In the twilight years of old-school first-person shooters prior to the modern military shooter invasion, Call of Duty 1 (2003), Call of Duty: United Offensive (2004) and Call of Duty 2 (2005) emerged as among the finest FPS games and WW2 fiction the world could offer. In the days before as the flagship title of sexual abuse enabler Activision’s Call of Duty was a name praised with freshness and movie-like qualities, when this was still a considered a net positive. We will make a close inspection as to why the games still deserve the praise, and also discuss how the games differ from one another in subtle ways. Just in case, spoilers abound.
Call of Duty 1
When isolated from its dreadfully mundane and mundanely dreadful nature, war can be quite enjoyable. When it involves shooting Nazis, the fun increases by a hundred fold. It’s not surprising then this found its way to games as early as Castle Wolfenstein (1981). But for a long time, video games did not represent war as historical epics, opting for either the abstract representation of strategy games or in the almost entirely history-agnostic context of action games. In addition, the first attempts at 3D, epic WW2 games plainly lack the necessary graphical punch. CoD is a fateful meeting of matured technology, evolved game design and the fresh language of the war movies of the era.
The result is a game that feels great to play. The night sky, the smoke on destroyed machines, apartment block ruins are all chillingly beautiful. The game is clearly made to look realistic, but today its color palette gives it a pastel-like vibe. Even the detail-lacking textures like faces and trees look tolerable, if not charming at times. The sound design is top notch as well. Guns each have their own identity with tiny visual details, the variety in heaviness, the fire spread, reload time, and most importantly, their sound. The footsteps, the random chatter between soldiers, somewhat comical death sounds, even grenades bouncing from the wall are so distinctly recognizable. To top it all off, the orchestral music by Michael Giacchino gracefully guides your mood throughout the game: Sometimes heroic, sometimes sneaky, sometimes intense, sometimes happy, but never too melodramatic.
Much of the good feel of the game comes from the level design. Levels have a nice sense of variety and identity. Even the day/night switches alone on the same map brings a unique feeling. More importantly, they all have a palpable sense of naturalism. War-torn towns don’t bend to my will, the car wreckage does not feel as if it’s there for me to use as a cover, the houses always have a couple more rooms and doors than strictly necessary, there are burning wreckage at seemingly random places that will hurt the player. This is a very linear game, but most of the time the player will be gently directed by natural obstacles, streets, walls, rubble and minefields. Only a few times does the game resort to bluntly placed invisible fences to keep the player inside the game’s bounds.
CoD 1’s breakout gameplay feature is to be able to fight as a team and it deserves every phase it got back in the day. Especially in closed corridors, the fights get chaotic in a way only normally possible in multiplayer games. People shout, hurl grenades, take cover, get injured and –- save for a sparse use of invincible NPCs -- die and you are just one of them. The game normally punishes friendly fire with a game over but in heated combat moments, will tolerate it to a small degree. You can kill or get killed by accident. No matter how skilled you might be as a soldier, in the end, you are still just a guy.
The game tries its hardest to hammer this point to home. Many moments in the game feel out of slightly exaggerated war stories: “This one time, me and the sergeant crossed into the German lines on a car but a tank started to follow us, we sneaked into the streets, then found some other car, and escaped from dozens of German soldiers!”, or “Our small squad captured a whole apartment block then defended it against an entire mechanized battalion for minutes!” They still feel entirely plausible though, especially when you know how truly ridiculous WW2 was at times, the battle that inspired the latter scenario in the game happened for an entire month for instance! [1] In the solo levels, I never feel quite like a superhuman FPS hero. Rather, these levels are actually quite terrifying. In particular, the level when you plant bombs to a warship feels cold, meandering and claustrophobic. Even a glaringly gamey mechanics like health bar adds to the naturalism. Being at low health means I have to be super careful and scramble to find any health pickup I can. It’s perfectly clear the player is just a lucky soldier, and that a stray bullet, an unheard grenade, a wrong step in the open field could end their life. Player won’t even get the most of the heroic moments. They won’t carry the injured soldier, they won’t drive cars in frantic escapes, they won’t destroy a tank by climbing on top of it and throwing a bomb inside, and they are not the one who hoists the Soviet flag at the Reichstag. Most importantly however, the player cannot open doors themselves.
Curiously, such moments are not presented in cutscenes. A couple of times, the game will immobilize the player with something like an explosion to focus their attention to a big scene, but the game never quits the first-person view and never completely takes away the player's control. Most of the time, we are free to look away from the action and even do a little sequence breaking. Like, in a level where you defend a French town, a tank blows up a wall and we are most likely expected to destroy it after it makes a small trip across the street while we escape its gunfire. But if we have an anti-tank weapon ready with us, we can just blow it up the moment it appears! From the same level, anticipating German assault, a soldier is sent to scout the street and gets killed in the first round of fire. But we can prevent his death by running outside and shooting that Nazi first! In the most ironic fashion for a series that gave linear games a bad reputation, the linearity in the original game never feels constricting.
This adds back to the game’s sense of naturalism. With one notable exception, this game lacks any kind of melodramatic excess. There is a moment where the player needs to cover for someone carrying an injured soldier, but despite being unkillable up until that point, the guy might just die. Despite clearly being an important character, there is no slowed-down Sad Moment, whether he lives or dies, the player continues all the same. In the level where we sneak into a ship with Captain Price, he doesn’t make it back. We don’t even see the moment of his death. We just return to our boat and the person waiting is like “Damn, he is dead!” and the level ends just like that. In the American campaign, you save this guy from a prison and for the entirety of the British campaign you go through many, many deadly ordeals together. And yet, he just dies alone in an enemy ship. The game maintains a consistently mundane, down-to-earth atmosphere. These days, most games would not miss the chance to give the player to sneak up and make an epic knife attack or reward them for playing in certain ways with scores, achievements and collectibles. It feels so nice to just play a game that’s a little indifferent to the player, especially when the indifference is actually crucial to the tone.
Call of Duty definitely wants to be a fun WW2 epic that makes the player feel heroic. But it also respects the subject matter a lot. It is not quite “War is hell!” on the whole but it makes sure to show that war is not fun for the people partake in it. The death screen shows player quotes from famous figures of the era, most of which have a clear anti-war streak, perhaps just as a way to remind us that in the real deal, we would have only had one shot. On mission-loading screens we can see diaries of the protagonists. Even maps and typed-out dossiers have pen writings on them, about changed plans, things gone wrong, or a little quip about the situation. Every soldier you fight alongside has a name and visible health status. The game’s earnest recognition of the everyday people who fought in the war is what makes its celebration of heroism meaningful.
