How much thought do you give to your moral choices in video games? Do you wish you could take one back? The Western press spills a lot of ink about Japanâs views on sexuality, but ever wondered what Japan thinks about our views on violence? All this and more, so come on inâŠ
Every week on Worth Reading, I present the weekâs best games writing, videos, and other interesting bits that didnât make it onto Kotakuâs own front page. If youâve seen anything or written anything that would make sense for a future edition of Worth Reading, let me know!
With that in mindâŠ
Hey, You Should Read These
âStrangely Privileged: The Blackness Problem With Gamersâ by Samantha Blackmon
How we roleplay in a game depends on many factors. At times, the character on the screen is directly influencing the decision making process. Other times, there may be subconscious motivating factors we donât comprehend until much later. Samantha Blackmon broke down one of these, following a discussion about Life Is Strange. In the game, itâs possible to report a crime to the schoolâs principal. Blackmon never considered telling the principal, a decision informed by her life experiences. For other people, it wasnât even a questionâof course you tell the school!
âSomeone asked how many of the podcasters had chosen to report a student to the school authorities and while some people had and some hadnât in the end everyone except for me had considered it. And then I thought about whyâŠI specifically remember thinking that being a âsnitchâ in this game was probably going to end badly and that I could probably fix things better than an ineffectual administrator, but most importantly I remember thinking that the authorities never help you so that would be a waste of time. As we talked about it last night and I began to process I realized that my choice had nothing to do with the game and everything to do with me as a person, and more specifically a person of color. While non-minority parents get to teach their children to go to the police if ever they need help, minority parents have to teach their children to steer clear of the police whenever possible because the possibility for things to go horribly wrong is extremely high and possibility of actually getting any help is almost non-existent (and in the end not worth the risk).â
âThe Westâs Tolerance for Violence, and Japanâs Tolerance for Girlsâ by Claude Smith
Though Iâm inclined to roll my eyes at the way some Japanese games portray womenâsome being the key word!âIâm more interested in knowing why. The cultural gap is whatâs interesting but often left out. Claude Smith translated a conversation between Kadokawa Gamesâ representative director Yasuda Yoshimi and InteractKK representative director Hirabayashi Hisakazu about the differences between eastern and western values on sex and violence. Thereâs an unusual amount of honesty about the gap between cultures. Iâd happily read more of these!
âYasuda: Last time, we used Mortal Kombat as a sample American game where you could clearly see cruelty on display. The sensitivity of the Japanese is very resistant to that kind of thing, as Hirabashi observed.
Hirabayashi: Yes.
Yasuda: The opposite is true. According to the value systems of America and the Western countries, the representation of women in anime and manga, especially the depiction of girls, meets with strong resistance. People working in Western game companies have often commented on this.
Hirabayashi: Thatâs right. Iâve experienced the same thing. Thereâs the old story of how Japan was loose in its regulation of juvenile porn. Those discerning eyes were strict. That said, of course, I condemn juvenile porn as well. However, I think the regulations of foreign countries are too severe. If I remember correctly, in England, saving pics on your computer of your grandchildren swimming in the water could be dangerous. If they got out, say for when you took the computer in for a repair, you could be arrested for possessing juvenile porn, even though youâre their grandfather.â
If You Click It, It Will Play
These Crowdfunding Projects Look Pretty Cool
Titanic: Honor And Glory hopes to re-create the Titanic experience, including the sinking.
Cadence wants to help you create music while you play games. Love stuff like that.
Night Terrors might actually be the end of me. Maybe this shouldnât get funded.
Tweets That Make You Go âHmmmmmmâ
I love you @jkottke but I couldn't help but notice⊠pic.twitter.com/qQ0nEs5PTd
â David Jacobs đ« (@djacobs) February 23, 2015
I feel bad when I see a team asking for $150k on kickstarter & players asking why it doesn't cost $10k. When in reality it will cost $600k.
â Daniel Cook (also on mastodon) (@danctheduck) February 24, 2015
https://twitter.com/embed/status/570658023640866816
https://twitter.com/embed/status/571024709522890754
Oh, And This Other Stuff
Laura Hudson explored how This War of Mine humanizes war.
Karyl Gilbertsonargued that in todayâs world, games are never, ever finished.
Katie Williamswondered if game jams are doing more harm than good to games.
Leigh Cuenchronicled how YouTubeâs Markiplier raised money to fight depression.
Emily Gera lamented Peter Molyneuxâs decision to back off from the press in the future.
Phill Cameron researched the financial viability of producing DOTA 2 announcer packs.
David Shimomura analyzed the cultural symbolism of the PlayStation controller.
Taylor Hatmakerdove into a virtual reality game and never wanted to leave.
Emily Shortrecommended some adult interactive fiction, if thatâs your thing.
See you next week!
You can reach the author of this post at [email protected] or on Twitter at @patrickklepek