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Videogame Conventions I: Indefatigable Capitalism photo

After 1,000 years, the Dark Lord has, against all odds, re-emerged into the world.

We hadn't thought it possible. Our people had, through a use of time- and space-rending magical power, with the aid of a great celestial coincidence and a sentient, priceless artifact, sealed away the threatening power, never to return. Alas, the utopia in which we thrived for generations is now threatened again by the encroaching of that dark power, summoned by a darkly insane harbinger, a madman with the goal of purifying the world through its destruction.

And of this genteel, utopian race, previous possessors of untold magical gifts, I, an ordinary fifteen-year-old boy, am the only one who can stop this evil. 

Hit the jump for my magical, powerful, not-in-any-way-derivative tale.

One day I'm peacefully farming, attending school, courting the plain-but-cute local girl, and in a heartbeat, I am thrust into my inexorable destiny. I am not afraid or even perplexed, but willingly commit to the cause. My journey will take me across great distances, put me at the mercy of fearsome, legendary beasts and send me to confront alone the aggressor that threatens all life as we know it. When I step out of my humble hut, blinking in the blazing sun, I am greeted by my entire village, their eyes turned on me and me alone with hope, joy and shining gratitude. A local woman took my arm and whispered breathlessly, "You're the only one who can save us." Clutching her babe to her breast, she looked desperate -- I knew that the future depended on me.

"It's too dangerous," said a strapping former soldier dubiously. "You haven't even the adequate supplies." And it was true. But a stripling of a youth, I had not magic spells nor equipment with which to confront the great evil I had been tasked to defeat. And should a beast rend my body with its vicious teeth, should the villain strip my flesh with his magical abilities, so arcane as to defy the laws of physics, I had no recuperative salve, not so much as a bandage to succor me.

All of the villagers stood dispersed about the town to watch me depart, some standing by their houses, others marching solemnly in place alongside the gate. They were gathered for my farewell. I knew that in their hearts, they feared I wouldn't return, and that their hopes for salvation would be dashed along with my bones on the harsh stone of an undiscovered continent.

I entered the local shop; the armorer and the medicine man worked side by side, at adjacent counters, for are not death and healing distant cousins? Is not medicine the brother of war? "I need a weapon," I told the shopkeeper, my young voice breaking. "I need arms with which to save the world; please, for our village's sake, for the sake of humanity, give unto me your strongest, most magically-endowed weapon."

The swordsmith looked down upon me, a wealth of armaments glittering in glass cases over his head. And, mute with the magnitude of his gesture -- after all, he was bestowing upon the world's hero the tool by which he would expunge evil from its face -- he lifted down a massive, blessed steel from its rack and set it upon the countertop. I met the eyes of the assembled, the patrons who gathered in the shop to share news and to observe my departure. This was the moment. I lifted the sword.

"That'll be 200,000 gold," the shopkeeper told me, the grin on his face incongruously cheerful despite the mortal peril we all could face at any moment. "But I am the hero of legend," I protested. Surely he had mistaken me, but his steely gaze would give no compromise. And in my pouch, a feeble 200 coins. "I can pay you back after I save the world," I told him, bewildered, but he would grant me no such extension. Frantic, I sought to inform the locals of the shopkeeper's lack of cooperation with our common goal. Perhaps he was in cahoots with our mortal enemy! But the villagers would not acknowledge the injustice, talking only of their crops, of their children, and of rumored secret areas in the local caves.

"I need money," I told a local man. "My journey is not yet begun, and I am inadequately equipped." Finally, I could see by the light in his eyes that he would consent to fund me against this ludicrous charge -- but my problems were not yet through, for he demanded a series of improbable errands. Milk for his child? The retrieval of his lost cat, the mowing of his lawn? For shame!

For 100 gold, I received a model sword with a blade of wood. "Come back when you have more money," the storekeeper told me, "and thanks for saving us."

Later, when I stumbled forth from a brutal cavern wherein I was certain I'd meet my end, my life flashing before my eyes, I dragged my broken body, depleted and bleeding, into another nearby village. Again I was greeted with warmth and gratitude. The noble hero. "Take care in the caves," they warned me. Into the hospital I stumbled, I the boy who would salvage humanity, and begged a physician to patch my broken bones. "300 gold," he proclaimed, "for you, hero."

Fie on these capitalists, with their eyes always on the bottom line, even as their own lives lay in peril! Mayhap my adventure is thoroughly doomed!

Stay tuned for the next episode of Videogame Conventions, following a lengthy hi-res anime-inspired cutscene.


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29 comments | showing # 1 to 29

Darth Kupi's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 07:37
Darth Kupi
That pic.....

What game is that?

:)
afalker's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 07:39
afalker
Ha! Great post.
Bas's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 07:40
Bas
Heh.

9/10
kobiyashi's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 07:41
kobiyashi
Neat. Also, what game?
brad drac's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 07:50
brad drac
I am looking for my cat. Have you seen it?
El Fajitas's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:14
El Fajitas
An old man used to live in the mountains near this village...

