ERYFKRAD
Barbarian
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2012
- Messages
- 29,851
Shit like The Expanse, I suppose?find me something produced currently that isn't.
I see your point somewhat nonetheless.
Shit like The Expanse, I suppose?find me something produced currently that isn't.
Are those all the same plot though? Fantasy has degenerated into elves and dwarves fighting the evil overlord. Is there something similar for scifi? Let me check…As much as the single unified fantasy Generica posted on the previous page? Trek. Mass Effect. Star Wars. WH40K. They all follow it to this or that degree. You could argue they are fantasy in a sci fi guise (space opera, then), but to that I will tell you: find me something produced currently that isn't.I mean, is there a single unified sci fi template?You sure about that?A key reason why fantasy is so homogeneous and stagnant yet consistently popular is because Tolkien and Gygax created bibles for the genre that all the hacks imitate. Other genres don’t really have that.
Just a matter of scale and point in time.Shit like The Expanse, I suppose?find me something produced currently that isn't.
I see your point somewhat nonetheless.
In that case it could be argued that not every fantasy story has the same plot either. Lemme see.Are those all the same plot though? Fantasy has degenerated into elves and dwarves fighting the evil overlord. Is there something similar for scifi? Let me check…
Star Trek: utopian space explorers explore new worlds and new civilizations every week. Sometimes there’s politics and gray morality.
Mass Effect: alliance of space elves and space dwarves fight evil space overlord.
Star Wars: space knight fights evil space overlord.
40k: numerous pastiches and parodies of scifi and fantasy tropes duke it out for control of an unending bureaucratic nightmare and literally hellscape of a galaxy.
I feel like we're cherry picking by limiting ourselves to popular examples. I imagine that if we had a larger sample size then 90% of it would be repetitive "heroes fight evil overlord" plots.In that case it could be argued that not every fantasy story has the same plot either. Lemme see.Are those all the same plot though? Fantasy has degenerated into elves and dwarves fighting the evil overlord. Is there something similar for scifi? Let me check…
Star Trek: utopian space explorers explore new worlds and new civilizations every week. Sometimes there’s politics and gray morality.
Mass Effect: alliance of space elves and space dwarves fight evil space overlord.
Star Wars: space knight fights evil space overlord.
40k: numerous pastiches and parodies of scifi and fantasy tropes duke it out for control of an unending bureaucratic nightmare and literally hellscape of a galaxy.
Witcher: has a few wannabe-but-not-quite-there evil overlords, but they are in the backdrop. Usually forcused on politics and gray morality.
Tolkien: THE classic. Elves and Dwarves fight evil overlord.
Forgotten Realms: THE Generica setting, with plenty evil overlords fighting dwarves and elves, but not always the focus of the setting.
Warhammer Fantasy: numerous pastiches and parodies of fantasy tripes duke it out for control of an unending autumn tales nightmare.
This is a very interesting video, fits well with the topic. It details a study done by Lego on differences between male and female (boy's and girl's) psychology, as in how they interact with toys, and extrapolates it out to today's 'writing' and 'entertainment'.
JealousyWhat gives?
https://www.seattletimes.com/life/l...-girls-raise-questions-about-gender-and-play/Okay, I looked it up. There was never any study done by Lego saying that little girls typically turned dolls into clones of themselves.
In fact, that statement contradicts everything we know about female psychology from a cursory examination of deviantart and fanfiction.net (i.e. creative expression without the filter of publishers). These women and girls love to create huge casts of original characters that play off one another.
I want to see the actual study, not unverified PR bullshit. This statement contradicts everything I’ve learned from female speculative fiction writers like Anne McCaffrey, Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler, C.J. Cherryh, Anne Rice, etc.https://www.seattletimes.com/life/l...-girls-raise-questions-about-gender-and-play/Okay, I looked it up. There was never any study done by Lego saying that little girls typically turned dolls into clones of themselves.
In fact, that statement contradicts everything we know about female psychology from a cursory examination of deviantart and fanfiction.net (i.e. creative expression without the filter of publishers). These women and girls love to create huge casts of original characters that play off one another.
'Michael McNally, Lego’s brand relations director for the Friends’ theme....'
'The boy focus got Lego back on its feet and a couple of years ago the company decided it was time to try again to figure out how to attract girls. It had made several attempts at that over the years, but all had fizzled. The company sent a bunch of anthropologists out to study how girls played differently than boys.
What they found, McNally said, was that girls wanted more reality-based toys that let them see themselves as the characters, whereas boys liked more escapist, fantasy stuff like ninjas and wizards.'
