wallwalker: Venetian mask, dark purple with gold gilding. (Default)
wallwalker ([personal profile] wallwalker) wrote2010-02-11 12:15 pm
Entry tags:

Let's talk relationships in games, or something!

Testing the poll option. Also, I'd really love to participate in some discussion about this, after a conversation on LJ and some further conversation about it with my boyfriend. Things that work for people, things that don't work for people, things people would put into their own games if they were designing their dream game, whatever. :D

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 5


Which of these varieties of relationship/romantic subplots in RPGs do you prefer, if you had to choose?

View Answers

Lots of characters as potential options, but less detail put into each subplot.
1 (20.0%)

A few character options, but more detail put into each subplot.
1 (20.0%)

I'll take either, I'm not picky.
3 (60.0%)

I don't like these sorts of subplots, or I don't care.
0 (0.0%)

Other - I will elaborate in a comment.
0 (0.0%)



(By the way - I am still taking more drabble requests, and will get to the currently-posted ones soon. If anyone else wants to play, feel free! Post is open until I reach ten.)
lassarina: (Default)

[personal profile] lassarina 2010-02-12 04:49 pm (UTC)(link)
(I played the SNES cartridge but once, then the hardtype fantran like 5 times before I got to the properly-correct Italian rendering, so it's stuck in my head the other way. XD)

Bioware's really good about not forcing romance to make plot choices, at least now. Back in NWN there was one boss fight that could be avoided if you happened to be playing a male PC and you took the romance route (such options not available as female, argh.)

The 360 actually has some really good RPGs - Lost Odyssey, for example, which is by Mistwalker (aka "Everybody who worked at Square and then left en masse when the merger with Enix happened" - Mistwalker is run by Sakaguchi and hired Uematsu to do the Lost Odyssey music, for example.) I bought it for Lost Odyssey, and only just recently bought a PS3 when the boy offered to split with me as our Christmas gift to each other.

The PSP is pretty epically awesome, though.

It's not too hard to upgrade your PC to run Dragon Age - mine is nearly 4 years old, and I souped up the graphics card and the RAM and it beats the min specs and hits the recommended in most categories. The game keeps crashing, but that appears to be a flaw in the game itself rather than my rig, as near as I can tell.