China Miéville Quote

The other, more nebulous, but very strong influence of RPGs was the weird fetish for systematization, the way everything is reduced to game stats. If you take something like Cthulhu in Lovecraft, for example, it is completely incomprehensible and beyond all human categorization. But in the game Call of Cthulhu, you see Cthulhu's strength, dexterity, and so on, carefully expressed numerically. There's something superheroically banalifying about that approach to the fantastic. On one level it misses the point entirely, but I must admit it appeals to me in its application of some weirdly misplaced rigor onto the fantastic: it's a kind of exaggeratedly precise approach to secondary world creation.


interview with Joan Gordon

Joan Gordon -- Reveling in Genre: An Interview with China Mi�ville[depauw.edu]


The other, more nebulous, but very strong influence of RPGs was the weird fetish for systematization, the way everything is reduced to game stats. If ...

The other, more nebulous, but very strong influence of RPGs was the weird fetish for systematization, the way everything is reduced to game stats. If ...

The other, more nebulous, but very strong influence of RPGs was the weird fetish for systematization, the way everything is reduced to game stats. If ...

The other, more nebulous, but very strong influence of RPGs was the weird fetish for systematization, the way everything is reduced to game stats. If ...