Slycne said:
Vern5 said:
Definitions were never really required since DA:O does not feel like a Dark Fantasy while one is playing it.
How does it not? Reading through this thread, posters have given numerous examples of where the story has darker themes - be it rape/sexual assault, horrific mutation, possessions ,moral ambiguity and scenes of bleakness.
I think you, like all the other posters who desperately want to defend Dragon Age as Dark Fantasy, are having a difference of opinion and definition with the rest of us.
While all the things you mention are "dark", they are not dark in the classic sense of Gothic or horror writing. I won't dispute that much of DA has a darker tone, but it's really only a veneer over a fairly standard High Fantasy tale, and your and others excessive cribbing from Wikipedia doesn't change that fact.
If I may, I'll go through the things you list point by point:
1. Rape/sexual assault- while horrible crimes, not the right kind of darkness we are looking for. This are simply terrible acts committed by terrible people.
2. Horrific mutation- I'll show my ignorance on this one and admit I'm not familiar with the instances in the DA games that concern this. If we're talking about the darkspawn and their various means of reproduction, it's a pretty standard corruption style genesis of life.
3. Posessions- This I would totally agree with, but it's not enough to bring the whole canon into the gothic realms for me.
4. Moral Ambiguity- Political intrigue and spotty moral choices do not make for Dark Fantasy on their own. I never felt in my playthrough of Origins that any of my choices were truly ambiguous. It was more like Good, Bad, A little less Good.
5. Bleakness, scenes of- Sure, there was bleakness. Unfortunately, in most High Fantasy stories, where I would put DA, the whole setting is usually undermined by the fact that before we ever read one word or hear one line of dialogue, we know that there will be a happy ending. So while things my
seem bleak, in the end, we know that Good will triumph over Evil and all will be well. As it was in DA:O. One of the reasons I gave up on the fantasy genre was because of this exact problem. The only books of recent memory that have strayed from that tired old formula have been George RR Martin's books, and we all know he's doing his best Robert Jordan impression at the moment, so I never expect to see a concluding novel written by GRRM. Regardless, I never found Origins to be bleak at all. Sure, there was tragedy and some scenes of desolation, but overall, I knew, that the outcome of the storyline would be rainbows and puppies for everyone after the big, bad blight was driven back. And it was.
However you slice it, it's up to you. You and others see it as Dark Fantasy. I don't. We'll have to agree to disagree, as the criteria for the "Dark Fantasy" genre is so unrefined that we can make just about any fantasy story fit it, if we really want to.