stratford wrote:
When it comes to MUDs, according to Richard Bartle, "People go there as part of a hero's journey—a means of self-discovery". Richard Bartle is also known for his taxonomy of gamer types.
Do you agree with this quote? Have you noticed things in yourself influenced by your characters that you might not have uncovered otherwise? Archetypal even?
Has the experience been overall positive or negative for you? Or is it impossible to summarize... yet?
I absolutely love the cited sources and putting yourself out there for conversation. A+.
As far as whether the experience has been positive/negative for me, it's been a net positive - no reservations. I made lifelong friends/acquaintances, and unintentionally exercised improvisational muscles to a point I couldn't forget them if I tried. There were definitely some negative periods, some wild stories... but overall I still think a positive. I also think roleplaying can help a person practice jumping into someone else's shoes in a low-stakes way, if they're in the right place for it - a general positive for empathy.
I think there's two critical points I'll jump on - first of which is to echo the criticism of the monomyth you spoke to. I think it's an example of being so reductive of a thing as to remove any meaningful definition from it. It gets really easy to plug square pegs into round holes when you give yourself that much slop in the size of the round hole.
The other critical point I'll latch on to is that...sometimes a cloud is just a cloud. Asserting people go to MUDs as part of their own hero's journey feels like apophenia. People can just bored creatures looking to play a game, and some of what Bartlet wrote/said feels like getting over-wrought with what it all means. Though I'll admit I skimmed, because
by god that #$@* is 1,000 pages. I just don't got the patience anymore.
Case in point: I've chatted with a non-zero amount of people who've played this game and couldn't find facts about themselves with two hands and a flashlight. I'm sure you have. Jen definitely has, and agrees.
That does bring to mind to a more interesting question to me - is there something you've learned about yourself you feel was facilitated by SK? "You" being stepped back from stratford to anyone reading this.
I think for me, I knew but had more concrete examples of my predisposition to being a 'burn bright then burn out' kind of presence with games (and probably other things, too)