>Thinks that medieval means European and doesn’t realize it encompasses the entire period after late antiquity which included the middle east and africa
How does it feel blowing that hot air you fricking autistic chimp?
You missed the part where I specified medieval fantasy game; I have no problem with American accents in jrpg dubs or sci-fi/fantasy rpgs. Where else was English commonly spoken before the colonial period aside from the British Isles?
You don't pronounce your "r". You're copying an affectation of homosexual noblemen that started ~1700. True English accents have hard "r"s.
What "reality" are you speaking of? You clearly aren't well versed in the subject since if you were you would be aware of how tiring the statement is for linguists and, more specifically, dialectologists. So here let me educate you.
Some pop journalists picked up on an article claiming that, just because American dialects preserved rhoticity while British dialects tended not to, it follows that American English dialects are necessarily "closer" to Elizabethan (and earlier) English.
Without getting into just how imprecise and unscientific "closer" is as a tool of discourse, rhoticity is just one aspect of phonology. Both En-US and En-GB dialects have diverged significantly enough from Elizabethan dialects (yes there was more than one and there were not canonical/standardised dialects in the same way there are now!) to the point that an English man from the year 1600 or earlier would be difficult to comprehend for speakers of either dialect.
The reason I called it a reddit meme is because the idea is almost exclusively perpetuated by the "ackshually"-spouting pseuds that call reddit home.
You just jumped in with this before anyone even said that. You could have at least waited for some to "ackshually" before posting your meme arrow.
The only real argument is that people have been conditioned to associate British accents with "ye olde mediaeval times" so that it can be jarring to hear an American accent in that sort of setting. It's also fitting if a current regional accent of Britain is used for characters from that region.
Medieval accents aren't closer to modern American accents but they sure as frick aren't similar to modern bongs. I've heard Shakespeare actors actually trying their best to faithfully replicate the prose in period English and it doesn't sound like anything familiar to me. It's more comprehensible than a drunken Scot with a head injury but not by a whole lot and certainly doesn't sound like the received pronunciation British actors use.
PS I tried to find the examples youtube but all I can find now are fricking homosexual zoomer cartoons.
Not even american accents, those usually sound fine (better than trying to imitate some european accent and failing), but the californian whine is utter ear poison.
who the frick says this? the American southern accent is just a drawn out English accent.
The overall American accent is just pronouncing words correctly
The "California" accent is the objectively most correct spoken form of English , how words are actually written.
When British people get a higher education they tend to lose their accent.
Actually people in medieval times and early renaissance were in general more hygienic than people in later centuries, well up untill the industrial revolution
whenever I hear a british accent in a fantasy game I immediately uninstall it. Such a garbage sound.
I'm a Brazilian ESL btw. I find British people speaking to be unbearable, regardless of what they're actually saying. Americans are much more bearable to listen to, even when I think what they're saying is stupid.
Brits have a literal wiki page of words they cant pronounce https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:English_dialect-dependent_homophones#Th-fronting
Although I guess thats not a big deal when your teeth look like that
>medieval RPG >political system resembles more a totalitarian monarchy than a feudalistic kingdom >peasants npcs all live in the city/castle and go out only to work the fields >common folk know how to read >religion doesn't play a major role in people's life
Okay, let's be honest, modern British accents may not have been around in mediaeval times, but it just fits the setting. And it's not like these are historical video games, it's all pseudo-mediaeval fantasy settings anyway.
>medieval-style fantasy rpg
>black people
>Thinks that medieval means European and doesn’t realize it encompasses the entire period after late antiquity which included the middle east and africa
How does it feel blowing that hot air you fricking autistic chimp?
>fantasy rpg
>no one talks in made up accents that don't exist
British accents aren't anymore fantastical, you're just a tasteless child
>reddit meme about American accents being closer to pre-colonial England accents than contemporary regional dialects of British English
>fantasy game
>somehow means pre-colonial England and ONLY pre-colonial England
You missed the part where I specified medieval fantasy game; I have no problem with American accents in jrpg dubs or sci-fi/fantasy rpgs. Where else was English commonly spoken before the colonial period aside from the British Isles?
makeup dates back to the dawn of civilization at least
>if i refer to reality as "reddit meme" i can rewrite it
shut the frick up dumbass
What "reality" are you speaking of? You clearly aren't well versed in the subject since if you were you would be aware of how tiring the statement is for linguists and, more specifically, dialectologists. So here let me educate you.
Some pop journalists picked up on an article claiming that, just because American dialects preserved rhoticity while British dialects tended not to, it follows that American English dialects are necessarily "closer" to Elizabethan (and earlier) English.
