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  • File : 1269892179.jpg-(241 KB, 640x480, 4.jpg)
    241 KB Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:49 No.8859387  
    So, /tg/. Cyberpunk. Is it dead?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:50 No.8859392
    Thirty years ago bro.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:51 No.8859413
    >>8859392
    What he said.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:51 No.8859414
    Sorry to say, but yes.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:51 No.8859417
    Long live the postcyberpunk!
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:51 No.8859426
    Not really. It's just more immediate than it used to be.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:52 No.8859450
    Sorry OP. This is 2010. Cyberpunk was 80s. Unless the live-action GitS movie, which I'm fairly sure will suck ass, causes a sudden revival, all that's left is a few phpBBs full of aspie simularians.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:52 No.8859456
    I'm afraid so, good OP. Eclipse Phase killed it, at least in my group.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:53 No.8859460
    >>8859417
    This!
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:53 No.8859461
    80s cyberpunk essentially died with the 80s and the crash of the Japanese housing bubble. So, 20 years ago.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:53 No.8859473
    Not dead, but diminished. If you're playing in a cyberpunk setting it'll feel like a retro future instead of a "likely" future unless you have great verisimilitude bending powers.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:53 No.8859476
    Not so guise.
    img.megachan.net/cy/
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:53 No.8859478
    We live in it, well except for the good stuff.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:54 No.8859500
    The only parts that are truly dead are the huge personal computers
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:55 No.8859516
    I still like it myself.

    But the popularity of science fiction in general has been on steep decline since the turn of the new millennium, if not even earlier.

    We're living in the "future", but I don't think anyone would have expected it to be so profit driven and otherwise mundane.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:55 No.8859521
    We're living in a cyberpunk world in which "order" still exists.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:56 No.8859543
    >>8859516
    So do I. I guess the problem was having an overly brainwashable general public.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:58 No.8859562
    Shadowrun is the most popular "cyberpunk" game out there nowadays.

    You tell me bro.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:58 No.8859568
         File1269892708.jpg-(146 KB, 615x440, bionics-615.jpg)
    146 KB
    Looked outside?
    http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2010/01/bionics/fischman-text
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:59 No.8859580
    It is, but I don't mind!

    I enjoy both playing wacky retro-futuristic cyberpunk where we all assume that by 2010, 30 years from now on, there will be people living on the moon, hovercars, etc. AND a more quiet, realistic 5 seconds into the future sort of game with hacking being toned down to what we can agree on as unix nerds.

    It might be dead, but in a way old D&D is dead; it doesn't stop enthusiasts from enjoying it!
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:59 No.8859582
    System shock, so good. I havent seen this picture for years
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)15:59 No.8859584
    >>8859473

    Which is funny, because a cyberpunk future could still be portrayed semi-believably. Maybe in the future, after being built up into a gleaming skyscape of glittering spires, Manhattan undergoes some really shitty real-estate bust and becomes a slum-covered warren of warring gangs and restless criminals. The once beautiful architecture decays into a gloomy and industrial wreck and futuristic luxuries give way to cheap electronic thrills and amoral vendors of shady knock-offs of designer drugs.

    I mean, it would be hard these days to say "the future is going to be all net-jacking and punks with laser rifles", but even in a more optimistic scenario there will still be class divides, and there will be plenty of room to give lower class groups and areas that gritty cyberpunk feel.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:00 No.8859598
    >>8859584
    Sounds like any midwestern city that was based on manufacturing.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:00 No.8859603
         File1269892825.jpg-(92 KB, 407x405, Advice Dog - problem starting (...).jpg)
    92 KB
    >>8859516
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:02 No.8859630
    >>8859476
    It shuts down next week.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:02 No.8859634
    I think that robot arm can curl more than I can.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:03 No.8859639
    threads like this make me think we need a cyberpunkchan.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:03 No.8859647
    >>8859387
    that pic is pretty cool
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:03 No.8859654
    >>8859598

    Exactly! You could always portray a future where the big markets that drive today's upscale urban areas- Real estate, money handling, oil- are compromised to the extent that manufacturing has in North America today.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:04 No.8859661
    >>8859639
    I'd say "make one", but I doubt it'd survive without a large userbase to start with.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:05 No.8859674
    System Shock isn't cyberpunk, in case you thought it was. It's just plain sci-fi.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:06 No.8859688
    Eh, insomuch as a genre can die. Well, sub-genre.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:06 No.8859690
         File1269893167.jpg-(26 KB, 500x465, 1249289812_by_hotspurs_500.jpg)
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:06 No.8859697
    >>8859603
    Naw... not really anything to do with war.

    Just science caught up.

    But while we don't have atomic flying cars or things like that, we've got Phones that fit in purses... Music Players that fit into purses...

    bourgeois women, it seems, is the driving force behind technological advances
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:07 No.8859699
    Cyberpunk is still my favorite setting, second is a tie between post-apoc and spaghetti western.

    I just wish I could find people to play shadowrun with :'c
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:07 No.8859703
    >>8859661
    The large userbase is right here.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:08 No.8859714
    Cyberpunk is motherfucking attitude.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:08 No.8859725
    Well, why does cyberpunk need to be a plausible future for the genre of fiction to continue? We're never going to have dorfs in reality yet fantasy continues.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:09 No.8859727
    >>8859699

    How about some post-apoc cyberpunk western?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:09 No.8859728
    Cyberpunk's gone the way of the dystopias and post-apocalyptic literature. Sure, it crops up every now and then, but it's no longer relevant to the current situation.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:09 No.8859732
    >>8859699
    How bout a post apocalypse cyberpunk spaghetti western?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:09 No.8859737
    >>8859727
    Hey.

    Fuck you.
    >> The Austrian !!w1HDefruhXL 03/29/10(Mon)16:10 No.8859751
    >>8859387
    I miss cyberpunk so much
    and I didn't even grow up with it.
    it is the best scifi
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:10 No.8859759
    >>8859727
    >>8859732
    Great minds thi- no, wait, samefag.
    >> The Austrian !!w1HDefruhXL 03/29/10(Mon)16:11 No.8859766
    >>8859728
    oh god why do you make me cry
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:11 No.8859769
    >>8859639
    FUND IT
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:11 No.8859780
    Why has scifi died?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:13 No.8859798
    >>8859780
    I think the genre was flooded by kiddy shit that gave it a bad name and drove people away. Either that or it began to seem geeky to the mainstream cool kids.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:14 No.8859802
    >>8859780
    The new starwars trilogy
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:14 No.8859808
    >>8859769
    SECONDAAAN
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:16 No.8859826
    >>8859798
    >began to seem geeky
    >began

    lol wut

    Anyway, sci-fi is alive and well in video gaming.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:17 No.8859833
    >>8859802
    Star wars prequel? Never heard of.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:18 No.8859854
    >>8859808
    Let's do this seriously.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:20 No.8859873
    >>8859854
    Actually, a scifichan would do better than a cyberpunkchan by far. But I agree, we should do this.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:20 No.8859875
         File1269894031.jpg-(94 KB, 800x537, african weaponry.jpg)
    94 KB
    There's a Neuromancer movie being made

    Too bad it's directed by a guy whose resume consists of Torque and some music videos.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:20 No.8859879
    SOMEONE MAKE CYBERPUNKCHAN NOW DO IT DO IT DO IT DO IT DO IT
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:21 No.8859895
         File1269894113.jpg-(101 KB, 506x454, shodan.jpg)
    101 KB
    Died shortly after System Shock 2.

