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Does your taste in other media correlate with your taste in RPGs?

Started by droog, January 23, 2007, 05:03:08 PM

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Erik Boielle

I like both kinds of fiction:- Science Fiction and Fantasy!
Hither came Conan, the Cimmerian, black-haired, sullen-eyed, sword in hand, a thief, a reaver, a slayer, with gigantic melancholies and gigantic mirth, to tread the jeweled thrones of the Earth under his sandalled feet.

Kyle Aaron

Yes, my tastes in rpgs match my tastes in movies and books.

However, that does not mean that one is always well-done, or there are a lot of such stories. For example, I enjoy realistic and well-done postapocalyptic or survival stories, but they're pretty thin on the ground in movies and books I've had better in rpgs. But on the other hand, I've had rpg sessions which were even worse than the D&D movie!

There's what you like in style, and then there's, how often is that done well. Different things.
The Viking Hat GM
Conflict, the adventure game of modern warfare
Wastrel Wednesdays, livestream with Dungeondelver

droog

Quote from: JimBobOzThere's what you like in style, and then there's, how often is that done well. Different things.
Absolutely. I love Ursula Le Guin's fantasy work, Stephen Donaldson's bores me, and I can't stand David Eddings'. But I've run more fantasy/mythical/historical games than anything else. I still find it the easiest type of setting to work with.
The past lives on in your front room
The poor still weak the rich still rule
History lives in the books at home
The books at home

Gang of Four
[/size]

Kyle Aaron

Yes, I think fantasy's the easiest to deal with, because so much of it is immediately familiar to people, whether they're new gamers or old.

But overall, postapocalyptic is the most versatile. You can have action, drama, comedy, stupidity, genius, building, destroying, it's lawful enough to restrain PCs from complete madness, but lawless enough that a few beatings and stabbings here and there will go unpunished, as PCs pretty much require... ;)

I do find I'm always coming back to fantasy, though. And that despite having perhaps only half a dozen fantasy books I've ever truly liked. The modern doorstopper trilogy books, I'm bored before I've even finished reading the blurb!
The Viking Hat GM
Conflict, the adventure game of modern warfare
Wastrel Wednesdays, livestream with Dungeondelver

Tyberious Funk

Quote from: JimBobOzYes, I think fantasy's the easiest to deal with, because so much of it is immediately familiar to people, whether they're new gamers or old.

Do you think?  Notwithstanding the massive success of the LotR trilogy, it isn't exactly a mainstream genre.  

Anyway, FWIW, I don't actually read that much fantasy.  I must be one of the few geeks on the planet that think Tolkein is overrated.  But I love a good fantasy game.  By contrast, I enjoy watching sci-fi, but don't often play sci-fi games.
 

ColonelHardisson

My taste in RPGs is not all that similar to my taste in other media. I vastly prefer to read and watch scifi than fantasy, but fantasy is by far my genre of choice for RPGs.

I don't find fantasy fiction all that interesting, besides stuff like Tolkien, Howard, Dunsany, and perhaps not surprisingly, much of the "recommended reading" from the 1e AD&D DMG. I read scifi when I go for genre fiction, especially if we're talking about recently published books.

Besides that, I read a lot of fiction and nonfiction which simply wouldn't, or doesn't (in my opinion), translate well into RPG form - I really have no interest in gaming in a historical background, unless it was a short interlude in a larger campaign involving planes-hopping. I like detective fiction, especially stuff like Dashiell Hammett, but it's really more about the author's cleverness, style, and presentation, so I've never found detective-type RPGs interesting.

I like the idea of playing scifi RPGs, it's just that I haven't played one since probably my Classic Traveller heyday way way back. Maybe once I get my setting finished I've been working on for years...but I only work on that once in a blue moon.
"Illegitimis non carborundum." - General Joseph "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell

4e definitely has an Old School feel. If you disagree, cool. I won\'t throw any hyperbole out to prove the point.

Kyle Aaron

Quote from: Tyberious FunkDo you think?  Notwithstanding the massive success of the LotR trilogy, it isn't exactly a mainstream genre.  
I think it is. Take a look at the section the next time you're in a bookstore. There are a lot of books being published in that area, it's very successful. Not as successful as cooking and gardening books, but hey, nothing is!

Just talk to people about these kinds of stories, the kid who grows up not knowing they're the heir to a kingdom, the blacksmith who grows up to slay a dragon, the party of brave heroes who must journey far from their homes to save the land - this stuff is deep down in our culture, the stories are familiar the first time you hear them.

Quote from: Tyberious FunkBy contrast, I enjoy watching sci-fi, but don't often play sci-fi games.
You don't play them, or don't want to? There's a difference!
The Viking Hat GM
Conflict, the adventure game of modern warfare
Wastrel Wednesdays, livestream with Dungeondelver

Tyberious Funk

Quote from: JimBobOzI think it is. Take a look at the section the next time you're in a bookstore.

I knew you'd take this stance.  :D Yeah, a typical bookstore has a pretty large selection of fantasy.  But it isn't often that a fantasy novel hits the best seller list.  It's a moot point, though.  Because Lord of the Rings (and Harry Potter if you consider it part of the genre) have thrust fantasy into the spotlight.  If a typical person didn't know about elves and dwarves before, they certainly should now!

QuoteYou don't play them, or don't want to? There's a difference!

I think that depends on what you consider sci-fi.  Hard core sci-fi?  Not really my bag.  Space opera?  Like Star Wars or Firefly? Bring it on!
 

Kyle Aaron

Quote from: Tyberious FunkI knew you'd take this stance.  :D Yeah, a typical bookstore has a pretty large selection of fantasy.  
Why wouldn't I take this stance? What am I, talking to that drongo Luther from rpg.net? "I dislike the way the authour used facts in his argument."

