Posts from Thalen on Thalen Speaks site.
Patrick Rothfuss agrees with me enough to have started a yearly geek-centered charity drive called Worldbuilders. Every year around the holidays, Worldbuilders solicits donations to Heifer with various nerdy things occurring once certain totals have been raised. This year, as an example, Neil Gaiman recorded a video of himself reading Jabberwocky once $600,000 had been raised. In addition, every $10 donated is an entry in a massive lottery of all sorts of geeky goodness. Books, board games, and so forth. Since Worldbuilders began, I’ve made my yearly donation to Heifer through it; I figure a chance at something neat is a nice little added benefit, so why not? If anything it encourages me to give a little more to up my chances.
I’ve never actually won anything in the lottery. Until this year, that is. Saturday I found a package from Worldbuilders at the door, and inside was a copy of the board game Amazonas!
It’s a pretty interesting looking game, with a short enough playtime and straightforward enough rules that I might be able to get my wife to play it (She hates complicated fiddly games with lots of different actions to choose from and hours-long play times. Sadly this includes most of the board games I own). Perhaps this weekend I’ll shanghai a friend or two and play a couple games. If so, I’ll try and write a review once I’ve seen how it plays.
I don’t know how many folks might stick around and keep reading, but I’ve been considering a state of the gaming post in any case, so what better time? Here’s what I’ve been up to recently.
FFXIV
The 2.5 patch came out Monday, and for the first time I was entirely caught upon the various questlines. I didn’t really have time last night to try running any new group content, but I got everything unlocked and am ready to give some of it a try. The Hildibrand questline continues to be the best thing ever, and I’m especially looking forward to the new Gilgamesh fight.
Apart from the new stuff, there’s still plenty of existing goals that I’m still working towards. I’ve leveled all my crafting and gathering classes to 50, but I still have plenty of better gear to work on so I can craft 3 and 4 star items. I’ve been in a bit of a conundrum where I didn’t want to spend a lot of gil melding materia into gear that isn’t best in slot, but working on desynthesis has opened up my ability to craft the best jewelry for gathering and crafting, so that should help me move on up the chain.
I’ve also been working on my battle classes and have 3 of those at level 50. Bard remains my main to which I’ve added Dragoon and Warrior. I’ll probably be focusing on White Mage or Scholar/Summoner next so I have a healer job available, but I haven’t decided which yet. I suspect I’d actually be better tanking as Paladin than Warrior, but I won the most absurd axe in the game off Titan a couple months back, and I’ve been wanting to use it ever since.
Marvel Heroes
I’ve honestly not done much in Marvel Heroes recently apart from try to log on once a day to collect daily rewards. I’m sure I’ll swing back around to it again before too long, but for now FFXIV and occasional single player games are dominating my PC gaming time.
Shadow of Mordor
Among my Christmas presents this year was Shadow of Mordor, which I have been enjoying the hell out of. I absolutely love Arkham City, so the basic gameplay is right up my alley, and the orc captains are a great element. I had one poor idiot come back a total of 4 times, jumping me out of nowhere each time and looking rougher and rougher as it went along. I do have trouble focusing on the story at all since I keep running into captains that need killing and Power Struggles to deal with. I need to at least get to the point where I can brand captains so that getting them promoted actually benefits me.
FFX
Finally, I picked up the FFX/X-2 remaster recently and have been playing my way through Spira again. I’d forgotten how dark that game is underneath the surface once you know what’s actually going on. So many things that were relatively innocuous the first time through have a whole new level of sad attached to them. Really though, I guess Final Fantasy games have a history of darkness. mass genocide in VI, the whole Cloud/Sephiroth thing in VII, and Tactics, man don’t get me started on Tactics. It’s like a Shakespearean tragedy told with Precious Moments figurines.
In any case I just wrapped things up in Luca and am headed out on the Mi’hen Highroad. X is one of the Final Fantasy games that I not only beat but pretty much burned to the ground content-wise the first time around, so it’s interesting seeing what all I remember and deciding how in depth I’m going to go. I have a hard time not collecting all the things, but I don’t know if I’m going to be willing to put forth the effort this time around to, for instance, get Lulu’s final weapon.
You see a lot of reasons suggested, ranging from ‘their gay lol’ to ‘they want people to give them stuff’ and so forth. It’s depressing, honestly. So many of the posts always seem to boil down to ‘I don’t want to do thing X so anyone who does must be wrong/different/weird’. There’s a self-centeredness and lack of empathy that seems emblematic of so much of what’s wrong with online culture.
When I create characters in online games, tabletop, or whatever, I generally have a basic outline in my mind when I start. I’ll either have a class or a personality in mind and everything else flows from that. One of those elements is gender. I’d feel as strange trying to make a character male that I’ve pictured as female as I would the reverse. Playing a female character is comparable to playing a dwarf, or a robot, or a psychotic little cat thing for me. I’m not any of those things in real life, they’re elements of a character I choose to inhabit.
That’s not to say my views on characters are the way, the truth, and the light. I can absolutely understand wanting to play ‘yourself’ (or more likely an idealized version thereof). My version of the Avatar in Ultima games has always been simply me at the core. It’s also not at all surprising that a transgender person would want to play a character of the gender they identify as. For me such a role is a challenge to attempt; for them it’s an opportunity to inhabit a more comfortable skin.
I think a lot of my view on this comes from my roots in late 80s and early 90s tabletop role-playing. This was a time when story and setting was really coming to the fore, and games tended to involve a lot of social elements along with the combat. Like most players I started out pretty much playing ‘me with magic’, but that gets boring after a while. For role playing to be interesting, the role needs to require some effort. As one gets better at it, the effort needs to increase. Particularly once I started running games, I needed to be able to play all sorts of different NPCs, some of whom were female. From there to a female PC isn’t much of a stretch.
Ultimately, choice of character gender is just one of many, many ways that different people play the same game in a different way. Trying to claim that someone else is playing wrong because of that choice says a lot more about you than it does them.