Without getting into just how imprecise and unscientific "closer" is as a tool of discourse, rhoticity is just one aspect of phonology. Both En-US and En-GB dialects have diverged significantly enough from Elizabethan dialects (yes there was more than one and there were not canonical/standardised dialects in the same way there are now!) to the point that an English man from the year 1600 or earlier would be difficult to comprehend for speakers of either dialect.
The reason I called it a reddit meme is because the idea is almost exclusively perpetuated by the "ackshually"-spouting pseuds that call reddit home.
You just jumped in with this before anyone even said that. You could have at least waited for some to "ackshually" before posting your meme arrow.
The only real argument is that people have been conditioned to associate British accents with "ye olde mediaeval times" so that it can be jarring to hear an American accent in that sort of setting. It's also fitting if a current regional accent of Britain is used for characters from that region.
the actual rewrite is the reddit meme, anon
You don't pronounce your "r". You're copying an affectation of homosexual noblemen that started ~1700. True English accents have hard "r"s.
Medieval accents aren't closer to modern American accents but they sure as frick aren't similar to modern bongs. I've heard Shakespeare actors actually trying their best to faithfully replicate the prose in period English and it doesn't sound like anything familiar to me. It's more comprehensible than a drunken Scot with a head injury but not by a whole lot and certainly doesn't sound like the received pronunciation British actors use.
PS I tried to find the examples youtube but all I can find now are fricking homosexual zoomer cartoons.
Not even american accents, those usually sound fine (better than trying to imitate some european accent and failing), but the californian whine is utter ear poison.
>California whine
What's that, or should I remain blissfully ignorant?
a mixture of uptalk and vocal fry
You end every sentence as a question.
who the frick says this? the American southern accent is just a drawn out English accent.
The overall American accent is just pronouncing words correctly
>the American southern accent is just a drawn out English accent.
This is a tired meme that fundamentally misunderstands how dialects evolve
There's a reason British singers can easily larp as country singers like Rod Stewart
Not really, when brits play Americans they tend to be sound pretty country
you can't even pronounce the word colour
Would you like a glass of wodder?
The "California" accent is the objectively most correct spoken form of English , how words are actually written.
When British people get a higher education they tend to lose their accent.
>medival-style fantasy game
>females have shaven armpits and legs, nice groomed hair, applied makeup and excellent teeth.
This and none of those hoors cover their heads or have a male guardian present at all times
Actually people in medieval times and early renaissance were in general more hygienic than people in later centuries, well up untill the industrial revolution
blacks
>medieval-style fantasy rpg
>modern british accents
even worse
American accents are 1000 times better than wienerney accents in fantasy
The only good english accents are the pirate ones and they're never used
>it's not!rome
>everyone speaks bongish
Never heard of the medieval era America?
I like it when a game goes all out with its accents. Especially if they serve to demonstrate different nations, ethnicities, etc.
I like the dragon quest IV localization too bro
I'm ESL used to reading subtitles anyway. It makes no difference to me.
I would expect an ESL to have a really hard time with the first chapter of DQIV, at least. The localization team had to learn to tone it down.
>medieval style rpg
Ruined
>alien language
>american pronunciation
>medieval game
>shitty gray filter
>one of the first dialogues has the word "okay"
whenever I hear a british accent in a fantasy game I immediately uninstall it. Such a garbage sound.
I'm a Brazilian ESL btw. I find British people speaking to be unbearable, regardless of what they're actually saying. Americans are much more bearable to listen to, even when I think what they're saying is stupid.
Brits have a literal wiki page of words they cant pronounce https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:English_dialect-dependent_homophones#Th-fronting
Although I guess thats not a big deal when your teeth look like that
Americans think "merry", "marry" and "Mary" are all pronounced the same.
Not all Americans.
>medieval RPG
>political system resembles more a totalitarian monarchy than a feudalistic kingdom
>peasants npcs all live in the city/castle and go out only to work the fields
>common folk know how to read
>religion doesn't play a major role in people's life
Okay, let's be honest, modern British accents may not have been around in mediaeval times, but it just fits the setting. And it's not like these are historical video games, it's all pseudo-mediaeval fantasy settings anyway.
>medieval-style fantasy rpg
>the major factions are Not-France, Not-Germany and Not-Russia
That's literally Warhammer Fantasy.
>Empire = HRE/Germany
>Bretonnia = France
>Kislev = Poland + Russia
I get what you mean and I don't diagree, but how many people would enjoy a game where everyone spoke in a French accent?