This might sound like a minimum level of seriousness that the media needs to approach the topic of wars, and perhaps it is. And yet so many WW2 video games absolutely miss the mark on that. They either have too much sob story about American soldiers, or too much one-man cool espionage, too much cartoonish action, too much self-congratulatory nonsense. CoD itself could not resist the temptation, as apparent with CoD: World at War (2008) and especially, newer Call of Duty WW2 (2017). A level of naturalism is clearly necessary for a graceful approach to WW2, and such a method can lend itself easily to so many more games. There are many theaters of war with little to no media depiction. But it seems like, any WW action game after a certain date was just destined to be a modern military shooter with an old timey skin.
This is also precisely one of the biggest strengths of the classic CoD. The games not only did depict the Eastern Front, the first game chose it as its cover image and devotes much of its cinematic attention onto it. Unfortunately, it is also the only area of the game deserving serious criticism. The developers could not help being Americans, there is at least one loading screen with a fake Cyrillic front, and the battle of Stalingrad in particular is filled with ahistorical tropes [2][3][4][5], but even still, it captures the spirit of how terrible war is very well.
I put the majority of the blame on the movie inspiration, Enemy at the Gates (2001). The game doesn’t seem to go hard on “Soviets bad 1984” attitude, because despite its shortcomings the Soviet campaign is truly the high-mark of the game. Even as a kid with no knowledge of history, it’s the Soviet levels that actually made me think of Nazis as the bad side. The player tries to live unarmed in true hell, has to fight in burned cities and the deepest winter and finally, tastes the glory of taking over Berlin. The game even ends with the Soviet protagonist writing to his mother about how he felt of the American soldiers as his brothers. American and British campaigns are bloody fine shooters, but the Soviet campaign is where the game gains its beating heart, its vulnerable soul, its trembling voice.
It’s a good thing then, the other two games do not repeat weird Americanisms.
Call of Duty: United Offensive
Unlike contemporary DLCs, old expansion packs were made with the assumption that they would be likely bought only by the fans of the original, which gave a lot of flexibility to the developers. For example, they could make the games as difficult as they want, discarding the usual design concerns. United Offensive absolutely relishes being difficult, it’s truly one of the toughest shooters around, even the easiest setting is not a cakewalk. The challenge feels appropriate as it depicts the intense winter fights of Battle of the Bulge and the utmost brutal Battle of Kursk. In addition, the new levels are much longer compared to the originals, the player will find themselves running from one battle position to another. The game can be quite relentless, in a quite fitting way to the spirit of war. It does allow the player to catch a break in the British levels though, as an inversion of the original, they are much calmer compared to the American and the Soviet campaigns, including a level where you just shoot at German fighter planes as a bomber gunner.
Despite having nominally fewer levels, the levels feel much more varied both in style and the substance. There is more attention to the small details, even similar snow levels feel distinct and memorable. The game’s color palette is quite diverse: the bright whites of the French farms and forests, metallic grays and the medieval stones of a fortress in the beautiful sunset of a Sicilian town, the wet green and brown marshes of Ukraine giving way to the cities under the hellish red of ever-burning flames. The action always stays fresh, even with the longer levels, the game never plainly repeat the original’s nor its own scenarios, when the player is asked to conquer a town, they go through the whole deal; the initial approach, clearing enemy positions and then repelling a giant counterattack all in one level. The gameplay feels more meaty as a result. Small refinements add up as well; there are more guns to use, the player can sprint, the autosaves are more frequent and less buggy, and so on.
In particular, it’s truly amazing how much the Soviet campaign improves compared to the original, which is already great despite its shortcomings. In the absence of excess dramatization, the brutality of war comes out much more profoundly, we can even casually encounter flamethrower soldiers, in the classic, plain CoD style. Much more care is given to the dialogue of the Soviet soldiers, there is a real sense that the player character and his comrades care about each other. And the last level, the defense of the train station and eventual rescue can easily rival conquering the Reichstag in its ability to stir my heart.
Call of Duty: United Offense does not contend with being a worthy addition to the first game, it’s one of the best first person shooters period, just by itself.
Call of Duty 2
Everything that makes CoD good continues in full force in the sequel, this time in the streets of Moscow, the valleys of Tunisia and the beaches of Normandy, with crispier graphics. The breath is visible in cold air, the uniforms look busy, the ground is palpably wet in the rain, metals are more metallic, wooden textures shine brighter. There are some gameplay refinements: the player can use smoke bombs which adds tactical depth. Iron sights work slightly better and are more visible. Ally tanks have individual names so I get melancholic when they get blown up. It is filled with so many great moments: Using a pipe to sneak past the enemy lines, chasing Nazis in an epic counterattack and then blowing up the building they hide, calling artillery strikes on whole tank divisions... On the whole it broadly hits the same notes as the first game, so if you enjoy it, you will also enjoy this one.
The departures from the first game are where things get interesting. The most notable one is the change of the health system. The sequel replaces the mundane,static healthy bar with self-regeneration: The modern system where waiting somewhere away from the line of fire for a few seconds heals the player. This fixes the theoretical problem of the player being stuck in an unfavorable position and forced to break the pacing of the game by searching for items. Now they can hop on between one firefight to another seamlessly and the game remains fair in each individual encounter. However, I don’t like this system all that much.
For one, the problem it solves is actually a positive for me most of the time. It’s not really more or less realistic but it does manage to instill a feeling of mortality. Instead of this, self-healing gives me short but semi-frequent spikes of fear, like getting jump-scared repeatedly. Perhaps this wouldn’t be so bad without the accompanying UI design. Gone is the simple health bar and the number, now when the player gets hurt, the whole screen progressively becomes engulfed in red, and eventually, a condescending “YOU ARE HURT, GET TO COVER!” text appears. It’s so annoying how CoD 2 popularized this understanding of “immersion”. Frankly it just gets in the way of playing the game, I literally can’t see the action when it’s most critical.
The health system brings up it’s own theoretical problem: the player might exploit it and render the game too easy. The devs “solved” this problem by having the enemies focus on the player more than AI allies. For example, in a building defense section, they will go past your teammates and straight to the player's spot. In the first game I could see some encounters end without my involvement at all or even hide in places where the enemies never find me because they are busy fighting others. In the sequel this never happens. It is also followed by making the enemies spam indefinitely unless the player is at a specific place the game wants them to be and, similarly, appear only when they are at a certain place. In a North Africa level, Nazis have a machine gun position fortified with sandbags and barbed wires, supported by people on the balcony of the building near behind it. Try to clear the position from the front? Nope, the house will indefinitely spit new fascists out until I go around the street and hit them on the rear. In the very last level, when I turn around a corner I find a backyard surrounded by walls and then, see several soldiers materialize out of thin air, and rush to their defensive positions without caring about me right behind their backs, oops! I honestly find silly mistakes in games charming as long as they don’t obstruct me from playing the game, but it creates a feeling that the player is at the center of everything, which goes against the spirit of the game. As if I have seen the magician’s trick, it’s hard to unsee once caught: The player starts the fights and they end the fights, it feels as if even the AI partners fight a little less effectively. Not having any solo levels makes this even more obvious. Perhaps the original used similar mechanics as well, but if it did, it was clearly far more delicate about it. Here, it definitely hurts the verisimilitude, it’s pestering rather than challenging and it started a trend where the shooters leaned towards micromanaging the player’s experience more and more. It’s not critically bad here, the game is still filled with many spontaneous, frantic, organic gunfights, it’s just unpleasant sometimes, like biting the bitter seeds when eating a delicious fruit.