    L-l-look at you h-hacker.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:21 No.8859896
    Cyberpunk is dead because we as a society are hella more optimistic about the future than in the 80s. (the Cold War is over, bro!)

    It's gonna come back, though. The optimism is giving way to cynicism. Dust off the system in 10 years.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:21 No.8859897
    I don't think cyberpunk died. It just got mis-interpreted.

    The "punk" part of cyberpunk to me always felt like general alienation rather than the actual "RoRoFightDaPowa" Rebellion shtick that drove CP into the ground.

    To me Cybeberpunk is about How the world gets controlled by big systems, Megacorperations, Godlike AIs, Conservitive religions, Neofacist police states, Ect. Because of there size and structure however, they are unable to control the underside of things and have large blindspots.
    The only way for them to cover these weaknesses is to hire people outside of the system to do there "dirty work", the things they won't/can't do.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:23 No.8859912
    >>8859897
    I was reading until...
    >CP
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:25 No.8859940
    >>8859879
    Anyone got any hosting space, then? Also, Wakaba or Futallaby?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:26 No.8859955
    >>8859897
    Agreed.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:26 No.8859959
    >>8859896

    Not necessarily. Now we just have post-apocaliptics.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:26 No.8859963
    >>8859897

    To put this into words 4chan can understand, I propose a new __Punk: Rape punk

    In a world where raping people puts them under your mind control, The world is controlled by networks or rapists making everybody there bitch.
    However these rape networks are hiveminded and can't think individually or adapt. As a result, somebody who remains a virgin can get a job helping the rapists rape each outher.

    However if he stops being useful, he gets raped just like everyone else and louses his individuality.

    The important thing of cyberpunk is that the only way to avoid getting screwed over by the corps is to help them screw other people over.
    And that hasn't died.

    What has died is faggots in trenchcoats with neon Mohawks "FIGHIN DA MAN!", I say The Matrix was the last death throe of this.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:27 No.8859973
    >>8859963
    We also have the perfect system for it already. FATAL.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:28 No.8859978
    >>8859963
    I lol'd hard.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:28 No.8859982
    >>8859973

    And Black Tokyo
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:30 No.8859999
    >>8859940
    Wakaba. And, what're free hosts for?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:30 No.8860003
    >>8859959
    Now this is an interesting observation worth examining. Whether you were for or against "the system" Cyberpunk assumes there IS one. Not only are we not optimistic as a society, we are so pessimistic we believe that the only way to "fix" the system is to end all existing power structures and decide afterwards whether or not it's worth rebuilding it all.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:31 No.8860013
    >>8859999
    Just one post and you'd have had it!
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:32 No.8860026
    >>8859963

    if you rape a rapist do you gain control of the people he raped?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:32 No.8860031
    Post humanism is more likely(at least with current technology) then cyberpunk, sorry bros, just people want realism these days.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:32 No.8860035
    >>8859879
    That's what Megachan is for.
    http://www.megachan.net/

    \Cyberpunk\ \Steampunk\ \Mecha\ \Space\ \Science Fiction\ \Cityscape\ \Post-Apocalypse\
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:33 No.8860048
    >>8860035
    Yep, but Megachan shuts down next week.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:33 No.8860051
    Cyberpunk is about us losing our humanity and technology fucking us over. Post-apocalyptic settings is about war and us screwing the pooch so hard that we've basically ruined ourselves.

    One negative future got replaced with an even more depressing, hopeless one.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:34 No.8860078
    >>8860026
    Yes but this spreads your mind over two bodies. You have two bodies but start to get stupider and louse individuality as your mind mixes with the victims.

    Only Virgins can think for themselves, and thus are useful for setting up ambushes.
    If they fuck up however they will probably get raped.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:35 No.8860090
    >>8860051
    And realistic. Technology makes things better, not worse.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:35 No.8860092
    >>8860051
    Difference being that in cyberpunk you got DAT ATMOSPHERE. In post-apoc all you got was 12-year-old /x/ regs celebrating on a pile of bodies.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:35 No.8860095
    >>8859963
    >trenchcoats = "FIGHIN DA MAN!"

    Where did this come from?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:36 No.8860108
    >>8860048
    WHAT!
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:36 No.8860110
    >>8860092
    And "DAT ATMOSPHERE" is also the biggest barrier for new players. Seriously, try to get into Shadowrun. Your brain will shut off as soon as you find out how many goddamn factions there are. On one continent. (LOL US Centrism)
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:37 No.8860121
    >>8860090
    Nukes are technology.

    In post-apoc settings, mis-use of them completely destroys us. It's not about the tech itself, it's about mis-use of it.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:38 No.8860136
    >>8860110

    >Implying most campaigns don't take place in Seattle anyways.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:38 No.8860148
    >>8860095
    Cowboys wore dusters
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:39 No.8860160
    >>8860110
    Got into Shadowrun two months ago. New argument please.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:39 No.8860162
    >>8860090

    It does both
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:39 No.8860164
    >>8860003
    Post apocalyptic however seems to assume that systems will collapse and the future will be full of Rugged individualism.

    For all it's talk about GRIMDARK. Most PA seems to sound more like a /k/ SHTF, SKS INA WOODS style wankfest.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:40 No.8860175
    Leaving aside technology (which is admittedly half of what makes cyberpunk cyberpunk):

    Dystopias are "we're going to have a bright future if we just avoid totalitarianism."

    Post-apoc is "we're going to have a bright future if we just avoid wars and dropping the bomb."

    Cyberpunk is "bright future? Fat chance."
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:40 No.8860178
    >>8860164
    Yeah.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:40 No.8860180
    I think cyberpunk and post-apoc are both rad.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:41 No.8860185
    >>8860003
    Sci-fi and fantasy shows condition of our world for over seventy years. If not for thousands.
    It implies, that democracy really isn't something that suits people, but it's only possible thing, right?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:42 No.8860203
    >>8859450

    I *think* you meant Battle Angel Alita, actually.

    condescendingsmirkface.jpg

    ...though the only reason I'm optimistic about it is because it's an adaptation of the first three volumes - so Cameron isn't writing it, just sticking awesome 3D all over the place. Plus there's no need for a painfully obvious Enviromentalism Message, like in Watchmen (gah, they had to cut bits out to put it in as well, scum), because it's pretty fucking obvious the Scrapyard sucks ass. /minirant

    >>8859562

    For good reason - ignoring every shitty book Catalyst have put out since Unwired (the worst) - it's funny though how William Gibson really dislikes it for getting magic in his dystopia.

    Ah you're all a bunch of motherfuckers you know? I really want to play a cyberpunk campaign now, but there's no way that's happening in real time.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:42 No.8860204
    >>8860148
    Makes sense.
    >> Butthole Magic !!ardhDh1S5RY 03/29/10(Mon)16:43 No.8860229
    >>8859699
    You have my cybermuscles.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:44 No.8860237
    >>8860203
    Actually, there're upcoming LAs for both, apparently.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:44 No.8860239
    reading one thread in megachan/cy/ there was the suggestion of infinity being a cyberpunk setting, thinking about it, it seems perfectly true.

    Sure, looking from outside you have the corporations that drive technological advancement and supply the army that protects you, but for the people who live inside, wouldn't it be a hell if you haven't got the right connections?

