I don’t know about anyone else but
the end of The Walking Dead game frustrated me. Throughout the (for me because I
suck at the game) long hours of playing and making difficult decisions, the
player comes to care about both Lee and Clementine. Then, viciously, the game
kills Lee off, and Clementine is left without him. So what on earth was the
point?
Galloway says that video games are
action-based, pointing out that the player physically acts to alter the world
of the video game. Most people would say that this is what makes the difference
between this medium, and the written word.
However, the player also mentally acts, making
choices that change the world we are playing in. In The Walking Dead we get to
choose what kind of person Lee is, and the way on which he affects his
relationship with others. As Clarkson
points out “Lee's choices don't change the world, or alter the fundamental flow
of the story”. They do, however, alter Lee’s character.
The video game medium lacks certain
advantages of the written word in being able to draw audiences in. A book can
describe a characters thoughts and feelings, pulling on the audiences’ heart
strings. A video game cannot describe a character’s inner monologue so easily. The
video game’s advantage lies in the player’s choice. By struggling to make
difficult decisions, watching their affects and living with the consequences/benefits
we come to care about the character that we are taking this journey with. We also
come to care for the people we save, serve, and risk ourselves for. So, while
our choices won’t matter in the grand scheme of things, that wasn’t really the
point anyway. So the answer to ‘what on earth was the point?’ is the same as
the point of reading a good book: We met people we will remember, and we cared
for the characters regardless of how the journey ended.
1). Hamilton says that there was
no way to make it out of the game without making some sort of ‘immoral choice’.
Why would the game makers make it that way? Why not give broader options?
2)How can we be ‘judged’ at the
end if we literally had no other choice than to make decisions that out captor
sees as bad? Are we supposed to take his point of view in condemning our
decisions, or are we supposed to see their necessity and stick by them? What is
the point to this judgment?
No comments:
Post a Comment