Charlaquin
Goblin Queen (She/Her/Hers)
It was very clearly a strong source of inspiration for V:tM. In particular, the social structures of the Camarilla are a direct mirror of Armand’s coven expanded to a larger scale, and the Traditions are a barely remixed version of the Great Laws.Oh yeah, forgot Rice's oeuvre - certainly a strong connection to that touchstone.
Buffy was never really horror. The movie was a comedy, and the show was very explicitly a teen drama that used supernatural monsters to externalize the internal struggles of adolescence. Joss Whedon infamously hated the characters of Angel and Spike because humanizing vampires was directly opposed to their intended allegorical function in the narrative.Something like Buffy probably has many, many inspirations, it wanted to flip the Horror genre on it's head.
Blade had very little in common with Rice’s works or V:tM.Also keep in mind that 'Blade' first appeared in '73 in Marvel comics, predating the Rice novel by three years (but not the short story '68 vs '76).
Err… Victor Frankenstein is the protagonist of Shelly’s Frankenstein. The creature is sympathetic, but he’s not the protagonist. It’s also a story that’s about interrogating what makes a monster, which Rice’s works are very much not, and V:tM… seems to want to present itself as being about that, but the gameplay doesn’t really support it well, in my experience. Phantom I’m much less familiar with, but at least in the musical adaptation the phantom was very much the antagonist.Other works where the protagonist is a monster are Frankenstein and Phantom of the Opera, both far older works.


