Seriously. Every form of entertainment has baked-in political assumptions, and that definitely includes #ttrpg . You might choose not to examine them, but this is an active choice on your part, and you don’t get to pretend that your entertainment is “free of politics”.

  • Ech@lemmy.ca
    701·
    29 days ago

    This douchebag isn’t exactly the most appropriate for this meme.

    *First draft was the op crowder meme. Good on op for updating it.

    • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
      251·
      29 days ago

      This template really needs to die.

      Edit: this was meant for the Crowder template. Calvin is cool.

    • AeronMelon@lemmy.worldEnglish
      11·
      29 days ago

      I came here after the edit and got scared that Watterson did something.

    • Darohan@lemmy.zip
      3·
      29 days ago

      This comment is really funny now that OP is using the new format, please leave it up.

      • Ech@lemmy.ca
        4·
        29 days ago

        Hah, gotta edit it at least a bit. I’ll leave the original viewable.

  • ViatorOmnium@piefed.socialEnglish
    478·
    29 days ago

    “I don’t want to talk about/see politics” is always synonym to “I support the status quo, and I will aggressively reject anything that goes against it”.

    Nothing that happens on a public space is free of politics, even when it’s not controversial.

    • Siethron@lemmy.world
      6·
      29 days ago

      I don’t like politics in ttrpgs because that means less time SMITING and more time with boring words. Unless the politicians are secretly vampires, then I can keep SMITING.

      NO TALK ONLY SMITE.

      This post has been brought to you by the palabian gang.

      • psud@aussie.zoneEnglish
        1·
        28 days ago

        Now with the vampire politicians gone you can help shape the new government of the city

    • edible_funk@lemmy.world
      83·
      29 days ago

      Just MLK’s white moderate doing white moderate things. Funny how shit don’t change.

  • skisnow@lemmy.caEnglish
    30·
    28 days ago

    You can tell what someone’s politics are by what they consider political.

    I was astonished at some of the Steam reviews of Outer Worlds after playing it. People proper pissed off that their experience had been ruined because there’s a female side character with an optional side quest where she wants a date with another woman. Like how thoroughly filled with hate do you have to be as a person, to be fine with all the mass killing but suddenly get a moralistic high horse about a fictional character going on a dinner date you don’t approve of.

    Sad that Steam are making a comment of their own by allowing those reviews to stay up.

    • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@feddit.ukEnglish
      4·
      28 days ago

      Steam definitely has a libertarian streak, seemingly. I wish I had started switching over to GOG a lot sooner.

    • Logical@lemmy.world
      2·
      27 days ago

      While I haven’t read those reviews, I think the implications of Steam removing reviews would be worse, since they would effectively be manipulating the user score of a game. User reviews are just that, user reviews. The score should indicate what users think, whatever their reasons may be for thinking it, no?

      I don’t disagree with the rest of what you said though.

  • mycodesucks@lemmy.world
    312·
    29 days ago

    EVERYTHING is politics and the shitheads who complain are the ones who made it that way.

    • vrighter@discuss.tchncs.de
      06·
      28 days ago

      that’s not politics. That’s just normal people getting offended at things. It’s normal because it’s not possible to please everyone at once so there will always be someone.

  • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
    231·
    29 days ago

    People do not all have the same working definition of “politics”. Many people seem to use it to mean “overt content about contemporary issues”, but that’s not really a good definition.

    If your game has sentient creatures with agency and desires, it has politics.

    For example, if your game has a king, there’s politics. Having the people accept monarchy is a political statement. It’s not as hot-button as, say, having slavery, but it’s still political.

    You might not be surprised if your players react to a world with chattel slavery by trying to free the slaves and end that institution. The same mechanism may lead them to want to end absolute monarchy. They see something in the setting they perceive as unjust, and want to change it.

    A lot of people are kind of… uncritical, about many things. They don’t see absolute monarchy as “political” because it’s a familiar story trope. They are happy to accept this uncritically so they can get to the fun part where you get a quest to slay the dragon. (Note that the target of killing the dragon rather than, say, negotiating or rehoming it is also political)

    People then get frustrated because they feel stupid, and they’re being blocked from pursuing the content they want. They just want to, for example, do a tactical mini game about fighting a big monster that spits fire. They don’t want to talk about the merits of absolute monarchy or slaying sentient creatures.

    It’s okay to not always want to engage in the political dimension. That doesn’t mean it’s not there. If someone responds to the king giving you a quest with “wait, this is an absolute monarchy where the first born son becomes king? That’s fucked up” they’re not “making it political”. It already was political.

    If you present a man and a woman as monogamously married in your game, that’s political. That’s a statement. If you show a big queer polycule, that’s also a statement. The latter will ping the aforementioned uncritical players as “political”, because it’s more atypical, but both are “political”.

