Vietnam-Based Shooters - A Suitable Topic? 159
Thanks to GamePro for their 'Pro Vs. Pro' feature focusing on Vietnam-based combat games are justified in their choice of setting. Opinions vary from: "I can't say that I can ever look on Vietnam games as being in good taste", through: "..if it's handled with respect, not only to the soldiers but to the reality of the war and the people involved, then I'll be right there lined up", to: "If developers make the claim of 'historical accuracy', they owe it to the veterans, victims, and the audience to cast an unflinching look at the human consequences of war."
And how is this different from any other war game? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:3, Insightful)
<aol>Me too!</aol>
I was going to make the same comment. Why should Vietnam be a less suitable topic than any other war in history? About the only thing I can think of is that there are more Vietnam veterans still around than, say, WWII vets. I don't think that changes anything morally, though.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:3, Interesting)
and what makes games in this part any different from movies except those vets aren't likely to see those games even, if ever?
and.. eh.. why
the wars in games aren't that spesific usually anyways(you could change it easily to some other war by jus
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:3, Informative)
MASH was a commentary on Vietnam, it's just that Vietnam was so taboo (especially at that time) that they set it in Korea. The simple fact is that helicopters (especially the types depicted in MASH) were not nearly as heavily used in Korea as in Vietnam (not to mention that it's been stated many times by the series' creators that this was the case).
I'm not saying that we shouldn't be able to make games based on Vietnam, just that it does cause som
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2, Informative)
The bubble cockpit piston driven helo from MASH is the H-13 Sioux (model 47) from Bell Aircraft. It was produced from 1946 to 1973. They were used for medivac and recon starting in 1951 and they evacuated around 18,000 UN casualties during the conflict.
The Sioux was replaced by the OH-6A Cayuse early in the Vietnam conflict.
In Korea the Navy used the Sikorsky H-19 Chickasaw and the H-21 Sha
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
And I say the crippled newborns over decades, and the dead soldiers and civilians on both sides are the tragedy.
I consider that the American public acchieved to get their goverment to withdraw from Viet Nam actually as a victory.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2, Insightful)
WWII. Very black and white. Has there ever been a more black and white war in the past few centuries? Can't feel bad about shooting Germans or Japanese. And I don't feel bad about playing them, either, because I'll get to play as the Allies next round, and the Allies need someone to sh
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
You feel better about picking off Nazis? You shouldn't. Nazis aren't evil. Naziism as a movement might be evil, but Nazis are just people. Misinformed people perhaps, but I don't think that the majority of the Nazis deserved to "picked off". You probably would have been a Nazi too if you grew up in the r
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
You and I could probably have been warped into Nazis. But that doesn't make them any less evil.
Besides... I was speaking of picking off Nazis relative to picking off Vietnamese. Allow me to illustrate:
n is how good I feel after killing Nazis
v is how good I feel after killing Vietnamese
n > v
There are no numbers assigned to those variables. You just know that one is greater than the other.
If I
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
And I suppose supporting the nazi slaughter of 6 million jews, gypsies, handicapped and gays was simply "misinformation." Oh, and don't give me crap about how they didn't support it and all. In America*, there is no WAY we would sit back and watch the slaughter of half-a-dozen million of our citizens (go ahead... use a japanese internment camp analogy. make yourself sound like a fool by comparing the two). This isn't school-lunch laws - if you don't stan
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
They obviously wouldn't let a Jew in, but I don't believe your religion defines who you are. What I meant to say by the you would have been a nazi too comment is that if you had been born into a nazi family or whatever, chances are high that you would have been a na
hmmm (Score:3, Interesting)
One of them was a teacher and had to join the NSDAP (national socialist german workers' party) or he would have been banned from teaching (he had a family to support, too), so technically he was a nazi without supporting the actual ideology.
Being in the NSDAP still didn't save him from having to "defend his home soil" in africa (wehrmacht/regular army) once the war started. (Austria joined the german reich in 1938 in a s
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
Next, whether or not the U
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
Actually, this is incorrect...
