Well into the evening hours, I went out to a bar. Between glasses of barely mixed booze, just past a lanky fellow with a glowing saber, I saw him. He was statuesque, decked out in leather and pierced all over, and wreathed by a rich, black mane. He was a hybrid, half man, half lion. He was ripped to hell. And what he really wanted was for me to tie him up.
Set in a pseudo-dystopic San Francisco of 2064, Read Only Memories is a classically-styled adventure game with witty writing and a cyberpunk atmosphere. Its designers are a group of gay and queer developers eager to show the industry how to do this sort of representation right.
Because of that, Read Only Memories is effusive with queer acceptance. Gay and trans and agender folks abound as part of the background and texture of the world, but thereās been little in the way of sexuality in the gameāuntil Crow came along, that is.
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āWith Crow, we wanted to have more positive portrayals that arenāt how you usually see gay people in video games,ā says Phillip Jones, one of the gameās developers. āHis sexuality is part of his identity, but itās also not the only thing to him. Still, heās the first person we let you obviously flirt with.ā
Your scene with Crow (at least until you take him back to your place) takes place in Pub Crawl, a bar that shows up after you finish the main story. After solving the gameās noir-inspired murder mysteries, relaxing in bars and chatting up patrons is about the only thing left to do. But, while all of the barās other patrons only present dialogue options like āWhat are you drinking?,ā with Crow, you can choose to select āFlirt.ā
Historically, gay bars and establishments were one of the few places where queer people were safe-ish. If youāve ever frequented a *gay bar* (which is very different than a straight bar thatās gay-themed), people are a bit more open and a bit more direct because itās assumed youāre there for a short vacation from the heterosexual world outside.
Crow, as heās written, groks that important bit of culture. He reveals what he needs to, saying simply that he loves to ābe tied up.ā
āSurrendering control is intoxicating,ā he adds, while avoiding any talk of his actual job. He prefers to keep the chatter mundane, even making quips about how picks out his cereal. He jokes that people donāt tend to like him at work, but lies about what he does, saying he has a desk job.
āHeās a secret bounty hunter,ā Jones tells me of Crow. āHe just pretends to have a desk job.ā Thatās not explicitly stated in-game, but if youāre in the know, you can see how Crowās definitely written that way. Beyond contextualizing some of his lines, particularly the one about how people at work donāt like himāget it, because he kills themāthis knowledge gives Crowās little bit of screen-time that much more depth.
āāBoringā stuff is just what we all do when weāre comfortable,ā Crow says later. And with the exception of letting you in on his kinks, he doesnāt talk about anything but normal. To him, the bar is a safe, comfortable place where he doesnāt have to worry about the excitement or weight of the world.
Most games that are āqueer-labeledā tend to be for adults only, says another of the gameās developers, Matt Conn. Games like Ladykiller in a Bind and others have set expectations that the text-based āvisual novelā style genre is supposed to have sex scenes, he says. That has, to a point, pressured the team to include something a bit more explicit, he says, leading to the addition of Crow.
Read Only Memories is quirky and tongue-in-cheek, even here. If you do choose to play with Crow, thereās no drawn-out cut scene, or awkward descriptions of anatomy or technique. Itās quiet and quick, framed as part of a broader process of getting to know someone, all with a jovial wink.
While the scene, taken on its own, may seem abrupt, in context itās part of the larger challenge that a lot of queer developers face. Sexual orientation can link a personās identity to their sexuality, but thatās never all there is to a person.
āIt was important to us to have a character who someone who fit in the world,ā Conn says. āA lot of games have āplayer-sexualā characters.ā In Dragon Age 2, for example,everyone that you could āromanceā would fall for you no matter what your gender or sex. Conn says thatās not the way to do things.
āObviously the ideal is that we all get along and everything is great and thereās a lot of harmony⦠but it ignores a lot real people. Not everyone is pansexual, obviously, so it doesnāt make sense for your characters to be,ā he says. āCrow is looking for a hook-up, so if youāre not there to meet each otherās needs in that way, heās not there for you.ā