Keep in mind that these exceptional individuals might not be representative of the general populace.This statement contradicts everything I’ve learned from female speculative fiction writers like Anne McCaffrey, Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler, C.J. Cherryh, Anne Rice, etc.
Yeah, I doubt lego are going to publicise intricate details of a market study they have commissioned and probably paid millions for, just to let their competitors hoover it up and use it. I agree with your list of exceptional female fantasy authors, would add Robin Hobb to your list, I also agree with the above post though, that they are absolutely exceptions to the rule. They are also all authors of written works, which is a very different discipline to writing for telvision, film and gaming. The barrier for entry to impose your will on a widely consumed product is far lower for the latter than the former, particularly as women and other formerly opressed groups are now being hired as a priority to tick boxes and virtue signal rather than on merit. Maybe, just maybe, there is a correlation between the downturn in quality of writing/executive leadership, the information detailed in the study and these affirmative action hiring policies. I guess what I am saying is utopia for me is a true meritocracy, where only the very best stories are green lit and funded, regardless of the race or gender of the author. Now back to Colony Ship, which I am sure will be well written!I want to see the actual study, not unverified PR bullshit. This statement contradicts everything I’ve learned from female speculative fiction writers like Anne McCaffrey, Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler, C.J. Cherryh, Anne Rice, etc.https://www.seattletimes.com/life/l...-girls-raise-questions-about-gender-and-play/Okay, I looked it up. There was never any study done by Lego saying that little girls typically turned dolls into clones of themselves.
In fact, that statement contradicts everything we know about female psychology from a cursory examination of deviantart and fanfiction.net (i.e. creative expression without the filter of publishers). These women and girls love to create huge casts of original characters that play off one another.
'Michael McNally, Lego’s brand relations director for the Friends’ theme....'
'The boy focus got Lego back on its feet and a couple of years ago the company decided it was time to try again to figure out how to attract girls. It had made several attempts at that over the years, but all had fizzled. The company sent a bunch of anthropologists out to study how girls played differently than boys.
What they found, McNally said, was that girls wanted more reality-based toys that let them see themselves as the characters, whereas boys liked more escapist, fantasy stuff like ninjas and wizards.'
Paranormal romance is a hugely escapist genre about having sex with mythological monsters and that’s overwhelmingly written by and for women!
Keep in mind that these exceptional individuals might not be representative of the general populace.This statement contradicts everything I’ve learned from female speculative fiction writers like Anne McCaffrey, Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler, C.J. Cherryh, Anne Rice, etc.
Women are not overwhelmingly narcissistic sociopaths like Kathleen Kennedy and co. If that was true, then humanity would’ve gone extinct years ago.Yeah, I doubt lego are going to publicise intricate details of a market study they have commissioned and probably paid millions for, just to let their competitors hoover it up and use it. I agree with your list of exceptional female fantasy authors, would add Robin Hobb to your list, I also agree with the above post though, that they are absolutely exceptions to the rule. They are also all authors of written works, which is a very different discipline to writing for telvision, film and gaming. The barrier for entry to impose your will on a widely consumed product is far lower for the latter than the former, particularly as women and other formerly opressed groups are now being hired as a priority to tick boxes and virtue signal rather than on merit. Maybe, just maybe, there is a correlation between the downturn in quality of writing/executive leadership, the information detailed in the study and these affirmative action hiring policies. I guess what I am saying is utopia for me is a true meritocracy, where only the very best stories are green lit and funded, regardless of the race or gender of the author. Now back to Colony Ship, which I am sure will be well written!I want to see the actual study, not unverified PR bullshit. This statement contradicts everything I’ve learned from female speculative fiction writers like Anne McCaffrey, Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler, C.J. Cherryh, Anne Rice, etc.https://www.seattletimes.com/life/l...-girls-raise-questions-about-gender-and-play/Okay, I looked it up. There was never any study done by Lego saying that little girls typically turned dolls into clones of themselves.
In fact, that statement contradicts everything we know about female psychology from a cursory examination of deviantart and fanfiction.net (i.e. creative expression without the filter of publishers). These women and girls love to create huge casts of original characters that play off one another.
'Michael McNally, Lego’s brand relations director for the Friends’ theme....'
'The boy focus got Lego back on its feet and a couple of years ago the company decided it was time to try again to figure out how to attract girls. It had made several attempts at that over the years, but all had fizzled. The company sent a bunch of anthropologists out to study how girls played differently than boys.
What they found, McNally said, was that girls wanted more reality-based toys that let them see themselves as the characters, whereas boys liked more escapist, fantasy stuff like ninjas and wizards.'
Paranormal romance is a hugely escapist genre about having sex with mythological monsters and that’s overwhelmingly written by and for women!