In the era when 'Oriental' was coined, it was everything east of Europe. The famous Orient Express rail line went to where? The Orient, of course, aka Turkey. And not all of the 'Orient Express' trains even went as far as Turkey. Some stopped in Sofia, Belgrade. wikipedia [wikipedia.org]
Oriental Rugs [handmaderugs.com] typically
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:1)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:1)
There is no "just" war.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
Damn hippie.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:1)
You might as well also say that there is no such thing as crime and that police are unnecessary. That stance works fine until it is your home that is robbed, or your family that is hurt.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2, Informative)
Regarding your question in the first paragraph: The only lasting methods of social change are nonviolent, so the answer is through nonviolent methods. You might find George Orwell's Reflections On Gandhi [k-1.com] relevant. Gandhi's comment regarding the Jews in Nazi Germany is distasteful and unpleasant, but most likely true. The last two sentences of your pos
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
I seem to recall that a lasting change was made in Germany, rather directly by WWII, and that Germany has yet to revert back to Nazism. Heck, the US was founded on violent acts, and doesn't seem to be going anywhere soon. I'm sorry, this idea is very obviously wrong. War is a tool for affecting change, the fact that it is used so often to create a very b
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
"Religion is the opiate of the masses"
Along with that, anyone who is that dedicated to their beliefs worries me. An inability to question one's own belifes is the sure sign of a nutcase who just needs the right proding to go kil
Debatable: Vietnam justified (Score:2)
There is a bit of political spin in that statement. The pentagon lied to the public about what was going on, but so did the communists. The only difference is that the pentagon got called on it and the communists largely did not. There is a large group that believe involvement was justified as part of the cold war anti-c
WW2 vets vs. Vietnam vets (Score:2)
Perhaps, but the answers don't reveal the truth. The fact is that WW2 vets were also widely affected by depression and guilt and greatly saddened by the waste, both their dead and the enemy dead. The difference is that the generation of the 60's was more willing to talk openly about such feelings. The generation of the 40's was not, they are more like
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:1)
I don't see how a Vietnam game is in bad taste either. People are just being overly sensitive.
What I find tacky is games coming out based on the recent bogus war on Iraq.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:5, Insightful)
WWII, for example, was a time of global insanity. It was the entirety of the free world in a blank-and-white battle for the future of mankind. Every game where Nazis get creamed and Kamakazis fall short is a celebration of good winning over evil. WWII veterans speak very proudly of that war, even though they went through hell during it.
Vietnam, however, was just different. I'm young enough to only know Vietnam in history books and documentaries, but even today thinking of Vietnam conjurs images of Nixon and LBJ and government meddling. It isn't as black-and-white as WWII. Vietnam wasn't really a victory over communism, and it highlighted flaws in the American "War Machine".
Vietnam, in the US, just doesn't have any video game appeal. However, a video game version of "Apocalypse Now" might be appropriate, because that movie was only partially about Vietnam and was actually based on a classic novel called "Heart of Darkness." Making "Platoon" into a video game would just be sad, period.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:1)
I think a modern Platoon game with Doom 3-like realism would just scare the piss out of players. It would probably share more in common with "Alone in the Dark" than any WWII dogfight game.
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
How come all Germans, Italians and Japanese are evil, heck all Iraqis and Afghans are evil too, but not the ones who defeated Americans?
The principles on which the Vietcong fought were just as 'evil' as the principles of Saddam and Bin Laden and Hitler at that time. All the soldiers on the enemy side in these conflicts were 'innocent'.
Games that show conflicts like the Vietnam which st
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, the North Vietnamese were supported by China and the USSR, but the whole scenario was just very complicated, it seems. This entry at Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] discusses things in more detail. If you follow some of the links, you'll see that the Vietnam war has its roots in efforts for indpendence from French colonization. If this doesn't leave Americans feeling somewhat conflicted over
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:2)
Noone is inherently 'evil'. The very use of this word seeps of ignorance. I hate to make it sound like a flame but the 19 suicide bombers on 9/11 were motivated simply because they thought they were right. They were never
And how is this different from any other war game? (Score:1)
Wish I had mod points left for ya.
