FrothySolutions
Post like the FBI is watching.
★★★★★
- Joined
- May 6, 2018
- Posts
- 19,894
There are lots of people who don't necessarily agree with the aggressively lefty agenda of the Cyberpunk 2077 development team. Problem is, those people probably don't even know about this aggressively lefty agenda. They don't follow every Tweet, they just check in to see if there's new gameplay footage. And if all you check is gameplay footage, you see a game that's not just quality, but extremely ambitious. And you probably heard stories about how they don't subject their staff to crunch. And how all of the dollars accepted for this game have gone into making the game better, not filling the pockets of the C-suite. This is what you know if you're a casual follower of the Cyberpunk 2077 development story.
So when this game is released, you're gonna be like "Wow what a great game I can't believe they made such a good game without resorting to shady AAA tactics!" And once Kotaku and the like see how much people like Cyberpunk 2077, they're gonna hit 'em with the "And did you know how GAY it was? Ha! We gotcha! Gay developers = Cyberpunk 2077 quality games!" And obviously being gay or trans doesn't automatically translate into talent for game development. But it's easy enough to convince people it must. Expect to never hear the end of how important it was for Cyberpunk 2077's development cycle to be as gay as it was.
Unless it's so ambitious that the game is broken, or it turns out to be another No Man's Sky: All bluster, no substance. But I really feel like it's not going to. This one's gonna be a hit.
So when this game is released, you're gonna be like "Wow what a great game I can't believe they made such a good game without resorting to shady AAA tactics!" And once Kotaku and the like see how much people like Cyberpunk 2077, they're gonna hit 'em with the "And did you know how GAY it was? Ha! We gotcha! Gay developers = Cyberpunk 2077 quality games!" And obviously being gay or trans doesn't automatically translate into talent for game development. But it's easy enough to convince people it must. Expect to never hear the end of how important it was for Cyberpunk 2077's development cycle to be as gay as it was.
Unless it's so ambitious that the game is broken, or it turns out to be another No Man's Sky: All bluster, no substance. But I really feel like it's not going to. This one's gonna be a hit.