spartaxoxo wrote: »I honestly think people hold non-binary characters to a higher standard than other characters. Like complaining about pronouns. Wisteria is a spy for the Garland Ring and a high level person within their organization. Tanlorin is her lover. Yes, the enemies would know who Tanlorin is and therefore can be expected to use the correct pronouns.
Tanlorin is also not good at everything. And is absolutely not a perfect character. Tanlorin is childish, insecure, and canonically annoying to some people. That's a big part of why they love the Garland Ring so much. The Garland Ring "gets" Tanlorin and helped them hone their skills and accepted them for who they are while their family was abusive and they were shunned and cast out by Altmer society.
As for Wisteria's motivations, I got the same idea about her motivations as you did. She believes in Altmer supremacy but also thinks all Altmer should be equal because they're all better than the lesser races. So, she doesn't like either Aryenn or the current Altmer society and wants to reshape it into her own vision by doing a coup. Her vision as a leader of society is more important to her than her romance with Tanlorin. But she wants to have both ideally and cares for Tanlorin deeply.
Tanlorin and Wisteria spent a lot of time together. So, she got to know Tanlorin on a much deeper level than even the player gets to.
As for Tanlorin being childish. She has significantly less education than other Altmer and copes with trauma with humor. Which is actually a fairly common form of coping for people with depression. It's not crazy that a young adult from an abusive home has less formal education than others and uses humor to cope. In fact, Tanlorin actually doesn't even like books because their abuse was specifically related to education. So, them seeing a plant and being like "its crazy to think we get clothes from that," isn't out of place.
As for the style of humor, it is very much US early 2000s coded. I wouldn't be surprised if a Millennial American wrote it.
spartaxoxo wrote: »I honestly think people hold non-binary characters to a higher standard than other characters. Like complaining about pronouns.
I agree with this.spartaxoxo wrote: »I honestly think people hold non-binary characters to a higher standard than other characters. Like complaining about pronouns.
For some maybe. But at the same time I'm not going to lower my standards because they are non-binary either. I personally think they did a disservice writing Tanlorin to be off-putting to many people if they wanted positive non-binary representation.
If Zerith-Var ended up using nonbinary pronouns for whatever reason I honestly would not care at all as he's otherwise a cool character with a great story.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »I also think, re the Zerith-var issue is that it is showing the difference between the vocal minority, those who chase others out, and the non-vocal majority, those who like those types of characters, but don't want to have an argument over it, so they simply don't talk about it.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »With the chasing TES fans away, sadly, one of the things I have noticed with franchises is that some of them absolutely will go for the new fan, who might not know the lore, or even care about it, over the established fans. I am not saying that TES is doing that. Just that it is something I have noticed.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »I wasn't so much thinking about main quest recurring characters, but rather the characters that keep coming back who have self-contained quest lines. Like the two that are on the tip of my tongue, but everyone always seems to love. Where their quests are almost pretty much 'well, my servant messed up (but it was really her who did it) (Lady Laurent and Stibbons?), so I need your help' and then at the end 'oh, well, I got what I wanted, sorry about my horrible servant, now I need to go figure out how to get him changed back, oh well, maybe someone will know'
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »I also want to say I am not against recurring characters.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »Also, These tropes aren't necessarily bad. If you like them, then it is great! I am sure that there are tropes I like that others don't.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »But, these tropes are still often the 'safe' choice to add, because there are people who do like them, and the people who don't tend to be less vocal than the ones that do.
spartaxoxo wrote: »I honestly think people hold non-binary characters to a higher standard than other characters. Like complaining about pronouns. Wisteria is a spy for the Garland Ring and a high level person within their organization. Tanlorin is her lover. Yes, the enemies would know who Tanlorin is and therefore can be expected to use the correct pronouns.
spartaxoxo wrote: »Tanlorin is also not good at everything. And is absolutely not a perfect character. Tanlorin is childish, insecure, and canonically annoying to some people.
spartaxoxo wrote: »As for Tanlorin being childish. She has significantly less education than other Altmer and copes with trauma with humor. Which is actually a fairly common form of coping for people with depression. It's not crazy that a young adult from an abusive home has less formal education than others and uses humor to cope.
spartaxoxo wrote: »As for the style of humor, it is very much US early 2000s coded. I wouldn't be surprised if a Millennial American wrote it.
