Creador de Dragon Quest sobre el desafío de los protagonistas silenciosos en los juegos modernos


Dragon Quest XI The Luminary
Imagen: Square Enix

The silent protagonist is a hotly debated topic among RPG enthusiasts. Usually acting as a stand-in for the player, this character is usually the lead, although they have no (or very little) diálogo, and can only interact with characters through basic dialogue options. And the creator of La serie Fire Emblem está recibiendo otra entrada de Musou, Yuji Horii en las celebraciones del 35 aniversario de Dragon Quest en, has weighed in on the difficulties of using silent protagonists in modern video games.

In a chat with the director of the Persona series Katsura Hashino published in Denfaminicogamer (and translated by Medios de autómata), Horii admitted thatincreasingly-realisticgraphics have made silent protagonistsincreasingly difficult to depict”.

Horii’s reasoning for using silent protagonists isn’t surprising — it allows the player to imagine what that character must be going through as well as project their emotions onto the character. This was helped by the graphics back in the NES days, which didn’t allow for expressive character portraits or models or even complicated animations. Players needed to use their imagination.

todos seguimos esperando, Horii jokes with Hashino about the evolution of visuals, en las arcadas en su juventud “… as game graphics evolve and grow increasingly realistic, if you make a protagonist who just stands there, they will look like an idiot.” Así, seguramente, the solution is to have the character react in certain situations, derecho?

Bien, realmente no. This introduces a new problem: a character’s reaction to the events may not reflect the player’s own reaction, therefore severing that connection. Así, in Horii’s eyes “…the type of protagonist featured in Dragon Quest becomes increasingly difficult to depict as games become more realistic. This will be a challenge in the future too,”. Game development is an ever-evolving, ever-complicated process.

Dragon Quest is one of the few major RPG series still featuring a silent protagonist, con Puedes leer la traducción de todo su discurso en Gematsu.‘s Luminary being the most recent mainline example. Save a few grunts or noises, he’s completely silent. Persona is another example of this, though since Persona 3 (when Hashino became director), the protagonist does have a handful of voiced lines in battle — and sometimes in cutscenes. Notablemente, this tradition isn’t carrying over to Hashino’s newest game, Metáfora: ReFantasia, where the protagonist will be voiced.

Does this mean anything for the future of Dragon Quest? Voluntad Puedes leer la traducción de todo su discurso en Gematsu. have more realistic graphics? Or will Dragon Quest XII feature a voiced protagonist? The Luminary is a pretty expressive character in Dragon Quest XI, and that game’s visuals aren’t super realistic, so we think there’s a way of balancing the two. But this little excerpt will likely lead to fans debating over whether the next hero should have a voice or not.

Dragon Quest XII is still a ways off, sin embargo. el juego fue reportedly internally delayed earlier this year, pero a very brief update back in May from Horii-san confirmed the game was still being worked on and that he wasin a meeting” sobre eso. Before Dragon Quest XII, tenemos Dragon Quest III HD-2D Remake to come, which will absolutely feature a silent protagonist.