PrinceShroob wrote: »It's odd that you'd call "and stuff" millennial, given that, just off the top of my head, the phrase shows up in Merrily We Roll Along ("We'll have Bernstein play next on / The Bechstein piano— / And Auden read poems and stuff") written by the celebrated Stephen Sondheim for a show that premiered in 1981. I even did some brief research and there's examples of the phrase being used back to at least the 16th century. The phrase tends to show up in Online (yes, and in the base game from back in 2014), but even Arena had "I cook and stuff" as a possible greeting for a chef.
I really, truly do not care a whit about vernacular, since this ain't period, pals--it's a medieval aesthetic but not literally medieval. If vernacular breaks your immersion maybe your impression of what's immersive is infinitesimal.
NotaDaedraWorshipper wrote: »Is it really millenial writers doing this? Always feel like millenials are blamed for everything, especially since many I see complain about writing like this are millenials. Myself included. Like they can't have more bad writers than other generations. All must have good and bad writers.
cyclonus11 wrote: »Is this the first time "laid" was used in this context in the Elder Scrolls franchise? I can't remember.
cyclonus11 wrote: »Is this the first time "laid" was used in this context in the Elder Scrolls franchise? I can't remember.
Since I'm not a native English speaker, I have a question. This guy on the screenshot above shows up as a random encounter several times and asks you different questions, depending on how far you've progressed the main questline. To describe it in a spoiler-free way: After you've finished the whole story, he'll question you about the big final fight. If you say you're that hero he'll reply that he's met several individuals who have claimed the same. And:
"Am I the target of some sort of joke, or is everyone on this island just that desperate for clout?"
Didn't that meaning of the word just come up a few years ago online (along with YOLO, rizz and whatnot)? If so, why would a middle-aged playwright in a pseudo-medieval world, or specifically in Tamriel, talk like this?
The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang suggests it was in New York, citing an 1868 letter Walt Whitman received from his brother, Thomas Jefferson Whitman, about some Brooklyn guys who “always think they are going to be deprived of office and ‘clout.’” But it’s curious that the term barely surfaced at all for another eighty years.
NotaDaedraWorshipper wrote: »Is it really millenial writers doing this? Always feel like millenials are blamed for everything, especially since many I see complain about writing like this are millenials. Myself included. Like they can't have more bad writers than other generations. All must have good and bad writers.
xbluerosesx wrote: »I'll never complain about AI writing again if they get rid of this
spartaxoxo wrote: »No. Clout has had a recent resurgence and is used a bit differently. But it's definitely way older than that.Really one of those everything old becomes new again but slightly different things.The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang suggests it was in New York, citing an 1868 letter Walt Whitman received from his brother, Thomas Jefferson Whitman, about some Brooklyn guys who “always think they are going to be deprived of office and ‘clout.’” But it’s curious that the term barely surfaced at all for another eighty years.
spartaxoxo wrote: »No. Clout has had a recent resurgence and is used a bit differently. But it's definitely way older than that.Really one of those everything old becomes new again but slightly different things.The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang suggests it was in New York, citing an 1868 letter Walt Whitman received from his brother, Thomas Jefferson Whitman, about some Brooklyn guys who “always think they are going to be deprived of office and ‘clout.’” But it’s curious that the term barely surfaced at all for another eighty years.
An older dictionary of mine gives 3 different meanings: a hit/blow (physical), political power, a piece of cloth used in archery. That character doesn't seem to mean "political power" though, but uses it the way it's all over Youtube right now, where it's basically a synonyme for "fame" (or more like "attention"). I've never seen it being used like that before (well, until it came up online few years ago), that's why I was asking.
spartaxoxo wrote: »No. Clout has had a recent resurgence and is used a bit differently. But it's definitely way older than that.Really one of those everything old becomes new again but slightly different things.The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang suggests it was in New York, citing an 1868 letter Walt Whitman received from his brother, Thomas Jefferson Whitman, about some Brooklyn guys who “always think they are going to be deprived of office and ‘clout.’” But it’s curious that the term barely surfaced at all for another eighty years.
An older dictionary of mine gives 3 different meanings: a hit/blow (physical), political power, a piece of cloth used in archery. That character doesn't seem to mean "political power" though, but uses it the way it's all over Youtube right now, where it's basically a synonyme for "fame" (or more like "attention"). I've never seen it being used like that before (well, until it came up online few years ago), that's why I was asking.
LootAllTheStuff wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »No. Clout has had a recent resurgence and is used a bit differently. But it's definitely way older than that.Really one of those everything old becomes new again but slightly different things.The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang suggests it was in New York, citing an 1868 letter Walt Whitman received from his brother, Thomas Jefferson Whitman, about some Brooklyn guys who “always think they are going to be deprived of office and ‘clout.’” But it’s curious that the term barely surfaced at all for another eighty years.
An older dictionary of mine gives 3 different meanings: a hit/blow (physical), political power, a piece of cloth used in archery. That character doesn't seem to mean "political power" though, but uses it the way it's all over Youtube right now, where it's basically a synonyme for "fame" (or more like "attention"). I've never seen it being used like that before (well, until it came up online few years ago), that's why I was asking.
In SE London in the 60s/70s, clout could be used of political power, but it was also used in the sense of someone having influence or being able to sway opinion generally. And also physical clout, of course - sometimes the latter was a necessary precursor to the former, if you get my drift.
Apollosipod wrote: »I'm currently playing through eastern Solstice and I am struggling due to the writing decisions this team has made. At one point you actually have our character make the comment "How did the assault go? I was busy rescuing prisoners and stuff."
Am I the only one that really hates this? I don't find it clever or funny. It's just immersion breaking. Why can't any of the dialogue be written like it's not an episode of a sitcom?
liliub17_ESO wrote: »
The average age of an MMO player is 26 with 25% of players being teenagers. Most formal definitions of "young adult" are 25 and under.
Age demographics can vary, but in the EU about 17% of the population is aged 15 to 29 - a larger bracket than just "teenagers".
So if 25% of teenagers are playing MMOs but make up less than 17% of the population, then yes in fact MMOs are favoured by young gamers more so than older ones.
Ye gods, this makes me feel like an antiquity.
Apollosipod wrote: »I'm currently playing through eastern Solstice and I am struggling due to the writing decisions this team has made. At one point you actually have our character make the comment "How did the assault go? I was busy rescuing prisoners and stuff."
Am I the only one that really hates this? I don't find it clever or funny. It's just immersion breaking. Why can't any of the dialogue be written like it's not an episode of a sitcom?
Apollosipod wrote: »I'm currently playing through eastern Solstice and I am struggling due to the writing decisions this team has made. At one point you actually have our character make the comment "How did the assault go? I was busy rescuing prisoners and stuff."
Am I the only one that really hates this? I don't find it clever or funny. It's just immersion breaking. Why can't any of the dialogue be written like it's not an episode of a sitcom?
So I don't know what's really happening. Millennials trying to write characters that sound like Gen Z, or Zoomers fresh into the work force writing Characters based on themselves.