But yes, I actually agree that people might have higher standards when it comes to Tanlorin. Specifically LGBT+ people, actually, including people who aren't cis. I've discussed Tanlorin in my "circles", and there are people who are more than unhappy with the fact that the first non-binary character that got a bigger narration in ESO is such a dumb, obnoxious character. For many people, especially outside the USA, Tanlorin was their first contact with the topic. At all. Non-binary is not a concept in many countries; unless you follow US-American media, you won't know it even exists. People tend to stereotype, so if this is what "a non-binary character" is presented them as, what impression does that leave? Are LGBT+ people, including trans and non-binary people, not allowed to be concerned about that "representation"?
spartaxoxo wrote: »I honestly think people hold non-binary characters to a higher standard than other characters. Like complaining about pronouns.
For some maybe. But at the same time I'm not going to lower my standards because they are non-binary either. I personally think they did a disservice writing Tanlorin to be off-putting to many people if they wanted positive non-binary representation.
If Zerith-Var ended up using nonbinary pronouns for whatever reason I honestly would not care at all as he's otherwise a cool character with a great story.
spartaxoxo wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »I honestly think people hold non-binary characters to a higher standard than other characters. Like complaining about pronouns.
For some maybe. But at the same time I'm not going to lower my standards because they are non-binary either. I personally think they did a disservice writing Tanlorin to be off-putting to many people if they wanted positive non-binary representation.
If Zerith-Var ended up using nonbinary pronouns for whatever reason I honestly would not care at all as he's otherwise a cool character with a great story.
Okay but when the criticism is stuff like people afraid it would be woke, or that the bad guys know the gender of their bosses girlfriend, or they went in scared it would be lecture...those aren't really standards that non-lgbtq+ characters have to meet at all.
I agree that Tanlorin doesn't have great writing. They use a very specific style of humor that was purposely cringe at the time period and has only aged poorly since then. It belongs in the past with such jokes as "rawr! That means I love you in dinosaur," and "can I haz cheeseburger," and "UwU 👉👈🥺 want to matchy match?"
BretonMage wrote: »I think about this a lot, having seen comments like this about Tan and the other controversial NB character, Taash from Dragon Age. While I totally understand the desire for LGBT+ communities to see representation that they can be "proud of", I think it was also important for the writers to stress that they don't have to be this model minority that people are expecting.
BretonMage wrote: »It's ok to be yourself, imperfect and loud.
spartaxoxo wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »I honestly think people hold non-binary characters to a higher standard than other characters. Like complaining about pronouns.
For some maybe. But at the same time I'm not going to lower my standards because they are non-binary either. I personally think they did a disservice writing Tanlorin to be off-putting to many people if they wanted positive non-binary representation.
If Zerith-Var ended up using nonbinary pronouns for whatever reason I honestly would not care at all as he's otherwise a cool character with a great story.
Okay but when the criticism is stuff like people afraid it would be woke, or that the bad guys know the gender of their bosses girlfriend, or they went in scared it would be lecture...those aren't really standards that non-lgbtq+ characters have to meet at all.
I agree that Tanlorin doesn't have great writing. They use a very specific style of humor that was purposely cringe at the time period and has only aged poorly since then. It belongs in the past with such jokes as "rawr! That means I love you in dinosaur," and "can I haz cheeseburger," and "UwU 👉👈🥺 want to matchy match?"
I mean, people don't really like being lectured to in entertainment about modern social issues when they are playing a fantasy game in an entirely different setting. Characters in veilguard sitting around in a circle and correcting each other about pronouns is cringe, even more so that this happens more than once in the story, and I'm sure people are afraid that they would get more of that. Luckily that didn't happen here.
The choice to handle the reverse of that, which is everyone innately knowing Tanlorin's pronouns even if they haven't met them is a choice too. It's not a terrible thing to ask how they all know that, when it is atypical of the setting. Having questions as to whether the writing makes sense or logical isn't a bad thing.
