https://forums.eveonline.com/default.aspx?g=posts&t=516990So reading through this thread it struck how there seems to be very different approaches as to how people interact with the lore and game world when it comes to their RP and I suppose it could be broken down into to two options:
1. My character is essentially "myself" or an idealized version of myself.
2. My character is not myself, or has as little to do with myself as possible and for all intents and purposes I treat them as NPC.
Reflecting back on my own experiences in RP these past few years, I think quite honestly there is absolutely no way these two different approaches can be reconciled in any real or effective manner, due to:
If a subsection of roleplayers approach their characters as "themselves" with a different fictional guise on this leads to (in my mind):
a) the potential for emotional over-investment in the character
b) an inability to see the different approach, "This character is not myself, it is essentially a fictional construct," because the standard held is that anyone else roleplaying must be doing it in the same way -- via author insertion into the game world.
This will lead only to severe misunderstandings and drama such as the following over the years:
- You roleplay an Amarr, you must believe in RL slavery and are a religious person yourself.
- You roleplay a pirate and pvp as one, you must be or want to be an actual killer yourself.
- You roleplay a Sansha, you must actually want to enslave the entirety of humanity in a messianic utopian vision.
- What do you mean you felt nothing during that avocado smashing ERP session?
This gets even more hilarious and potentially extremely salty when people who self-identify as their characters in RP try to second guess or metagame the intentions and motivations of other players through the in-game actions and interactions of their characters.
Personally, I think these two differing approaches are pretty incompatible as a whole.