Much like Victorian London, then. London in the late 19th century wasn't exactly a hotbed of social equality. Sure, people of different races existed, but like fuck were they treated equally.
Well sure, that'd be a good argument if the game had done a better job of addressing those kind of issues. Like if you're going to do something unequal to illustrate and actually grapple with those topics in a weighty way, fair enough, but otherwise it just feels like a cop out to say, "Yes, it's all very unbalanced, but so was life back then" when the technology exceeds what was possible. Why have one vast improvement and not another? Why is disenfranchisement a necessary part of background detail?
It just sometimes feels like a bit of a lazy default assumption.
Uhhh, yea, once again false assumption. Literally only the beginning of the game is where people seem to put any trust in the order, and even that's thrown out the window after the first level when the police coms in and basically says "We got this." The Order is portrayed as having little authority in all matters outside of the actual lycan problem. And only two of the rebels are portrayed as having color, the rest all have basically the same faces over and over. I'm not even saying or implying that it's clever like you so passive aggressively imply that I am.
I'm not sure why you are so certain these are assumptions. There are NPCs you encounter on the streets who talk about how impressive members of The Order look and how they shouldn't worry, you're here now. (Mixed with speculation that the danger is much worse than they had realized, if they had to call you in.) Obviously we're meant to understand that this once noble group has seen better days and is less important than they once were -- this is well worn ground in storytelling -- but I don't think I suggested anywhere that they were the very best, the most noble, the greatest. I said that they are a representation of these things and for them to have fallen at all it is sort of necessary that we agree that, yes, the Order is meant to represent these things. Whether or not you want to debate semantics over whether or not they can be said to be any of these things in anyone's eyes at any point in the course of this game is I guess up for debate, but I don't see how it's super productive.
I would think we both understand the point one another is making by now, but maybe I'm being unclear.
And no, I'm not passive aggressively implying anything about
you. I think it's rather clear the game intends this as a twist. It is a reveal. Reveals are meant to seem clever, or otherwise there is no point in concealing the information. That's just basic narrative structure.
Not trying to suggest anything about you whatsoever; I'm not nearly invested enough in this conversation to try to take petty jabs at you for no particular reason. I am under the impression the game thinks this reveal is clever. It isn't. You are under the impression I cannot comprehend the rather standard plot of this game. I disagree. That's it. No need to be so annoyed about it, seriously. If I have done something to make you think there's any need for such annoyance, I sincerely apologize.
ACTUALLY, You implied racisim because you said they didn't show her in the trailer because she was brown.
yes, yes they did. They represented a 'brown' character who is very important to the story.
You're implying, they show EVERY RACE/NATIONALITY in a game trailer and marketing to prove that they are NOT being racist. That's ridiculous.
Pointing out something troubling or problematic isn't the same thing as calling an entire video game racist, though I understand why some people don't see the difference. It's a disagreement on semantics that results in the kind of unproductive rabbit hole all these conversations become lost in.