¡°In books, films and video games, ¡°mutant¡± is often used interchangeably with various terms that essentially mean ¡°other¡±: ¡°freak,¡± ¡°monster,¡± ¡°beast,¡± et cetera. However, it isn¡¯t completely interchangeable because everyone understands that ¡°mutant¡± has something to do with genetics and biological development. Therefore, the choice to use the term ¡°mutant¡± implies that there is some biological, likely genetic, basis for why these ¡°monsters¡± are the way they are. [...] It appears to me that the designers were just cribbing dysmorphic features that occur in real life and applying them to the game¡¯s monsters, then naming them ¡°mutants¡± and going on their way. Why do they look the way they are? Because they¡¯re ¡°mutants.¡± No additional thought went into that.¡±Michael California draws upon his background as a geneticist to compliment a discussion of Rage 2¡®s industry-standard ableism with an explanation of why the ¡°mutant¡± tropes of disfigurement and disability widely perpetuated in popular media make no scientific sense whatsoever. [YouTube][Rage 2 Launch Trailer]
¡°Last summer, I had a chance to talk with id Software studio director Tim Willits about Rage 2. After a relatively straightforward interview running through the game¡¯s grabbag of inspirations, the conversation shifted to something more personal: my birth defect and how the game presents it as a crude joke. Rage 2¡¯s publisher Bethesda had just revealed a $119.99 collector¡¯s edition that would come with a talking, robotic bust of Ruckus the Crusher, one of the game¡¯s many goliath mutants. Like all the other Crushers in the game, Ruckus has a gash running from the top of its upper lip through his nose, as if its face didn¡¯t fully form at birth. [...] Fiction has long associated clefts with both villainy and mental health disorders, and it appeared the Rage franchise would perpetuate this cruel, damaging misrepresentation to a broad audience.¡±
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They called mutants "sports" back then and so does the book, which was a little confusing on my first reading, because I thought it was in the sense of "Hey old sport!" like Gatsby would say. Sport retains a somewhat distinct usage in botany, where it's a part of the plant that has a different morphology, usually due to mutation.
posted by SaltySalticid at 9:29 AM on May 20, 2019 [2 favorites]