    There are megacorps that may have battles between themselves, an all-encompassing AI that may be benevolent, or a tyrannical oppressor, and god help you if you are near a warzone, with another country or the aliens.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:44 No.8860245
    Closest thing I've played to cyberpunk recently is Mirror's Edge, though it's not /tg/ related. On the same note, Dystopia is based on cyberpunk ran by some Aussies as a source engine mod.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:46 No.8860253
    >>8860203
    > Ah you're all a bunch of motherfuckers you know? I really want to play a cyberpunk campaign now, but there's no way that's happening in real time

    I would have GM'd a shadowrun game Friday but one of the players got grounded even though he's going to enter college in about half a year.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:47 No.8860267
    >>8860245
    Dystopia is alright but I got a bit bored of the gameplay. The setting is pretty sweet though, pretty light on the J-cyberpunk (as in, some maps have neon signs with japanese wurds on 'em and the katana melee weapon). I don't really care much for J-cyberpunk.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:47 No.8860269
    I see it's already in the archive incomplete, but can someone archive (or at least save the HTML file and post it tomorow) this so I can see what develops? I need to go to work now.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:48 No.8860284
    How can it be dead?

    We are living it.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:48 No.8860293
         File1269895720.jpg-(86 KB, 840x525, Dys_mk2_Corp_Heavy.jpg)
    86 KB
    >>8860245

    When I play Dystopia I only choose the heavy class and minigun while Micspamming Heavy Weapons Guy sounds

    also the Corp's color scheme looks really good on Tau.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:50 No.8860309
    I'm in a Shadowrun campaign; enjoying the hell out of it. It really all depends on the group you have. People who use Star Trek as the universal reference point for defining "futuristic" destroy games.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:50 No.8860315
    >>8860269

    the archive is auto-updated until thread 404's
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:51 No.8860324
    >>8860267
    I used to play it until it got old as well. Probably could've sucked me in much longer if it had some more customization elements, or even tack on some lame RPG ones.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:51 No.8860333
    I disagree that CP is all that GRIMDARK.

    Dystopia,
    The systems will take over, there is no stomping them, the individual has not place in the new society. Shut up and take your drugs citizen.

    Post Apocalyptic.
    The systems will collapse under there own weight and take most of the worlds population/infrastructure with them. The Survivors will be a bunch of rugged individualists, the way god intended.

    Cyberpunk is a third option.
    Yes the systems control the world, but they have inherent weakness that the individual can exploit. Because of this the systems have to rely on people outside the system to do there dirty work.

    Cyberpunk is not about the death of the individual but rather the interaction between the individual and the systems that control the rest of the world.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:51 No.8860339
    >>8860293
    >spider bomb kill
    >rocket launcher kill
    >ion cannon kill
    Trumped by FATTY FIST KILL
    "I DON'T THINK SO SISTAH"-spam
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:55 No.8860393
    Have you seen the news today? cyberpunk isn't dead, it is becoming reality. Corporations are becoming more powerful, high-speed internet and wireless are becoming ubiquitous, and cybernetics are rapidly advancing into the mainstream
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:57 No.8860414
    >>8860284

    This, pretty much. The only reason Cyberpunk feels dated right now is because we caught up with it. If people wrote about current scientific predictions, foreseen advancements in technology, and applied a generous helping of cynicism, we would have new cyberpunk.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:57 No.8860415
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)16:58 No.8860438
    >>8860293
    Fuck yes, you have the best melee weapon ever. Nothing as satisfying as punching a guy standing 2 meters away with a hydraulic fist.

    Whenever I'm on a good streak, all I hear is "my fist, your ass" as I keep taunting.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:02 No.8860501
         File1269896575.jpg-(68 KB, 640x480, All I have is this candy bar.jpg)
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    Oh and there's a new Deus Ex coming out

    It might add to the genre's popularity even if it will be hated by everyone who played the original.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:04 No.8860519
    >>8860414

    We will call.. Carbon Nanopunk.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:06 No.8860551
    >>8860414
    We're still some way from having a sentient AI which is like the holy grail of many cyberpunk stories.

    Then we also have the forming of mega-cities, such as an area in south-east China where several cities are growing together to form one giant 250-million inhabitant cluster within 10-20 years. With China's increasing capitalistic drive taking over, I think there are great grounds for cyberpunk stories to grow.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:08 No.8860573
         File1269896887.jpg-(28 KB, 300x458, judge dredd.jpg)
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    >>8860551
    > China
    > Megacity

    I AM THE RAW
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:08 No.8860581
    Well I still play Shadowrun fuck you
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:09 No.8860593
    >The only reason Cyberpunk feels dated right now is because we caught up with it.

    >People surfing the internet with their minds
    >Japan bought everything
    >Nations have collapsed
    >Corporations rule
    >People chop off their limbs for fun
    >Killerrobots everywhere
    >Everyone's either poor or lives in a gated community, most of these being owned by corporations

    That's the world we're living in, man.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:12 No.8860618
    >>8860593
    > Japan bought everything

    Well that one feels dated because we now see that Japan will not rule the world anytime soon.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:12 No.8860622
    >>8860551
    >sentient AI
    >holy grail of cyberpunk
    >not satan incarnate
    what the fuck am i reading?
    >> Shas'o R'myr !!TZikiEEr0tg 03/29/10(Mon)17:12 No.8860626
    >>8860293

    >the Corp's color scheme looks really good on Tau.

    GUESS WHAT

    THAT'S THE COLOR SCHEME I USE ON MY TAU

    WHAT NOW
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:13 No.8860641
    >>8860626

    Yeah but any sort of color scheme looks bad on models painted by you.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:14 No.8860648
    >>8860593
    >Japan bought everything
    >Implying Japan doesn't have a giant national debt.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:16 No.8860674
    >With China's increasing capitalistic drive taking over, I think there are great grounds for cyberpunk stories to grow.

    Not really. Even corruption and crime are a matter of gouvernment in China. Aka: If you're a runner, you're gonna work for THE MAN who also hunts you.
    Chinese cyberpunk would basically be Cyber-Kafka.

    >>8860618
    Oh, the next american cyberpunk will be about Muslims taking over via their illegal Muslim-President and turning the USA into a muslim-nation with a huge christian underclass.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:16 No.8860680
    >>8860593

    >People surfing the internet with their minds
    This kind of technology isn't too far off.
    >Japan bought everything
    More like China bought everything.
    >Nations have collapsed
    Well, not really, but there's still a hell of a lot of war.
    >Corporations rule
    Pretty much.
    >People chop off their limbs for fun
    Got me here.
    >Killerrobots everywhere
    And here.
    >Everyone's either poor or lives in a gated community, most of these being owned by corporations
    Well, maybe not everyone, but a good portion of people.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:17 No.8860688
    Just wait until we run out of oil some 10-15 years from now. THEN WE'RE REALLY LIVING IN A CYBERPUNK WORLD.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:17 No.8860691
    >>8860648

    Dude, you don't even know the Jap-fear that gripped the US during the 80s?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:18 No.8860704
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    The Matrix oversaturated the cyberpunk genre (even though it's arguable if it can be classified as such it undeniably has lots of cyberpunk elements in it).

    I always found that the high tech lowlife apect was the most interesting thing about it, not the sterilized monolithic corporation aspect.

    When the fuck are they gonna make a Snow Crash movie?
    The thing to love about it is how it doesn't try to build a plausible future, just a fucking cool one.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:20 No.8860719
    >>8860691
    Why would I know it? I'm not American.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:21 No.8860744
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    >>8860719

    You are now.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:21 No.8860745
    >This kind of technology isn't too far off.

    Yeah, only like an uncountable number of generations. Because the model we were presented with was: "3D GOOGLES IN YOUR BRAIN" which is a tad bit different from: "You now can learn how to move a cursor with the power of your mind."

    >More like China bought everything.