Educational simulation (Score:2)
So you definitely want to show warcrimes like My Lai, but you want the simulation/model to explain why things like that really happened, so that players learn from them.
Incidentally, one of the most artistic pop songs of the 20thC was Kate Bush's "Pull Out the
Re:And how is this different from any other war ga (Score:1)
Nazis vs. Communists (Score:2)
Kidding aside, war is an especially brutal undertaking. Especially in the 20th century when modern warfare techniques began to involve far more civilians than combatants. I think that games should avoid glorifying war. Since they are art, they should still portray it but without the whitewashing.
2 questions (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean we have Battlefield 1942, countless historical battle games (Medieval Total War comes to mind here), Terrorist encounter games (Rainbow6 anyone?)
They are all based on true events.
How is it that the Vietnam War deserves different treatement?
2. Why does the developer owe anything to the participants of those events, or to the audience.
Its a game, not a reconstruction. If it were so, it would be _static_. I mean there would be no game here.
I suppose that certain topics are harder for some to understand, but I am not seeing the difference between a game as Rainbow6 (very well received as far as I know) and something like the game proposed.
I am not trying to be a troll, and this is not a flame, I am simply trying to understand the issue a bit better.
2 answers (Score:2)
2) I don't want the people at the local Chinese restaurant spitting in my food (yes they are from vietnam).
Re:2 answers (Score:1)
2) wouldn't that make it a Vietnamese restaurant (as opposed to Chinese), or are you really getting Chinese food from Vietnamese people? (I guess that Vietnamese people can make Chinese food just as well as anyone else, but I don't usually buy Mexican food from non-Mexican people, and most of the Chinese places I eat at specialize in the region of the chef(s) or owner(s))
Re:2 answers (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:2 answers (Score:2)
No you didn't.
My post was in reply to your post, which was speculating on whether or not the employees at most Chinese restaurants are of Vietnamese decent.
Okay, maybe you just didn't read my article before you posted.
my opinion (Score:4, Interesting)
Vietnam wasn't nearly as black and white. Moral clarity is absent from that conflict. So playing as the righteous American fighter has the distinct possibility of pissing off a lot of people. Which I think is a fine thing to do from time to time, but when trying to make a product that's going to appeal to a massive part of the gaming populace, there has to be NO question in the motives of the main character. Not unless you're interested in raking in the dough like Gigli.
Sure, you can play a hitman in the Hitman series and nobody cares. But basing a game on a controversial subject does nothing but invite controversy.
I'm guessing that this is a constant problem in storytelling. Nobody wants to be portrayed as the bad guy. We know Nazis are okay to rag on. The Russians are still okay but they were more devilishly portrayed during the Cold War. The Gulf War and the Gulf War Strikes Back have made it okay to demonize Arabs. But in the 80s, the WWF ran into problems with their character The Iron Sheik. So it hasn't always been okay to make Arabs the bad guys. White guys make good bad guys. They run things, so they're used to playing the bad role. Black guys only make good bad guys if they're selling drugs. I could go on, but I think you see my point. In order to be a bad guy, you have to be extinct, a culturally approved negative stereotype or so hated by everybody that it's okay. Of course, if the bad guys and good guys never really existed, then you can damn near get away with anything.
As for your question about why the developers owe anything to the public, they actually don't. But they do want the public to buy their product. As such, it's a good thing to consider the sensitivities of the target audience. Personally, I think most people that buy Vietcong weren't alive when Vietnam was going on and couldn't care less if it's authentic or not. But if I were the developer, I'd have done my research to make sure that's true. Because the worst thing ever would be to develop a great game and then have it not sell because it was based on Vietnam and not on something less controversial.
Why not? (Score:1)
But is it supposed to be fun? (Score:3, Interesting)
anyway, just to be clear i don't think this should be legally prohibited or anything, i just think it's in bad taste.
