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Nothing...
it s the opposite of all that man should strive for. there is nothing good about regression, man should work towards perfection always.
post apocalyptic era for sure, well i always find beauty in destruction. nothing is more beautiful than a decaying megacity. :)
It all depends on your dystopia, really.
If it's a 1984/Hunger Games/Logan's Run world, where death is almost assured to happen early and at a young age, then no. Sign me on for one closer to a utopia (This Perfect Day, Brave New World).
In the way of the world, though, it'll be more realistic to assume that dystopia would look like a hybrid of the fashionpunk (Grey and Yarn) and cyberpunk (Gibson's "Sprawl" novels, Neuromancer, Count Zero, and Mona Lisa Overdrive), where PR and information are more important than truth, and life at the lowest levels is borderline anarchy.
Post-apocalypse... give me the world of The Stand, post-Flagg. Once we get to branch away from Boulder, it would be tolerable. I can load my own ammo and hunt, so food wouldn't be a problem, and given the lack of people who think upstate NY is an attractive place in the winter, I can gobble up all of the canned stuff with no competion.
Keep in mind, though, that most dystopian fiction follows some form of apocalypse, so separating the two is tricky.
Also, don't get caught in the trap that if you were in a dystopic world, you would be the force to change it. That happens exactly twice in the books I've read (This Perfect Day and The Hunger Games trilogy).
English is not my first language so I am not familiar to all these wannabe tough ass expressions. But since you are funny, I am going to write it on my calendar to wake up next month to laugh at your joke.. or whatever you wanted that to be ;)) Lol, I just read that uppity means also arrogance. You are the second person to call me an arrogant in my whole life, seriously. Is not even one of the last things that suits me. I am not arrogant at all, actually I am an unserious person who laughs at anything even if is something immoral. Unlike others here, who takes these kind of questions too seriously and they have blashful reactions.:lol: Aren't you uppity for a wee lil' noob?
MissLibrarian
Neither. Of course if you're talking about video games, or fiction, i find dystopian futures more interesting.Â
I'll stay with my games if I want to "live" in post-apocalyptic/dystopian eras. I'm not one of the people that pretends they'd love to actually live through a zombie apocalypse and all the sorts.DudersaperSeconded. I like post-apocalyptic games like The Last of Us, RAGE, and Fallout: New Vegas, but living through any of those in real life would be hell. Nothing good to eat, no games or Internet, everyone and everything trying to kill you, radiation, and a scarcity of attractive women. I'll pass.
[QUOTE="Dudersaper"]I'll stay with my games if I want to "live" in post-apocalyptic/dystopian eras. I'm not one of the people that pretends they'd love to actually live through a zombie apocalypse and all the sorts.gamerguru100Seconded. I like post-apocalyptic games like The Last of Us, RAGE, and Fallout: New Vegas, but living through any of those in real life would be hell. Nothing good to eat, no games or Internet, everyone and everything trying to kill you, radiation, and a scarcity of attractive women. I'll pass. Same. The cyberpunk theme has run its course.as most of themes that we've considered to be cyberpunk in past are everyday occurrences.
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