Honestly?
I read A LOT of sci-fi books. Generally medieval settings, swords and magic and the odd lusty, sex scene. (Chris Bunch is the Author if anyone is interested. Highly recommended, The Seer King trilogy). I find it incredibly easy to get attached to a character in a book such as that, especially if there is a trilogy of books that you are following over a long period of time.
However,
That first time I saw Aeris die...
I actually smiled when Tidus and Yuna do... whatever, in the pool.
The same with Zidane and Dagger,
Squall and Rinoa,
Locke and Celes,
And that's just one series of emotion invoking games. There are hundreds more.
The most emotion invoking game I can think of is Suikoden 2. If you don't care about each 108 characters in your castle by the end of the game, you have no heart. At all.
I read A LOT of sci-fi books. Generally medieval settings, swords and magic and the odd lusty, sex scene. (Chris Bunch is the Author if anyone is interested. Highly recommended, The Seer King trilogy). I find it incredibly easy to get attached to a character in a book such as that, especially if there is a trilogy of books that you are following over a long period of time.
However,
That first time I saw Aeris die...
I actually smiled when Tidus and Yuna do... whatever, in the pool.
The same with Zidane and Dagger,
Squall and Rinoa,
Locke and Celes,
And that's just one series of emotion invoking games. There are hundreds more.
The most emotion invoking game I can think of is Suikoden 2. If you don't care about each 108 characters in your castle by the end of the game, you have no heart. At all.