Re:But is it supposed to be fun? (Score:1)
Here's a fact about another war which is portrayed is
Re:But is it supposed to be fun? (Score:2)
Re:But is it supposed to be fun? (Score:2)
games are supposed to be fun in the this-is-intresting-enough-to-keep-me-playing(whic h , may, or may not, include comical aspects) way which is exactly the way movies are supposed to be intresting too except you don't get to do anything. i don't think they ever meant vietcong(game) to be a comedy either, rather a simulation of how crude war can be(and no the game isn't exactly about shooting kids either, not sur
Re:But is it supposed to be fun? (Score:1)
I think then, that it should be clarified what we mean by bad taste. Making a game based in Vietnam, shooting at VietCong soldiars (or as VietCong, shooting at Americans & French) should, in theory be fine and unobjectionable. Despite all the controversy about the Vietnam war, the fact remains that by far the majority of any action seen in the conflict was of a 'clean' kind, i.e. straight-up soldiar vs. soldiar warfare. Why should a game that simulates this be more offensive than a game that does the s
Re:But is it supposed to be fun? (Score:1)
A vid
Silly, stupid, and looney. (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm Vietnam-age. My father was WWII-age. My friends have children in the Middle East theatre. My grandfather was crippled in WWI. I lost ancestors on both sides of the Indian Wars, and one of my admired adults when I was child fought among Pancho Villa's insurgents and lost an eye.
The point: wars happen. Every generation. Viet Nam was no different. None. People die. Even civilians (when there's a realistic distinction: Sand Creek proves it wasn't considered much in the indian Wars.) No one expects considering the historical consequences of Castle Wolfenstein, WWI aerial combat, or the Punic Wars. Expecting a first-person shoot'em-up in Viet Nam to "consider the historical context" is idiotic.
Re:Silly, stupid, and looney. (Score:2)
it's almost funny though.. that the french have no national trauma about vietnam, and that the usa does seem to have(very unneeded, it almost seems that the civil war is more appropriate for discussion than vietnam which sounds just stupid) very severe cultural trauma about it, that they even continue to enforce for no real reason at all, it's not like the world condemns usa for it anymore or anything like that.
(yeah, i haven't been in a war and i don't plan to either, no way in h
Re:Silly, stupid, and looney. (Score:2)
Re:Silly, stupid, and looney. (Score:2)
That has to count among the stupidest things I've ever seen someone write.
Re:Silly, stupid, and looney. (Score:2)
A brief example:
WWI: huge scale long term trenches, gas, machine guns, etc. all never before seen
WWII: massive bombing, tanks, nuclear weapons, kamikazes, etc. all never before seen
Viet Nam: drug use common among troops, massively racially integrated military, non-propaganda journalism from front lines, Americans killing a lot of civilians and digging up graves for body counts, etc, all never
Re:Silly, stupid, and looney. (Score:2)
Just vietnam? (Score:1)
Of course it's a suitable topic (Score:2)
In otherwords, just calm down, it's only a game!
What about the recent Hamas game? (Score:2)
In that case, it is blowing up innocents and getting points for it, something that is actually going on and immensely horrifying. The game itself is a recruitment tool. I think we would be justified in being disgusted at any such game, whatever the political position. A "MaiLai" ga
Re:What about the recent Hamas game? (Score:2)
Are there any WW2 games that let you take part in the Rape of Nanking?
I'm not saying I agree or disagree with Vietnam games, but have we really treated WW2 games all that differently?
Re:What about the recent Hamas game? (Score:2)
Re:What about the recent Hamas game? (Score:2)
You should add palestinian suicide bomber and iraqi baath liberator to that list of yours.
Re:What about the recent Hamas game? (Score:2)
possible rationale (Score:2, Insightful)
1- Chronological distance - Vietnam is much fresher in the minds of people than other major conflicts.
2- Controversy - Vietnam was a very controversial war that never had any good resolution.
3- Psychological Healing - Most of the soldiers in Vietnam did not come home to heroes welcomes like their predecessors had. This makes it harder to get over the atrocities.
