Unpopular walking dead opinions?

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  • Oh, because the complexities behind the appearance, behavior, actions, and portrayal of her character happen to line up with many elements that make it easy for someone to see her as being any archetype, trope, straw[wo]man, stereotype, or psychological case that she reminds them of.

    You can say that about a lot of characters.

    Why she would exhibit weird sentiments and undertones.

  • #InNickBreckonWeTrust

    Crips posted: »

    I love Nick Breckon's writing.

  • That GIF scares me.

    DabigRG posted: »

    DabigRG fine too.

  • Which episodes did he write?

    Crips posted: »

    I love Nick Breckon's writing.

  • I opine that we need accuracy, not particularly more gay characters.

    Think about how many characters there are whose sexuality has not been explored; we should not assume that they are heterosexual, or then we will be led to the conclusion that there is a lack of sexually diverse characters. It's possible that we have met gay survivors and we do not know, just as we do not know that we have met heterosexual survivors.

    I believe that the cast should be representative of our world's demographics. Isn't America's population two thirds white? If this is the case, then I say that the proportion of people of color to white people is larger that it would realistically be.

    Accuracy is the reason why I intervened when somebody claimed that Jonas and Zachary's appearance was mere service to gay players, but simultaneously I believe that the proportion of gay characters in the series should not be much larger than our world's, or else it will reasonably feel like fan service.

    We need more gay* characters.

  • edited November 2016

    I liked Ben, I prefer s2 over s1, I prefer Clem being a kid, leaving with Kenny and not staying at wellignton is best ending.

  • 1, 2 and 5 of Season 2.

    Which episodes did he write?

  • The point of those things was to provide examples for how she could be interpreted as an icon for "feminism." I'm trying not to argue about them here because that's not the topic.

    And when did Rebecca almost miscarry and what did it have to do with Jane?

    The observation deck. Because Jane made Luke that offer, he ended up neglecting his job as watchguard, which allowed the herd to get fairly close to the group. Sarah sees them coming and warns everyone in time for them to hurry towards the deck with the herd right on their heels. After the defense of the observation deck ends with Sarah dying and Clementine dropping the deck on her and the members of the herd who followed Jane's example of crawling up the board-railing, it initially appears that the baby died during the birthing process as it was lying breathlessly in Kenny's hands. Luckily, it soon coughs to life and isn't actually dead, ergo an avoided miscarriage.

    Bon-Bon posted: »

    You seem unnecessarily critical of Jane just because she knew what she was doing and was prepared. I think people forget that most of us wou

  • Oh, then I agree.

    Crips posted: »

    1, 2 and 5 of Season 2.

  • Agreed. He may not have been able to properly address all of the baggage that did/would've carried over from the previous episodes in No Going back, but he clearly knew what he was doing. I wish he had been able to stick around for Episode 3 and Amid the Ruins.

    Crips posted: »

    I love Nick Breckon's writing.

  • Cool. You're right that homosexual character's inclusion should be more than just a novelty for the sake of it.

    How did you feel about Walter and Matthew or Zachary and Jonas?

    I am a bisexual female...my partner is a lesbian.

  • Walter and Mathew...other than the talk with Walter we did not get much of a view...yet Walter and Matthew came off as any number of couples that I have known. Zachary and Jonas is a mixed bag.

    That far into the apocalypse it is hard to believe there are people as innocent as Zachary....

    However the scorn that Randall showed for Zachary...it is indeed familiar. Monroe seemed to have quite a few people...surely Zachary could have been used as Jonas's orderly....Randall just came off as badgering Zachary for not being tough and being gay... but yes I have seen that type of badgering before..so that part wAs believable.

    DabigRG posted: »

    Cool. You're right that homosexual character's inclusion should be more than just a novelty for the sake of it. How did you feel about Walter and Matthew or Zachary and Jonas?

  • THIS.

    I opine that we need accuracy, not particularly more gay characters. Think about how many characters there are whose sexuality has not be

  • I agree with pretty much everything.

    NorthStars posted: »

    I liked Ben, I prefer s2 over s1, I prefer Clem being a kid, leaving with Kenny and not staying at wellignton is best ending.

  • You mean where the story was irrevocably broken. I hope he does a good job.

    DabigRG posted: »

    Agreed. He may not have been able to properly address all of the baggage that did/would've carried over from the previous episodes in No Goi

  • edited March 2017

    You mean where the story was irrevocably broken.

    If you meant Episode 3 and Amid the Ruins, then yes.

    You mean where the story was irrevocably broken. I hope he does a good job.

  • I felt the leaving with Kenny ending was terrible....then what was the point? Everyone died and he just lets Clementine piss all over everyone who died protecting her and AJ by letting her not go to safety?

