Eurobeatjester wrote:Pretty clear to me what their relationship was, and what they knew it to be. In the absence of things being clearly defined, especially with something as important as a relationship (as it's the entire point of the game) then most people assume that "normal" feelings and boundaries apply. This is why it's important to establish these early on.
The idea that monogamy is "normal" is presumptuous. Anthropologically there's no evidence that monogamy is the "default," and the concept of "infidelity" is a fairly recent (and very Western) invention. I'm not saying that Hisao, Misha, Shizune, et al are influenced consciously by that context, but as you say, the boundaries were nebulously defined.
Eurobeatjester wrote:Katawa Shoujo is different than a lot of other VNs that English readers may be familiar with
Not to be rude, but why do you feel the need to explain this?
Eurobeatjester wrote:at the moment polyamory is not the openly accepted norm, especially in Japan.
Polyamory is not defined as "the absence of exclusivity." You know as well as I do that the beginning of relationships are frequently "informal," even for self-identified monogamous people. Just because Shizune and Hisao began a relationship doesn't mean that either of them agreed not to be interested in other people.
Eurobeatjester wrote:So in that sense, the context of the game makes it really clear that their relationship is not a polyamorous one, and that it is cheating.
I only brought up my being polyamorous because people here were defaulting to the presumption that relationships are inherently exclusive and need to proactively be "adjusted" in order to become otherwise. This isn't true for poly people OR monogamous people. Failing to establish boundaries with a partner is a sign of immaturity, plain and simple, and any hurt that might be caused as a result of that failure is the fault of both parties.
The
context of the VN is that Hisao and Shizune are both too immature/too chickenshit/whatever to
have that necessary discussion, and as a consequence, absent other guidance, Hisao and Misha
feel like what they did was disloyal. It's not
objectively cheating, because cheating requires
rules. Hell, that
entire route has an extremely strong emphasis on games and rules. Boundaries and agreements are
inherently thematic to that story, yet of all the relationships in the VN (and we'll include
Summer's Clover in that just for funsies), the one between Hisao and Shizune is the most poorly-defined by a country mile.
I'm not saying Hisao having sex with Misha wasn't
unbelievably stupid. It was stupid for a whole
lot of reasons. But I'd argue that neither of them are really in their right mind when that decision is made, and then their unwillingness to deal with their mistake in a mature way is what creates the emotional distance between them and Shizune and ultimately dissolves their friendship. The "cheating" isn't the decision that gets the bad ending. It's Hisao's inability to
understand his guilt and his feelings that causes the dissolution of the relationship. People like to say "cheating on Misha causes the bad ending," because that's punchy and that's how you'd describe it in
video game terms, but the reality is clearly more complicated than that.