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Love me some “Hatred"


On 10/17/2014 at 01:23 AM by NSonic79

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A VR Sociopath’s take on the game “Hatred”

Today I was blindsided by a video game announcement that I wasn’t expecting in the least. In my world there was no forewarning, no heads up and no mention of what this game was going to be about. There it was on my twitter feed as a message on how disturbing it was. Others called it disgusting and some even went as far as to call it “controversial”. The majority of commenters and posts seem to agree on one thing: it was a game unfit to be made. A game that should never see the light of day.

So obviously I had to take a look at it. I had to see what all the fuss was about. I hadn’t heard such strong words, gnashing of teeth and cries of foul since Flappy Birds and Six Days in Fallujah. Funny how #GamerGate didn’t hit my radar (unless I needed a laugh) but this “Hatred” game I had to check out.

And check out I did. Two minutes later I was dumbfounded. At a loss for words, with my jaw hanging open and my head reeling of the images I saw. In all my years as a Virtual Reality Sociopath had I never seen something so shocking, so graphic, and so amazing that I had to ask myself “This had to be a joke right?” But no it would seem. This game is real; this game is no ARG title or some parody. It was real.

And it was GLORIOUS!

When I read more into this game and why it existing I started to like the game more and more. Unlike other titles before it that merely intended the title to be some form of black comedy or tongue-in-cheek parody on the FPS genre, this game was the very thing that critics and news outlet firebrands charged FPS’s to be back in the day: a murder simulator. It was downright amazing (as well as refreshing) to see someone actually attempt to create something that was not just out of the norm when it comes to game releases, but goes completely against the very nature of what games are becoming. Even now some people are having a hard time trying to figure out what the underlying theme of this game is. It is just trolling because the current controversies in gaming? Is it just trying to be ultra-violent for violence sake? Is it trying to make a statement without saying a word?

You can go to Destructive Creations website where they tell you it’s a game that goes against the “polite, colorful, politically correct and trying to be some kind of higher art, rather than just an entertainment” mentality that they think the gaming industry is heading. That comment I don’t quite buy given the recent title releases of the Saints Row, Far Cry and Borderlands series, as well as the game South Park: The Stick of Truth. Even their charge as their game being a “propaganda tool” is a stretch given how most games out there have you performing violent acts similar to what is shown in their gameplay trailer video. No in truth what this game does is raise the bar and asks us if this game crosses that imaginary line in what we accept as violence in video games. And once again we gamers are asking ourselves if this game goes too far.

For me the answer is pretty obvious: No. No it does not.

In fact I dare to say that we all shouldn’t be shocked over this. This was bound to happen eventually. Given the current cry of how we shouldn’t limit ourselves and our imaginations, thus accepting all forms of opinion despite the audacity of it. We are seeing this concept in our current issues in our modern time. From politics to social issues to the very foundation of common sense in what we should consider normal, we are seeing opinions and ideas being shifted and pushed to the point where we are supposed to be tolerating and accepting of anything regardless if it goes against our moral or personal convictions. And if you don’t your either the racist/misogynistic/hatemonger/closed-minded and all out evil person or someone who doesn’t “get it?”

Whether this game “Hatred” is what it says it is or is judged upon what is shown, the underlying fact of the game is obvious. You play the part of a man who hates the world to the point where he goes out to kill ever last person he sees till he meets his own end. It’s pure violence in every sense of the word. Expect instead of it being the usual base violence we’ve come to see and expect in current video games, it goes one step further and puts us in the shoes of one who just kills for killing sake. Even now at this point I’m having a hard time trying to put my thoughts into words about this game. I know it is a game that I want as a Virtual Reality Sociopath but at the same time I want to dive deeper into the premise of this title though I’m not sure if there is one to be had.

Here’s what I’m trying to get at. Since video games have reached the point of being able to depict graphic, almost realistic visuals of killing in video games, people have seem to be forgetting what exactly what we are doing in these games. When I originally heard about this game it sounded like a more in-depth version of Grand Theft Auto series Free Roam Mode. You pretty much do the exact same thing in that version, gunning down people, stealing cars and causing general acts of wanton destruction until you get bored or your character dies. Sure back then people took offense but in the end people realized what it just was: a game mode that let you perform acts that would be considered socially unacceptable. And in fact isn’t that half the stuff we do in video games now a days? In an FPS your mission is to kill the enemy on the other side be it aliens, helgast, enemy soldiers or what have you? In a good portion of the games we play, from rated T to M, it has us killing something in a graphic way. From Call of Duty to Bioshock Infinite we were killing.

