Well, glad to see the conversation kept going through the Memorial Day weekend.
I guess we're just assuming each other's motives now? Good to know.
If you want to figure mine out, you could just ask me. Or, read what I already wrote, and just don't assume I'm lying about it. Either one works for me.
But, to hopefully put this question to bed, I'll answer a couple things and then we can all move on.
If he believes TFP faces real reputational damage from a racist depiction, then forum debate and an optional mod are weak solutions compared with getting actual affected voices or public scrutiny involved before release.
Yes, one reason (not the only one) why I want the story to go in a different direction, is because I don't want 7D2D or TFP to suffer reputational damage.
And to avoid that, I should whip up public opinion against them, which would damage their reputation? That doesn't make sense to me.
I also don't want to do that because I'm not an activist, and have no interest in becoming one.
I'm writing on these forums because this should ideally be handled internally. If TFP do not decide to change course themselves, then the pressure to do so should come from within the community.
I'm letting them (and you all) know, because I don't think most people realize how false and racist these tropes are. I did not realize it myself before I did the research.
Side note: if anyone thinks this approach is "censorship," then they must absolutely hate the Survival Revival changes, because those came about through exactly the same form of "censorship."
That's because for some people this whole conversation is pure la la land talk, so we're legitimately wondering about his motivations.
The fact that this is perceived as "personal attacks" tells a lot about how you perceive this kind of conversations.
My motivation is to share what I learned while researching the real-life facts behind the lore (for unrelated reasons - I wanted backstories for my NPCs which meshed with the existing story and lore). What I found, I didn't like, and I don't think other people like it either, so I'm sharing it.
If you perceive it differently, that tells a lot about how you perceive this kind of conversation.
This really is not hard to figure out. Anyone who reads the dialogue in the localization files, and does even a little bit of honest research about Native Americans, would probably come to the same conclusions I did.
As it stands now, the Duke
matches exactly the "Casino Indian" stereotype. (People may disagree if they have not read the lore, or misunderstand the "Casino Indian" stereotype. That is completely understandable, and I try to provide them with sources of information.)
And,
I have found no source at all who denies the "Casino Indian" trope
is a negative racial stereotype. Even the people who
promote the stereotype agree with that. They just claim the negative stereotype is
factual, and is "racial" because it arises from
race-based preferential treatment enjoyed by Native Americans.
"Casino Indian" stereotype aside, there's also the fact that the
real life Whiteriver has been stripped of its Apache heritage in the game (whether that was the intent or not).
In an ideal world, this would be most people's reaction to those facts:
"Huh, I didn't realize that stuff was so false and racist. Yeah, we probably shouldn't have that in the game."
End of reaction.
I realize we don't live in an ideal world. We live in a world where any criticism of racism (or other controversial topic) will be met with a very vocal minority among the contrarians, who seem to be offended that anyone would even dare to bring it up, and believe the best way to deal with it is by making personal attacks, misrepresenting what the critics say, and publicly maligning their motives. It is probably a result of the political "culture wars" that have become especially virulent over the past decade or so.
This is why I've tried very, very hard to not make this conversation devolve into that. I try to be unambiguous, to focus on facts and sources, to avoid politics, and to not assume people's motives (even if I think those assumptions give people the benefit of the doubt). I have failed at this in the past, so I want to be extra careful now.
If that makes me sound too serious then so be it.
Now, maybe we can get back to the topic at hand?