>>1786348No it's understandable. Fantasy and sci-fi are two very common settings for video games. But I noticed a trend myself where I preferred modern or sci-fi games over Fantasy.
My own excuse for that is because modern and sci-fi games and stories (movies, books, etc) have at least a tiny bit of familiarity in them, because everything in those settings have some grounding in reality that we're familiar with: Guns shoot bullets, cars go fast on gas, medicine gets rid of the sick. And they all have to work a certain way, otherwise shit just doesn't make sense.
Whereas in fantasy, 90% of all problems and their solutions is always MAGIC!!! A general concept that any author/game designer can be free to just pull shit out of their ass at any given time to do anything they want. That might work for some people, but not me.