Dude, who even knows.
Post with 88 notes
this, about re-enchanting the world and the darkness of original fairytales, got me thinking, I’ve been playing through the Witcher DLC the other day and it really is one of the best games-as-narratives I’ve ever seen
like the gameplay itself isn’t that deep tbh. dialogue choices and a third-person melee system that’s pretty sparse by prevailing Dynasties May Creed standards
but there’s so much atmosphere, and so much of it feels like these Polish devs just getting the ground-level fedualism right
and part of it is that there’s this interesting high/low distinction where the common village people live lives full of curses and magic and wondrous beasts
on top of which are layered these grand sweeping
epics of military conquest that are just incredibly mundane, when you
get down to it it’s a bunch of unremarkable people doing tedious
logistics as a way to manipulate resource flows in a way that doesn’t at all affect lived meaning
like
great kings and nobility might tangentially encounter magic as a
macguffin on the way to resolving an incredibly petty dispute with
significant bloodshed; to the extent it touches on their lives it’s
often to the extent that they aren’t any different from the rabble
like there are flying humanoid monsters and the possibility of using them in war is lampshaded specifically to be mocked, battles are fought with armies full of village bullies slapped into cheap armor
(and there
is an absurd amount of attention paid to material logistics as an
aesthetic element, if an army is in the field there will be beachheads
and depots not as a particular mission setting but just because it makes
sense; every settlement, in environment designs that have no attached
mechanics, serves a discernable economic purpose; there are pollarded trees)
but a nobleman’s unhappy marriage or thwarted youthful romance will manifest as like, actual monsters, presented with a backstory so psychologically real it’s not til halfway through the questline you realize you’re playing a riff on a famous fairytaile
drives home the point that a lot of folk tales were #relatable by virtue of being about human suffering
lowercase-reblogs reblogged this from kawuli
littletownlibrarian liked this
ruinconstellation liked this
confusedrodent liked this
trans-ceiver liked this
youarenotthewalrus liked this
rendakuenthusiast liked this Having not played The Witcher, one thing I’m wondering about this- I wonder if maybe it’s actually impossible in normal...
madreabeja liked this