When people play medieval fantasy games, they don't think of France, they think of Britain.
Maybe when they Prince of Persia they think of France.
lol Trumps deporting all of them.
When people play medieval fantasy games, they don't think of France, they think of Britain.
Maybe when they Prince of Persia they think of France.
lol Trumps deporting all of them.
Literally the highest mountain in Western Europe lies on the French-Italian border.
>that flag
Does everyone in Uganda know Kung Fu?
Well as a whole our country is less mountainous than Spain or Italy for instance but yeah it's actually mountainous enough, even though most of them are in the south
>When people play medieval fantasy games, they don't think of France
Of course they don't. They just think of paladin, the archetypical holy knights from the Matter of France. They think of Game of Thrones, a copypaste from Les Rois Maudits which George RR Martin called "the original Game of Thrones". They think of King Arthur, a myth that originated in Wales but was written down in its most popular form by Chrétien de Troyes. They think of the Hundred Years War. But of course, they never think of France.
Not going to deny that in American fantasy Britain tends to be the prime source of inspiration, but France is a very close second.
>Maybe when they Prince of Persia they think of France.
Considering Ubisoft now owns the franchise, they actually do.
Why are you so mad? Did a French tourist only tip you 5% at your dead-end job which only exists because of shit-tier American regulations?
Tbh though most media in the Anglosphere has knights with English accents, it makes sense too because Britain was actually host too Knights at one point unlike other Anglosphere countries. King arthur is famous but nobody equates him with France even if they recorded the welsh tale and got it more popular. Sir William Marshall is probably the most famous knight, then I guess Richard the lionheart.
>Sir William Marshall
Who ? Lionheart is famous, but in France we're more familiar with Jeanne d'Arc of course, Saint Louis, or even Du Guesclin
Oh you meant Guillaume le Maréchal. My bad, but yeah he was actually anglo-normand
There's some holy grail Arthurian myths in it too