  • edited March 2017

    Yeah, admittedly it was kinda jarring when I saw that was a thing on my second playthrough.

    I felt the leaving with Kenny ending was terrible....then what was the point? Everyone died and he just lets Clementine piss all over everyone who died protecting her and AJ by letting her not go to safety?

  • edited November 2016

    It was not only the happiest ending, but Kenny helped along the way the whole way through, he deserved to stay at Wellington and if he couldnt I wasnt going to stay, the whole plan was that everyone could stay at wellington and I didnt want Clem to break the promise. Ofcourse one reason of ditching him is someone who doesnt like Kenny would prefer leaving him.. but many Kenny fans dont want to ditch their favorite character, more than likely he would die if he was alone.

    I felt the leaving with Kenny ending was terrible....then what was the point? Everyone died and he just lets Clementine piss all over everyone who died protecting her and AJ by letting her not go to safety?

  • Isn't treating men like farm animals or neutering the more violent/offensive ones a stereotype of "feminism" or something?

    That is true; that sounds like BuzzFeed comment section propaganda, although we do not see it much in the physical world.

    Obviously, otherwise the whole pragmatic survivalist angle wouldn't work to well. This is merely one of the attributes to the "feminist" icon interpretation.

    From my perspective, the extreme feminist movement depicts it as the entire female sex being superior than the entire male sex, but not as individuals. A woman would not be able to surpass another woman by their logic, unless the latter woman is not a feminist.

    Yeah, that one might be me confusing "feminism" with masculinity. One night stands are typically on the male side, after all.

    I believe this is the case as well.

    I know what she meant in context, but out of context, it's that whole "be your own woman" thing.

    I'd be lying if I said I didn't try to look at that in a more positive light, but unfortunately, I simply cannot take Jane's side when it comes to her values--especially where someone like Clementine is concerned. What she caused before and afterwards certainly don't help.

    I do see how it can resemble the extreme feminist movement, but I do not believe that Jane said it with that meaning in mind. She was speaking broadly, as in "be your own survivor," regardless of sex.

    This might tie in with my personal problems with Jane, but word of advice from storytellers everywhere: you don't give a major character you want us to like the same negative beliefs as the main villain unless you're portraying it as a legitimate flaw on their part that they will acknowledge the downsides of and attempt to overcome.

    Scratch that the first part: this is one facet of a major problem with Jane's character in general.

    Agreed, partly.

    As you first addressed, modern storytellers make multiple exceptions to these rules by contrasting the antagonist's and an allie's beliefs, especially in morally ambiguous narratives.

    I believed that a version Carver's approach was the most effective at orchestrating a post-apocalyptic community in the first place, which is why at times I consider his and Jane's approach the most moral, speaking long-term; a person died, but you saved multiple lives down the line. This would prove then as the best outcome, broadly speaking.

    She literally uses that line, dude. I know I'm not biggest fan of Jane to begin with and the whole straw feminist angle is more of a noticeable interpretation than something that defines her character, but that's probably the biggest testament to making those undertones overtones.

    I was referring to the fact that Jane was not presenting the situation to Clementine like that, a-la-Life-is-Strange, in a way that life will be good if we simply drive away.

    The way that option was presented was much less sudden.

    DabigRG posted: »

    How is this a stereotype? Isn't treating men like farm animals or neutering the more violent/offensive ones a stereotype of "feminis

  • edited November 2016

    Even though I helped Kenny kill her dad and then left her on the side of the road, I think Lilly was a very-written, complex and very sympathetic character.

    ...I probably look like a fucking hypocrite right now.

  • Clem's best voice acting was unfortunately in the episode with the worst audio quality, A New Day.

  • What was wrong with the audio in A New Day?

    Clem's best voice acting was unfortunately in the episode with the worst audio quality, A New Day.

  • Deliberately hyping Season 2 up with a fight for the sake of controversy was stupid.

  • Yeah you do...but hey you Kenny fans gotta support your boy. ;)

    Even though I helped Kenny kill her dad and then left her on the side of the road, I think Lilly was a very-written, complex and very sympathetic character. ...I probably look like a fucking hypocrite right now.

  • And what's wrong with the voice acting in the other episodes?

    Clem's best voice acting was unfortunately in the episode with the worst audio quality, A New Day.

  • Clem and Ben yes, but honestly i don't give a s*** about Sarita and Sarah and Arvo didn't mean much to me. Becca is overrated, but for me Kenny and Lilly are the best characters in the game in terms of being unique, each in their own way
    
    DabigRG posted: »

    I find characters like Clementine, Ben, Sarah, Sarita, and Arvo to be inherently more interesting than characters like Kenny, Lilly, Becca, Jane, and especially Carver.