Heaps of books in the bookstore, selling = widespread knowledge of topic.

Plus, like I said, it's basic to our culture. Jungian archetypes, the monomyth, all that shit.

Quote from: Tyberious FunkI think that depends on what you consider sci-fi.  Hard core sci-fi?  Not really my bag.  Space opera?  Like Star Wars or Firefly? Bring it on!
It's all sci-fi. So we'd say that in your case, your taste in other media overlaps your taste in roleplaying, but it's an overlap, not a perfect fit. If it were a perfect fit then you'd read more trashy fantasy rpgs, and you'd be waiting for the Dogs in the Vineyard movie to come out.
The Viking Hat GM
Conflict, the adventure game of modern warfare
Wastrel Wednesdays, livestream with Dungeondelver

Tyberious Funk

Quote from: JimBobOzWhy wouldn't I take this stance? What am I, talking to that drongo Luther from rpg.net? "I dislike the way the authour used facts in his argument."
Because this...

QuoteHeaps of books in the bookstore, selling = widespread knowledge of topic.

Is not a fact.  

There are many reasons why there would be heaps of fantasy books in a bookshop.  I worked in a bookshop for a number of years and we tried to keep a good selection of fantasy books because they sold well.  But they were being mostly purchased by the same half a dozen customers each time.  By comparison, I must have sold "Flowers in the Attic" to hundreds of different teenage girls.

We also used to maintain a HUGE selection of Mills and Boon romances.  And they sold like hot cakes.  But again, they were often being purchased by the same people each time (mostly bored, middle-aged housewives).
 

Kyle Aaron

After the books are read, they pass on to the second-hand stores, where they're read by a wider selection of people.

But the real proof is, just mention any of the common themes of the stories to people, or the common plots, and see if they're nodding at how familiar it all is.
The Viking Hat GM
Conflict, the adventure game of modern warfare
Wastrel Wednesdays, livestream with Dungeondelver

droog

I'm interested in a couple of answers here:

QuoteOf course, I also read things completely outside the geekosphere, but that has very little to do with this thread.

QuoteFor my own pleasure reading I prefer German literature, or history books; Nearly next to no contemporary popular literature.

My question to the first respondent is: why do you feel this way? That is, why do you feel your reading outside the 'geekosphere' is unconnected to this thread?

My question to the second respondent is: you seem to feel there is a dichotomy between what you read 'for gaming purposes' and what you read 'for pleasure'? Why do you think you enjoy certain things in games but not in reading?
The past lives on in your front room
The poor still weak the rich still rule
History lives in the books at home
The books at home

Gang of Four
[/size]

Settembrini

QuoteMy question to the second respondent is: you seem to feel there is a dichotomy between what you read 'for gaming purposes' and what you read 'for pleasure'? Why do you think you enjoy certain things in games but not in reading?

It´s fun to do stuff, even if it´s cliche or repetitive. Rolling for crits and destroying an enemy Battlemech is fun every time around, because the outcome is uncertain.

In cliche literature outcome and language are predictable and uninspiring.
If there can\'t be a TPK against the will of the players it\'s not an RPG.- Pierce Inverarity

PhishStyx

As with RPG's, I get the feeling that my tastes in other media categories vary widely from most people's here.  I do read and enjoy some science fiction and fantasy books, but I don't dig into the big series because the quality drops off too quickly. I never read Stephen King, and most other horror novels bore the fuck out of me 5 pages in.

In tv science fiction, I loved Firefly, but hated Farscape. Liked Star Trek: TNG, but didn't Andromeda. Loved B5, but repeatedly turned off DS9.

In TV fantasy, I love Supernatural, Buffy, and Angel all pretty well, but cannot watch more than 3 minutes of Charmed without gagging on my own vomit.

On the other hand, I have played and loved several horror related games. I do love the Buffy and Angel games, and my current favorite game, WitchCraft reminds me in virtually every episode that I'm essentially looking at someone's rpg campaign being brought to screen.

The fact is that I saw my first science fiction show in 1975 on my 5th birthday when my father let me stay up until midnight to watch the "Miri" episode of Star Trek. From that moment 6 years before I saw my first copy of D&D, I was hooked on science fiction. Of course the next year, Star Frontiers utterly captured my attention, and there was no going back.
"I don't hate D20, hate's too active, like running around setting PHBs on fire. No, my dislike is more like someone who's allergic to something and thus tries avoid any contact with it." - Lord Minx (@ RPG.net)

KrakaJak

When I read non-gaing books, I read Terry Pratchet, which I guess is fantasy but it's more Parody. However I abhor just about all things fantasy, from Lord of the boRings to any book with a dragon and/or flaming sword on the cover. The only exception to this is Warhammer, I like the acthetic and the game world in general. I don't really like D&D (it's fun enough, but I'd rather play something else), but I play it to hang out with with my friends who enjoy it lots.

I like watching Horror movies, however I prefer my horror movies to be B grade and campy. I.e. Jason X, Bloodrayne, Toxic Avenger etc.. I love Zombies whichever way they come.

I like Sci-FI. Not all Sci-Fi, but mostly guys like Bradbury and Gibson (Semi-Hard?). I also dig Star Wars.

So, as far as my gaming habits go, the match up pretty well. I like to play really frightening WoD or AFMBE games, which is a little different from my viewing habits. I also like campy techy-Sci-Fi games like Star Wars D20 and Shadowrun. The only fantasy game I dig is Warhammer Fantasy, Ptolus is growing on me as a setting though:)
-Jak
 
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