    More like we sold out to China.
    >> scaredofshadows !!7tJvdfwxbH7 03/29/10(Mon)17:24 No.8860793
    >>8860745
    weaver-toys in my brain make me little uneasy, anon

    people really want that kind of thing?
    >> darkmarvin 03/29/10(Mon)17:28 No.8860855
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    yes and shadowrun killed it
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:29 No.8860875
    >>8860745

    >Yeah, only like an uncountable number of generations.

    Science is trending towards speeding up, not slowing down. What won't be possible in 50 years today may only not be possible in 5 years a few years down the road.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:30 No.8860890
    >People surfing the internet with their minds
    No but we do more interesting things in 2d than Gibson ever predicted with 3d.
    >Japan bought everything
    CHINA bought everything.
    >Nations have collapsed.
    >Corporations rule
    The Corporations decided things were easier if they could let the nations think they were still in charge.
    >People chop off their limbs for fun
    >Killerrobots everywhere
    Veterans come back from wars missing limbs. Fueling a market for advanced prosthetics.
    >Everyone's either poor or lives in a gated community, most of these being owned by corporations
    Pretty much.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:30 No.8860891
    Shadowrun was never Cyberpunk though. It never even mentioned cyberpunk anywhere in the book IIRC.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:31 No.8860900
    >>8860674

    >Not really. Even corruption and crime are a matter of gouvernment in China. Aka: If you're a runner, you're gonna work for THE MAN who also hunts you.
    Chinese cyberpunk would basically be Cyber-Kafka.

    Near-future China would be an AWESOME cyberpunk setting.

    Sure everyone is working for the Man in some way or other, but in such an old and ideologically bankrupt regime as the PRC the Man can be quite at odds with itself with several internal disputes.

    Also Cyber-Kafka sounds totally awesome. Sorta like a less lethal more realistic version of Paranoia.
    >> scaredofshadows !!7tJvdfwxbH7 03/29/10(Mon)17:31 No.8860902
    >>8860875
    think you guys got 50 years left, anon?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:31 No.8860905
    >>8860855

    That's funny, you're a funny guy.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:32 No.8860913
    >>8860890
    Also UCAVs for the Killerrobot part.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:32 No.8860928
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    >>8860855
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:36 No.8860983
    >Science is trending towards speeding up, not slowing down. What won't be possible in 50 years today may only not be possible in 5 years a few years down the road.

    Actually, that "speeding up"..it applys to microprocessors only. Actual science reacts to stuff like: "Do we even have a working theory?" and "Do we have monneis?" More science means less moneis for everyone, resuling in an acutal slowdown of research. There's also a complete lack of understanding how the brain creates images, which is a bit of a hurdle right now.

    >No but we do more interesting things in 2d than Gibson ever predicted with 3d.

    Suprise, really. RL is always more interesting and creative than fiction.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:37 No.8861008
    I am waiting for the day when I can buy Follistatin next to my creatine.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:39 No.8861043
    >Sorta like a less lethal more realistic version of Paranoia.

    Actually, your characters would end up getting shot for no apparent reason. Or because they camped in a house a murderer used to frequent and the cops need somebody to present to court.

    >Also UCAVs for the Killerrobot part.

    Remote controlled guns do not qualify as berserk killer robots kicking cars on highways.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:41 No.8861072
    >>8861043
    >Remote controlled guns do not qualify as berserk killer robots kicking cars on highways.
    yet, but every one is betting the next generation of fighter craft will be robots.
    >> scaredofshadows !!7tJvdfwxbH7 03/29/10(Mon)17:43 No.8861127
    >>8861072
    not a big surprise man thinks of destroying itself every chance it can

    how long before that day, anon?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:43 No.8861133
    Technology doesn't necessarily make things better. Despite the seemingly limited life of the Amish, they still have an extremely strong, close-knitted community.

    Society has only been becoming more secular, which isn't a bad thing but we get shit like the sexualisation of children, pseudo-morality, desensitization and the break down of the community as people become more isolated.

    tl;dr: Technology kills the spirit and soul.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:44 No.8861151
    >>8861133
    I have no soul so I'm not worried.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:46 No.8861173
    >>8861133

    Shouldn't that be the re-sexualization of children?
    >> absurd 03/29/10(Mon)17:46 No.8861174
    Yeah. I would say it's because we're living in 2010, and it's not fucking cyberpunk at all.
    The dream is dead.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:46 No.8861181
    We're living in cyberpunk. All the shitty stuff that happens in cyberpunk with erosion of rights and the conglomeration of megacorporations? Yeah, all that stuff came true. The good parts where people get to fight back and win? Well, the parts where the governments of the world gets these crazy anti-terrorist powers and unpiloted secret drones and the will to poison dissidents and such on behalf of corporations, well those parts became extra true, so the cool stuff for the good guy people in cyberpunk didn't really come true, maybe the best of them are locked away in some secret US army base at the request of a powerful megacorp, as they busily tell their captors about their friends, and that they wish they had never done anything - maybe they haven't done anything, but they'll admit to it anyway after being manually drowned while blindfolded several times a week.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:46 No.8861182
    This thread has me wanting to run VtR in a Cyberpunk setting for some reason.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:46 No.8861183
    >>8859387
    >Cyberpunk. Is it dead?
    Are you dumber then shit?
    Every year they produce comics, movies, books, and games that are set in cyber punk settings.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:47 No.8861190
    >which isn't a bad thing but we get shit like the sexualisation of children

    Newfags wern't around back then and believe that history beings when they're around six, but the high age of CP and "childfucking will make for a better, more open and human society" were the 70s. You honestly don't want to go through magazins and add from that period, they're full of naked children and WTFISTHIS?
    >> Spanignoll 03/29/10(Mon)17:48 No.8861204
    Cyberpunk is dead
    Space Opera is dead
    Time travel is dead
    Psy powers is dead
    But fantasy is still going...
    RRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE............
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:50 No.8861246
    >>8861190
    This is true.

    Most people don't realize that we are going though a conservative reactionary period right now.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:50 No.8861262
    Simple. Kids these days would rather go to the pseudo-past Steampunk.
    Steampunk killed cyberpunk
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:51 No.8861265
    Currently playing Shadowrun.

    So no.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:51 No.8861277
    >>8861190
    That wasn't the norm, though. But if we look at western society only it's:
    -Division of community. Breakdown of the family unit, multiculturalism causing a less united community/tensions, people opting to go on the computer over talking, open sexualization being the norm.
    -Class divide between those who work at slave wages, those on welfare, those who lost their jobs to outsourcing or really cheap labor, the struggling rich/middle class and then the ultra rich.
    -Highly fragmented, diverse amount of religions. (IE: There was no religious right, traditionalist etc back in the 50s and all)
    -Aging societies with changing ethnic balances.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:51 No.8861279
    >>8861190

    This is a horrible affront to our morals. I must obtain some of this damning literature so that I may rest knowing our society has improved.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:52 No.8861288
    >>8861246

    >Conservative REACTIONARY period
    >REACTIONARY

    Goddamn, how did I not see this. Oh right, I'm a youngfag.

    What exactly is being reacted to, and why is conservatism the paradigm that's reacting to it?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:55 No.8861353
    >>8861288
    Conservatism is always the reaction, since acting against conservatism is action. Part of the definition of conservatism is that it is reactionary to change (often to reverse/minimalise it).
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:56 No.8861375
    >>8861353

    I see. Whenabouts did this current reaction start?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:56 No.8861382
    >>8861288
    Most people seem to think that technology erodes morality and always goes in a straight line till eventually we are walking around naked and having huge orgys in the street with free drugs for everybody.

    This is 100% not true.