The second most notable thing is that the game is a lot more “modern” when it comes to music, i.e. it’s allergic to having music take over scenes. This means, unlike the original, what soundtrack there is is a lot less memorable. Maybe the game wants to prioritize the battle ambiance, which is far noisier and involved compared to the first game. Both your allies and enemies will constantly shout about stuff: Enemies locations, needing reload, demanding support, insulting the other side. For the most part, it makes the fights feel more natural, but it becomes silly when the last remaining guy doesn’t cease to cry at the top of his lungs, like surely during an intense shootout sometimes combatants would get quiet too. The noise in the original is just fine, and I certainly appreciate having a real soundtrack over what we have in CoD 2, even the menu theme doesn’t want to get your attention at all.
The game is also notable for its lack of narrative structure. The levels are just a collection of WW2 theaters, there is little if any story progression: Each couple of levels you just switch years and place without a sense of resolution. In the original, the player survived in Stalingrad and marched to Berlin, the expansion focused on entire battles on operations stretched on a couple of really long levels. The sequel just ends with taking over a German town, it almost feels unfinished. It doesn’t help that, because series of levels take place in very similar places, they have a tendency to blend into one another, and yes the game’s better moments actually strengthen this feeling. It sits in an awkward spot between CoD 1 and UO, it lingers on the same-looking scenery a lot, yet it is too short to conclude near anything it starts in a meaningful way. It is a series of amazing moments in between many fine ones.
It also has a couple of minor annoyances. Pistols don’t have a dedicated slot, making them functionally useless. The ability to switch between semi-automatic and automatic modes in certain gun models is gone. The button for grenades throws them automatically, leaving less window to decide where the grenade should go. When the player is near a loose grenade, the heads-up display informs them with a sign. This is more player friendly but it also conditions the player into following a marker over being aware of their surroundings. The dialog text is smaller, a harbinger of another annoying modern trend. The game auto-saves very frequently but you can’t manually save, view files in-game or start a level from the middle part. While it isn’t this game’s fault, the North Africa levels feels slightly off, years of modern military shooters gives it a bad vibe. Mission briefing slideshows are replaced with official military documentaries, which have less personality. Finally, there are very few night levels. Not just because I like the night view but also it could certainly help to make the levels more memorable.
Overall, Call of Duty 2 is a consistently great experience that occasionally fails below its full potential. The fact that the original is one notch better is not really a point against this game.
Conclusion
Call of Duty 1, United Offense and Call of Duty 2 are excellent WW2 shooters that eschew the pulp for having one foot in reality. Anyone that craves good WW2 media or a simply enjoyable FPS game should try them out.
PSA: Don’t buy them though, not just because Activision-Blizzard is evil and doesn’t need your money, but they are also massive cheapskates and never properly discount their games. Paying above 1-2$ dollars for a 10+ year old game is a scam, regardless of the game’s quality.
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[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavlov's_House (They even modeled the house accurately!)
[2] Yes, a reddit post, but this subreddit is actually decent:
https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/22t8dg/did_the_soviet_union_really_use_human_wave/
[3] https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/31t5on/did_the_soviets_really_send_soldiers_into_ww2/
[4] https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/1ef0k1/how_realistic_is_the_depiction_of_soviet_soldiers/
[5]
https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/2r9az2/is_the_portrayal_of_the_battle_of_stalingrad_from/
This article is written thanks to my dearest Patrons, namely: Effy, Laura Watson, Makkovar, Morgan, Olympia, Otakundead, Sasha. Also thanks to Alex(@jyhadscientist on Twitter) for his perfect editing work
25 Ekim 2021 Pazartesi
Classic Call of Duty PC Games
16 Eylül 2021 Perşembe
Challenges of Time
September 2021 marks the fourth year of this blog. So it’s a good time to reflect on myself.
I believe the quality of articles has increased this year. I don’t like bragging, but I can’t help but feel like I put a little bit more effort into my words nowadays. Of course, the editing contributions of my friend Alex cannot ever be overstated. It’s thanks to him that my essays look as professional as they do .
Have I made good on the “an article a month” promise so far? We have 4 months and I need to deliver 6 new posts (counting this). I need to make up for the past years as well, 2020 was kind of an embarrassment for the blog all things considered If I give myself 2 weeks between each article, I have the potential to deliver 8 essays, anything more would make me run out of topics pretty quickly, somewhat hurts the visibility of the posts and I don’t think I can even deal with the workload. But, an article every 2-3 weeks is not so bad, and I am quite confident to keep up my promise from now on. How? First, a little story:
When I was a teenager, there was not much going on with my life. Most of my time was spent on school and related activities and was quite isolated in many ways. But then, I started going to university. My English was now proficient enough and I had lots of free time, so I could finally surf the Web.
And surf I did. On various forums, sites like Wikipedia and TVTropes, I have devoured every novel information like a starved animal, most of which would be obvious to most of you, but not to me, because I was living in a bubble. One website in particular would prove quite influential on me: Youtube.
There were let’s plays, media reviews, little weird videos and all kinds of interesting stuff. I have watched so many videos, for years. A lot. Admittedly too much. However, I got a lot of out of it too:
My English jumped from “usable” to “casually good”
It gave me motivation and a pop culture foundation to start this blog!
I discovered a good 95% of the music I listen to here, especially anything that’s not from a game or anime soundtrack.
Some of the best things I have watched were on Youtube. Both educational and artistically. (A recommendation list is a decent idea for another blog)
Youtube, for everything bad about it, is actually a quite amazing free source of constant and easily-available entertainment, both to listen casually and to actually learn things from.
It is also “the constant and easily-available entertainment” part that has bitten me quite a bit in recent years. Easier than studying, creating, working, reading, playing, messaging, showering, cleaning… I won’t say it’s addicting. For one, I have never craved it constantly. I could do just fine when I did not have access to a computer. Also, I was well-aware about its ability to eat my time for years.
