Rodan56 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 24, 2021 5:58 am
I can agree with one over arching theme in this, if nothing else. (Although I do feel Detroit: Become Human is a really badly made allegory for civil rights because of its nature of using androids) That being that if you're going to ask complex philosophical ideas in your story, you have to argue both sides and argue both sides effectively. Especially if it's something as complex as this story's themes.
I disagree.
*warning - copious swearing ahead*
I feel that unfortunately falls into the Golden Mean fallacy which is a real issue in life. If the argument is that the world is flat versus the world is round. You don't have to argue one side effectively because one side is a fucking moron. Similar with the idea that, say, vaccines cause autism. Because it's fucking stupid. Or, you know, The Last of Us: "Cannibals and Bandits are Bad" vs. "Cannibals and Bandits are Good," You don't need nuance.
The problem with Detroit: Become Human isn't that it's a premise. It's the same goddamn premise as Blade Runner and Blade Runner is awesome. The human race has, for whatever insane reason, created a slave race that is fully conscious and aware as well as desiring of freedom. That's because it's an allegory for slavery where humans are fully conscious and desiring of freedom but assholes try to break them.
There's no need for an argument because slavery is bad and people who do slavery are bad. It's funny because the Romans, those archetypal slavers, weren't unaware of this. Their laws are full of like 9000 laws about how slaves would murder you in your sleep if you didn't scare the shit out of them or punish them horribly for it. They knew being a slave sucked but didn't care because it made them rich.
Really, the problem of Detroit: Become Human is that it REALLY thinks the audience is a bunch of the aforementioned fucking morons. That we, the audience, have not seen Blade Runner. I mean, 5 minutes in the game, I'm like, "Okay, this family butler robot is freaking the fuck out because he's about to be decommissioned for a new model and murdered by the family he loves. That is tragic. That is understandable. Oh and robots are sentient."
Then stretch that five minutes into hours and hours and HOURSSSSSS of explaining, "Did you know cruelty to a sentient is being is bad? This asshole bought a robot daughter to abuse. Oh and a robot girl to mother her and presumably ****."
Its boring not because of the content but assumes we do not UNDERSTAND the content. Slavery=bad. Got it. Now get with the storytelling that makes it exciting. Blade Runner is interesting because it has Slavery=Bad but has its protagonist as a slave hunter and its antagonists as well-motivated terrorists. Exciting action scenes and complex relationships. Not so much here.
But this is becoming a bit of a rant. Let's just say leave things off with this, in the Antebellum South, Slave Owners would claim that runaway slaves were merely sick or mentally ill. That they were naturally predisposed to bondage and that their desire for freedom was a disease that made them disobey their masters. Sound a bit familiar? Because it's kinda how Detroit explains what Deviancy is... a latent virus, a computer glitch, they're not supposed to think they're alive. The game has literally made a racist belief system from the past a tangible reality and never really addresses how much this undermines it's own plot. I think if you create the implication that your civil rights leader is actually infecting people with a virus that makes them go rogue... you have failed to properly construct an effective allegory for civil rights story. Someone REALLY should've sat the creatives down and asked them if they were actually curious about the implications they were exploring through these themes... or did they just think they sounded like a fun idea for a game?
Eh, I think the game is actually pretty clear that "deviancy" is just the explanation for the sentient robots wanting freedom when it's obvious their reasons are the fact being a slave sucks. Its possible the creepy Jeff Bezos guy who invented robots is programming them to become sentient but all of the robots have valid reasons for rebelling.