    More accuracy Liberals and Conservatives constantly move back and forth, we had a sexual revolution in the 60s 70s but the AIDS epidemic and conservative panic pushed us back.

    Another revolution was in the 20s up until the great depression.

    Really people just party less when bad shit happens.
    >> Spanignoll 03/29/10(Mon)17:57 No.8861385
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    *Science fiction integrity under imminent danger, initiating defensive protocol 124C 41+*
    I
    MUST
    SHARE
    THE HOLY WORD!.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)17:57 No.8861404
    POSTMODERNIST ALBUQUERQUIAN PROG ROCK STYLE DECONSTRUCTIONATIONISM IS TOTALLY DEAD, UNLESS YOU COUNT ITS RECONSTITUTED DEFIBRILLIATATRONIZED OFFSHOOT, RECONSTRUCTONKATOUGHINALISM
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:01 No.8861490
    Here's how I play/write it.

    Also those 'futures' that we predicted? The Steampunk Empires, The Atomic Americas, Bleak Big Brother States, New age of Aquarius and Cyberpunk Corporations.

    They all exist in some parallel stream of time. They probably visit and compete with each other, lost futures battling to survive against the tide of normal history. And battling to influence our time, to steer down the 'proper' path of history.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:04 No.8861556
    >>8861133
    >tl;dr: Technology kills the spirit and soul.
    Yeah! Look at all those people before modern technology! They lived happy carefree lives! There was no war murder crime or nasty shit at all!
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:05 No.8861583
    >This is a horrible affront to our morals. I must obtain some of this damning literature so that I may rest knowing our society has improved.

    Sorry, I can't tell you what the: "Boyfucking, it's aaawright"-books were called, but 80s "artful" pedomaterial is still being sold. The nudes of Brooke Shields by Gary Gross would be an example, but there was another dude, can't recall his name right now...his whole career was basically softcore fanfic photos of little girls. Even made a movie about that.
    >> Spanignoll 03/29/10(Mon)18:05 No.8861592
    >>8861490
    That sounds like your Infinite worlds campaign.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:06 No.8861599
    >>8861490

    That's an easy way out and retarded.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:09 No.8861664
    >>8861583
    Google "Brooke Shields by Gary Gross"
    Obtain Legal CP
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:09 No.8861672
    >>8861204
    Teenager mutants are kinda dead too, everything we have this days is more or less a rehash of the old stuff..
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:09 No.8861678
    >>8861583
    So common you can name, individually, the people on the entire Earth who are famed for doing it.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:10 No.8861697
    >>8861583

    There is a japanese movie called The Emperor Tomato Ketchup.

    You may google it for more info.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:11 No.8861716
    >>8861592
    Damn right.

    >>8861599
    Whats wrong with an easy way out? I suppose you want me to break down the door instead of open it?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:13 No.8861744
    >So common you can name, individually, the people on the entire Earth who are famed for doing it.

    I actually have plenty of other things on my mind besides remembering who exactly got the flak when everyone started: "OMG PEDOPHILES" at the beginning of the 90s.
    I take a general interest in the subject as part of history but it's not something I'd either fap to or would make a living on.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:16 No.8861794
    OP>So, /tg/. Cyberpunk. Is it dead?
    Last post few posts > Child porn

    What the hell guys?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:17 No.8861808
    >>8861678
    Art is produced by few individuals, but only exists because it is supported by society.

    These people made money off of what would now be considered child pornography and didn't go to jail. Try doing that now.

    Another case study. Google Virgin Killer, an album by the Scorpions released in 1976, the cover features a naked 10 year old.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:17 No.8861811
    >>8861794

    CP by any other name...
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:17 No.8861826
    >>8861794

    Cyber Punk = CP = Child Porn
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:19 No.8861852
    >>8861794
    Simpler than it seem. Cyberpunk represents the degredation of society, people discuss if technology, one of the main organs of cyberpunk is the engine of degredation, a representative of this could be child pornography, so whether this is true is what is debated, from pre-cyberpunk (70s and before) onwards to probably now.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:20 No.8861877
    >Google Virgin Killer, an album by the Scorpions released in 1976, the cover features a naked 10 year old.

    they had at least two of those covers, but probably more.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:21 No.8861895
    >>8861852
    Wait, that's why it came up?

    But that shit (and the portrayal of it) has been around since the ancient Greeks!
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:22 No.8861911
    >>8861895
    Yeah really, also war is as good an example.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:23 No.8861917
    WE MUST PROTECT THE CHILDREN FROM CHILD PORN

    *12 year old girl takes naked picture of herself, gets thrown in jail*
    *12 year old boy download picture of naked 12 year old girls, gets thrown in jail*

    Everyone in America is a fucking retard and these people should not be making decisions about what others are allowed to see or produce..
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:27 No.8861990
    >>8861917
    Challenged in Pennsylvania
    http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/03/sexting-lawsuit/
    'lowering' of punishment in illinois
    http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2010/03/19/Bill-would-lower-teen-sexting-penalties/UPI-17861269000684
    /

    sage for leaving /tg/ land, etc
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:28 No.8862014
    >>8861917
    Eventualy the 12 year olds will grow up and be in charge, and we will get out of this reactionary period.

    Until FlyingPig flu (bird/swine flu hybrid) kills off half the worlds population, and the survivors blame it on god punishing us for our decadence and usher in the new morality which makes it illegal to take naked pictures of ANYBODY naked or otherwise.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:29 No.8862047
    >>8862014
    Except H1N1 isnt dangerous.

    At least not more than the common cold
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:29 No.8862054
    >>8862014

    Everyone knows the swine flue will mutate into the zombie virus

    Just ask /x/
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:31 No.8862081
    >>8861990
    It shouldn't be illegal at all. I don't want to live in Christland where sex is demonized.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:31 No.8862097
    >>8862054

    Everyone knows that the Ukraine is void of people now because of a recent combined russo-american swine flue attack.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:33 No.8862121
    >>8862081

    The problem being that most CP is apparently produced either by uncles and dads abusing their children or as part of child pornography.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:34 No.8862141
    >>8862097
    No, that's just because the Zone grew
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:35 No.8862160
    >>8862121
    Child prostitution.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:35 No.8862164
    >>8862047
    Swine flu is not dangerous but very contagious.
    Bird flu is dangerous but can't jump from person to person.

    A hybrid could do lots of damage. And disasters tend to make people more conservative.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:35 No.8862167
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    Cyberpunk is dead. Long live postcyberpunk!

    Really the only way to do a cyberpunk plot and have it be believable now is for it to be set in a third world country where power is concentrated such that technology only benefits the ruling cla-

    Oh my god /tg/ I've got it! Cyberpunk in a third world country where the end goal is to get out and live a successful life in one of the really awesome countries.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:37 No.8862200
    >>8862167

    Nigeria, all you can do with computers is scam English speaking people.

    But yeah, african cities are very cyberpunk these days. People mentioned that in the last CP is death-thread.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:37 No.8862203
    >>8862160

    I know child prostitution is damaging to the child, but.. So is working in a coal mine or digging through toxic garbage to get hazardous material from old computer monitors.

    If you're willing to adopt a very fatalistic and capitalistic stance on things, you could argue that getting paid to be in child pornography would be better than that entire family, the child included, starving to death.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:37 No.8862204
    >>8862121
    I'm going to call bullshit on that. The VAST majority of cp has got to be taken by the "victim" themselves. Do you have any idea how many highschool girls send nudes of themselves to boys they like?

    Now if you're talking about the single digit age variety of CP specifically I will agree with you.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)18:50 No.8862428
    >>8861246
    The country has only been becoming more and more left-wing, and it"ll continue to. Did you see any actual swift changes for limited govt. and all under Bush? Fuck no.

