endtherapture said:
If there's a dirty world full of racism and political strife and rape and murder, having sex adds to the world you've built. You might know this, but sex is an important part of relationships. Hence why it's a key part of Geralt and Triss' relationship.
Yeah, it's also an important part of Geralt's relationship to just about every female character he meets in that game. Frankly, I didn't even pick up that there was anything particular about Geralt's relationship to Triss. She just seemed to be another random woman who inexplicably wanted Geralt's pasty cock for no discernible reason.
endtherapture said:
But you wouldn't know, since you're pre-judging the game without playing it.
Nope. I played the Witcher 1, which was the game I was talking about (and the game I assume we're still talking about now). I may wish I hadn't, but I certainly did.
endtherapture said:
How is it integral to the plot? The plot is about Geralt trying to get back his memories and the stolen Witcher chemicals against a backdrop of political strife in Temeria. In TW1 Geralt gets the choice between Shani and Triss. I went with Triss since she seemed more pragmatic and as a sorceress she could look after Alvin and deal with his unpredictable powers more than Shani good. But you wouldn't know, since you're pre-judging the game without playing it.
No. I'm afraid I played that. I went with Triss as well because it seemed more canon, but at that point I didn't really care because I had no sense of who the character I was playing actually was beyond blandness and nobbing.
And yes, I know Witchers are meant to have diminished emotional affect. Don't even get me started on that and how much of a lame copout it is.
As for the amnesia.. Jesus. I'm not saying amnesia is off limits or that it can't possibly be done well (KOTOR) but if you're going for a journey of self-discovery it kind of helps if you
put something in there to discover. Simply giving your protagonist amnesia to justify them having to learn a bunch of stuff or to justify why they're not the amazing badass everyone thinks they are is not a story of self-discovery, it's just lazy metagame bullshit.
Did I express myself badly or something, because I'm pretty sure it should have been obvious that I played the game. I said that I haven't played the Witcher 2, but that's only because the Witcher 1 really bothered me. How would it have bothered me if I hadn't played it?
endtherapture said:
There's no pill, no morning after bill, no implants and no condoms. You might also not know since you obviously haven't paid attention to the game, that Witchers are STERILE and IMMUNE TO DISEASES. This means having sex with a Witcher, such as Geralt, won't make women pregnant, or at risk of STDs such as syphilis. That's why women are throwing themselves at Geralt.
You and I live in a world in which everyone can be effectively immune to pregnancy and to many STDs. Does this mean we are sexually indiscriminate?
There was contraception in medieval Poland. Nature has generally been pretty generous when it comes to distributing natural abortificants, and as a result there has been contraception (well, technically abortion) for about as long as there have been human beings. These methods could be unreliable and unpleasant, but we know they were used very routinely.
And if abortion failed, there was always infanticide.
However, in medieval Poland (and indeed in medieval Europe more widely) there was also a complex system of really screwy logic around sex, and around the status of men and women. People simply didn't think of sex and sexual desire in the same humanist way we do today. Sexual fantasies, for example, could be understood
by the people having them as a form of demonic influence or possession.
A story set in a "realistic" medieval society would actually make almost no sense to a modern reader in almost any aspect, and sex would certainly be no exception, so no. I'm not buying the realism card.
endtherapture said:
That's not even adding in that Geralt just kills whoever he wants and can offer protection to women and acts chivalrously whilst most other men are misogynists. But you wouldn't know, since you're pre-judging the game without playing it.
..and of course, everyone wants to bang the guy who just kills whoever he wants..
..what happens if you (the person he's banging) do something he doesn't like?
Why are all the other men in this setting nasty to women? Generally, it's because they want sexual access to women. Geralt always has sexual access to women (through his amazing protagonist powers), and therefore never has to use force or violence to get what he wants. If he did though, does he strike you as the kind of person who would hesitate. After all, he kills whoever he wants, right?
I get that the "benevolent patriarch" character has a lot of traction in fantasy, but I think it's probably time to start questioning it.