Now I know what you’re all thinking. But NSonic79, that was all in context. There was a reason for killing in those games. They were the enemy; they were trying to kill us. And for the most part I’d agree. In situations like that I follow the Malcolm Reynold’s train of thought: “if someone is trying to kill you, you try to kill them right back!” And at the end of the day this is what has gamers upset over the game “Hatred”, though you do have a purpose in the game, a set “mission”, it is one that goes against the very thing we are used to. We just don’t go around killing innocent civilians as a game level. When it was done before with Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2’s “No Russian” level, it was met with controversy. Yet people seemed to have missed the context of what that level was all about. Yes you were killing unarmed civilians in an airport terminal, but it was also showing you the circumstances and situations that lead to this action. The level was intended to show you how it was the major issue as to World War III was started in the COD: Modern Warfare universe. It showed you, and let you experience, a moment in a game world’s history that would play a pivotal role in what was to come later on. As a form of interactive media it put you in the shoes of someone caught in the middle of something that no “normal” individual would ever have to contend with. It placed us in a no-win situation that demonstrated what people were willing to do to destabilize the balance of power in that world. Even when you had the option not to shoot, it was still a powerful enough scene to make you step back and realize if this is what’s going through someone’s mind as they do what they do. Or worse yet what else is going through their mind.

Hatred isn’t going to be for everyone. And even if you want to chalk it up as for what it is as a murder simulator, I think one might be missing out on the context of what this game title has to offer. The character that does the mass killing is just as barebones and generic as they come when you think about stereotypical killers. A single white, male with long hair and a trench coat with a general hatred for humanity that drives him to want to watch the whole world burn before his time is up. His speech alone in the trailer is basically the generic cliff notes of any would be mass killer that’s either been caught or left a note. I’m sure this was done on purpose, not to glamorize any known individual, but to leave a blank slate for players to put themselves in, much like how Bella in the Twilight book series was left so bland and generic so that any female reader could put themselves in her shoes.

For some when it comes to Hatred, the motives for the plot will be too much.  We’ve become accustomed with this unwritten rule of what we should expect out of our video games that have violence in them. A line of decency is assumed to exist in deciding what kind of killing is okay and what kind of killing is too far. When in true ALL killing is bad regardless if you’re doing it to defend yourself, saving the world or just letting out some pent up frustrations in the world. We’ve boxed ourselves up in when it’s right or wrong to killing. We enjoy watching shows that deal with these issues yet no cries of alarm were made known. Look at the current popular media that is hot right now. True Detectives deals with a serial killer who, shockingly, kills people. The Walking Dead has the remains of humanity fighting off zombies, and other humans, in the most visceral way possible. In the Game of Thrones we saw the Red Wedding Massacre. In the first season of American Horror Story we not only witnessed a high schooler perform a mass shooting but also see him get gunned down by SWAT officers in his own bedroom.  

Now that's "Quality Television"

Yes I know many will point out that that what I speak of is “visual” media. We don’t participate in those events; we only watch them in morbid fascination. My question is why can’t the game “Hatred” be treated the same way with its content? Be it interactive or not the context of the actions being performed still remain the same. If people want media that offers visceral carnage found in current shows and movies that seem to cross the line in respects to the act, then why can’t that be allowed in all forms of media interactive or otherwise? We’ve blown the heads off zombies in games we’ve faced off against other human opponents be it in the game level or in the fighting ring, we’ve faced off against unnatural creatures be it from outer space or other dimensions, why limit yourself now when it comes to a mere person that just wants to go out in a blaze of glory.

Hatred is not only a “murder simulator”. It’s also a means for someone to see what drives someone to perform one of the most hot button topics of our modern time. No one wants to think that anyone is capable of such evil. No one wants to admit that despite our good nature and in thinking we are good people as a whole, that any of us would be capable of performing “that”. You may agree or disagree with me on this but in the end of the day, we as humans are capable of great deeds or unspeakable evil. No one wants to admit it, no one wants to look inside themselves, no one wants to acknowledge that despite our belief that we as human beings are capable of greatness, we are also just as capable of unimaginable horror.

I know we’ve all had that dark thought in our minds during one point of our lives, the thought of wanting to kill someone. Be it a loved one who hurt us so or a random stranger who was just being ugly to you. Usually we don’t follow thru with that train of thought (or action) due to whatever limiter we have on ourselves, be it from moral convictions, social standards, character upbringing or lacking in that “cowardly courage” that drives others to decide in the act.

Hatred could be just a “propaganda tool” or it could be a means to look thru a window to ourselves and see a person that “could have been” in one crux point or another in our lives. Whether people see it that way or see it as the “knee jerk” reaction to wanton violence is up to the gamer in question. But the fact still remains. People cry out in wanting to have same sex options in games. People cry out demanding more diversity when it comes to game characters and to the people that develop them. People cry out and demand that sex scenes be shown since graphic violence is allowed.  People cry out that they want their gaming media be legitimized, seen as a form of art and be recognized for its powerful potential. And yet gamers will cry foul over a game that’s just a step up from the “Postal” series while they go back to playing their base violent video game of their choice.

It’s not like Hatred will ever get published. Seeing what became of Six Days in Fallujah is the perfect example of what this game will have to tend with. And even if it did for some strange reason get published, you don’t have to buy/play the game. We live in a world where the worst of the worst in media can be released to the masses in one form or another under the guise of “tolerance” and “enlightenment”.  No one is forcing you to accept the presence of one offensive media or another. You can freely live in blissful ignorance of anything that doesn’t fit your mindset like some have been able to with movies, books, tv shows and games.

Love it or Hate it, Hatred is what it is and what you can make of it. You may not like what you see and I respect that.  But for me I love the premise of this game. Not just because of my Virtual Reality Sociopathic tendencies, but because you don’t have to become a monster to face/understand one.

Ta-ta

“N”


 

Comments

SanAndreas

10/17/2014 at 02:15 AM

This game reminds me of a less comedic Postal more than anything, judging by the trailer.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:10 AM

Indeed. They seem to be going all out in making it as realistic as possible. Never cared much for the Postal series myself given how they took the series. Even worse when it came to the movie.

KnightDriver

10/17/2014 at 03:05 AM

Art is a mirror of our times. This mirrors the mass shootings that get reported in the news every so often. The game definitely creeps me out. I wonder how the game deals with this character's fate. He clearly wants to be gunned down. Does he get his wish?

SanAndreas

10/17/2014 at 12:05 PM

There was a point-and-click game called Dreamweb made in the 1990s by British developer Empire Interactive, where your objective was to kill seven people (a rock star, a politician, a priest, a business magnate, and three others, along with anyone who stood in your way) to prevent them from destroying the "Dreamweb" and triggering a nuclear war. However, if you read the documentation that came with the game, including the main character's diary which also served as copy protection, it made you wonder whether the main character you were playing as was just another schizophrenic or sociopathic serial murderer, since he was documenting his own deteriorating mental state. None of this actually appeared in the game itself other than a conversation at the beginning between the main character and his girlfriend, who is worried about him and wants him to see a psychiatrist. What's your reward for "winning" this game? Being killed by the police in a hail of bullets.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:25 AM

I guess this game didn't make it into the mainstream or else I'd have remembered the crys of horror at such a game being created. But then again the 90's was a much different time than it is right now. Pity I missed it.

SanAndreas

10/26/2014 at 08:08 PM

It was a PC game, not a console game, and back then, mainstream media only gave a shit about games like Myst and The 7th Guest. In addition to the violent subject matter, it also showed admittedly pixelated sex between one of your targets, a rock star, and a female groupie who was riding him like a pony.

KnightDriver

10/26/2014 at 11:33 PM

Like a brony you mean.Tongue Out

NSonic79

11/03/2014 at 12:40 PM

brony? EEk! Tongue Out

NSonic79

11/03/2014 at 12:39 PM

i didn't realy keep up with PC gaming back then either so I can see how this was missed. I can vaugly remember Myst and 7th Guest myself. still makes me wonder if gien the right conditions, how would the media and people in general handle such a title. I guess we'll never know.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:13 AM

It does make me wonder if that was a considered intention of the game Hatred. They said it wasn't an "art" piece yet it is one of the poliarizing issues of our time.

I also wondered how they would handle the player character dying. Would it be considered a game over screen or a winning level game screen?

asrealasitgets

10/17/2014 at 03:17 AM

This game is made by racists. Did you know that? The main character in the trailer is killing ethnic minorities. It's a recruitment tool by neo-nazis.

"Hatred" is a genocide simulator developed by Neo-Nazis


 

Matt Snee Staff Writer

10/17/2014 at 07:33 AM

yup.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:17 AM

has their been any more news about these claims or are most gaming news sites ignoring this in the hopes of it going away?

Alex-C25

10/18/2014 at 05:28 PM

I kind of wish you had other news outlet though. That Tumblr page is iffy, especialy since its the Kotaku/Polygon kind of soapboxing.

asrealasitgets

10/18/2014 at 06:51 PM

Exactly what a racist would say. 

Alex-C25

10/19/2014 at 04:36 AM

Okay, why the hell do you jump to conclusions like that!?

asrealasitgets

10/19/2014 at 06:12 AM

OMG! I was kidding. Relax! You have a point though. But if it's true, it's pretty gross and I'm totally against this product. Yuck!

Alex-C25

10/19/2014 at 12:00 PM

Okay, glad to hear that, sorry if I overreacted, jokes don't translate well on text unless pointed out.

But yeah, if it's true the Neo-Nazi afiliation, i'm steering right away from this game (which probably already had in my comment below).

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:18 AM

I'm with you there. Given all the recent controviersies it would be nice we could get some actual fact checking and news reporting from game sites when it comes to issues like these.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:16 AM

I've heard those rumors as well thanks to some sherlocking by those on twitter. And your link was helpful though I wish too that we'd get more sources working on the origin of the people invovled with this project. Though the ant-communist issue isn't that much of a problem for me I see alot of confusion when it comes to the neo-nazi claim with the facebook profiles and connections to an anti-islamic/immigration group.

asrealasitgets

10/26/2014 at 05:22 AM

I also found the devs webpage to be very vague and kind of stupid. As much as people like to complain about social changes in vidja games, games haven't changed that much yet. And the ones that have are better for it. Borderlands has cool chicks in it, and Evil Within is supposed to get some DLC starring one of the female character to round out the story. There is also a Japanese dude in Evil Within as the side kick and guess what, the game was not totally ruined for it! So the HATRED devs can fuck off with "we are against" change. They're full of shit and I don't need to know if their racists or not to not like them. Oh and also Alien Isolation has a lead chick in it too and who gives a fuck?! The game is great! Cool Also there is also already a game where you can slaughter tons of non-white people called Mordor. (*intended humor)

NSonic79

11/03/2014 at 12:37 PM

your lucky. When I went there they didn't even have a website yet. It was just a domain under construction. I'll have to check it out again.

Yes! Thats' why I don't really don't fully buy their reason for making this game. The recent titles being offered seem not to cater to such things yet at the same time they were totally awesome. It didn't takea way or water down the gaming experiance of the games you mentioned. Either it was planned properly or intentaonal choice, it shows that those games were not made to cater to a  specfici demograpic from what I can tell. 

Is Mordor that "Shadows of Mordor" game you speak of? I need to check that game out!

asrealasitgets

11/04/2014 at 01:20 AM

Yes Shadow of Mordor is a psychopaths wet dream. It's brutal and gross, as is The Evil Within. Now go have fun! Cool I honestly don't give a fuck about Hatred either way. If that's the kind of shit people want, go ahead. I love F.E.A.R and it's pretty gross at times as well. There is already a game out there called GTA that is the same thing. Here. Have a F.E.A.R. screencap to brighten your day!
 

NSonic79

11/10/2014 at 12:50 PM

Is that from F3AR? that screen shot is from F3AR isn't it!

Oh when will the VIP Pass to that game finally be offered for free!!!!

jgusw

10/17/2014 at 06:14 AM

I only saw the trailer once last night and I wasn't expecting it to be as violent as it was.  I saw it and thought, "Damn, will it release on the 360 or PS3?" Cool 

Man, this game is going to start up some shit!  If it is as violent as it looks and it's released, you better preorder. Laughing 

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:21 AM

I was wondering the same thing too if it would come out on consoles. But upon seeing it PC only that would explain things. I doubt any console maker would allow this to be on their systems without some kind of editting or AO rating.

If anything it'll just help confirm to those that claim video games are nothing more than murder simulators that this one will be true. The conspiracy theorist were right about the NSA so I guess we can chalk this up to them as well.

Cary Woodham

10/17/2014 at 07:23 AM

Like Andrew said, it makes me think of Postal.  I'll skip out on that and go back to playing my tough and manly games like Kirby and Skylanders. :)

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:23 AM

No quibbles you'll get from me. Indeed this is a game not meant for everybody. I still need to see about Kirby myself though.

Matt Snee Staff Writer

10/17/2014 at 07:31 AM

I've played the No Russian level a couple times, and enjoyed it, but it's not a plot device, it's just pure wish fulfillment.  Everybody wants to gun down civilians at some point in their life, and here you could.  The idea that it was anything but that is an illusion.  It could have been pulled out of that game and the game wouldn't have missed it at all.  It's just there to titillate the player, which is does, very well.  

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:33 AM

True. Even if you did take out that level in the game and just left it as a "in-game dialoug exposition" dump between levels it would've still continued the narrative. Yet at the same time it still gave you a chance to be in the shoes of a undercover CIA operative who I'm sure would be having conflicting emotions on either gunning down cilviians or risk blowing his cover.

The same can be said for certain "iconic" scenes in movies even. You could easily remove sex scenes or even ultri violent moments and the movie could've continued without missing a beat. Some would argue they are nothing more than gratitious actions for viewership yet some would aruge they add gravitious toward a character.

Just the line that video games tend to blurr when it comes to media in this day and age I guess.

avidacridjam

10/17/2014 at 08:36 AM

That trailer disgusts me and I have no interest in ever playing a murder simulator. It's a personal preference perhaps (I don't enjoy GTA games since they embrace criminality, despite their technical achievements) but I don't see the value of being placed in the shoes of a psychopathic murderer, no matter how novel the idea may be. Even if I ever got a chance to play it, I don't think I'd last very long. The game that's being sold here seems to be a celebration of human depravity, rather than an indictment of it.

KnightDriver

10/17/2014 at 03:44 PM

I agree, games like GTA or Carmageddon or Manhunt or even Hotline Miami make me cringe; no life of virtual crime for me thanks.

Alex-C25

10/18/2014 at 05:18 PM

If I have to defend Hotline Miami though, the progression through the game shows how it screws with the protagonists mental health and even your bosses fell depraved by your presence. It's a game that strives on violence, but it doesn't glamorize it.

KnightDriver

10/19/2014 at 04:40 AM

I had a feeling Hotline Miami might not fit that list since I've heard such good things about it above and beyond its gory violence.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:40 AM

I need to play this game.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:40 AM

Taht is understandable. I agree it's not for everyone.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:37 AM

For me I never could get into GTA's free roam mode. When I played them back in the day, the police were too aggrisive during shootouts. I expected them to run for cover and not charge me as I unloaded a MAC 10 into them.

but it does make me wonder if anyone has tried to draw comparisons with this game and GTA online though.

I have to admit if I do end up playing the game myself, it would be more like a "gulity pleasure" kind of game where I only play it on occasion and when no one else is around. there is such a thing as too much.

Super Step Contributing Writer

10/17/2014 at 11:44 AM

The gameplay that is shown from the top-down perspective looks awesome and it's the kind of release sometimes one needs. But the close-up murders ... those are intense and add a lot to the feel of the trailer, but I wonder how long I'd last with those apparent in the game. I wouldn't feel good about killing presumably innocent people, virtually or otherwise. 

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:44 AM

I wonder if the top down view was intended so they could add the assassination scenes. Poeple are said if they wanted to make the game like it was, a FPS genre would've served better.

I wonder too how long I would make it during the assassination scenes. I'm sure some would argue that if games like Cod and Halo 4 have takedown moves why can't this game. But tehn again you don't hear the other playing begging for their life.

Super Step Contributing Writer

10/26/2014 at 11:23 PM

Also, in those games it's assumed the other team had it coming. In this, you can clearly tell the people are innocent. 

NSonic79

11/03/2014 at 12:43 PM

true that. It does make for a stark contrast though I have to say generally no one like seeing themselves being taken down. I know I don't when for some odd reason someone is able to get a drop on me when I try the same method with no result. but that's Halo/COD for you.

Alex-C25

10/18/2014 at 05:34 PM

Yeah no, i'm more on restrained kind of moral or of black/dark humor (something which Hatred doesn't seem to have). Even GTA has some restraint, which I can play just fine.

Still an interesting article you wrote, though I'd rather not think about the subject.

NSonic79

10/26/2014 at 04:46 AM

I'll admit I'm the same way, yet at the same time I have to keep fighting myself in not gunning down everyone I want to in games like Fallout 3 and the rest just because I can.

I get the feeling that no one really wants to dwell much on this game and the issues it presents as a whole. Hopefully this is just a "proof of concept" video showing it can be done.

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