Star Wars/Dune comes to mind.I mean, is there a single unified sci fi template?You sure about that?A key reason why fantasy is so homogeneous and stagnant yet consistently popular is because Tolkien and Gygax created bibles for the genre that all the hacks imitate. Other genres don’t really have that.
Then where are all the clones?Star Wars/Dune comes to mind.I mean, is there a single unified sci fi template?You sure about that?A key reason why fantasy is so homogeneous and stagnant yet consistently popular is because Tolkien and Gygax created bibles for the genre that all the hacks imitate. Other genres don’t really have that.
I wouldn't look for clones exactly but more like for stories that take from/copy the teenage Chosen One narrative, the dying mentor/father figure. You can also see parts of Dune's style in Riddick, Mad Max, Alien and even The Matrix. Dune is pretty big for sci-fi. Star Wars is kinda obvious I think.Then where are all the clones?Star Wars/Dune comes to mind.I mean, is there a single unified sci fi template?You sure about that?A key reason why fantasy is so homogeneous and stagnant yet consistently popular is because Tolkien and Gygax created bibles for the genre that all the hacks imitate. Other genres don’t really have that.
That describes Frodo and Gandalf. You see the exact same tropes in every other fantasy novel.I wouldn't look for clones exactly but more like for stories that take from/copy the teenage Chosen One narrative, the dying mentor/father figure. You can also see parts of Dune's style in Riddick, Mad Max, Alien and even The Matrix. Dune is pretty big for sci-fi. Star Wars is kinda obvious I think.Then where are all the clones?Star Wars/Dune comes to mind.I mean, is there a single unified sci fi template?You sure about that?A key reason why fantasy is so homogeneous and stagnant yet consistently popular is because Tolkien and Gygax created bibles for the genre that all the hacks imitate. Other genres don’t really have that.
Yes, the way I've been told this was popularized most by Dune and LOTR. That as well as the high level of characterization and world building that Dune did is what sets it apart from other sci-fi's at the time. There's a quote from Arthur C. Clarke where he say's that he knows nothing with the same level of grandeur like LOTR and Dune.That describes Frodo and Gandalf. You see the exact same tropes in every other fantasy novel.
Yes, but my points are that:Yes, the way I've been told this was popularized most by Dune and LOTR. That as well as the high level of characterization and world building that Dune did is what sets it apart from other sci-fi's at the time. There's a quote from Arthur C. Clarke where he say's that he knows nothing with the same level of grandeur like LOTR and Dune.That describes Frodo and Gandalf. You see the exact same tropes in every other fantasy novel.
Good counter-culture media that is able to penetrate the mass media wall is hard to come by. Maybe in the past it could have been easier to do so as there weren't so many studio trying to come up with something original on a high level. Nowadays everybody is doing their own thing and there are not so many big projects that are being made just so that they can take a leap in story-telling/originality while taking a chance on money.Yes, but my points are that:Yes, the way I've been told this was popularized most by Dune and LOTR. That as well as the high level of characterization and world building that Dune did is what sets it apart from other sci-fi's at the time. There's a quote from Arthur C. Clarke where he say's that he knows nothing with the same level of grandeur like LOTR and Dune.That describes Frodo and Gandalf. You see the exact same tropes in every other fantasy novel.
1) genres outside fantasy don’t have a single genre-overshadowing work that every hack copies as their outline
2) fantasy (specifically Tolkienesque and D&D-inspired) is overrepresented in crpgs because of this, whereas all other genres (including non-Tolkien fantasy) struggle to get made
Most of the non-Tolkien crpg classics like Fallout, Planescape: Torment, Arcanum, and Vampire: Bloodlines were made by the same dev team. How is it that one team can be more creative than >99% of the entire rest of the market? Even the few post-apoc and cyberpunk crpgs that exist are mostly made to jump on the bandwagon popularity of Fallout 3 and Cyberpunk 2077. In general I feel like the people in the position to create these kinds of games have suffered brain rot in the last two or so decades. The barrier to entry is lower than it’s ever been but there hasn’t been a corresponding uptick in games that could be considered classics in retrospect. For every Don’t Escape, Stasis, Primordia, Disco Elysium, etc (I’m counting adventure games because otherwise I wouldn’t have much) there’s a thousand interchangeable “chosen one saving the universe from the evil overlord with the macguffin” stories.
Oh noes, White culture contains ageless tropes which resonate with people and remain popular no matter what. Better deconstruct them and try something creative. Maybe black lesbians?That describes Frodo and Gandalf. You see the exact same tropes in every other fantasy novel.