HentaiWriter
Tentacle God
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2014
- Messages
- 751
- Reputation score
- 366
Well, whatever 50 Shades of Grey started as, it ended up exploring some themes which most people are not familiar with. Hence why it ended up being classed as Erotica, because it is enlightening people about the BDSM scene, and more importantly exploring issues regarding consent.
Except the problem is that it's enlightening people in a very incorrect way, using factually bad examples and painting the BDSM community in a light that is pretty inaccurate.
50 Shades of Grey is to BDSM what early Folgers ads were to a woman's role in a relationship, so to speak, and that's why people are angry at the movie and why it comes off as pornography rather than an actually legitimate BDSM relationship to anyone who actually is in the BDSM community to any degree.
It would be like if someone made a documentary on cybersecurity and portrayed hackers as this;
Last I checked Future Fragment's is not there (although this was a while ago) - the entire thing where you create a fairly contrived setup to justify a large number of horny people would appear to put it quite firmly in the porn category rather than the erotica category, especially given apparent fallacies in said setup.
Yeah, definitely check out the 027F demo link in my signature - it's basically a different game. Full english voice acting across 40 characters between 15 or so AAA/hollywood VA's in the demo (full game will be 150+ characters across 40+ VAs), more storyline paths and choices (that actually matter) than Detroit: Beyond Human that'll be in the full game with the demo already having over 100 of them, 36+ endings with only a few being sex related, and you can go the entire level without seeing a single sex scene or reference to sex. The setup as to why people are horny is actually pretty well fleshed out too, and gives a lot of logical reasons, but again if you've only played the much earlier version I can see why you'd think that.
It appears that your primary concern is the sexual content. And do note that I'm not specifying what your actual primary concern is - just how it appears, because that's how you get judged on what you are. There's no use saying "I'm making erotica" if everyone thinks you're making porn.
Right, which is why I referenced the reviews; so far something like 90-95% of the reviews for the game across all sites and/or poll results have said that they consider the storyline and gameplay of the game to more of a driving force as to why they're playing the game than the adult content is. So at least with Future Fragments, the majority of people don't see it as porn to just get off to; they actually (in their own words) are enjoying it for the story and gameplay first, porn second, and I'm sure there's other western h-games out there too that have that same sort of reception.
That said, I didn't mean to derail the topic, I just wanted to post that defense of Future Fragments given the callout it got and the misunderstanding of what the content is in the game by the original person I was replying to, so I don't want to derail the topic anymore towards my game if possible, since I've said about all I can say in defense of it/proof that it's okay with the current guidelines, as the other games are as well.
More problematically, for long-form content (such as games) it's probably way outside of the scope of the reviewers on Patreon to be able to determine if something is erotica or pornography. The danger is that if a significant number of creators do confuse the two, and this becomes broadly apparent, then Patreon would likely have to ban both categories to ensure their platform remains pornography free.
A lot of Patreon games have been played in full by people working there, and I know this because some of the creators have came back after getting suspended to have them tell the creators that specific events, 10-20+ hours into the game are what's getting them hit, so they're definitely playing all the way through.
That said, the confusion/problem isn't "erotica" or "pornography", the problem is whether it's real life or illustrated content. If it's illustrated content, then it flies no matter what the focus is (as long as it's not bestiality or underage or glorifying non-con/incest), given the industry standard of separating illustrated and non-illustrated content. This separation can be seen in generally any site dealing with adult content in America.
Last edited: