Frank Zappa once asked, as the title of a 1986 live album, Does Humor Belong In Music? He meant the question as an ironic ventriloquy of his critics, implying an answer in the affirmative. Today, by contrast, a vocal subset of the geekerati is asking “Does politics belong in videogames?”, and shrieking “No!”
It is, to be sure, an odd time. This summer, Ubisoft has said that it doesn’t make “political” games, just “mature” ones, while Obsidian has insisted it doesn’t want to “lecture” its players, and so its forthcoming RPG The Outer Worlds is not going to be “politically charged”. This is odd since The Outer Worlds is set in a galaxy dominated by corporations, while Ubisoft’s recent output has included a game in which Americans are encouraged to…