But it was so easy. Just watch this video, maybe that one too. Just a 10-20 minutes before getting into any kind of work. While distracted, the mouse hovered on Youtube again and again. It’s just so easy to watch when you just hop on the computer, taking a break, eating something, feeling tired at night, or just want to do nothing in particular. Serials or movies are not really the same for me, they require commitment. Youtube doesn’t. It’s always there. Occasionally, a circular interest takes over me and for a time, my use of Youtube will be limited. But, I always return to it not long after. Occasionally, Twitter has proved itself to be bad for my productivity as well, but nowhere close to Youtube. Youtube was always there, was never noticeably dull, and most importantly, demanded nothing but my time.
I knew this was draining me slowly and making me quite unproductive. “Productivity” is a heavily loaded word, but I use it here for anything I want to do. I love learning, getting better at things, or just engaging in some art, you know? So, I tried to fight back against it.
My method was putting them in the background. Most Youtube videos are quite understandable without actually seeing them. Occasionally, it worked well enough. I was writing articles, playing games, chatting with my friends
and while catching up to the good content.
These spikes of productivity were the exact thing that deceived me. After all, under enough pressure or with a burst of passion I was quite capable of having a nice couple of productive days. This is exactly what made idle watching so dangerous. It is how Youtube proved to be “draining”. “Listening in the background” stretched one hour of writing into a whole day. Paying attention to anything for long proved quite difficult. Scant few types of videos are actually non-distracting, but even they can open a door to distracting videos. For every one decently productive day, I was having a week of trying to do anything in the middle of Youtube and Twitter feedback loop. I was zombie-watching.
About a few weeks ago, I said enough was enough, and stopped watching videos.
This was not giving it up cold turkey, I tried that and that doesn’t work. Old habits eventually creep in. No, this was a fundamental shift in how I was going to use the website. I decided that I will watch Youtube only in two cases:
When it’s maybe one-two hours away from sleep and I can’t think of anything better to do.
When a video is genuinely worth allocating time, I will still prioritize watching it in “off-work” hours, unless it is relevant to the work I am doing.
The immediate effect was to realize how truly draining the zombie-watching was. Like wow, there is so much time to do things now. When I want to sit down and study for a couple of hours, I can do that now. I can write articles without the ebb and flow of my attention, I don’t have to look at the same screen the whole day just to be able to write a couple hundred words. I don’t need to scapegoat responsibilities like cleaning or shopping for my lack of time, I have time. I don’t need to turn to the same Youtube videos I have watched a dozen times or refresh the page again and again just so I can distract myself from the gnawing feeling that my life is slipping away. When I lay in the bed I don’t have to think about how I am useless and unable to achieve anything. I have never been this productive for this long even with some external force pushing me. It doesn’t feel like a sprint either, I just have the willpower to start and finish any task, something I have lacked since I began 10th grade. Knock on wood...
After not watching for a while, not watching indeed has proved quite easy. This is how I can say with certainty that I wasn’t addicted. Regardless of the quality of their videos, I wasn’t following most channels I did out of active interest. They were just good enough content that I can use as someone would get drunk to forget the pains. Quitting made me actually appreciate the limited time I now spend watching videos. They feel enjoyable in a way that the never-ending mill of content I was half-watching while trying to do something never was. They stopped being “content”, they became comedy, opinion pieces, documentaries, tutorials, cute animal videos again.
The final revelation was that I was, actually, quite bored. I craved something that wasn’t Youtube, that wasn’t just someone else's opinion or research. I wanted to engage in art, to learn and to create! After a long time, I played video games again, and without trying to listen to something in the background, without Alt-Tabbing every ten minutes to check the timeline or refresh the Youtube page! And I found out that my habits made me somewhat fragile! A couple of years ago, I was able to play games for hours and hours without breaking a sweat, now playing more than about 4-5 hours makes me somewhat tired. But it’s all good, it means the brain is getting used to paying attention again.
Part of the reason why the new posts were coming so erratically was that I was plainly having a hard time coming up with something interesting. Living so passively drained my creativity quite a bit too. The topics I have written about for a couple of months were either long in the drafts, or were found by mere accident. Sometimes, old ideas did not help either. Some topics have been in the drafts for so long that I have completely forgotten my opinions about them. In retrospect, it is actually miraculous that the posts turned out as good as they have.
My sole steady creative output was my amateur constructed language project, which I gave a little introduction here last year. After a couple of months, it too succumbed to my circling interests. There were other excuses too of course, like school and housework. Months later, I returned to work on it, but didn’t like where it was going, and began anew. It’s 90% thanks to that project that I was spared from falling into serious mental issues, quite similar to how I was using this very for a similar effect back in 2017-2018. That time, being enrolled in graduate school saved me. This time, it’s entirely through my own efforts and some feedback from my family. No more trying to write anything in between endlessly chasing every new video or tweet. I am really determined. I won’t feel terrible for my own foolish habits! No more!
So then, what will I do instead? Maybe watching some anime I wanted to watch for years, reading and finishing some physical books, paying proper attention to my school, doing real programming work, actually planning a program to study Japanese in a disciplined manner and so on…
What does this mean for you, dear reader? Well, as stated before, I intend to release a new essay every 2-3 weeks. I can’t always guarantee that they will be as big as the previous one, but hopefully, you won’t be disappointed quality-wise.
I don’t like to publicly declare article topics because I can change ideas fairly easily, but you might see a couple of articles on video game genres. That topic is quite interesting to me, and it’s something I can endlessly talk about. I could also remake more articles. The ones that are old enough that most people won’t remember. A lot of stuff on the website could use a clean up. Perhaps my opinions have even changed since then. In particular, Battle of Middle Earth articles still stand out as disappointments to me. Other than that I won’t promise anything too specific, just your usual video game musings, and perhaps some other media critique as well. I hope you enjoy those!
One topic that was in my head for quite a while is how to present my conlang project. Should I do it when it is developed to a certain point or should I release small stuff while I am doing it? Unless you are already greatly into conlangs, neither seems like an interesting prospect. I want to make it appealing to a more general audience, and maybe get people more interested in languages too? Lofty ideas, surely, but a woman can dream.
Certainly, I have a lot of dreams. One of them is to have another 4 years writing this blog. 4 good years. Perhaps one day, it will be more famous. But I don’t care too much. Enjoying that there is a place I can organize my thoughts and knowing that other people also get to enjoy seeing it matters by itself. Being able to make an allowance on top is already miraculous enough. Perhaps one day I will gather confidence, discipline and enough literature background to try fiction writing too.