As far as the "woke" thing, it's overdone and I'm tired of people that just dismiss everything they dislike as "woke" for no reason. They do it for women simply existing as main characters, people of other races, all kinds of things and it's just eye-rolling to me. That's not the same thing as asking questions about the narrative, and if someone's discourse is yelling "woke" when they see a character that isn't a cis white male I simply don't engage with them personally.
I mean, people don't really like being lectured to in entertainment about modern social issues when they are playing a fantasy game in an entirely different setting. Characters in veilguard sitting around in a circle and correcting each other about pronouns is cringe, even more so that this happens more than once in the story, and I'm sure people are afraid that they would get more of that. Luckily that didn't happen here.
As far as the "woke" thing, it's overdone and I'm tired of people that just dismiss everything they dislike as "woke" for no reason. They do it for women simply existing as main characters, people of other races, all kinds of things and it's just eye-rolling to me. That's not the same thing as asking questions about the narrative, and if someone's discourse is yelling "woke" when they see a character that isn't a cis white male I simply don't engage with them personally.
spartaxoxo wrote: »
Modern storytelling not allowing messaging if it's not the correct messages is very much part of the higher standards.
And if you can't address pronouns directly by having characters discuss them but you also can't just make it undiscussed and automatic, then it becomes a spot where you can't have such a character at all because the standards are impossible.
Also all of the henchman are literally sent by Tanlorin's girlfriend. It would weird for them not to know.
spartaxoxo wrote: »I agree that Tanlorin doesn't have great writing. They use a very specific style of humor that was purposely cringe at the time period and has only aged poorly since then. It belongs in the past with such jokes as "rawr! That means I love you in dinosaur," and "can I haz cheeseburger," and "UwU 👉👈🥺 want to matchy match?"
But like also, that was very much a pretty common type of joke for young women back in the day. It was just goofing around.
spartaxoxo wrote: »Modern storytelling not allowing messaging if it's not the correct messages is very much part of the higher standards.
spartaxoxo wrote: »And if you can't address pronouns directly by having characters discuss them but you also can't just make it undiscussed and automatic, then it becomes a spot where you can't have such a character at all because the standards are impossible.
Also all of the henchman are literally sent by Tanlorin's girlfriend. It would weird for them not to know.
That said, I absolutely don't expect a fictional LGBT+ character to be perfect, genius level intelligent, capable and whatnot in every regard. Because in real life, we aren't perfect either. We're all just humans with all the variety in human characters, interests, talents, etc, that exists. Some are dumb, some intelligent. Some introverted, some extroverted. Some live a very mainstream life, others don't. Exactly like people who aren't LGBT+. So, yes, of course a LGBT+ character in ESO could also be dumb, or evil, or annoying, or racist, or a human-sacrificing cannibalistic Namira cultist. But the smaller the minority, and the less familiar the masses are, I don't think it exactly helps to publish a depiction that's rather off-putting to many people. Because media depiction influences how people think of "groups" (or people they put in these groups by some character trait or aspect of their being). So there's a certain responsibility, from my point of view.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »Sure, we have had other 'they/them' characters, but it doesn't seem to be a widespread phenomenon, nor do I imagine it would be accepted everywhere.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »Sure, we have had other 'they/them' characters, but it doesn't seem to be a widespread phenomenon, nor do I imagine it would be accepted everywhere.
One of the things I like about Elder Scrolls is I haven't really seen anyone care about gender/sexuality stuff at all - as opposed to race where there is a lot of built-in drama there.
No one caring I feel is a nice way to avoid the Veilguard approach to gender/sexuality. I haven't seen anyone making comments about any of the same-sex couples. Or that argonian questline where they can change genders. I have a feeling in this universe if someone decided they were non-binary there wouldn't be much conversation about whether it is accepted or not, it would just be accepted and people just move ahead as though this is simply who they are.
I could be wrong, I can't really remember clearly if Alchemy ran into any discrimination or if that was something they put on themselves. I recall Alchemy's sister/friend (it's been a few years, I can't remember) being very accepting and not judgmental if I remember correctly.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »Sure, we have had other 'they/them' characters, but it doesn't seem to be a widespread phenomenon, nor do I imagine it would be accepted everywhere.
