Well, that happened

Some of the early trailers forForspoken, a Squeenix action-adventure/RPG epic coming in January, suggested portentious world-saving stuff. This is a different vibe to a clip shared on Forspoken’s offical Twitter this week, which featured main character Frey Holland doing a “Yup, that’s me!” kind of elevator pitch for the game. A lot of people on the birdsite took an instant, vehement dislike to Frey’s dialogue, and were just as instantly sure who to blame for the peachy keen quiplashing, even if by proxy. Yes, Joss Whedon strikes again.

In the clip Frey lists all the stuff that’s going on with her (“So let me get this straight…") in the snarktastic style of a fast-talking MCU character. I can’t be sure, but I think the biggest offender is “I’m seeingfreakingdragons”. Everything in the clip is actually edited down from other stuff (mostly astory trailerfrom almost a year ago). But, welp, sometimes something just hits at the wrong moment, and thousands of people quote-tweet your game and blame Joss Whedon for it.

A beautiful and cruel new land? Twisted monsters? An array of magical abilities? Sentient jewellery!?Welcome to the world of#Forspoken.pic.twitter.com/46diiLnQ7M

It also doesn’t help that the quipping is edited down to one concentrated dose of 30 seconds. Over a longer time frame I’m sure Frey has more facets to her character and is less annoying (at least, I hope so, because I think the game looks fun).

We were debating how much Joss Whedon can be blamed for this. On the one hand, as far as I can tell he’s not written a solitary word of Forspoken, but on the other handmaking fun of Joss Whedonis a public good. Plus he did popularise this kind of cynical lolmonster in broader Hollywood, because his stickly little fingerprints are all over The Avengers, and that bled into a lot of other people’s work. And hey, just ask Zack Snyder fans what they think of Whedon (no don’t, you will lose your whole afternoon).

Forspoken used to beProject Athia, and it used to be coming out this year (before gettingdelayed). It’s in development at Square Enix’s Luminous Productions, and a lot of the devs worked onFinal Fantasy XV, which may account for why the combat and open world look very cool and pretty gorge, respectively. Forspoken is, however, a game where the main character is a modern, regular person who gets transported to a bizzaro world (a genre known in Japan as isekai, but which I personally recognise as a sub-genre of fan fiction). Therein, perhaps, lies the problem. We accept that, e.g., this is how Captain American or Captain Marvel or the other hero Captains talk, but it’snothow actualfreakingregular people talk.