    Some of this can be handled in session 0. But sometimes you learn that some people in the group have different tastes and probably shouldn’t play together.

  • Bobbysaurus@lemmy.world
    213·
    29 days ago

    I feel like a lot of people, who complain about politics in gaming are not choosing to examine/not examine the political assumptions, they are simply not realising that they’re there. Often these themes reside deeper in the storytelling so you have to actually engage with it to be aware of them. People who complain about it only choose a handful of topics to be mad about, because they are against it.

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
      53·
      29 days ago

      Exactly. What they’re really mad about is the fact that there’s a black person, a gay person, or woman with normal sized tits in the game.

    • XM34@feddit.orgEnglish
      413·
      29 days ago

      That may be the case for some people, but a lot of people just want some good lighthearted fun without any of the real world implications attached to it. This obviously doesn’t excuse bigoted mindsets. I’m talking about campaigns where me and my players just want to do some good old goblin slaying without the need for anyone to chime in with a “UM actshually those goblins have families too”.

      • edible_funk@lemmy.world
        61·
        29 days ago

        Aren’t goblins ontologically evil in most DND settings? That should take care of that specific issue anyway.

        • XM34@feddit.orgEnglish
          41·
          29 days ago

          Nah, they’ve long fallen to the usual cycle of “here is a species of interesting antagonistic creatures” -> “Oh wow, that sounds interesting. I want to play them” -> “Yeah sure, here’s a playbale variant of that species. We’ve removed all traces of evilness and uniqueness because god forbid players playing evil characters”. Same as Drow, Orcs, Fairies and Goliath.

          It’s not just their inherent evil nature BTW. It’s also stuff like daylight sensitivity.

          • edible_funk@lemmy.world
            21·
            29 days ago

            I mean I can understand having occasional exceptions to the rule so the players can get an interesting non standard experience, but straight evil aligned critters should always be present in fantasy settings especially ttrpg and DND specifically.

  • kameecoding@lemmy.world
    171·
    29 days ago

    All I want is more nice unpolitical games like Bioshock or Wolfenstein

    And not the woke nonsense of having female or PoC main characters.

  • Magiilaro@feddit.orgEnglish
    14·
    29 days ago

    I don’t care about politics in my games (and shows/movies) as long as it fits into the world and into the story. A TV show examples for that is Torchwood. It has to be the most gay scify show (at least it is the most gay I know) but all of it fits together and I love the show, even as a totaly hetero/cis guy. It doesn’t feel forced but is just how everything just it. Not sure if I can explain it good, hope it is somewhat to understand.

    • Apeman42@lemmy.worldEnglish
      4·
      28 days ago

      I haven’t actually seen Torchwood, but I am skeptical that it could possibly be gayer than my beloved Sense8.

      I do like that era of Doctor Who though, so maybe I should check this out for myself…

  • HappyFrog@lemmy.blahaj.zone
    12·
    29 days ago

    Feels kind of ironic using Chowder for this meme, but I agree with the message :P

  • 4am@lemmy.zip
    176·
    29 days ago

    “I don’t want politics in my gaming” = “I stopped growing, emotionally, the first time I saw Jugga in Conker’s Bad Fur Day”

  • PieMePlenty@lemmy.world
    9·
    28 days ago

    I absolutely want politics in gaming. Without it, we’d be stuck in the arcade era. Sure, sometimes I also like to zone out on puzzle games which are largely devout of it. Imagine The Witcher 1 without politics, is there even a game there?

  • JackbyDev@programming.devEnglish
    9·
    28 days ago

    I disagree, because typically it means someone is racist or sexist and just doesn’t want to see people of color or queer characters. Such people may still be willing to engage with the political aspects of their gaming insofar as they may join initiatives like Stop Killing Games or argue that game devs should be treated better, but they’re just bigoted assholes who can’t handle people of color or queer characters.

    Also don’t mistake this as a defense of them. They’re deplorable. I’m just saying I don’t agree with the statement as written.

  • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.dbzer0.com
    8·
    28 days ago

    I love politics in gaming, I loved Fallout 3, NV,4 (I still enjoyed it but to a lesser extent), Cyberpunk, and Outer Worlds 1/2. I love it when a game has multiple factions, I love when you get to really understand the politics of a fictional world, and I love stories involving politics.

    • Echolynx@lemmy.zipEnglish
      1·
      28 days ago

      Yes agree, scheming and politicking can make the game mechanics really work.

  • LwL@lemmy.world
    7·
    28 days ago

    What’s the political assumption of pong?

