Edit:
There was a clarifying thread one year ago. What David Gaider apparently meant when he said there won't be any atheist protagonists is that there won't be any dialogue options to express disbelief in higher powers. That doesn't necessarily mean that there will be unavoidable lines which express belief. Not being able to express an attitude towards gods sucks, but it's better than being forced to express belief. In any case, the tension between Morrigan's stated beliefs in DAO and David Gaider's statement about her beliefs remains, as does the possibility that religious beliefs will be implausibly tied to the expression of certain personality traits. Paraphrasing is still evil.
[Original post text]
Recently, someone posted a link to this old tweet by David Gaider which I hadn't known before. For those who don't follow links, it says neither Morrigan nor the qunari are atheist, and it was a follow-up to the claim that there won't be any atheist protagonists.
Now I find this rather irritating, not just because I claim sovereignity over my protagonists' attitudes towards gods in any role-playing game I play, but especially in the face of Morrigan's statement in DAO that she doesn't believe in any sort of higher power. She says that to Leliana as part of a companion banter:
Leliana: So you truly do not believe in any sort of higher power?
Morrigan: It has been bothering you, I see. No, I do not. Must I?
This topic comes up up several times in companion banter, and nowhere does Morrigan leave any doubt about it: she doesn't believe in higher powers. I don't recall what WoT has to say about the qunari, but I'm pretty sure they don't believe in any higher power either (The DA wiki says so and they're usually correct based on published material). So David Gaider's statement needs clarification. I was occupied with ME3 when that tweet was made and I don't know if there was any clarification forthcoming. If so, I'd appreciate it if someone would tell me.
Having said that, DG's statement could be technically true in some sense without claiming its own sovereignity over the player character's religiousness, for it would be rather odd for anyone with any sort of deeper knowledge on Thedas to deny the existence of the Old Gods, and it's become rather apparent that Flemeth may belong to the same domain of life. It would be plausible that the player character can't deny their existence, but is still free in their attitude towards these entities. Morrigan could believe, for instance, that the Old Gods, while certainly powerful, aren't "higher powers" rather than "greater powers", denying them any meaningful divinity in form of things like authority over mortal's lives or moral significance. However, that leaves some doubt as to the applicability of the term "god" to these entities. If "god" is nothing but a shorthand for beings instrincially bigger than mortals and mysteriously powerful, then there is no problem and some real gods exist, which means that it's not plausible to deny their existence and thus not plausible to be atheist, but that leaves the question what happens if mortals acquire such powers. Do they become gods? If, on the other hand, the term "god" does imply some kind of worship, then it should be perfectly possible to be atheist, since it is very plausible to disdain any powers and deny them their status as deities, as the example of the Chantry's attitude towards the Old Gods demonstrates perfectly.
This *may* be a problem caused by implied definitions rather than a real restriction of my sovereignity over my protagonist's religiousness, but it needs clarification. I would greatly resent the latter.
Edit:
One of my Wardens was a traditionalist Andrastean, so it's not that I have any problem with playing religious characters. However, I envisioned my main Warden as someone who denies the gods any authority over his life and who doesn't believe in the Maker. It would be rather annoying to not be able to play another such character. Well, it would be more than annoying, I would find it insulting and unnecessarily prescriptive on the developers' part.
Modifié par Ieldra2, 23 janvier 2014 - 09:22 .





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