Also off topic: I'm from 83 (xennial generational void) so I still grew up "analog" and never really connected with the younger online-focused millenial subculture.Apollosipod wrote: »Off topic, but as a millennial I really appreciate you associating youthful with millennial. I feel young again. Anyway, time to stretch my back
cyclonus11 wrote: »Millennials are reaching the mid-forties. Using it as a reference to "youth culture" is tired.
Eh? It's only about 25 years since the millennium.
Players complaining on forums don't care about their "look" in this manner, they're not running for office or selling a product. They are attempting to communicate to the devs or reach a broader audience that may agree with them, not trying to convince the "it's fine" people.It is ok to point out bad writing, although being hypersensitive about ambiguous instances isn't necessarily a good look.
The ambiguous "epic" isn't as egregious as "tank" or "Wing Buffet" for breaking immersion with modern cultural references, but western millenials are a big demographic for this game and it's obviously contentious. The writing fails to connect with its target audience.
xbluerosesx wrote: »
Why did the daedric prince that was sealed up for millennia use "epic? "💀
I haven't even heard "epic used like that in forever.
why's she talking like a 30 something who's still mentally 12?
It's just one of the many examples I have of ESO writers putting zero effort into writing. It's not like ZOS can't afford to hire good ones, they have that Micro$oft money.
WaywardArgonian wrote: »As to the overarching question of why that sort of writing is present, it's just the direction that popular culture took after a lot of it got homogenized under the influence of Marvel and other franchises like Star Wars. It's less to do with the way millennials actually talk and more with how media and mainstream culture became sanitized when executives realized that they could sell more copies of their product if it is rated PG-13. So you end up with this sort of performative toughness and quirkiness that has by now caught on in video games as well.
xbluerosesx wrote: »
frogthroat wrote: »xbluerosesx wrote: »
Yes, the word originates in the late 1500's so yeah, it's not really medieval, or even late medieval any more, but more like early modern era. The Millennials of the Renaissance started to use that word.

Well, yes. It would be less of modern use if the word would be used as a noun instead of an adjective, "the tale of struggle would be fit for an epic" or something.The way it was presented by Ithelia in ESO, in that style of speech (the complete dialogue, not just the word), looked a bit borderline to me, but there are really worse examples in ESO that very clearly seem out of place.
Aristotle has used the word ἔπος (epos) in his work Poetics to categorize different forms of writing. Literary works that time that are still known today, that fall into the category of epos, are for example the Iliad and the Odyssey. So the word epos itself is from Greek Antiquity, 2350+ years old.
When "epic" came up for "of the kind that gets described in an epos", I don't know for sure, but it doesn't seem a complicated deduction.
The way it was presented by Ithelia in ESO, in that style of speech (the complete dialogue, not just the word), looked a bit borderline to me, but there are really worse examples in ESO that very clearly seem out of place.
Oh, and while we're at it: "manifesto" can be derived from Latin "manifestus".
xbluerosesx wrote: »
Why did the daedric prince that was sealed up for millennia use "epic? "💀
I haven't even heard "epic used like that in forever.
why's she talking like a 30 something who's still mentally 12?
It's just one of the many examples I have of ESO writers putting zero effort into writing. It's not like ZOS can't afford to hire good ones, they have that Micro$oft money.