Yup.Insanum said:Have you had any moments where your own morality has stopped you from progressing?
I totally do that too! It really adds to the gaming experience, I find.Incidently, I can quite easily grasp the difference between Real Life & games, But i do tend to get quite into my characters in games.
I never actually chose to die in the Portal boss fight. What happens anyway?Chamale said:I played Fallout 3 as an evil character, to see what it's like. I nuked Megaton, robbed old ladies at gunpoint, kicked puppies, and so on, but I didn't feel like a real villain. So I decided to be as viciously evil as possible.
I read up on the behaviour of serial killers, and I tried to emulate one by stalking my victims for days before a killing. I revelled in panic and despair, tearing people apart as they came screaming for help as they were chased by the Ghouls I unleashed on them.
After a few hours of the worst video-game villainy I've ever committed, I got the shakes while torturing a tied-up captive to death. After that I orphaned a few more children, but my heart wasn't in it. I renounced evil and went back to my chaotic neutral character, to find that murder feels a lot less terrible when there's a motive other than "let's be really, really villainous".
Oh yeah, and Portal. When Glados says"This isn't brave, you know. It's murder." I hesitated. When she said, "The difference between us is, I can feel pain. You don't even care, do you?" At that point, I refused to kill her. I sat down and let the neurotoxin kill me.
Do you know what happens when you die? I do.
After my first playthrough of Dark Messiah with Xana (evil chick), I tried to do it with Leanna, however I couldn't bring myself to [spoilers] kill Xana, say what you want about her being evil but she A. brought you back to life, B. Is incredibly loyal and C. Is fucking awesome, why should I destroy her??[/endofspoilers]. Now I don't mind killing those in my way, its killing optionally that sometimes gets to me in games. I'm not an amazingly moral person in the sense, but even then I see human life as more valuable, if nothing else to be thrown away if needed. I also have certain principles I can't avoid in games.Insanum said:Morning All,
Just a quick question for you: Ever had a moment where you couldnt do a simple task in a game due to a moment of morality?
Ive just been reading an article from 2006 (it popped up as related news to an Extra Punctuation Article) about Thief[/I]. In it, it stated that if you listen to the guards, they start complaining that the people above them have all the favours, Yet they havent eaten in days.
Now if i was playing that game, I wouldnt be able to kill that guard. If I was forced to kill him to progress, It would trouble me. A similar thing happened with the airport scene in MW2 (The First Time) - I only shot one Civi, and a few cops who were shooting me back - Now i know these "People" are not real, But if you stopped to think, If it were[/I] the protaganist in that game (which is supposedly the point to videogames).
Have you had any moments where your own morality has stopped you from progressing?
Incidently, I can quite easily grasp the difference between Real Life & games, But i do tend to get quite into my characters in games.
The quick answer for me is no. I have never come across a moral choice were I thought "I just can't do that"... because I do completely realize that it is a game and usually in games I use them as a form of escapism, so I might do things in games (realizing it is a game) that I wouldn't do in real life.Insanum said:Morning All,
Incidently, I can quite easily grasp the difference between Real Life & games, But i do tend to get quite into my characters in games.
I kinda agree with you on Shadow of the Colossus. Mostly due to the atmosphere created after you kill one. The music is somber, watching the creature's bodies slump lifelessly as you administer the final blow... the game was designed to make you question what you were doing, which made me love that game even more.swolf said:The toughest was the CODMW2 mission "No Russian", that was...odd...also, it kinda bugged me a little when I started to attacking in Shadow of the Collossus. I dunno why really, it just seemed weird to attack and kill these creatures who had done nothing to me and otherwise seemed to have little to no interest in causing me any harm.