Feeling In The Dark: The Power of Dark Souls
I’ll be playing Dark Souls II on my back. When I finally have the time to play it this April, I’ll be recovering from my long-awaited genital reassignment surgery (GRS), the personal capstone of my gender transition. Gory details aside, GRS is essentially a game of genital musical chairs; vaginas do not grow on trees and so the surgeon can only use my own tissue to construct one. The most sensitive skin I have will become a new clitoris. The rest will be used to form vaginal walls. Everything moves. Everything changes.
One might think that a Souls game would be too grueling for my convalescence but I can’t think of a more appropriate accompaniment to my recovery. Dark Souls has resonated with me deeply as I’ve prepared to inhabit a newly reorganized body. The Souls games have changed my approach to other games, certainly, but they have also helped me rethink my approach to some of my deepest fears and anxieties. More than any other game, Dark Souls understands the beauty and precarity of being a changing creature in a hostile world.
I first met Dark Souls in a period of complacency. I felt like I was doing homework when I played most big budget videogames. Shooter? Pull on the left trigger, hammer on the right. Platformer? Trial, error, repetition. Action horror? Open everything, hoard ammo and resources. Everything was rote. Everything was expected. I knew all the steps to all the dances. Games were just hoops to jump through, not worlds to explore.
My relationship to my own body, too, was stagnating. My gender dysphoria was like a continuous low-frequency hum that followed me wherever I went; I had learned to tune it out when I should have been figuring out how to make it stop. Deep down, I knew I needed GRS but the thought of actually undergoing the surgery terrified me. Like a videogame, sex had become easy and predictable. How scary would it be if I suddenly didn’t know the steps to that particularly significant dance?
But Dark Souls could not abide my complacency. In the era of Call of Duty arrows and Dead Space lines, Dark Souls refuses to highlight the way forward; instead it asks you to find your own path through a mysterious and troubled world. The game teases you with the familiarity of its mechanics—health bars, heavy attacks, equipment drops—but forces you to engage with them in an unforgiving setting.