One of the things I like about Elder Scrolls is I haven't really seen anyone care about gender/sexuality stuff at all - as opposed to race where there is a lot of built-in drama there.
No one caring I feel is a nice way to avoid the Veilguard approach to gender/sexuality. I haven't seen anyone making comments about any of the same-sex couples. Or that argonian questline where they can change genders. I have a feeling in this universe if someone decided they were non-binary there wouldn't be much conversation about whether it is accepted or not, it would just be accepted and people just move ahead as though this is simply who they are.
I could be wrong, I can't really remember clearly if Alchemy ran into any discrimination or if that was something they put on themselves. I recall Alchemy's sister/friend (it's been a few years, I can't remember) being very accepting and not judgmental if I remember correctly.
I actually just went to look up Alchemy because I thought that there had been discrimination there, but I couldn't really find anything about it. I had thought that there had been a problem with her living as a woman, but it seems like it was more about Alchemy not joining the Sapiarchs than anything else.
spartaxoxo wrote: »
Modern storytelling not allowing messaging if it's not the correct messages is very much part of the higher standards.
And if you can't address pronouns directly by having characters discuss them but you also can't just make it undiscussed and automatic, then it becomes a spot where you can't have such a character at all because the standards are impossible.
Also all of the henchman are literally sent by Tanlorin's girlfriend. It would weird for them not to know.
It's great you came up with a plausible explanation as to how they know. You could state as much without assuming whatever is being assumed by people who asked about it who may have missed this. Honestly fans of fiction often discuss plot holes about anything and everything - and sometimes there are explanations that can be considered and that's fine.
I still think discussions about that really are secondary to the fact that Tanlorin simply isn't very likable to many people and is polarizing, and would be whether they were nonbinary or not.
spartaxoxo wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »
Modern storytelling not allowing messaging if it's not the correct messages is very much part of the higher standards.
And if you can't address pronouns directly by having characters discuss them but you also can't just make it undiscussed and automatic, then it becomes a spot where you can't have such a character at all because the standards are impossible.
Also all of the henchman are literally sent by Tanlorin's girlfriend. It would weird for them not to know.
It's great you came up with a plausible explanation as to how they know. You could state as much without assuming whatever is being assumed by people who asked about it who may have missed this. Honestly fans of fiction often discuss plot holes about anything and everything - and sometimes there are explanations that can be considered and that's fine.
I still think discussions about that really are secondary to the fact that Tanlorin simply isn't very likable to many people and is polarizing, and would be whether they were nonbinary or not.
I haven't assumed anything about anyone in particular. But, I think it's important to talk about how nonbinary characters are held to higher standards when it comes to quality of writing when discussing Tanlorin. Because so much of the discourse centers around their non-binary identity, even when the story really doesn't. Other than Tanlorin having they/them pronouns, it really doesn't factor in at all. And I think it can be important to examine and understand how these things can impact our understanding and feelings towards these characters. Because sometimes their can be unconcious bias in even the otherwise most thoughtful, intelligent, and fair-minded people.
spartaxoxo wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »
Modern storytelling not allowing messaging if it's not the correct messages is very much part of the higher standards.
And if you can't address pronouns directly by having characters discuss them but you also can't just make it undiscussed and automatic, then it becomes a spot where you can't have such a character at all because the standards are impossible.
Also all of the henchman are literally sent by Tanlorin's girlfriend. It would weird for them not to know.
It's great you came up with a plausible explanation as to how they know. You could state as much without assuming whatever is being assumed by people who asked about it who may have missed this. Honestly fans of fiction often discuss plot holes about anything and everything - and sometimes there are explanations that can be considered and that's fine.
I still think discussions about that really are secondary to the fact that Tanlorin simply isn't very likable to many people and is polarizing, and would be whether they were nonbinary or not.
I haven't assumed anything about anyone in particular. But, I think it's important to talk about how nonbinary characters are held to higher standards when it comes to quality of writing when discussing Tanlorin. Because so much of the discourse centers around their non-binary identity, even when the story really doesn't. Other than Tanlorin having they/them pronouns, it really doesn't factor in at all. And I think it can be important to examine and understand how these things can impact our understanding and feelings towards these characters. Because sometimes their can be unconcious bias in even the otherwise most thoughtful, intelligent, and fair-minded people.