For that to happen, I need to avoid falling back to destructive cycles again. So far, it’s going pretty alright, but there are still improvements to be made. Some say that worrying about time efficiency is a product of capitalism. Which is largely correct, and we need to all remember that we are not factories, that mindset is equally destructive. But no matter what, I plainly don’t like the feeling that I am doing nothing with my time. If I could live in a society where I could sleep all day without any repercussions, the feeling would still haunt me. At its core, it’s not really about a sense of responsibility towards others, but something deeper. Not a cry to “Create, create, create!” but a raw desire to keep the thought-mill spinning. Daydreaming has been my most defining trait since when I was a wee child. Dreams forever await me to weave. And for that, time must be used cleverly. There is no merit to cry over wasted opportunities, no point in worrying about an uncontrollable future. I just want the seconds slipping away at this very moment to amount to something. Just not empty-brain watching life as a film reel.
My advice for you is the same too, dear reader. If you sincerely feel that Twitter, Youtube, Reddit, a Discord channel, a video game or any other nominally recreational way to spend your time is making you miserable, then quit! Perhaps you don’t need to give up entirely, then restrict yourself! Customize the social media for your benefit, don’t finish the series you don’t enjoy. Stop making memes about how you keep doing the thing you hate. Change is not easy, it took me so long for me to fully gain this level of consciousness, you might have many additional problems that push you into this cycle, and the entertainment industry very much feeds on people’s bad habits. Something in our hearts wants to keep us in perpetual misery in regret and yearning. It seems inescapable at times. But know this, you are never too late to reclaim your present, no matter how many times you have relapsed. Your day can always be a little better...
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This article is written thanks to my dearest Patrons, namely: Effy, Laura Watson, MasterofCubes, Makkovar, Morgan, Olympia, Otakundead, Sasha. Also thanks to Alex(@jyhadscientist on Twitter) for his perfect editing work
1 Eylül 2021 Çarşamba
Jrpg Is A Bad Name For A Genre
The term “JRPG” as a video game genre annoys me. Long-time readers of this blog might remember that I have written about this before, but this topic is worth re-visiting because it continues to create annoying discourse. That old post doesn’t quite hold up to my current standards, and also it is more of a general discussion about what the term “RPG” means. So a revisit is in order:
Why does the discussions around the word “JRPG” tend to attract terrible takes? Here, I argue that it is because the term itself is a pit of unexamined and outdated generalizations, based on these points:
It is a misleading name, superficially about game having Japanese producers, in truth it is used for a set of unrelated, arbitrary qualities which is seen fit to be called “Japanese” or “Eastern”
These set of arbitrary qualities don’t build up a true shared identity or tradition of design
The games that are called “JRPG” don’t have unified traits which neatly separate them from “non-Japanese” RPGs
“JRPG” is unintuitively used to imply both an “rpg-ishness” but also a place of exclusion from “true” RPGs, a term which is subjected to a great degree historical revisionism that people insist on the most when talking about “JRPGs”
The label is awkwardly loaded to carry over the legacy of “the console RPG”, a distinction which was itself never quite correct and definitely not relevant today
“JRPG” inherently centers a western centric viewpoint, specifically an audience who is being advertised “an exotic product”, it is no surprise that the discourse around these games have racist undertones.
People who make hot takes about “JRPG” never explain what they mean by the term, instead instinctively drawing on lazy assumptions they have absorbed by cultural osmosis, breeding bad discourse
The label actually obfuscates the set of shared design traditions we can use to connect games with.
Building upon the last point, I will present my personal approach to classification. My goal is not to evangelize a new naming convention, but to make you think about assumptions we make and hopefully, to make media critique a little healthier. If nothing else, classifying things greatly pleases me.
I want to stress here that vague terminology is a natural part of everyday speech, and the ideas behind the words are more important than words themselves but game critique examines our relationship towards games and our choice of words when describing games is absolutely a part of that. Also, all good media critique is a little pedantic.
1. “JRPG” does not mean “Japanese RPG”
Dark Souls is a JRPG. Made by Japanese developers, it is literally a “Japanese RPG”. And yet, I have seen no publication calling it such. Wikipedia includes it among “Eastern RPGs”, but it also doesn’t use “JRPG” as a distinct identifier.
Why? More bafflingly, I imagine there are many who respond to this with a surprised look: “Well duh, Dark Souls is obviously not a JRPG?” There is nothing obvious about this. The clear thing here is that JRPG is something different from Japanese RPG, even though that’s what the acronym stands for and most people would use the two terms interchangeably but they would only exclude games like Dark Souls. What’s more, sometimes non-Japanese games are called JRPGs as well, and you can see why people do that some of the time. It almost makes sense, but it should not. This is opaque and unintuitive.
Other genre names have some unintuitiveness, as well. First person shooters are commonly understood as involving movement in a 3D space, 2D arcade first-person shooters don’t count. Similarly, in English discourse, “fighting game” is likely to exclude beat’em ups, despite the fact that they almost always involve nothing but melee fights. In this case, it is very easy to understand why: On-rail shooters and beat’em ups aren’t very prolific anymore, people don’t immediately think about them when we say “FPS” or “fighting games”, respectively. This is not a conscious exclusion, while there are contrarians about everything, I am confident that most people would not seriously object if you said “Double Dragon is a fighting game.”
Terms like “action” and “adventure” might be confusing to people who don’t really play a lot of games, considering that apart from a couple distinct genres such as puzzles, most video games involve some kind of action and adventure. But, they become less unintuitive when we think about their sources: “Action” clearly takes its name from action movies. Action movies live by their combat scenes, so an action game makes the player directly engage in real time combat. Pew pew, stab stab, pretty easy to understand. “Adventure” is somewhat more tricky: It refers to games defined by a lack of combat and a focus on exploring an environment or unraveling a mystery. “Adventure” does not describe a core mechanic, it describes a lineage: This game is like Colossal Cave Adventure (1986), or simply, Adventure. And there is a very clear need to identify games with deliberate focus away from combat. So really, “adventure” is as good of a one-word phrase as anything else.
More importantly, none of the terms mentioned above are deceptive. “JRPG” is a deceptive term. It draws you a coherent enough picture that we can go and say “Oh? JRPGs, you know? We just know how those games are…”
No. I don’t know. You don’t know either. No one knows.
2. “JRPG” defines a lot and nothing at the same time
“JRPG” can mean so many things:
Japanese developers
The game has “Japanese-ness”
“Anime” look
“Turn-based” combat
Random encounters
Combat transition screen
Dungeon areas separated from non combat zones
World map where characters are represented gigantically
Fantasy setting, may or may not have futuristic elements
Elaborate, spectacular boss fights
Long plots, lots of dialogue, often with a lot of cutscenes
Story does not offer branching paths or moral choices
Linear story and environmental progression. If there are any “side quests”, they are minimal.