    Besides, the Repubs voting base (and most conservatives) are white people, who are a shrinking majority that's also aging
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:03 No.8862680
    GLORY TO THE MANY.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:07 No.8862760
    >Cyberpunk in a third world country where the end goal is to get out and live a successful life in one of the really awesome countries.

    Why do I have the idea that the shitty country will be America in nine out of ten novels that use this plot in the near future?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:08 No.8862777
    >>8862428
    >The country has only been becoming more and more left-wing, and it"ll continue to.

    It's called 'progress', and it's been happening for several centuries now.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:36 No.8863195
    >>8860203
    >Battle Angel Alita

    While I hated the protagonist, the rest of the characters were mostly cool and the setting was awesome. What would you think of a campaign where the players replaced Alita, /tg/? What would be the best system?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:37 No.8863216
    Post Cyberpunk is the new cyberpunk.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:37 No.8863223
    Is ghost in the shell and The Matrix cyberpunk or postcyberpunk?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:40 No.8863271
    >>8863195

    Hutner-killan…
    Motorballan…
    Barjackan…

    I want to play this. I have no idea of system, possibly M&M, or Hero, which I understand can do ANYTHING.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:40 No.8863274
    >>8862760

    sounds like appleseed.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:40 No.8863287
    Cyberpunk died 1 January 1999 hope this helps.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:41 No.8863293
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    Cyberpunk as it was 20 or 25 years ago is dead.
    Cyberpunl was the idea of a group of punks with guns in the future playing Atari games on computers built into their heads.

    We are living in the world they tried to imagine today and in some areas it's more developed than they thought. . . and in others it's less so.

    Nations have not collapsed, thze megacorps have not taken over the world, computers are not yet in everyone's head.

    But we're getting closer, and if you want to you can just move your settign anothe 30 years into the futere. Have a look at Shadowrun'S latest edition for some ideas in that direction.
    Also, fantasy is on the upswing becasue of the awesome LotR movies, and several other good fantasy movies that were released over the last decade.

    SciFi had SW Ep. I-III. . . and that was a very mixed bag. Star Trek has been essentially dormant, save for the Enterprise series (which also was rather mediocre)
    A bunch of other one-off movies were succesful, but none had the power to really re-start interest in the genre. And while most of these were near-future, neither of them dared to project the dystopian cyberpunk image like Blade Runner did.

    tl;dr: Cyberpunk is dead, but can adapt, and so can SciFi.
    Fantasy is 'cool' today because Frodo appealed to emo kids

    Also, I'm babbling and need sleep. Pic distantly related
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:42 No.8863316
    >>8863223
    GITS - postcyberpunk
    Matrix - shit tier
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:45 No.8863365
    >>8863271
    ROCKET PROPELLED WARHAMMERS

    One thing I like about the scrapyard is the total forbidding of firearms. So it's all futuristic and shit, but people are only fighting with futuristic melee weapons. Unless, of course, they acquire or make a gun illegally.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:45 No.8863376
    Deus Ex 3 will save it
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:46 No.8863395
    >>8863316
    Matrix was cool, but in it's own way that helped kill the genre.

    Especially part 2 and 3 were . . .bad.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:47 No.8863424
    >>8863376
    Just like Homeworld 3

    ;_;
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:48 No.8863434
    >>8863274
    >Sounds like SHIROW GET OFF YOUR ASS AND MAKE SOMETHING
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:50 No.8863472
    Cyberpunk doesn't work anymore because of the internet. The internet would need to be destroyed (gov't's doing its best) for cyberpunk worlds to exist.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:50 No.8863487
    >>8863434

    Seriously. People are gonna forget who the hell he is if he doesn't drop his fetish paintings and get to work on something important.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:51 No.8863490
    >>8863376

    Even if it is actually good by "normal" people's standards, /tg/'s front page will be filled with threads about how much it sucks for several weeks after it comes out.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:51 No.8863508
    >>8863472
    Not really. Shadowrun had the matrix, whihc was in many ways like teh internet is today, except it was waaay more interactive.

    So all you have to do is integrate it into your setting.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:52 No.8863529
    Cyberpunk, in reality, is just nostalgia for a simpler age wrapped up in laser rifles and mega corporations. Steampunk has essentially replaced it and is much more honest and obvious about it's nostalgia basis.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:53 No.8863536
    BLAME!

    I love that series so fucking much. It's like post postcyberpunk.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:57 No.8863613
    >>8863365

    Or shoot ball-bearings.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:57 No.8863627
         File1269907076.jpg-(628 KB, 2050x1000, 42704273812d026b15285a11a4995b(...).jpg)
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    >>8863536

    "At one point, The Megastructure had expanded to encompass the earth's moon."
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)19:58 No.8863636
    >>8863365

    Pneumatic sniper rifles.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:01 No.8863691
         File1269907281.jpg-(367 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.11.jpg)
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    >>8863627
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:02 No.8863710
         File1269907355.jpg-(1.16 MB, 1118x1600, BLAMEG_06.jpg)
    1.16 MB
    >>8863691
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:04 No.8863734
    >>8863691
    >>8863710

    ha ha ha oh wow is this the author's work?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:05 No.8863754
         File1269907515.jpg-(346 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.01.jpg)
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    >>8863734
    Yeah. Blame Academy. One of those "Omake" parodies they sometimes include.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:05 No.8863761
    >>8863627
    At the time Blame! takes place, the megastructure is at least out to Jupiter, as Killy passes through a space roughly the same diameter, implying that Jupiter has been consumed for raw materials
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:05 No.8863767
    >>8863627
    >>8863691
    >>8863710
    >>8863754
    fucking stupid.jpg
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:06 No.8863775
         File1269907580.jpg-(323 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.02.jpg)
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    >>8863754
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:06 No.8863778
    Deus ex 1 was PCs
    Deus ex 2 was Xboxes
    Deus ex 3 will be Xbox 360s.

    Nope. Game's gonna be shit.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:06 No.8863783
         File1269907610.jpg-(378 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.03.jpg)
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    >> CaptainChaos !WoEb/JhE.6 03/29/10(Mon)20:07 No.8863790
         File1269907634.jpg-(59 KB, 1000x655, fe438f59-689a-40ef-83c8-03e7ff(...).jpg)
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    how can cyberpunk die if we're living the dream right now?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:08 No.8863811
         File1269907710.jpg-(362 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.04.jpg)
    362 KB
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:09 No.8863823
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:10 No.8863841
         File1269907806.jpg-(291 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.06.jpg)
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:10 No.8863842
    >>8863767

    HAHAHA FAGGOT.jpg

    This shit's hilarious.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:10 No.8863855
         File1269907850.jpg-(369 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.07.jpg)
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    >> hamster boy 03/29/10(Mon)20:12 No.8863872
    >>8863790
    that shit is beautiful.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:12 No.8863873
         File1269907920.jpg-(422 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.08.jpg)
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:12 No.8863876
    I'm confused, how do you guys measure how "alive" a setting is?

    I'm 32 and I basically first learned of the term "Cyberpunk" after playing Deus Ex, and I can bet I've heard nerds drop that word more in the past few years than I ever heard my nerd friends prior

    Also someone said the Japanese housing bubble killed it. Explain?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:12 No.8863891
         File1269907972.jpg-(330 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.09.jpg)
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:14 No.8863913
         File1269908055.jpg-(374 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.10.jpg)
    374 KB
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:14 No.8863920
         File1269908071.jpg-(165 KB, 540x540, graham_chapman_colonel.jpg)
    165 KB
    >>8863754
    >>8863775
    >>8863783
    >>8863811
    >>8863823
    >>8863841
    >>8863855
    I am detecting fair amounts of silly in these images.

