roguerouge
First Post
The thread on defining Mary Sues included an interesting question as to whether PCs can be considered Mary Sues or proto-Mary Sues until they hit high level. There's an essay on that here: Beck
The authors delve into definitions of Mary Sue as one based on distortion of canon and character, one which has different effects based on whether we think of Mary Sues as literature or as play:
"To be more precise, the Mary Sue writer is playing an RPG of one. It is not the output—the narration—that is important to her. It is the simulation, the state of playing, a game of make-believe that is at the heart of the Sue experience. Clearly, we are talking about the realm of daydreams and personal fantasies. But in a fannish context, these fantasies often take place in Middle-earth (Tolkien), on Faerûn (Dungeons & Dragons: Forgotten Realms), or on the SSV Normandy (Mass Effect)."
"If Mary Sue fan fiction is an unintentionally misclassified game log, then looking at her from a gaming context should result in a kinder assessment. But unlike the Sue story, not all games are single-player experiences, and that introduces a new set of catches."
What do you think? Is the power gamer a Mary Sue? Are gaming stories perceived to be in that genre by nongamers?
Forked from: Mary Sue- Not sure I understand
The authors delve into definitions of Mary Sue as one based on distortion of canon and character, one which has different effects based on whether we think of Mary Sues as literature or as play:
"To be more precise, the Mary Sue writer is playing an RPG of one. It is not the output—the narration—that is important to her. It is the simulation, the state of playing, a game of make-believe that is at the heart of the Sue experience. Clearly, we are talking about the realm of daydreams and personal fantasies. But in a fannish context, these fantasies often take place in Middle-earth (Tolkien), on Faerûn (Dungeons & Dragons: Forgotten Realms), or on the SSV Normandy (Mass Effect)."
"If Mary Sue fan fiction is an unintentionally misclassified game log, then looking at her from a gaming context should result in a kinder assessment. But unlike the Sue story, not all games are single-player experiences, and that introduces a new set of catches."
What do you think? Is the power gamer a Mary Sue? Are gaming stories perceived to be in that genre by nongamers?
Forked from: Mary Sue- Not sure I understand
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