  • This is because when the game is recent everyone will say it's good, because of the hype (?), but after some time they begin seeing more of the game's flaws

    Really? I could've sworn i saw comments saying Michonne was better than season 2 when the episodes were coming out

  • Agree about Lee, his death was good for the story, and so well done that it would be a waste if he comes back

    I don't think Lee is alive. And I don't want him to be. EDIT: I feel the same way about Luke.

  • edited November 2016

    ;) ;) ;)

    Yeah you do...but hey you Kenny fans gotta support your boy.

  • I like Kenny, he's one of my favorite characters. But I stayed at Wellington, it's what he wanted, and it was the safest option for Clem and AJ.

    NorthStars posted: »

    It was not only the happiest ending, but Kenny helped along the way the whole way through, he deserved to stay at Wellington and if he could

  • The comics will always be better than the show unless they made an animated version that's a 100% direct adaptation of the comic.

  • No, 204 had terrible audio and sloppy audio mixing.

    and in 205? that noise Jane made when she died?

    What the fuck was that?

    Clem's best voice acting was unfortunately in the episode with the worst audio quality, A New Day.

  • that's not really an unpopular opinion, it's what most comic readers think.

    The comics will always be better than the show unless they made an animated version that's a 100% direct adaptation of the comic.

  • edited November 2016

    I know, but he deserved to stay at wellington along with Clem, I didnt want her to have to stay with a bunch of strangers. Anywho I dont even think staying at wellington is even worth it, it looks like shes on her own again judging by the trailer. Leaving with Kenny, staying at wellington, going alone, looks like the same outcome.

    Acheive250 posted: »

    I like Kenny, he's one of my favorite characters. But I stayed at Wellington, it's what he wanted, and it was the safest option for Clem and AJ.

  • If Kenny wouldn't let Clem and AJ go to safety, why did he volunteer to not stay at Wellington so Clementine and AJ could be safe?

    I felt the leaving with Kenny ending was terrible....then what was the point? Everyone died and he just lets Clementine piss all over everyone who died protecting her and AJ by letting her not go to safety?

  • Yeah, I hating seeing that guy when I was younger.

    That GIF scares me.

  • edited November 2016

    From my perspective, the extreme feminist movement depicts it as the entire female sex being superior than the entire male sex, but not as individuals. A woman would not be able to surpass another woman by their logic, unless the latter woman is not a feminist.

    I believed that a version Carver's approach was the most effective at orchestrating a post-apocalyptic community in the first place, which is why at times I consider his and Jane's approach the most moral, speaking long-term; a person died, but you saved multiple lives down the line. This would prove then as the best outcome, broadly speaking.

    Ehh, I guess. Really, it once again comes down to the execution.

    In an interesting variation of "Show, don't Tell," Carver was pretty much just a smug, psychopathic tyrant, so believing that his ways were doing any good is kinda hard, but not as hard as other things, since both Troy and Taavia have lines implying that Reggie does indeed have a habit of messing up, so it's not like it falls completely flat.

    And while Jane actually had an understandable reason for her logic, her implementation of this thinking put into practice suuuucks. Her pressuring Clementine into forsaking Sarah was callous because
    a. not only was she basing it on her own experiences with Jaime in which she kept her going across multiple states before ending in a situation where she was forced to leave Jaime because there was no way to help her to safety herself,
    b. not only because Sarah was literally in a situation where getting her to safety would've taken all of 20 seconds if they tried hard enough,
    c. but also because she insists Sarah is/was dangerous when really saving her does nothing to hurt the group and in fact helped thanklessly save them from a threat that she herself gets killed by due to Jane's selfishness.
    And her insistence that Kenny is becoming like Carver ends up dragging her down because
    a. she was already wrong about Sarah, who even I'd argue wasn't the most stable person around,
    b. she provided the conditions for his sanity slippage when she robbed Arvo, turning the boy into the sole survivor of his group and Kenny's punching bag,
    c. she forces a situation where he'd attack her by hiding the baby, which is basically manipulating things to go down on her terms,
    d. and she had more than proven herself to be already like Carver in her treatment of Rebecca, Sarah, Arvo, and AJ.

    I was referring to the fact that Jane was not presenting the situation to Clementine like that, a-la-Life-is-Strange, in a way that life will be good if we simply drive away.

    The way that option was presented was much less sudden.

    Um, okay. Since my only experience with Life is Strange comes down to a few "fan videos," can you sum up the basic idea of what you're referring to for comparison's sake?

    Isn't treating men like farm animals or neutering the more violent/offensive ones a stereotype of "feminism" or something? That is t

  • Would anyone really choose Carver after (dependingly) hitting/punching clem, letting his people boss her and her group around, killing a few of her friends, I think Kenny would have more fans if it was that way.

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