There are enough gay villains, in fact there's probably too many. It used to be that some form of "sexual deviancy" was enough to make a character a villain in a story. Think of
Silence of the Lambs,
JFK, or
Pulp Fiction. None of those are bad movies and in fact two of them are some of the best movies ever made but they do fall into that stereotype. Even though it's tapered off a bit you still have a wealth of gay villains like in
Skyfall, and that
Tron movie that everyone forgot about. In video games, while it's not explicitly stated, you still get a lot of effeminate male villains and gruff male heroes. The upcoming
Far Cry 4 looks like it's going to have a much more feminine bad guy,
Saints Row: The Third,
Skyward Sword,
Street Fighter's Vega. Video game developers play into the male insecurity by having these characters act in a way they can find to be uncomfortable and that way is making them be stereotypically homosexual. I'm not saying any of these games are bad, in fact most of them are quite good, what I am saying is that the effeminate ambiguously gay villain is something that's already becoming a bit tiresome.