this post was submitted on 08 Sep 2023
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That's what puts me off of so-called "post cyberpunk." It decides that cyberpunk is over... without even trying to get past the inherent contradictions of capitalism. It's just superficially nicer looking and the ego-insert protagonist gets a holo waifu.
I haven't done any of the cyberpunk stuff yet. I spent like a minute in that city so far. It's not good?
I'm not saying Starfield is post-cyberpunk. I'm saying that post-cyberpunk as a literature genre tends to bleach all the social issues framed in cyberpunk under a firehose of hopium instead of seeing those issues resolved meaningfully.
Starfield just rocketed past those issues and left them still sitting out there.
I always thought of Post Cyberpunknas things like The Diamond Age or Mirrors Edge or Glasshouse, which critique the individualistic response of a Cyberpunk protagonist vs social responses.
I am familiar with Mirror's Edge, and if that's post-cyberpunk, the setting has promise.
Much with cyberpunk libs took all the shiny white singularity dyson sphere bullshit and none of the "they made capitalism sentient and it ate the humanity of everyone who took part in it , then itself, then promptly collapsed into a post apocalytic economy made entirely of grifts."