'When I'm describing a new character to our lead character concept artist, constantly she will ask: ‘What if it was a girl?’' recalls creative director Neil Druckmann. 'And I'm like: 'Let me think, does that affect or change anything? No? Let's do it''

Naughty Dog: We set out to introduce strong female characters to Uncharted 4

Neil Druckmann, the creative director for Uncharted 4, has revealed how Naughty Dog ensured strong women were represented correctly in the game.

“When I’m introducing and describing a new character to our lead character concept artist, constantly she will ask: ‘What if it was a girl?’ And I’m like: ‘Oh, I didn’t think about that. Let me think, does that affect or change anything? No? Cool, that’s different. Yeah, let’s do it’,” Druckmann told Glixel.

“Initially, in the epilogue, it was Nate’s son. Something similar happened with the mansion they go into. That was an old English guy’s house. She asked: ‘Well, what if it was a woman?”

Druckmann went on to defend the game from accusations that Nate’s cut-screen character and narrative path are at odds with the fact that he is in fact a mass murderer, slaughtering thousands throughout the campaign. This disconnect between story and action in games is called ‘Ludonarrative Dissonance’ – which is also the name given to the in-game achievement unlocked by killing 1,000 people.

“I told all the people on the team: ‘This is my proudest moment, the fact that I came up with this trophy on this project,’” he enthused. “Why is it that Uncharted triggers this argument, when Indiana Jones doesn’t? Is it the number? It can’t be just the number, because Indiana Jones kills more people than a normal person does. A normal person kills zero people. And Indiana Jones kills a dozen, at least, over the course of several movies.

"It’s a stylised reality where the conflicts are lighter, where death doesn’t have the same weight. We’re not trying to make a statement about Third World mercenaries, or the toll of having killed hundreds of people in your life.”

Read the full story on Develop sister site MCV

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