I think these points (and many others) make peo
Re:possible rationale (Score:2)
Go find On Killing, by Lt. Col. Grossman.
He's the guy who thinks playing Doom will turn us into a generation of killers. But the rest of the book is an excellent study into the psychology of killing. Very insightful, in places.
Vietnam and play. (Score:2, Insightful)
Personally I think its way to early for these kind of games, the horrors of Vietnam is just too close and most games haven't digesed the World War II games yet. Think about all those children that are struggling to bear the emotional burden of playing these games that in their search for historic
Re:Vietnam and play. (Score:1)
This is a good thing. I don't think that they're using these as excuses to justify their desire to make good computer games. If they didn't mention this at all, concerns would be brought up regarding historical accuracy and respect for the soldiers. It'd be wrong and disrespectful to make a
Re:Vietnam and play. (Score:1)
The horrors of Vietnam too close? My dad was too old to serve in Vietnam (by a few months, granted...). I was born a few years after the last troops pulled out, and I'm 25. Even my education on Vietnam was divided based on the views of the teacher I had in a given year (and the only wars they talked about more than Vietnam were WW2 and the American
Obligatory Apocalypse Now quote.... (Score:2)
Re:Obligatory Apocalypse Now quote.... (Score:2)
Re:Obligatory Apocalypse Now quote.... (Score:2)
"Joker thinks the bad bush is between the old mama-san's legs"
You mean FMJ (Score:3, Informative)
Bah.... (Score:1)
Red Dawn? Obviously he didn't even *watch* the movie... Red Dawn had nothing to do with Vietnam.
Re:Bah.... (Score:2)
Rambo II and Rambo III, I'll agree with ya (generic actioners that made him into a War Hero). Rambo I was a DRAMA (with action elements) that portrayed a man who went to Vietnam (likely normal before he left) and upon his return he was haunted by the war, paranoid and (seemingly) he no longer had any friends or family to turn to. He was a loner and the Sherrif (Brian Dennehy) tries to push him out of town be
Vietnam game not in good taste (Score:3, Insightful)
I am slightly hypocritical, because I LOVE WWII shooters, and Rainbow 6, and Operation Flashpoint. I do feel sometimes guilty, though, at enjoying levels where I storm the beaches of Normandy. I mean, these were real people after all. Not those fake real people that you'll never meet... but real people that are still alive and you might run into. People I'm related to.
It's a tough call for me. But I respect other people who want to play them. But if a game comes out tomorrow titled: "Operation Iraqi Freedom: The Hunt for Saddam", I won't be buying it. No matter how fun it is.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Vietnam game not in good taste (Score:2)
I take it you drank the media Kool-Aid that says that WWII was all fought in orderly lines of soldier vs. soldier, but that in Vietnam, soldiers went around putting
Then go look up the firebombing of Dresden.
Wolverines!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Say what? Red Dawn [imdb.com] is arguably "jingoistic" but has nothing IIRC to do with Vietnam.
Incidentally, it's certainly true that the Hollywood version of Vietnam combat is distorted but not so much in the way they think. Depictions of the Vietnam War invariably involve American troops (usually single platoons) fighting lightly armed Viet Cong in a village or a jungle ambush, before some planes show up and napalm everyone and Hueys carry out the wounded.
In fact, the number one cause of US casualties in Vietnam was NVA artillery (followed by booby traps). How many movies show large NVA units, or artillery on either side? How many movies even mention the NVA? At this point, I think most people think the war was fought entirely between the US (French? What French? Aussies? Canadians?) and the Viet Cong.
Re:Wolverines!!! (Score:1)
Interestingly enough I had a history prof who insisted that Viet Cong was an invention of the Americans who didn't really understand the Vietnamese Order of Battle. I wish I could remember his reasoning for that statement.
At the risk of sending this totally
Re:Wolverines!!! (Score:2)
I believe Red Dawn (which I watched recently and is one of the worst movies I've ever seen. Ever.) had a little text intro that described the alternate history that led to the U.S. being invaded by communists.