    Nothing wrong with that, of course.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:15 No.8863934
         File1269908120.jpg-(386 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.12.jpg)
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:16 No.8863950
         File1269908165.jpg-(341 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.13.jpg)
    341 KB
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:16 No.8863959
         File1269908206.jpg-(285 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.14.jpg)
    285 KB
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:17 No.8863971
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    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:18 No.8863991
         File1269908312.jpg-(344 KB, 822x1200, Blame.Academy.16.jpg)
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    The end, of chapter 1.

    or "What would Blame! be like if it was a slice of life school comedy instead of a grimdark post-cyberpunk"
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:18 No.8863993
    >>8863971

    hurr lol
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:24 No.8864085
    Here's a stupid idea I had a while ago, to introduce the same de-humanizing shitty dystopianism to Fantasy: Necropunk.

    everything works off of the 3.x version of necromancy magic. Grafted Zombie Limbs, Ghous are like Androids, and Liches are full cyborg conversions.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:27 No.8864127
         File1269908829.jpg-(270 KB, 955x658, Corp AR 04.jpg)
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    >>8860293

    I prefer the "Stormtrooper" loadout. Medium class. AR for your weapon. Medplant, infrared vision, and increased power for implants (cortex bomb optional).

    Works best with fellow Stormtroopers (As you become a true self-supporting corporate kill squad) but works as a general "helpful guy who's still combat capable."

    People *never* seem to expect cooked 'nades to tumble around the corner, too.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:41 No.8864347
    >>8863876
    A big part of cyberpunk was portraying Japan Japan and/or its (mega-)corporations as dominating the world, based on '80's paranoia that they were watching this happen IRL.
    When the ass fell out of Japan's economy, everybody realised those fears were baseless and Japan/its corps didn't actually have the money to buy the whole world, and one of the main planks was yanked out of cyberpunk's 'platform'.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:43 No.8864398
    Goddamn fucking Ghost in teh shell and shadowrun
    ruined the entire cyberpunk genre
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:47 No.8864466
    >>8864347
    Why not replace china with japan?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:49 No.8864506
    >>8864466
    Not high-tech enough.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:52 No.8864567
    >>8864466
    Don't you mean replace Japan with China?

    Anyways, What killed cyberpunk? Transhumanism.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:53 No.8864576
    The real problem with cyberpunk is that it envisioned a future underpinned by consumerism. We no longer believe that to be the case. The future seems to be a bleak one of mass unemployment, collapse and economic failure, with the internet as a force for social freedom rather than exploitation.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:54 No.8864595
    Shadowrun isn't technically cyberpunk, because it doesn't keep that level of old tech.

    Cyberpunk is basically the dystopic sci fi from the 70s 80s, when we thought people would be spinal jacked to computers, and whatnot.

    Shadowrun is the modern version of this. It's an evolution of the cuberpunk genre. The deckers and spinal cords are (mostly) replaced with Augmented Reality and Wireless connections to EVERYTHING.

    It's just realistic that Cyberpunk changes with how the future will most probably look like.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)20:57 No.8864653
    >>8863376
    TROLL DETECTED
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:05 No.8864816
    >>8862204
    >highschool girls
    CP in your country, not in mine.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:06 No.8864836
    Biopunk. Someone get that started. That is what's next.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:07 No.8864847
    >>8862777
    >implying moving away from a society for an individual and for a collective or any political agenda could be called something as abstract or universal as progress
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:08 No.8864871
    >>8864836

    Instead of looking like half-terminator freaks, people start adding hideous limbs and mutations to themselves, reminiscent of Resident Evil tyrants, to better accomplish things?

    Sounds cool. Criminals with reverse joint legs, nightvision and lock-picking fingerbones. Cops with enhanced senses to track them, and dermal plates stronger than kevlar.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:10 No.8864925
    >>8864595
    I can't agree with this statement at all. Shadowrun is still cyberpunk, it's just an evolution of the genre. Otherwise it would be like saying that Stargate isn't sci-fi because it doesn't have tacky looking rocket ships (like Buck Rogers).
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:24 No.8865195
         File1269912257.jpg-(33 KB, 184x216, rei face 3.jpg)
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    >>8863991
    > "What would Blame! be like if it was a slice of life school comedy instead of a grimdark post-cyberpunk"

    Wow, what an original concept
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:39 No.8865512
    >>8864871
    >reverse joint legs

    naw man, he has camo-implants and rapid face-type manipulators.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:45 No.8865648
    >>8863395
    >>8863395
    NO, THE FIRST ONE WAS BAD, AND YOU SHOULD FEEL BAD

    THE SECOND AND THIRD WERE WORSE

    YOU DON'T GET MORE ENERGY OR RESOURCES FROM A HUMAN BODY THAN YOU PUT INTO THEM

    YOUR "FORM OF FUSION" LOLPLOT IS FUCKING BULLSHIT AND DOESN'T CHANGE THE LAWS OF THERMODYNAMICS
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:45 No.8865649
    >>8863395
    >>8863395
    NO, THE FIRST ONE WAS BAD, AND YOU SHOULD FEEL BAD

    THE SECOND AND THIRD WERE WORSE

    YOU DON'T GET MORE ENERGY OR RESOURCES FROM A HUMAN BODY THAN YOU PUT INTO THEM

    YOUR "FORM OF FUSION" LOLPLOT IS FUCKING BULLSHIT AND DOESN'T CHANGE THE LAWS OF THERMODYNAMICS
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:47 No.8865690
    >>8865649
    umad?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:53 No.8865834
    >>8859387
    >>8860293
    >>8864127
    MOAR LIKE THIS!!!

    I'm running a futuristic campaign using DnD rules and what I pictured in my head bares an uncanny resemblance to this.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:55 No.8865882
    >>8865834

    http://www.dystopia-game.com/

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_Shock
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)21:57 No.8865926
    Are we discussing the aesthetic, the genre, or the subculture?

    Cyberpunk as an aesthetic has gone out of style because that's what aesthetics do after 20 or 30 years.

    Cyberpunk the genre was based on its specific then-current technology, and has been supplanted by [everything]punk, with "Biopunk" being its most direct evolution.

    If we're discussing the subculture, it's not a subculture anymore, it's the fucking CULTURE now.
    >> teka 03/29/10(Mon)22:00 No.8865987
    >>8865648
    >>8865649
    iirc loudbuy, original/early scripts called for the humans to be plugged in for a different reason. short version, they used the massive network of human brains as a way to make the machine system more powerful.

    like FOLDING@Home, only with brains instead of home computers, and robot inteligences instead of protein folding.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:09 No.8866152
    >>8863195 I hate Alita

    A bit late to the party here, but...

    FUCK. YOU.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:14 No.8866262
         File1269915243.png-(142 KB, 299x410, emp face.png)
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    >>8866152

    Aww did somebody insult your waifu (or is it husbandu? I don't really know)?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:20 No.8866370
    Cyberpunk was based on fear of new technology and the powers that could exploit it.

    Their fears never realized in the first world, and elsewhere, well... let's just say there isn't much of a market for speculative fiction that's indistinguishable from everyday life.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:21 No.8866384
    >>8865987

    I still believe this is the real reason and Morpheus was wrong.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:21 No.8866397
         File1269915718.jpg-(134 KB, 1024x1418, 025.jpg)
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    >>8866262

    Did you pick another octo-lips for your reaction image on purpose?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:23 No.8866434
    >>8866384

    Quite possible. The only reason for the change was that some dumbfuck executive thought it would be too technical for the average viewer.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:25 No.8866474
    >>8866370

    The real question is why the fuck post-apocalypse has grown after the Cold War rather than shrinking.

