• underreacting@literature.cafe
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    6 days ago

    It was the reason I started playing it.

    It’s one of the first things I bring up when recommending it to other women who aren’t playing online multiplayer games usually.

    Most women I know who play it don’t play any other multiplayer games online, at least none with VC.

    Games with VC usually do have the option to turn it off, but doing so you’ll have less information than players who use it. You’ll be a detriment to your team if they would otherwise have had efficient comms. You are turning off a feature, where the game is built on the expectations that it is turned on. I’d rather not have that option at all and instead have everyone be on the same page, with no expectations of comms with strangers. One less thing to consider, say no to, to disappoint others with.

    Nowadays I’d probably use VC if they had it, but I never would have started playing if they did, so I’m glad there are still games where it’s not even an option.

    So I’d say for a fair percentage that absolutely is the reason. That, and the horror icons.

    • warm@kbin.earth
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      6 days ago

      I see that and it certainly takes that initial worry out, but DBD isn’t that competitive, so there would be no pressure to talk really even if it did exist (different for each person I guess, how they feel about that). It’s a more chill game and the community in my experience is a lot more open-minded than your hyper-competitive games like CS where you find all the degenerates, I think that’s why its mostly more welcoming.

      Text-chat has been way more toxic in my experience anyway. Usually they stop talking on the mic and start typing.