Characters have pre-defined personalities and appearance with little room for player expression
Characters level up
Leveling up happens frequently
Low customization, no stat allocation on level up
Engaging in combat specifically to level up or collect resources (i.e. grinding)
Little or no limitation on inventory
And so on…
There are many ways to classify games. But not all of them are very illuminating for game critique. Sure, “anime” look, “turn-based” games or colorful bosses are things I enjoy and seek in games, but does that mean that they are meaningful for identifying genres? Is “JRPG” a pointer for a set of narrowly-defined design ethos, or an umbrella term for a myriad of games that share a nucleus? If it's the former, it becomes doubly awkward to call the genre “Japanese RPG”. If it's the latter, it doesn’t make sense to have so much gameplay and setting requirements, especially when some of those requirements are nonsensical in of themselves. Genre names are usually defined minimally around a core element (action) or elaborately around detailed expectations (roguelike). JRPG sits in an awkward spot where it clearly evokes tropes from certain games but those evocations don’t trail back to a shared identity between those games.
3. “JRPG” points to no unified identity
If “JRPG” points at a unified identity, it should be easy to determine which set of qualities make a RPG “Japanese”. Unfortunately as it turns out, having Japanese producers is not enough.
Is it having “anime” looks? What does it mean to have “anime” graphics? Better yet, what is “anime” in the first place? Outside of Japanese, it usually is a loan word to describe Japanese animation. The bad terminology starts right here, I have heard “anime” being referred to as a genre worryingly often. Yes, a country’s cultural output shows a shared history. The shared history can reveal many design traditions. “Ottoman poetry” or “Soviet cinema” are valid areas of study. No, this doesn’t make them genres. Otherwise this implies that an entire country has the cultural width of a movement of only several artists, which is quite othering. Anime offers widely different artistic directions, saying a game looks like “anime” or “cartoon” only says that it doesn’t look “realistic”.
It’s gravely frustrating that the dictionary of gaming media contains so many pure marketing terms. People don’t think about how weird it is to talk about, say, “animated cutscenes”. On the whole, only a minority of games use any live-action footage, most games are entirely animated. There is no “make the game look naturalistic” button. Lighting, meshes, shades, colors are all conscious decisions by the designers. One can just say “non-engine cutscenes” but we don’t, because game graphics must be discussed in the limited window of realism. Final Fantasy 10 (2000) has well-detailed, well-proportioned creatures and buildings presented in an environment with exquisite attention to color and flow of water, managing to look both whimsical and lifelike at the same time. It’s a true visual marvel. Another popular game from the same year, Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind looks like a decayed horror puppet show. Yet the gaming press have pledged eternal servitude to the 3D acceleration gods, so the former looks like “anime”, the latter looks “realistic”. This feels so disrespectful to the craft. Trails in the Sky(2004) uses 3D models on a 2D plane, giving it a very distinguished toy-like look. Dragon Quest 11: Echoes of An Elusive Age (2017) gives a sharply drawn Pixar movie vibe. Shin Megami Tensei/Persona games had many different directions but they all have the unique blend of brightness and weariness that makes the environments feel both otherworldly and mundane at the same time. Looking past the fidelity hype, “realistic” games also make wildly varied choices. Modern horror games use hyperrealism to disgust and unnerve the player. Many open world games have a very pastoral direction, sometimes to the point of making the human feel out of place. FPS and racing games clearly masturbate to guns and cars, respectively. Gaming critique would immensely improve if it stopped hatched on lazy terms so much.
Even beyond using obstructive terms, does it even make sense to put graphics as the basis of a genre? Perhaps, but it is strange to do so selectively. For the most part, game genres are almost entirely defined by gameplay concepts. Visuals immensely affect the character of a game but would Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim (2011) have fundamentally split from other “Western RPGs” if it had looked like Trails of Cold Steel (2013)? Especially when its predecessor: Oblivion (2006) looks like a saturated, darkened Shrek movie most of the time. It all feels bizarre to me, because the logic clearly comes from preconceived notions of how Western titles look rather than thinking about how visuals affect the design of the games.
The other commonly seen definition of “JRPG” is having a collection of several gameplay concepts, most importantly having a separate screen for battles and “turn-based” combat. It should be noted here that “turn-based” actually refers to controlling characters with a menu, whether battles actually happen by taking turns or spending time slots is not that relevant, so it should be really called “having a combat menu UI”. Is performing combat through menus a genre-defining property? It does affect the general design of the game quite a bit after all. But it doesn’t really separate a game from “Western” RPGs. The WRPG label doesn’t seem to have such restrictions. Anything from full tactical gameplay to almost pure action is OK. And really, would Witcher 3: Wild Hunt (2015) be so fundamentally different if it had combat transition screens? Or, in a purely structural sense, how much is it different from a Tales entry? If anything, the latter is more fast paced and combo oriented compared to most Western action RPGs. The only way this makes sense is to conclude that “JRPG” lacks a coherent set of qualities, because it is defined by exclusion, by looking too “anime”. Anything about game mechanics is a backwards justification, not a point of serious analysis.
4. “JRPG” is a label to demote a game from being “true” RPGs.
“Roleplaying” in video games is not just playing as a soldier, an adventurer, a cook etc. but being that person with a past and personality, making decisions and having the world react to you back, to create the experience of a tabletop role playing game. This is facilitated by rich dialogue trees, morality systems, factional alignments, player actions snowballing into unpredictable future events, customization options for appearance, character builds, obstacles designed to be solvable in different approaches and creating as many opportunities to let players express a personality as possible. A fairly common argument is that a roleplaying video game is a game that has such mechanics and that it should try to approximate a tabletop experience as much as possible. This is quite understandable, given that the idea that the computer simulating a Dungeon Master [1] is perhaps old as using the word “RPG” for video games.
Unfortunately, this is an ahistorical definition. Computer [2] RPGs have always been called as such because they are mathematically simulating a tabletop game: Character sheets, level progression, combat calculations, inventories, maps etc. Things like story, characters with personalities, lore, non-transactional dialogue came quite later. It’s all good to say “JRPGs aren’t real RPGs” but then this argument extends to declare that nearly two decades of games designed, marketed and accepted as RPGs have not been RPGs all along. It is also weird because Japanese RPGs were quite instrumental for the push from math-intensive dungeon dwelling to games centered around strongly realized narratives, worlds and the feel of RPG adventure, and in fact, ahead of serious attempts by Western RPGs. They are built upon tabletop RPGs as well. Reserving the word RPG for around a handful of franchises designed to imitate a tabletop experience opens more holes than it closes. It’s usually easier to widen a definition than to narrow it down.
