V
Oldschool DMC fan
Just wondering if Dante's fashion sense in the new DmC matters to you as a gamer and a fan.
NT are telling us that it's important, that Dante needs to 'get with the times'. But I've always felt that Dante's fashion sense in the other games was (almost) timeless, and not that important in itself. In DMC1, While he wears 'modern-day clothes' clearly, they weren't current for the year 2000 and have a genrally warrioresque and functional look to them. Neither were DMC2's (if you ignore the Diesel stuff) - his outfit there looks like some kind of older style elegant velvety ensemble, and still not current for the time the game came out. It seems with DMC3 and 4 Dante was fixed to make him look a bit more 'fashionable', though very few people seemed to have a problem with Vergil's choice of wardrobe - or indeed Sparda's, which hail mainly from the 18th Century by the looks of them.
Personally I liked the idea of Dante's world not being much like ours (a modern world in which demons exist, a demon once ruled, and is inflenced by a lot of gothic architectural trends it seems) and that Dante's fashion, while not all that important, should look like it belongs in that world, not this one.
What do you think?
NT are telling us that it's important, that Dante needs to 'get with the times'. But I've always felt that Dante's fashion sense in the other games was (almost) timeless, and not that important in itself. In DMC1, While he wears 'modern-day clothes' clearly, they weren't current for the year 2000 and have a genrally warrioresque and functional look to them. Neither were DMC2's (if you ignore the Diesel stuff) - his outfit there looks like some kind of older style elegant velvety ensemble, and still not current for the time the game came out. It seems with DMC3 and 4 Dante was fixed to make him look a bit more 'fashionable', though very few people seemed to have a problem with Vergil's choice of wardrobe - or indeed Sparda's, which hail mainly from the 18th Century by the looks of them.
Personally I liked the idea of Dante's world not being much like ours (a modern world in which demons exist, a demon once ruled, and is inflenced by a lot of gothic architectural trends it seems) and that Dante's fashion, while not all that important, should look like it belongs in that world, not this one.
What do you think?