
(04-15-2015, 11:45 AM)Verad Wrote:(04-15-2015, 04:16 AM)Seriphyn Wrote: But my issue is this; if I wanted to play an authentic English Knight, I would play a fair-skinned Briton. If I wanted to play an authentic Samurai, I would play a Japanese gentleman. If I wanted to play an authentic Maasai chieftain, I would play a dark-skinned Kenyan. Similarly, if I wanted to play an authentic Ishgardian Dragoon, I would play an Elezen or Hyur. If I wanted to play an authentic Ala Mhigan, I would play a Highlander. And so on. I don't believe in the argument "It makes it more interesting", because I don't believe that an exotic race or exotic occupation is needed to make your character interesting (it is your character's character which makes your character interesting!). Moreover, if being a race that defies that nation's norm is intended to make the character more interesting, why is it always Miqo'te?
The farther this goes, the less reason you have to play your character.
This is not a general you. This is a specific, Kale-centric, you.
You do not need to play an officer of the Immortal Flames, or a member of the military in general. These are outward trappings. It is Kale's character that makes them interesting. You do not need to play a gladiator or somebody trained as such for the same reason. It is the personality that counts.
Likewise, none of us need to play in a setting that relies on magic, exotic races, or fantasy in general. Why can we not ignore these trappings? It's our character that makes our characters interesting.
This is the same argument that disparages fantasy and places value only in realist fiction. Why are we using it for this?
For the life of me, I can not find any spot to re-insert myself into that behemoth (or steaming pile of shit depending how you look at it) thread I created. However, this quote has actually been another discussion I've been meaning to start.
I'm not going to go on a spiel about it because I think people basically get the general idea of it. To use Verad's example of my character, he is right. I actually play him according to an ESTJ type as a guideline, and this is not contingent on anything existing in the game world. A no-nonsense, upfront, diligent communitarian. If I inserted Kale as an Ishgardian knight, a Lominsan naval captain, a Gridanian ranger, or a Garlean centurion, he would be exactly the same. He would express his views in the same manner, but it was just be tailored according to his nation of origin. It would still be in the same vein of "you are part of a greater whole" either way.
I feel this is a core aspect of character building. "My character is an Ul'dahn Sultansworn/Ishgardian Dragoon/etc". No, let's not do that. Let's boil down our characters to the most generic level that they could exist in any fictional setting. "My character is paternalistic and society-oriented worker soldier", or something (even soldier might be too specific!). I feel everyone will come up with greater characters if they look at who their character is first, and what their character does second.