I'm just saying there are threads about the quality of writing, and us really delving deep into all kinds of questlines on these forums. We scrutinize how characters are written, and if they fit past lore and the setting. This is not unique to Tanlorin. Most threads here don't discuss Tanlorin at all because they are about other questlines. The level of detail being discussed across the forums can be intense. What can be viewed as very small details are discussed at length.
While it's possible some people will be extra critical of Tanlorin solely because they are nonbinary, I haven't seen that here in this thread. I won't say it never happens, as I have seen it on Reddit and Twitter, where people are very negative about this aspect of their identity being included at all.
Some may wonder if they/them pronouns were a thing in the lore previously for the general population o elves, as opposed to other genderless beings like daedra or characters that were viewed as exceptional, or if it is a recent addition due to modern culture issues. And if that is the case, how should we view that? Is it good writing to add to the lore in this way? It can be another topic of discussion as to whether such characters existed all along, or not.
spartaxoxo wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »
Modern storytelling not allowing messaging if it's not the correct messages is very much part of the higher standards.
And if you can't address pronouns directly by having characters discuss them but you also can't just make it undiscussed and automatic, then it becomes a spot where you can't have such a character at all because the standards are impossible.
Also all of the henchman are literally sent by Tanlorin's girlfriend. It would weird for them not to know.
It's great you came up with a plausible explanation as to how they know. You could state as much without assuming whatever is being assumed by people who asked about it who may have missed this. Honestly fans of fiction often discuss plot holes about anything and everything - and sometimes there are explanations that can be considered and that's fine.
I still think discussions about that really are secondary to the fact that Tanlorin simply isn't very likable to many people and is polarizing, and would be whether they were nonbinary or not.
I haven't assumed anything about anyone in particular. But, I think it's important to talk about how nonbinary characters are held to higher standards when it comes to quality of writing when discussing Tanlorin. Because so much of the discourse centers around their non-binary identity, even when the story really doesn't. Other than Tanlorin having they/them pronouns, it really doesn't factor in at all. And I think it can be important to examine and understand how these things can impact our understanding and feelings towards these characters. Because sometimes their can be unconcious bias in even the otherwise most thoughtful, intelligent, and fair-minded people.
I'm just saying there are threads about the quality of writing, and us really delving deep into all kinds of questlines on these forums. We scrutinize how characters are written, and if they fit past lore and the setting. This is not unique to Tanlorin. Most threads here don't discuss Tanlorin at all because they are about other questlines. The level of detail being discussed across the forums can be intense. What can be viewed as very small details are discussed at length.
While it's possible some people will be extra critical of Tanlorin solely because they are nonbinary, I haven't seen that here in this thread. I won't say it never happens, as I have seen it on Reddit and Twitter, where people are very negative about this aspect of their identity being included at all.
Some may wonder if they/them pronouns were a thing in the lore previously for the general population o elves, as opposed to other genderless beings like daedra or characters that were viewed as exceptional, or if it is a recent addition due to modern culture issues. And if that is the case, how should we view that? Is it good writing to add to the lore in this way? It can be another topic of discussion as to whether such characters existed all along, or not.
I never said that anyone who dislikes Tanlorin does so purely because they're nonbinary. I even pointed out another one holding Tanlorin back, which was the cringe absurdist humor used in their dialogue. Which was too modern and very much gives young American women in the 2000s.
I'm just pointing out that how their non-binary status can result in the story being held to a higher standard. This honestly true of many stories featuring minorities. I think it's good to examine how unconscious biases can influence our opinion on such things from time to time.
We all have them. It doesn't make a person bad or hateful.
JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »JemadarofCaerSalis wrote: »Sure, we have had other 'they/them' characters, but it doesn't seem to be a widespread phenomenon, nor do I imagine it would be accepted everywhere.
One of the things I like about Elder Scrolls is I haven't really seen anyone care about gender/sexuality stuff at all - as opposed to race where there is a lot of built-in drama there.
