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"I don't like the heroes, therefore the villains are good"
How does this train of thought work, exactly? Are stories required to be symmetrical?
Don't get me started on people who apply this to real life, though.
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Basically, you don't like the heroes, and the villains are working against the heroes. Therefore, you support the villains. And as such, you'll probably say they're good, since good is kind of relative anyway.
Which is, incidentally, also bullshit.
IE, say Spain, France, and Germany are all at war with each other.
If Spain can convince or trick France into attacking Germany as a priority target, Spain can sit back and play defensively while France wastes their strength on Germany. Once thats done, Spain can step in to mop up the remaining french forces without giving France time to recover their strength.
Well, sure, if you're going to use it that way it's reasonable enough, but people use it literally at least as often at this point.
I find it a little irritating when people insist, in all seriousness, that the villains were more good than the good guys, but can't back it up without ignoring elements of the actual premise presented to us. I know I've been kind of a broken record about this, but I'd say that Avatar was a case in point; a lot of people say that they were rooting for Colonel Quaritch because the Na'vi were dicks. And the Na'vi kinda were dicks, but Quaritch was a particularly obnoxious flat villain with unsubtle colonial connotations.
(only posting this because I haven't seen Avatar, but I have seen Gundam, so... I'm assuming they are similar in this regard?)
To me, it smells of forced edginess and a pretentious desire to be different - "Look at me! I root for blatant Nazi stand-ins and racist colonial analogues!"
Agreed.
In the case of Gundam, it's mostly just because Zeon have cooler mechas.
@DYRE: Friggin' Scherzo...
Yeah, siding with those who hate your enemies is not enough, especially if you don't agree with them, or in the example I'm bringing up, are making the same mistakes the enemies you hate are making.
In Crimson Echoes, some of the creators sided with King Zeal as the "good" one because Crono and pals keep on sending other eras, like the Reptite timeline created by King Zeal, the Vanguard timeline also caused by King Zeal, and the bad future post-1999 AD to the Darkness Beyond Time, even though 2 out of three points to Zeal being the cause. If Crono and gang didn't try to fix the timeline, than the original timeline would've been in the Darkness Beyond Time instead. Thanks Zeal, for shifting the blame and being praised for it by fans.
Also, the point of all this bullcrap is... to revive the Kingdom of Zeal, which is easier to achieve by going back and rule Zeal again in hope of keeping his wife from going crazy and destroying the kingdom, or failing that, helping Magus destroy Lavos or otherwise prevent the destruction of Zeal in the first place.
And that's the lesson why Chrono Trigger and Chrono Cross don't go together. Try and connect one to another, and you end up with crap like this.
For example, Alan Moore intended Rorschach to be unsympathetic, but I found him highly sympathetic nevertheless. I don't think this was a failing on Alan Moore's part, I just really liked the character.
But no, he's not a villain, he's a protagonist, and he's a protagonist in a story which doesn't present clear black-and-white morality.
So, not quite the same as in the OP, but I brought it up because I thought it was somewhat comparable.
That's not indicative of good writing, though, that's indicative of Hussie being a troll.