More importantly, the fundamental difference between video game roleplaying and tabletop roleplaying needs to be addressed. All video games except the most abstract ones attempt to simulate an experience. Racing games want to make you feel fast. A football game wants you to give the thrill of playing football. Games with a protagonist make you, to a certain degree, feel like that person. Tabletop systems have the same goal, the difference lies in methodology. They create an environment to make the player imagine scenarios, whereas video games create scenarios players can see and hear to capture the player’s imagination. Moreover, tabletop and video games are both necessarily unfaithful simulations. Tabletop games are a medium of mats, dice, pens, papers. Video games are a medium of buttons, sticks and --nowadays-- VR headsets. The difference in physical experience gives another dimension of difference in two roleplaying systems. But this layer of difference goes beyond the specifics of the play items. If a tabletop game was conducted in an electronic medium, if the player communicated exclusively with chat systems, all calculations and decisions were mediated with a computer, the layer would not disappear. Because the physical experience is still used to give space to player-made scenarios, not a pre-made or generated one.
The most important difference however, a tabletop game is a social experience, whereas video games have a social dimension built on top of them. Roleplaying in a tabletop game is a fundamentally collective experience, a scenario is enacted by the clash and harmony of multiple brains. In a multiplayer game, players still primarily interact with the computer individually and use the channels the computer gives to interact with other players. The roleplay experience happens separately. Anything more needs to be done outside of the computer’s supervision, meaning, outside of the game.
Then, what do exactly dialogue trees, factions, classes etc. add to a video game? Of course they enhance the ability to roleplay in various ways, but at its core, we are still no closer to the tabletop experience than a figure of level progression values or controlling a virtual avatar to swing a sword around. Roleplaying in a video game is a unique experience, but it is not limited to “roleplaying games”, let alone only ones with very specific design goals among them.
5. The problems of “JRPG” don’t vanish with “Console RPG”
A fairly common term in RPG discourse is “Computer RPG”. Originally just referring to the platform, the terms seems to have been crystallized to RPGs which have long dialogue,branching paths etc. and to specifically contrast with “console RPG”. This is nearly identical to “WRPG vs JRPG” dichotomy and while it bypasses the weird implications, it is still problematic: Because for the most part, “Computer RPG” is still implied to be the true RPGs but also because, “the console vs the computer” is a misleading framing. PC game development in Japan was quite active in the 80s and stayed somewhat relevant until the 2000s and many RPGs, including famous ones like Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, either had ports or were developed first for the PC. Also, quite a bit of Western RPGs made their way to the consoles. Most charitably, the console vs computer RPG divide existed maybe a few years in 2000s before games being released on more than one platform, however late, began to emerge as the new norm. Today, “JRPG” is still somewhat used with “console RPG” interchangeably, and it is still awkward.
6. “JRPG” is Western-centric
No need to beat around the bush: The Western discourse and attitudes on East Asian cultural outputs have been, and sometimes still are, plainly cringeworthy. On the video game front however, things are a little more complex.
The Japanese impact on video games is undeniable. So much so that, discourse often dodged the usual Orientalism, it was simply a fact that you were playing Japanese games on Japanese consoles. Consider that for the PS1 and PS2 eras, Final Fantasy games were the biggest AAA titles of their release years. It is somewhat difficult to speak of these games in an othering tone when they ruled the scene. For this reason I don’t actually find it surprising that “JRPG” or even “Japanese RPG” doesn’t really appear in the 1990s or even much of the 2000s. [3] It just wasn’t thought of as separate from Western games.
Then, in the late 2000s and early 2010s, something happened. In much of the gaming press, a “decline” narrative took foothold. JRPGs, they said, were “stagnating”, “anime”, “outdated”,”cliche”. Of course, they were still often praising the new Japanese releases, yet they needed to “innovate”. [4] Even the old games they hailed as “core role-playing experiences” for years and decades were not spared from scolding. They were “slow”, “overly complex” and “stiff”. Now that big-boy Western games like Oblivion and Dragon Age were here, it was a problem that “JRPGs” were too “stale”, probably needed to be a bit like them, not “too Japanese”. As soon as Western press could turn up their noses without losing clout, they did, and “the Japanese-ness” became a problem. The same attitudes have always existed for niche localized titles, especially visual novels, and in hindsight it was inevitable that it eventually hit RPGs too, doubly so in an age where long-time Japan-only games were slowly being localized.
No wonder that “JRPG” feels so awkward. It wasn’t really around until an arbitrary list of features people have some grievances genre-ivied around what Westerns decide as “Japanese”. When people invoke a cultural association heavily in a negative context, the discourse inevitably gets loaded with racist undertones.
7. “JRPG” enables bad critique
Regardless of whether someone cares about game reviews or not, the discourse still flows downstream into the general public. We are discussing games with the vocabulary the gaming press and the marketing teams create. It’s irresponsible to write thinkpieces and list hot takes about Japanese games if you don’t know what you mean when you say “JRPG”. It’s really not merely my love of taxonomy, I just want to know the base assumptions the author is making. When I read something like “JRPGs are clunky”, I truly think “Damn, that’s crazy. I wish I knew which games you are referencing here...”
This goes hand in hand with a second issue. In the absence of a common understanding of a genre, the writers entirely rely upon their pool of personal references, which, I can say with great confidence, is usually very shallow. Perhaps some Square games in Super Famicom, perhaps Final Fantasy games from the PS1 era, often a collection of popular hits like Pokemon and Persona. Usually a stand-in for “turn-based” games, you would be quite lucky to find any reference to action games that are not FF 15. Even luckier if you never encounter the word “anime”. If the author talks about a game without an English version, you’re basically witnessing a miracle!
A good critique avoids uniformed generalizations. Starting the discourse with balloon concepts like “JRPG” encourages them. Even otherwise reputable writers time and time again fell into it’s magic. At least, with something like “Computer RPG”, we can be reasonably confident that the person is talking with some coherent design goals in mind. “JRPG”, on the other hand, can be anything you want it to be. A lightning rod for childhood nostalgia, a pinch of exoticism for a newly localized title, or a nice boogeyman of every video game trope you think of as “Japanese” thus bad. Just bad games writing all the way down.
8. It blocks us from better ways to think about games
Perhaps one reason the word “outdated” comes up with “JRPG” is because, in a sense, “JRPG” is outdated. You can never see innovation in something if you repeat arguments that already decided it as backward a long time ago. There will never be a fresh take about “JRPGs”, only reviews gushing how a new popular RPG “revitalizes the genre”, “gives a fresh spin on classics”, “shows that JRPGs can be [insert good thing]” for the umpteenth time. So then, let’s think of alternatives!
