Where does this put series like Hitman, then? You do murder people - sure, mostly bad people, especially if you choose to avoid civilian casualties altogether - but generally the idea is to kill them without giving them a chance to shoot back. Indeed the same can be said for any war scenario where you're killing enemies from stealth - they aren't an active threat to you, and while you're on opposing sides in a conflict, what's to say they're bad people, aside from lazy writers making mercenaries talk amongst themselves about the time they raped all the puppies in the local pet store to death?MortisLegio said:To be fair, in war games (most of them at any rate) the guys you shoot at shoot back.
It kinda bugged me when in Black Ops 2, a game where I did in fact enjoy the story quite a bit (more so than BlOps 1 or MW3) that when you
go undercover inside the terrorist organization
As to the main topic, I guess aside from the obvious "Run and hide from the shooter horror style", I'd maybe try the approach of making the world around you 'alien', 'hostile' and 'terrifying' so that you use what little power you have - your gun - to defend yourself against percieved threats, only to gradually unveil what you're really doing, culminating in 3 choices: Kill yourself (Cathartic ending), Surrender to the police ("Good" ending), or go out guns blazing (For people who are playing video games to escape reality, not be depressed by it forcing its way into their entertainment)
It's not being "completley anti-social", it's just being able to distinguish between reality and video games.NightowlM said:Wow. The fact that you went and thought all this out is really very disturbing. But I guess it's not all that uncommon for a certain subset of gamers to be completely anti-social.Jadak said:I'd make it a sort of "against the clock" FPS.
Video games do not represent reality - They are fiction. Any sane person can create a piece of fiction where horrible things happen without being an evil person who would ever consider doing these things in reality.
I write fantasy epics where Rape-Demons and the living dead prey on whatever victims they can find, and sci-fi space operas where Humans enslave alien species based on a caste system where the most human-like are at the top and the less human-like are treated like animals regardless of intelligence.
By your logic, this means I am a racist who wants to enslave women of "inferior" races to rape them and eat their flesh.
Does the fact that this is just written fiction somehow make easier to distance yourself from it than if it was in video games? If so, maybe we need to reconsider the stance that "video games are an equally valid media to books and movies".