    I mean I don’t disagree with the sentiment, the moment something has world building or a story or goals that relate to real life non-abstractly, there’s at least a political assumption, potentially an intentional statement. And people just don’t notice when it conforms to their world view. But politics free entertainment can exist, even if being able to engage in that entertainment necessarily requires some sort of engagement with real politic systems.

    Though the most memorable games tend to be the ones very intentionally making statements anyway.

    • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@feddit.ukEnglish
      62·
      28 days ago

      Glancing at Wikipedia for any Pong discourse. Found a likely example. Turns out Pong had a bug (read: feature) that contributed to its place as the first commercial success in video games. Quote,

      the in-game paddles were unable to reach the top of the screen. This was caused by a simple circuit that had an inherent defect. Instead of dedicating time to fixing the defect, Alcorn decided it gave the game more difficulty and helped limit the time the game could be played [per payment]

      So, Pong established the concept of video games systematically favouring the rich. Are we there yet, is that political enough?

      • LwL@lemmy.world
        2·
        28 days ago

        There is still no political assumption in the game itself. Of course the moment you consider the means of acquiring it, everything touches on politics, even going to the forest and throwing a random stick, because forests existing is politics, them being accessible is politics, and you being allowed (or not) to throw a random stick is politics. That doesn’t make the concept of “throw stick at target for fun” political.

        • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@feddit.ukEnglish
          42·
          28 days ago

          Alright yes, if you deliberately draw a circle around a portion of your entertainment and say “this is the part I like because it’s not political!” that’s still a political choice, which is the entire point OP is making, ICYMI.

          Everything is political, even the choice to isolate one thing as non-political. The fact is that politics are only escapable if you’re privileged to be the kind of person who gets to say “shut up about politics, I’m trying to play Pong!”

          • LwL@lemmy.world
            11·
            28 days ago

            Yeah generally when talking about a thing you draw a circle around the thing, that’s how that works. My glass from ikea isn’t making any political statement or assumption in its design as a finished product (unless you consider presumed size requirement for a beverage container to be political, though inherently nothing about it even states its purpose, so even that is doubtful) the process behind its design, manufacturing, and sale very much is political as fuck though.

            • sirblastalot@ttrpg.network
              2·
              28 days ago

              You slightly moved the goalposts there. The assertion is not “Everything is making a political statement” it’s “Everything is political.” Your ikea glass reflects your social class, the international relations between where you are and where it was made. It may have been made by an oppressed person in some third world shithole (or even sweden!) It may even be a political statement, like a designer somewhere made it curvy because he thinks people are more likely to buy something with a “feminine” silhouette.

            • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@feddit.ukEnglish
              12·
              28 days ago

              Okay, well I’m drawing a circle around how much more interesting it is to talk about politics than whatever this was.

    • Hazzard@lemmy.zip
      3·
      28 days ago

      Closest I’ve got, which I’m surprised nobody has mentioned, is the very concept that entertainment is a worthwhile pursuit, and that we aren’t made solely to work. Pong serves no functional utility, which is a statement unto itself.

      That said, it feels a bit like a cop out to me, from what that quote is supposed to mean. I’d be content to rephrase it to “any sufficiently complex entertainment has politics in it”. For example, I feel like this could almost certainly be said about stories in general, but I’d struggle to find the politics in many simple children’s books, besides “children should be read to”. Although the more I think about it, teaching all children to read was once quite political.

      • stray@pawb.social
        3·
        28 days ago

        Children’s stories have tons of politics. They’re almost always intentionally pushing a message of some kind, like “Be nice to ugly people because they might turn out to be really hot and/or magical later.”

        • psud@aussie.zoneEnglish
          1·
          28 days ago

          We are trying to indoctrinate children though

    • stray@pawb.social
      2·
      28 days ago

      Pong is competitive rather than cooperative, and I find that very meaningful.

    • Enerhpozyks@eldritch.cafe
      32·
      28 days ago

      That’s a false argument your are making here.

      First : it’s a TTRPG group. You can’t have TTRPG without world building, story goals, etc.
      Second : Pong is not a TTRPG. AFAIK.
      Third : In case you don’t know, people who tend to say “no politics in my gaming” (like gamergaters) actually do a very political statement as for them “being black” or “being gay” or “being a woman” etc. is often seen as “politics in [their] gaming”.

      Sure, you can try to argue with the words, but it’s not just words, they exists in a context and the context is that it’s a fascist dog whistle.

      • LwL@lemmy.world
        2·
        28 days ago

        The statement was “every form of entertainment”. Tbh tho yea i didnt really notice it being rpgmemes so it wasnt super relevant, that statement was surely not just meant for ttrpgs tho.

        I fully agree you can’t have a ttrpg without political assumptions