5 Great Romances in Recent Games
Let’s be honest: If you want to experience top-notch romantic storytelling, videogames may not be the best place to look. Historically they’re quite good at coupling romantic relationships with death and miscellaneous tragedy for the sake of moving a story forward. Healthy relationships featured prominently that don’t exist just to be manipulated for motivation or character development are still few and far between.
But thankfully it appears that games are getting a lot better at addressing this age old issue. Here are a few recent videogame romances that prove it.
1. Cassandra Pentaghast and the Inquisitor, Dragon Age: Inquisition
The reason Cassandra’s romance with the player character in Dragon Age: Inquisition is so strong is largely because of Cassandra herself. It would have been very easy for her to be altogether dismissive of tenderness and romance, because dozens of characters like her across many different types of media are. She’s a bold, strong, no-nonsense person… who also happens to have a serious penchant for pulp novels and the wine-and-poetry approach to seduction.
If Cassandra were one of only a few female characters in Dragon Age: Inquisition, maybe the way her romance (and her personality in general) is handled would be a problem. But as one among many women prominently featured in the game’s story, the burden of representation is well spread out. There’s room for her to have a soft spot for sappy stuff without that implying that all women have a soft spot for sappy stuff, and that matters.
2. The Princess and her Fiancé, Chariot
A princess is tasked with hauling her father’s sarcophagus (and his rather picky spirit) to a suitable resting place. If you only play Chariot’s single-player mode, that’s all you’ll really see. Pick up your controller with a friend doing the same nearby and a slightly different story emerges, with the princess accompanied by her husband-to-be. He’s there to help and support her on her dangerous journey, and certain puzzles and parts of the map will only be accessible when the pair are cooperating. It’s not the most involved romantic narrative ever, but it’s still pretty darn heartwarming.
3. Sam and Lonnie, Gone Home