Wilhelm Figge said:
kurupt87 said:
My point is that being gay is not a minor character trait, it's a big deal. It alone shapes people's entire lives. Shep is not a shrinking violet of a character. Once it becomes clear s/he'll spend a large amount of time with someone, or intends to become their friend, there'd be an up front declaration [sub](I struggled to spell that and put deceleration first, it's sounded differently but could be the same)[/sub] of the type, "I'm gay. Got a problem with that? Deal with it."
It is a big enough deal that if you want to include variable sexuality then you should do it at character generation. That way it is outside of the game and dialogue can accommodate it with minor tweaks, like with male/female now.
Well, it for sure is a big character trait. But i don't think Shep has to be a "shrinking violet" to not explain to everyone that he's gay. Why would you need a "I'm gay. Got a problem with that? Deal with it."-option in a future that hopefully is progressive enough that homosexuality isn't considered abnormal?
I don't know what to think of including sexuality in character generation. Sure, real people don't make their sexualities up on the fly, but the same applies to most character traits. You can't set them all there, so why single sexuality out?
The society is not described as progressive. Unless something is described as different it is assumed to be the same, otherwise authors would have to describe absolutely everything.
In fact, racism is a big issue in the first game. I know it'd obviously flare up in real life if ever there were contact but still, it only serves to illustrate how like ours their society is.
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Compare this to Iain M Banks' Culture novels, where he describes his society as pansexual and also transsexual. It is considered normal for its citizens to be sexually active with both men and women and, enabled easily via technology, to switch themselves between being male and female. He even has a character that is criticised for being exclusively hetero and one which is considered odd for being asexual and, using technology like the transsexuals have, making herself completely androgynous.
If he had not described the society as such you would assume that the majority of men and women are straight, that there is a minority of gays and lesbians and an extremely small minority of transsexuals.
When reading fiction; in lieu of stated difference, reality is assumed.
Edit: Bugger, forgot to address your point about Shep not not being a shrinking violet.
S/he is absolutely not a shrinking violet, this person kills people and is beyond capable. There is no way that character would have patience with homophobic bigots. A homo bigot is the only type of person that is protected by Shep being a shrinking violet, why would Shep protect them?
Your point about what gets included in character generation is valid, though it's handicapped by the fact that most big issues don't come up. It also has an origin system which can be used to justify being either paragon or renegade, it works for either extreme (an extreme character needs an extreme reason to be so extreme, ergo the origin justifications).
They actually did racism in the first game, and did it badly too. They tied it to the paragon/renegade system, which I don't agree with. That defeated the purpose of the bar, which was stated to not be a good/bad system but a merciful/merciless one. There is a relationship there, but not one that would hold up in reality; especially not given Shep's aim of doing the best for humanity.
Though I s'pose he is about protecting it rather than doing the best for it, so you could use that to justify it (seeing alien culture as a threat to combat yada yada). But either way, it shouldn't have had anything to do with the para/ren system.
Sorry, tangent-ed myself.
I think they should've had racist or not in character generation, since they dealt with it. That's much more controversial though, since it's making the player the perpetrator rather than the victim. Maybe dress it up as pro-Human/pro-Alien.
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Whatevs, these things affect your life and would that of a character. And since ME is a game with a large focus on socialising/shagging with your (alien in ref. to my racism side topic) squaddies it really should be apparent.