First, what is a “genre” when it comes to video games? In the past, it was quite simple: Are you shooting, jumping or moving things around like chess pieces? Simplicity is certainly useful sometimes. But contemporary thinking bends towards focusing on specific features without making judgments on the game as a whole. For example, “Metroidvania '' points to certain ideas on level design. It doesn’t make assumptions about combat or game spaces. You can have a 2D shooter Metroidvania or 3D turn-based Metroidvania. This makes it easy to talk about games with mixed and creative design ideas without awkwardly collapsing them into broad categories.
So, should “RPG” be an umbrella name pointing to a simple interaction, or a particular pattern that can appear in wildly different games? For a long time, they have distinguished themselves as being centered around a strong sense of progression. But today, that’s a little shaky; most games have embraced “RPG elements” in one way or another. They favor empowering the player bit by bit and want us to play the game for a long time. Is every game that has a skill tree an RPG, or does the game need to obsess over character statistics a little more?
Perhaps big modern games, with their desire to be a little bit of everything for everyone, are making us lose the forest for the trees. I have already mentioned that old RPGs are called so because they imitated tabletop RPGs. But, this by itself does not mean a lot in terms of game design. Instead, we should ask this: How did they approach their goal? Time and time again, we see three answers:
A game like Wizardry: Proving Grounds of Mad Overlord (1981) says: “RPG means numbers. Lists of numbers. All the numbers please”
A game like Legend of Zelda (1986) or Ys I: Ancient Ys Vanished (1987) says: “No, what’s important about RPGs is the feeling of being in a well-realized fantasy world, the moments of exploration and triumph.” [5]
A game like Dragon Quest (1986) says “I can have both the numbers and the fantasy world”
The first approach aims for delayed satisfaction. These games want you to plan, manage resources and gradually train the player characters to mastery. They are very reminiscent of strategy games in some key ways, no wonder many “RPG-strategy” hybrids fit this model.
The second approach takes its strength from other video game designs. These games are about the moment-to-moment fantasies that RPGs can offer. Finding hidden items, beating impressive bosses, solving puzzles, successfully talking your way out of something, expressing your character visually and textually more than with statistics. These games simplify and often outright remove numerical representation whenever they see it as a crutch for the feel of the game.
The third approach unites the first two approaches. This is not a really middle-of-the-road approach, rather it wants to achieve both in-depth planning and a fully immersive world, only cribbing from them to achieve the integration better.
Finally we have a coherent picture of a genre and I can provide my answer.: A computer RPG is a game that tries to be an RPG in a computer. This is recursive, but, RPG is really a feeling like “horror” or “romance” more than a neat collection of gameplay elements. Every RPG is a spiritual successor of previous RPGs, the spirit is what connects them the most, more than any particular design idea. It might not look quite descriptive at first but it is actually not that vague. Think of Grand Theft Auto games: They simulate a lot of things, and the next installment can add progression bars or skill trees all it wants but RPG-ness needs a deeper textural feel that needs to be in every fiber of the game. A game similarly doesn’t become horror if it just puts random, out-of-context jump scares isn’t it. It should want to be a RPG.
I find this is a satisfactory answer for a couple of reasons: First, it encompasses most games that someone could think of as RPGs and some games that aren’t called so but have clear links to the former. Second, it relies on a specific interpretation of “roleplaying” in video games. Third, it doesn’t make assumptions about a game’s features such as linearity, speed of combat, the weight of the plot or even any online features; clearly RPGs show a rich variety across all these. Lastly, it highlights similarities between games that are usually neglected within the discourse.
Now, onto the subcategories! I will call RPGs that are in love with numbers as a Bookkeeping RPG. These games essentially make us have fun while maintaining databases and making numbers go up. It covers very old-school games with various tactics or strategy hybrids. We can also use the term “classic-type RPG”, but “classic” is a fairly overused term in media critique so I am avoiding it, plus “bookkeeping” is funnier.
The second type can be called a Journey RPG. These games are mainly interested in making us travel to a different world. Numerical systems are not necessarily shallow but they are clearly not the main attraction. Modern AAA behemoth games are clear examples of these, despite their many, many design goals. So are most 3D Final Fantasy games, they are very clearly drama and spectacle centered, even if they include side bosses to account for the power players. In fact, not only were they the biggest games of their times, they set the blueprint for today's all-encompassing design approach.
The third type can be called Growth RPG. These games are about multi-faceted changes of the main characters; statistical, visual, story-wise and everything else. Many old and new RPGs, Western and Eastern alike, fall into this category. [6] Yes, games like Final Fantasy 6 (1994) and Baldur’s Gate (1998) are similar in many ways. They both have extensive combat systems alongside rich story content. The differences in execution matter, but they can be expressed with further categories or qualifiers in ways that do not swallow the connections.
Once again, I don’t claim that my method is the only good way to classify RPGs, in fact it is very accommodating to many potential taxonomies. This is also not a complete work, we can deepen our taxonomy a lot more, but this article is already too long. Besides I put almost no thought for online RPGs because I basically know nothing about them. One could say that their design concerns are different from single player RPGs and require a different approach. However, at least when it comes to single-player games, taxonomy is a topic that’s certainly worth visiting again, because it is quite fun. I hope it was for you too!
Notes:
[1] A person that can be considered as an overseer of a tabletop RPG game. They create the scenarios, write NPCs for the players to interact, respond to the player actions, manage various disputes that might arise etc. “Dungeon Master” (DM) is originally used in Dungeons & Dragons but DM made its way into general tabletop game terminology.
[2] In the sense of a “Von Neumann machine”, not just personal computers. “RPG video game” is redundant, Video-RPG is not entirely true because there are text-based ones. So, “computer” is the best next thing. But no worries, it won’t be confused with “CRPG”s, which mentioned later
[3] I don’t claim that my research is extraordinarily extensive but I did research quite a bit. I did not write this much to make up guys to get mad about.
[4] Just food for thought, this was the golden era of modern military shooters, brown graphics and dudes in armor. Games like Bioshock Infinite and Heavy Rain were “redefining” storytelling. You couldn’t just get more excited at the sheer level of innovation happening.
[5] Yes, LoZ has a strong RPG heritage. There are no meaningful differences between it and a game like Ys. To call one the former “action-adventure” and the other RPG. Like a lot of its kind, Zelda is a very clear response to originator games like Dragon Slayer (1984) and Hydlide (1984).
[6] Western RPGs have a historical attachment to complex game systems. Even action combat tended to be complicated and janky. Their Japanese contemporaries often have more streamlined systems, yet only they are constantly called “clunky” and “slow”, really makes you think!
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This article is written thanks to my dearest Patrons, namely: Effy, Laura Watson, MasterofCubes, Makkovar, Morgan, Olympia, Otakundead, Sasha. Also thanks to Alex(@jyhadscientist on Twitter) for his perfect editing work