Wall of text time.
Oddball wrote:Remember, A22 wrote the least popular character and route in the game, for what it's worth.
That is worth nothing. Meaning is subjective, as is enjoyment. Also, how popular his writing was has no bearing on whether or not his opinions have value.
Oddball wrote:Still, even then, he wrote it in reference to writing the route.
True, but I think it can apply to the process of reading KS as well.
Oddball wrote:When you finish the game and get the good ending it should be because you made all the right choices.
What is a "good" ending, and what are the "right" choices? Some happy endings are, IMO, less artistically-satisfying than the "bad" ones - for instance, I think Lilly and Rin's Neutral endings make for a more compelling story overall than their good ones. I mean, don't get me wrong: my heart isn't so iron that I wasn't touched when Hisao ran after Lilly - I'm a sucker for melodrama - but in the end, the inevitability of loss in her neutral ending, that his "perfect girlfriend" cannot hope to last, that his plans for the future are empty, makes for what I personally think is a more satisfying story. You appear to be assuming that I need to work toward a "win" state where Hisao is in a relationship with the girl, but you cannot win a story. You can only experience it. The closest thing KS has to a win state is getting a 100% gallery.
I think that's where you and I differ in how we see KS. It's OK to see it as a game - if that's what makes it most meaningful for you, or anyone else, that's perfectly fine. I just disagree that it's necessarily the best way - the best way depends on the person.
Oddball wrote:Instead of experiencing the events and emotions alongside Hisao, you're just reading them. There's no connection there.
This I disagree with entirely. What you're saying implies that when I read a "true" novel (or, for that matter, watch a movie or play a linear video game), I can't experience the events and emotions alongside its character because of the fact that a novel offers me no choices in the first place and I'm just "reading" it. Which is obviously false.
Connection is a matter of emotional investment. For some, this investment may come through participating in choice along with the character. There's nothing wrong with this. It's simply not how I chose to experience KS. I'm amused that you (appear to be) claiming my experience was worsened as a result, that I ended up not connecting with the characters (and I assure you that is false), when the fact of the matter is that there is no objectively "wrong" way to experience
any work, let alone KS.
Also, I didn't play KS for the accomplishment of mastery, any more than I read a book just for the sake of finishing it. I played it to experience the stories. The story is central. It's why you can come back to the game even if you know what does what and still enjoy yourself. Yes, I knew the broad outlines of the story - but did I know what would happen? The specifics? Look at the flowchart - it's as spoiler-free as a walkthrough gets. I knew the broad outlines, but not the details, and it's the details where the beauty lies. Also, knowing the broad outlines gave me a sort of fatalistic view on the game, which was interesting in and of itself.
Also, let me bust out my student cred here and note that a recent psychological study (Kaufman, Geoff F., and Lisa K. Libby. “Changing Beliefs and Behavior Through Experience-Taking”. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2012, Vol. 103, No. 1, pp. 1-19.) noted that when we read a novel, we often in some sense assume the identity of the focal character of that narrative, simulating, to a greater or lesser extent, the "thoughts, emotions, behaviours, goals, and traits" of the character as if they were our own. And I personally feel that this is plausible in and of itself. Who among us hasn't read a novel which moved us, a story so good we felt like we were
there? I'm with the postmodernists on this one: in the act of reading, we become that which we read.
Given this, then in reading the story, to the extent I enjoy it enough to invest myself, there is a connection. If in reading we become the read, in reading, I become Hisao, if only for a time. And isn't that "connection", in the end? Isn't that emotional investment?
tl;dr There is no "right" or "best" way to experience
Katawa Shoujo.