Nope, doesn't sound familiar.
HiGHFLYiN9's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:16
HiGHFLYiN9
Don't forget the item shop decorated with racks of amazing weapons, yet none are available for purchase ^_^
Mxyzptlk's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:19
Mxyzptlk
Hahaha, excellent post Leigh.
glipe's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:36
glipe
I know I read this elsewhere but I actually read it again on here and still loved it. =)

I need more time to post. No time at the moment. =(
Gnort's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:37
Gnort
Worse yet, after I had slain a brutish ork warrior, who was clearly wielding a double-sided battle axe of gleaming steel, I searched his body and found only a rusty dagger and a pittance of copper coins.
B-Radicate's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:39
B-Radicate
That sounds like an amazing game... you should make it... doesn't sound like anything on the market. Ever.
Tristero's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:41
Tristero
I really hope the Virtual Console jumps on the Ys train soon. That'll really make my day. But until then, this article made my day as well.
Velt's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:56
Velt
Yeap, its going to be like that even if you are on North Korea.
kobewan0824's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 08:56
kobewan0824
Great post, as usual. It's a shame we don't see more of you on here. Then again, maybe I just seem to miss your stuff. Oh well, great job.
MechaMonkey's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 09:00
MechaMonkey
Fantastic post. I lawled in fond remembrance of many an RPG.
MasterMS's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 09:31
MasterMS
This was great! I remember playing through many RPGs thinking similar thoughts. I remember in FFVI if you try to buy weapons as Edgar in his castle the man would offer them to you for free saying he couldn't charge the king. But of course you refuse and pay in full. I can't remember any other games that acknowledge who you are in shops. With the exception of the specialty shop in Lunar, but it was the hero's friend who ran it.
Joseph Leray's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 09:35
Joseph Leray
@Tristero -- you know who is jumping on the Ys train? The DS. Remakes are a comin'.
Lord_Satorious's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 10:23
Lord_Satorious
Maybe it's all one big joke played on the protagonist. The whole village secretly hates this person, and to get rid of them, they say, 'oh, you're the hero of legend, now please leave the village to kill the evil sorcerer. Good luck with that' Then by some miracle you actually do it, and return to your village rich and powerful, and nobody can believe it. Until there's a sequel, and you do it all over again, starting some scratch because apparently you lost all your skills and equipment since the last evildoer cast darkness over the land.
Pangloss's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 11:07
Pangloss
Remember, Leigh, that there is no convention against theft. If you take enough valuable objects in chests from the villagers' houses, you'll eventually have enough cash to buy a fancy copper sword.

Remember, if you put something valuable in a chest, you're asking for it to be stolen.
Upgrayedd's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 11:19
Upgrayedd
lol That was awesome.
kadosho's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 11:41
kadosho
Leigh, your rpg bible is off to a great start. Unconventional methods always get the huge quest off to a a rocky bit of baby steps. We're still tango-ing to snag the "sword to save the world". Plus a thief in town, which we'll bump into later. Or maybe the "chosen one" as some girl he meets (hey could be a princess!) *and we'll get tossed by her guards.

hey who knows what could happen.
Tristero's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 11:50
Tristero
@Orcist, can we share a bunk together on the Ys train?
Necros's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 12:25
Necros
Ha ha, amazing! I always liked the option in Link's Awakening to just go and steal from the shopkeeps. Served them right.
Terror Player's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 12:57
Terror Player
Ha, and remember that every village has a valley full of evil beasts that, for no reason at all, happen t carry lame weapons and cheap money.

This is good conversation. Did the developers actually thought it funny to make villagers charge for weapons and items when said items will ultimately save their asses?

I can't help but remember FFX, before the battle with the dragon guarding Bevelle. "Hey, why do you charge us Rin? - Well... I need money and I trust you will win" LOL
Knives's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/12/2007 13:09
Knives
Can't really blame them, their economy is based on war against evil beings.

I'm pretty sure that after you save the world the store owners from all over gather and decide on which super powerful evil being resurrect next so they can keep selling weapons.
Knives's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/13/2007 04:36
Knives
Exactly!!

Now just act like you don't know anything or they'll get you.
liam2015's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/13/2007 18:41
liam2015
Unlike any other game on the market...

What about the creepy hermit at the other side of town, who everyone thinks is crazy, but knows seemingly too much information?

Ad why aren't you an orphan?
Miike's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/14/2007 12:25
Miike
How about a firey princess full of spunk that escapes her father's overbearing ways only to accidentally run you at the local fair and she loses her mother's priceless (time traveling) pendant.

why are you all looking like me you've heard of this before?

Before we get Y's 1&2 I like to call a STOP THE PRESSES and ask that SquareEnix drop everything it's doing and make Chrono Trigger for the DS. Seriously, why isn't this out yet?
Fading Star's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/17/2007 20:01
Fading Star
Excellent Leigh.
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