    Since, you know, that would seem to be an even more obvious case of our fears being proven wrong.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:31 No.8866609
    >>8866474

    You forget one of the important side effects of the end of the Cold War. An assload of nukes are now spread across half the world in the hands of rogue states and splinter factions, instead of all being located in one superpower that could be kept from using them.

    Add the looming oil crisis which is now looming even closer, and the addition of environmental disasters, the post-apocalyptic genre has nowhere to go but up.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:40 No.8866777
    >>8866609

    And yet, life goes on as it always has.

    On a side note, I'm surprised that I haven't seen more historical fiction set during the fall of Rome.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:44 No.8866872
    >>8866777

    If you want to put it that way, 'life goes on' is basically the theme of every post-apocalyptic story in existence. That is why it is POST-apocalypse, because there are still people around to have a story to tell.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:47 No.8866908
    >>8865649
    If they could use your anger, they wouldn't need the fucking Matrix.

    That aside. . .sure, it's fucking stupid. The hall fight was still close to what a fully cybered streetsam does to a bunch of rent-a-cops. And that's cool.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:52 No.8867014
    >>8866872

    Uhm, no, my point was that we're no closer to an apocalypse or societal collapse than we were 10 years ago.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:54 No.8867041
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    >>8866777
    Allow me to introduce you to Steven Saylor's Roma Sub Rosa series.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:55 No.8867073
    >>8867041

    Oh? Looks interesting, thank you.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)22:58 No.8867141
    >>8867073
    It's the fall of the Republic rather than the fall of the Empire, but you weren't very specific.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:00 No.8867175
         File1269918016.jpg-(195 KB, 800x979, 1253703049114.jpg)
    195 KB
    >>8865648

    >YOU DON'T GET MORE ENERGY OR RESOURCES FROM A HUMAN BODY THAN YOU PUT INTO THEM

    >YOUR "FORM OF FUSION" LOLPLOT IS FUCKING BULLSHIT AND DOESN'T CHANGE THE LAWS OF THERMODYNAMICS

    While your understanding of thermodynamics is accurate, your application is highly flawed. Yes, you can not gain more energy from a system than you put in. Yet this does not stop us from have power plants all across the globe, generating power 24/7. How is this possible, despite the laws of physics? Because no power plant CREATES energy, they CONVERT energy from one form to another. Most operate by converting Potential energy in fuel to Thermal, then Thermal to Kinetic, then Kinetic to Electric. At no point is any energy being true created, since this is impossible.

    Where the Matrix and the Machines real, they would operate in a similar fashion, using human bodies to convert the energy in organic fuel, which the machines cannot use, into heat and electric, which they can use quite easily.

    TL, DR: Pic related.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:00 No.8867178
    >>8867141

    I was referring to the fall of the Empire, that period being the closest historical analogue to most post-apocalypse stories. But I'm a fan of historical fiction in general so that's fine too.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:01 No.8867196
    >>8867014

    And my point was that fact has no impact on the post-apocalyptic genre.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:03 No.8867240
    >>8867175
    >implying machines couldn't easily do that with bacteria, or other machines. or by burning it.

    using humans is the most retarded thing they could do.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:04 No.8867253
    >>8867014
    nobody ever sees the fall coming before it happens.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:07 No.8867302
    honestly as a player who's part of a really awesome 2020 campaign currently I'll say.. maybe. we retcon celphones to be negligable in terms of weight. but think of it like this.

    cyberpunk is a fantastical look at the computer revolution as steam-punk is to the industrial revolution. its not about what could be but what could HAVE been
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:08 No.8867312
    >>8867240

    And machines can't be retarded?

    One of the points in the later films was that the machines still had an emotional attachment to humanity, and therefor could not bring themselves to just wipe them out. The Matrix was a 'kill two birds' solution, resolving both the energy problem and the human problem.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:08 No.8867315
    >>8867196

    It seems like it should. Unless the motivation is less a fear that society will end and more a wish that it would.

    Which, on reflection, does seem to be the case in the zombie apocalypse fandom.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:12 No.8867388
    >>8867315
    many wish the world would end.

    many also expect it to end with all the nukes floating around, and many fear it -is- ending what with this global economic downturn.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:14 No.8867440
         File1269918896.jpg-(31 KB, 257x283, Active_Denial_System_Humvee.jpg)
    31 KB
    Active Denial System: Basically shoots out microwave frequency waves that cause skin to "feel" as though it's on fire, placing the targets in crippling pain but leaving no lasting evidence of use.

    >Some have focused on the lower threshold of use which may lead those who use them (especially civilian police) to become "trigger-happy", especially in dealing with peaceful protesters. Others have focused on concerns that weapons whose operative principle is that of inflicting pain (though "non-lethal") might be useful for such purposes as torture, as they leave no evidence of use, but undoubtedly have the capacity to inflict horrific pain on a restrained subject. According to Wired Magazine, the Active Denial System has been rejected for fielding in Iraq due to Pentagon fears that it would be regarded as an "instrument of torture".

    Fun times ahead...
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:17 No.8867482
    >>8867440
    >implying fences of the future aren't replaced with active denial systems

    NOBODY GETS IN

    EVERYBODY BURNS
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:19 No.8867519
         File1269919185.jpg-(33 KB, 576x424, Agony_Booth-2267.jpg)
    33 KB
    >>8867440
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:20 No.8867537
    >>8867388

    Civilization collapsing due to debt (and its partner CHINA OWNS EVERYTHING) are unfounded fears, due to the fact that if people actually tried calling in the national debts of any major power at this point they'd just get the finger for their efforts.
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:21 No.8867565
    >>8867537
    and what would that fingering do?
    >> Anonymous 03/29/10(Mon)23:24 No.8867626
    >>8867565

    Create some major funding issues for the governments doing it.

    The citizens will not be happy and it will not be fun, but we're talking career-ending impact here, not country-ending impact.
    >> SR4rry !p28NxRuKMo 03/29/10(Mon)23:48 No.8868076
    Aesthetically, somewhat, if you're talking about the 80s aspects in particular. Thematically, hell no, we're fucking living it. We live in a world where bankers make billions on bailouts and the rest of us fight for meager jobs. Dissidents in Iran fight repression by putting cell phone video on the Net, and hacktivists continually battle their way around and through China's Great Firewall. Medical technology advances rapidly, but attempts to make sure average people have access to it are for the large part stifled (we'll see if this watered-down bill is enough). Do you guys not watch the news?

    >>8859598

    I've got a fuckton of family out in Michigan. Modern Flint or parts of Detroit are as feral as anything Gibson ever dreamed up. Hell, last year at the height of the recession Detroit's official unemployment rate was something like 28.9%. That's pretty fucking horrifying for the developed world.

    >>8860136

    Mine's in Minneapolis, but I've been itching to do Saigon, what with the Dega Alliance stuff going on, and the brewing independence movement. It irks me when people run Seattle as a default (although running it because you're really into its particular flavor is entirely fine).

    >>8860333

    You make a damn good point, and it's one that people forget. Cyberpunk settings are dystopic in that they're, like, shitty to live in, but there's usually a message that the lone dissident can make a difference. They're not typically truly hopeless dystopias; then you're just playing Paranoia with cybertoys.

    >>8862777

    This.



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