No one caring I feel is a nice way to avoid the Veilguard approach to gender/sexuality. I haven't seen anyone making comments about any of the same-sex couples. Or that argonian questline where they can change genders. I have a feeling in this universe if someone decided they were non-binary there wouldn't be much conversation about whether it is accepted or not, it would just be accepted and people just move ahead as though this is simply who they are.
I could be wrong, I can't really remember clearly if Alchemy ran into any discrimination or if that was something they put on themselves. I recall Alchemy's sister/friend (it's been a few years, I can't remember) being very accepting and not judgmental if I remember correctly.
I actually just went to look up Alchemy because I thought that there had been discrimination there, but I couldn't really find anything about it. I had thought that there had been a problem with her living as a woman, but it seems like it was more about Alchemy not joining the Sapiarchs than anything else.
Thanks for looking that up - my memory was really hazy there. Nothing stood out in my memory though so it seems it falls in line with other questline where people don't care all that much and more care about other things about the characters.
I don't hate Tanlorin, actually, but the character's infantile writing does grate me at times. I think it's implied that Tanlorin isn't actually at the level of a five-year-old, but only ironically pretends to be like some Gen Z or millennial of our days who fears nothing more than to appear "boring", that is, adult and serious. The character is a symptom of the postmodern fear of seriousness. Even their voice and acting is otherwise good, but for some reason the accent has to be the lazy, annoyingly loose drawl of a modern-day US hipster. Tanlorin is a wasted opportunity.
I'm a millenial. When I was a teen, most of my classmates rather tried to appear more adult than they actually were, because they wanted to be taken seriously and seen as responsible, capable and intelligent by adults (which meant, simply, people trusting you more, and therefore more freedom). No one would have infantilized themselves by choice. It would have been perceived as very, very embarrassing. And as young adults? They were living their lives, studying, some started a business, many were in a relationship. Put short: They succeeded on their path into life. Babbling like a preschooler would have brought them nowhere, neither in academics, job matters nor in personal relationships. It's really a mystery to me how that weird baby talk would appeal to anyone. I don't live in North America, though, so maybe in my culture, things are different. I often wonder if something feels "weird" to me in ESO's writing, that specific plot, or reasoning, or the values depicted there, might just not really work for cultures outside the US (or North America, or the West, or whatever it might be).
Toddler talk aside, parts of Tanlorin's design also come across as annoyingly pseudo-rebellious to me. We also had them here back then: Kids trying very hard to be "special" (while not actually being special). Most often teen girls, and most often those who were horrendousbly boring and had no real talents they could impress anyone with. So, while others got their peer recognition by being able to play guitar, or paint, or being good at sports, or having some interesting hobbies or impressing knowledge, they went all "Look at me! I'm so special! I'm a rebel! I'm not like the others!" They didn't notice no one found that cool. But of course, in Tanlorin's case, everyone applauds and Tanlorin is super capable of everything, and lives that "fulfilled" life with lots of alcohol, parties and sex (which would also be seen as very immature life goals in my culture, by the way), and of course, is also a cool spy and fighting for the correct things which are currently frequent media topics, because it's a silly Mary Sue stereotype/fantasy. Makes me wonder if this writing was an attempt to appeal to a certain young audience, basically providing them with a power fantasy character of what they'd rather be than a boring kid, not understanding that many don't find that cool, but cringe (unless boring pseudo-rebels themselves, probably, but I'm not sure if many of them actually play ESO).In fact, I'd like to see a High Elf companion like Wisteria much rather than what we got. Someone competent, intelligent, driven and disciplined. In sum, a character that would embody more traditional Altmer virtues even if his/her story would test and question the value of those virtues. I'd enjoy that. Of course, it would be a bonus if the said companion also would be a pretty lady like W...
My preference would be a male Altmer scholar, but, yes, Wisteria would also have been more interesting than Tanlorin. It's truly a pity that it often feels like companions were designed exactly to not be a typical member of their culture. TES has such a rich lore background for all its fictional cultures, so many interesting characters and stories could be written about exactly that, telling us more about cultural values and differences in upbringing in different regions of Tamriel, through showing us people who grew up in these cultures, and how that might have influenced them.