But look how sexy my dark elf looks in the wedding suit...Male orcs running around in wedding dresses. I feel you on that. Clothes should be gender specific.
This is a fantasy game, not suppose be realistic. I wear a suit on my Templar Healer. Suit is all cloth and my gear is 7 light. Is that realistic enough for you? It's better than wearing a silly robe. I don't see anything wrong with wear clothing during comBat.

EldritchPenguin wrote: »But look how sexy my dark elf looks in the wedding suit...Male orcs running around in wedding dresses. I feel you on that. Clothes should be gender specific.
This is a fantasy game, not suppose be realistic. I wear a suit on my Templar Healer. Suit is all cloth and my gear is 7 light. Is that realistic enough for you? It's better than wearing a silly robe. I don't see anything wrong with wear clothing during comBat.
And if you don't agree, which is fine, then consider this: I spent my hard-earned money on the wedding suit, and I don't have a single male character. If they were to change it so that I suddenly couldn't use an item I paid for, I would be quite an unhappy customer. I imagine the people who like to play fat orcs in wedding dresses would feel the same way.
ChaosWotan wrote: »Fantasy should stay true to its own Lore. But if you like ESO to be like Terry Pratchett instead of Tolkien, then we just have to agree to disagree. The majority wins in either case, because ESO follows the money, the consumer.
However, banning civilian clothing during combat is only a quick fix, because the main problem is that the devs often create costumes and armor sets which looks like crap.
ChaosWotan wrote: »@Insane
The point of this thread is to ask ESO to stop creating "funny" gear, before the game becomes a game of clowns.
ChaosWotan wrote: »Those criticising the arguments I present here only prove that they either got bad taste or doesn't care about it. Alternatively, they have not carefully read the posts I have written. Me writing this is arrogant, but aesthetics, unlike ethics, is not a democracy.
It's not "realistic" to shoot lightning out of your hands, ride giant cats, have horses that appear out of nowhere, port via wayshrines, etc., either. You can't really tell people what they can and can't wear in a game which is fantasy and not realistic by nature.
My advice would be to pretend that those players are using alteration and shielding spells, that would be a legitimate possibility.
ChaosWotan wrote: »Those criticising the arguments I present here only prove that they either got bad taste or doesn't care about it. Alternatively, they have not carefully read the posts I have written. Me writing this is arrogant, but aesthetics, unlike ethics, is not a democracy.
ChaosWotan wrote: »ESO is starting to look like a bad taste party. Male orcs in white wedding dresses, men in pink shorts, and now many players running around with a silly crown that looks like a cheap toy found within a box of cereals. And let's not forget the chef, jester and dinner party costumes. It is not realistic that clothes like that are used in combat. It's like BF1 should let soldiers dress in a bikini during combat.
Now it's obvious that ESO is catering to those who think that a game should be "ironic", a bit "hilarious" and "LOL", but if ESO wants to go down that path, please create gear that is actually funny, with the same quality as Monty Python, instead of turning combat into a clown act.
Male orcs running around in wedding dresses. I feel you on that. Clothes should be gender specific.
This is a fantasy game, not suppose be realistic. I wear a suit on my Templar Healer. Suit is all cloth and my gear is 7 light. Is that realistic enough for you? It's better than wearing a silly robe. I don't see anything wrong with wear clothing during comBat.
ChaosWotan wrote: »@Jitterbug
As already written, MP was funny and creative 30-40 years ago. In the 80s, when I was a punk, I wore an orange female gown at high school, and a cowboy hat. That was "provocative" back then, in my country. Crossdressing today is just boring.
@laksikus
If people say that the Ronald McDonald's costume is as beautiful as a dress created by Christian Lacroix, yes, then it's "no opinions allowed".
ESO is the first game that is more than just a game. It actually got class. And it has potential to be art. But not if the devs like to be lame comedians instead.
If the devs create a Donald Duck costume, people will wear it, because it's "so hilarious", and then they will predictably try to refute criticism by arguying that those who say they don't like it are "paternalistic", "too serious" and probably "fascists" too.
The point is that looking like a fool in 2017 is not provocative. I basically don't care if people in my group want to look silly, because I will just focus on the battle instead. But it makes me more indifferent about the game, in the same way I'm not interested in reading a boring novel or celebrity gossip magazine.
ChaosWotan wrote: »@Jitterbug
As already written, MP was funny and creative 30-40 years ago. In the 80s, when I was a punk, I wore an orange female gown at high school, and a cowboy hat. That was "provocative" back then, in my country. Crossdressing today is just boring.
@laksikus
If people say that the Ronald McDonald's costume is as beautiful as a dress created by Christian Lacroix, yes, then it's "no opinions allowed".
ESO is the first game that is more than just a game. It actually got class. And it has potential to be art. But not if the devs like to be lame comedians instead.
If the devs create a Donald Duck costume, people will wear it, because it's "so hilarious", and then they will predictably try to refute criticism by arguying that those who say they don't like it are "paternalistic", "too serious" and probably "fascists" too.
The point is that looking like a fool in 2017 is not provocative. I basically don't care if people in my group want to look silly, because I will just focus on the battle instead. But it makes me more indifferent about the game, in the same way I'm not interested in reading a boring novel or celebrity gossip magazine.
