🐱 The Mass Effect TV Show Shouldn't Star Commander Shepard

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
CatParty


After years of wondering when, not if, Mass Effectwould ever make the leap from video games to film or TV, it would seem we’re at last on that precipice: Amazon has eyes on bringing BioWare’s sci-fi shooter/Garrus Vakarian dating simulator to streaming. But the question should be less if the Mass Effect series should come to TV, but how—and the answer is without its “main” character.

Commander Shepard is the star of the first three video games in the Mass Effect saga—in the fourth game, Andromeda, it’s Ryder, a character similarly largely defined by the player. Shepard is beloved, although not perhaps necessarily because they are a great character. Shepard is, in some ways, hard to define as having a personality when you scrape away the thing that makes Mass Effect still so loved, and the thing that makes an attempt to adapt Commander Shepard’s story to another medium such a dangerous prospect: so much of what we see in Shepard as players is what we ourselves put into them. Mass Effect is a game franchise defined by its incorporation of player choice, no matter how clear sometimes thelimitations that influence can be made within its systems. Even if, on a macro scale across the games, players’ choices are relatively binary, or more about filling in the little flourishes here and there rather than the broadest strokes of its overarching tale, Commander Shepard remains a deeply personal character to people who play the Mass Effect games. We do more than just control Shepard from one plot point to the next, we guide what they say and what they believe in, we forge their friendships and their loves, we craft them as a person. Are they man or woman, paragon or renegade, are they queer, are they war survivors or orphaned soldiers, tech experts or psychic space-wizards? All the little choices people pour into that character make Shepard less of their own person, for better or worse, and instead our window into their place in Mass Effect’s universe.

Shepard’s nature as that kind of powerful cipher makes the possibility of a Mass Effect show simply trying to adapt them and the events of the original trilogy of games something of a nightmare. It’s not that it can’t be done—the games have long prided themselves on their cinematic framing and values, making it about as easy an adaptation as it could possibly be if literally translated. But bringing in a Shepard, whoever plays them, and trying to set a defined frame around the nebulous idea of who Commander Shepard is, feels like asking for trouble: and asking for it from a fanbase that has, to put it diplomatically, very much proven how vocal they can be about things they don’t like about the ways the series handled their choices. Even what might seem like the simple choice of whether or not adapting Shepard as John or Jane would be a decision that upends Mass Effect’s fanbase, and that’s before you even get to the granularity of weaving about their personality, their romances, or the way they conduct themselves across their story. So much of ourselves is wrapped up in our interpretation of Commander Shepard as Mass Effect players that the thought of seeing some version that is not just our own would be jarring.

So why even do it? It’s not just that adapting Shepard is a guaranteed way to disappoint the Mass Effect fan base in one way or another. Mass Effect’s world is home to more than just one story, and Shepard’s story has already been told. It’s a setting ripe for exploration beyond the conflict between the Commander and the Reapers. A Mass Effect show could follow in and around the shadow of Shepard—following characters we know before or after they crossed paths with Shepard, familiar favorites like Kaidan, Liara, Garrus, Thane, or Tali (or perhaps an anthology that could encapsulate the lives of its beloved expanded cast). It could show us the events that brought us to Mass Effect’s start point, like the Rachni War and the Krogan rebellions that came after, the Quarian’s creation of the Geth, or even the First Contact War between the Turians and Humanity. There are tales in between the games, especially the period of time in Mass Effect 2's opening where Shepard is, well, quite dead (they get better). With the addition of Andromeda to the canon, Mass Effect’s universe and potentiality exploded onto the scope of whole galaxies—and a show could explore what Andromeda set up, seemingly left behind after that game’s lukewarm reception, while we wait for whatever comes next in the franchise.

We know what Shepard’s story is already, and most importantly to Mass Effect players, we know what that story is to our own experience of the shape of it. If we’re going to take the next Mass Relay to TV stardom, Mass Effect should stand ready to do so beyond the shadow of its first hero—and get ready to lay the groundwork and introduce us to new ones beyond the Commander’s reach.
 
OP isn't wrong. Mass Effect the Game should remain a game. Video game adaptions can never truly recapture the experience, no matter how hard they try.

Bioware had a golden opportunity to explore the rest of the Milky Way with endless games, media, what not set in their setting. But like retards they crashed the franchise with no survivors with the combined blow of the exceptional ending of ME3 (well, ME3 in general, imo) and Andromeda.

The best they can do is to reuse the setting to tell its own story. So yes, OP isn't a faggot for once.
 
And here I thought they’d be bitching about Shepherd being an ebil hwyte male, despite the fact you can choose his gender/skin color.

Sometimes it’s nice to be surprised
 
Is it just a thing to make a TV series out of games that are fading from public memory in one last gasp to squeeze some brand recognition from the product?
 
Is it just a thing to make a TV series out of games that are fading from public memory in one last gasp to squeeze some brand recognition from the product?
I wouldn’t say Mass Effect is fading out of public memory tbf. It got a remaster only several months ago to great acclaim.

It was and still is one of the most successful and beloved space opera stories in the last twenty years. Regardless of the controversy of the ending.
 
I wouldn’t say Mass Effect is fading out of public memory tbf. It got a remaster only several months ago to great acclaim.

It was and still is one of the most successful and beloved space opera stories in the last twenty years. Regardless of the controversy of the ending.
I'm thinking it's like Castlevania though, it hasn't had an actual new entry in a long time and the most recent entry was a flop... and it's riding on name recognition. Andromeda is widely viewed as a flop, and a remaster isn't exactly breaking new ground.
 
Its being made by Amazon, so its fairly obvious that it will be femshep with Liara as love interest. People might grumble about femshep, but most people agree that she was better, but Liara is basicaly the cannon LI, so they will be able to have a lesbian main charactor without being accused of pandering, which is dream come true for this type of project.

The real question is if they will continue holywoods red-head removal program, and make femshep black.
 
The story of the main trilogy is nowhere near good enough to support a show on its own. Maybe the first game, but 2 and 3 rely heavily on player choice, combat, and the eternal question of Tali vs Liara to let you overlook all the times the plot flat-out stops making sense, or the way Cerberus comes to absolutely dominate the entire story for no apparent reason. I love the setting, and you could make a good sci-fi series out of it, but it should be set way into the future, where Shepard is a long-dead legend or something.

Its being made by Amazon, so its fairly obvious that it will be femshep with Liara as love interest. People might grumble about femshep, but most people agree that she was better, but Liara is basicaly the cannon LI, so they will be able to have a lesbian main charactor without being accused of pandering, which is dream come true for this type of project.

The real question is if they will continue holywoods red-head removal program, and make femshep black.
Also, Liara (and the Asari in general) are pansexual and don't technically identify with a gender. It's absolutely tailor-made for the current generation of critics. I bet femshep will still be white, but Liara will be black or asian (in blueface).
 
Dollars to donuts, they want an Asari who just fucks and sucks her way across the galaxy.
 
Yvonne Strahovski was just in that shitty Amazon Prime series, so I assumed this was going to be a Miranda series that goes out of its way to not show her ass and have her have sex with countless black men while transsexuals prance around and punch nazis.
 
Back
Top Bottom