Shapeware - Százszorszép

shapeware - Százszorszép

More Posts from Shapeware and Others

10 months ago

"the terms" of a video game is that it was made at some point in time and is about that point in time. all video games, television, movies, books, all fiction all media is about NOW. you cannot create a fictional world. it is just discourse on and in the real world. to do a meeting of the game on it's terms in the way framed here is to create a misconception of what fascism is—which is what this post does.

I don't think "Fascist" is a very useful or accurate thing to call Caesar and his Legion (from Fallout: New Vegas) in the context of the game world itself. Like there are a lot of aesthetic similarities and basically all of their unironic real world fans are some sort of Nazi Nerd, but when talking about their place within the context of fictional post-nuclear Nevada it just doesn't work. Like Caesar's whole deal is that he's a Social Scientist who, living in a world that's been "blasted back to the Stone Age", figures that society must evolve through the same stages if it wants to properly return to modernity. The Legion is basically comprised of "Primitive Communists"* who've been forced into a Slave Society. His criticisms of the NCR boil down to them being a moribund remnant of/reversion to Old World Capitalism rather than something organically adapted to the post-Nuclear world. He repeatedly talks about how the Legion isn't meant to represent an ideal society but simply a stepping stone onto something better (the thesis that will clash with it's antithesis and evolve into a superior synthesis). His interactions with the Courier heavily imply that the Legion's Misogyny, Homophobia, Tech aversion etc. are much more tools of social organisation and control than values that Caesar personally holds. The Legion isn't just some band of mindlessly violent reactionaries but the product of very deliberate Social Engineering; a peculiarly post-nuclear sort of scientifically planned society

Now I'm not defending the Legion as a "good" choice or anything; Caesar's plan has a lot of problems, it's not hard to poke holes into and in terms of unadulterated cruelty The Legion is easily the most morally repugnant of the main factions. But the thing I really love about The Legion is how, within the specific context of Fallout's setting, it makes sense. Like once you really think about it you can understand why someone in Edward Sallow's position would arrive at these conclusions, and there are good reasons why (if you take your roleplaying seriously and don't treat the Player Character as an extension of yourself) someone living in this world might chose to side with him. The Legion may be terrible but it's not evil for the sake of evil; there's genuinely a compelling ideology behind it.

It's why I get sad when I see so many people dismiss them as the "dum dum fascist slavers" because there's so much more to them than that. Like I think the best part about The Legion is how ridiculous they first appear ("These raiders dress like Ben-Hur extras?????) but once you find out more about them then it all starts to click ("Oh I see their leader is trying to assimilate them into a distinct and alien culture in order to maintain their loyalty; severing their previous connections and giving them a whole new identity"). So it sucks to see so many people get caught up in the first part and never make enough connections to reach the second. Like in general, Fallout: New Vegas is very messy and flawed and yet it's full of all these interesting little nuances and I think that's worth appreciating it. It's why, time and time again, I keep walking down that dusty road

*in the very broad sense that Fallouts "Tribals" are meant to represent people who have reverted back to some sort of pre-state society; of course there are countless problems with how Fallout treats this matter (including but not limited to incredible amounts of racism) but in order to understand Caesar we're forced to meet the game on it's terms

1 year ago

what of one who can do both?

Babies Two

babies two

4 months ago
Paolo Roversi - "The Surreal Art Of The Extraordinary Hat", 1985, From Unseen Vogue: The Secret History
Paolo Roversi - "The Surreal Art Of The Extraordinary Hat", 1985, From Unseen Vogue: The Secret History

Paolo Roversi - "The Surreal Art of the Extraordinary Hat", 1985, from Unseen Vogue: The Secret History of Fashion Photography by Robin Derrick and Robin Muir (2004)

7 months ago
Gloovy.daze

gloovy.daze

8 months ago

wake up i wanna go outside but i'm scared!!

i need to go to the monster store

shapeware - Százszorszép
5 months ago
Buzzing And Whirring: Servos Swerve And Shift My Hips Sorta To One Side —hey Baby,, Do You Come Often?
Buzzing And Whirring: Servos Swerve And Shift My Hips Sorta To One Side —hey Baby,, Do You Come Often?

buzzing and whirring: servos swerve and shift my hips sorta to one side —hey baby,, do you come often?


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9 months ago

i'm a place


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3 months ago
Christina Bothwell’s Magical Glass Deer.

Christina Bothwell’s magical glass deer.

10 months ago
St. George And The Dragon, From Red Magic By Kay Nielsen (1930)

St. George and the Dragon, from Red Magic by Kay Nielsen (1930)

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shapeware - Százszorszép
Százszorszép

on my hands and knees looking for God • 32 • she/her (like a boat)

393 posts

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