I think it had something to do with the U.S. giving up really early on South Vietnam... so that led to the whole 'domino effect' where the communists kept knocking over country after country until the U.S. was the
A question of responsibility (Score:2)
The games blew and really didn't focus on trying to create a Vietnam experience. Whenever developers are working on war games, I think it is necessary to make them responsible and faithful to the conflict be represented.
An RPG would be an interesting way to showcase a war like Vietnam, thought I would hesitate to make it an MMORPG. In terms of a shooter, perhaps online squad play would be interesting - from both US/So
Double standard (Score:3, Insightful)
My father fought in that war, and was active with a number of Vietnam veteran organizations when I was growing up. The impression I got spending time with some of the other families as to the reason that nobody liked to talk about the war had nothing to do with the moral ramifications or justifiability of the conflict, but rather it was related to Vietnam being the first war that America "lost". Many of the Vietnam veterans disliked veterans of other wars for not welcoming them home, and the other veterans disliked the Vietnam vets because they "lost".
I would say that the Vietnam war changed the American perception of war and the rest of the world every bit as much as the first and second world wars, it removed that candy coating around what America was really about. We learned that we are not infallible or invincible, we learned that good and evil wasn't always black and white. It's no wonder that people are still so sensitive to the time.
But the only way over it is through it, if we never talk about it or come to terms with it how are going to avoid a similar quagmire. Maybe it doesn't matter. Maybe games should only be about sunshine and kittens.
Re:Double standard (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason Vietnam is so "disliked" is because it was/became a political war and over time the soliders figured this out.
While I don't believe Iraq is a political war(i know many disagree no flames please), if the soliders ever started feeling this way, it could become like a Vietnam.
Re:Double standard (Score:2)
How would things be now if we went into Vietnam? Since the war in Iraq started the American people have settled down. The world has settled down. I have not heard of millions marching in protest any more. Things have gone back to "normal".
A game is a game (Score:2)
Sorry (Score:2)
Anyway, free speech is free as in anything goes. There are court-set limits, where applicable (peadophilia, etc), but the rest is FREE (as in GNU).
I would not even object to have:
a. Vietnam War (we have)
b. Vietnam War where you kill the Yankees as a VietCong
c. US soldier occupying Iraq
d. Bhaat
Re:Sorry (Score:2)
Am I the only one here who had an image of Uday chanting "Toga! Toga!" flash through their head?
WWII (Score:2)
No war is romantic whatsoever, so singling out Vietnam as being a war we should be sensitive about over much more bloody wars is overlooking what war really is,
Come on..... (Score:2)
Do vietnam games sell better elsewhere? (Score:1)
Oh Please, (Score:2)
Real people dying is a Very Bad Thing. A simulation of a situation of a real person dying is an exercise for the individual. If they die in Vietnam, if they die in France, if they die on Main Street USA they are all the same. If you shoot one simulated person, you have shot them all. To say otherwise is some sort of bizarre virtual racism. Its ok to s
It's only hypocrisy if you agree with any of it... (Score:1)
a) get you just involved enough to have bio- and neurochemical responses to stuff occuring onscreen (this wo
Re:It's only hypocrisy if you agree with any of it (Score:1)
Re:hypocrisy (Score:2)
Re:Native American Genocide (Score:1)
I surely hope the morality patrol fails in its effort to legislate what they deem "good taste". Not only should one be able to make a game based on Vietnam, but they should be able to make it as distasteful and offensive as possible.
Political correctness and the dopey notion of "hate speech" as a crime have gone to far. Dont like the movie? Dont watch. Dont like the game? Dont play. Organize a boycott with your friends, whatever.
Re:Native American Genocide (Score:2)
Or you could have one Indian tribe completely wipe out another Indian tribe.
Or maybe like the Incas and scrafice another tribe virgins and put the rest in slavery.
Don't think the settlers have cornered the market on genocide or killing others.
And with regards to genocide, most Indians died from disease bought by the settlers not from slaughter.