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Natzi Coded Nea cosmetic plz fix!!!

insomniac_743
insomniac_743 Member Posts: 15
edited February 2 in Feedback and Suggestions

Red laces mean that the person is affiliated with the Neo-Natzi group (especially paired with docs as it seems she is wearing). since Nea is strongly punk coded I ask that you please fix this! I would love to use this cosmetic but do not feel comfortable doing so. Lace code is not as popular anymore however it is still strong in the punk community so I ask that you please consider this.

(edit: there seems to be a lot of discourse here. I'm not asking anyone to get offended nor do I think anything was malicious. I'm not even offended. I simply found it uncomfortable and thought it would be an easy change to the cosmetic. let me ask you, if the laces had been black would you have even noticed? or cared? And in terms of history, yes there were different meanings depending on the region; however, it's important to look at the present as well. we now, with the internet have information everywhere. What is the most commonly accepted meaning right now? it is not 1980 anymore. if we don't have the same opinion that's okay! I respect that, and I hope you will respect mine.)


Post edited by insomniac_743 on

Comments

  • insomniac_743
    insomniac_743 Member Posts: 15

    lace code has been around since the 70's, I'm bringing it up because she's a punk-coded character so lace code would apply to her. I am also part of the punk community so it stood out immediately to me. I really am not trying to start anything (pinky promise) and I'm too old for tick tock bs

  • insomniac_743
    insomniac_743 Member Posts: 15

    I don't believe anyone was trying to be malicious! nor do I think they thought of this while making the design so you're right on that. I LOVE the cosmetic but as someone who is part of that subculture I would not use it, I hope that they can just change the color to a neutral black. it is just a video game however we are all real people so please respect differences in culture. just because something has no meaning to you does not mean that it has no meaning to others.

  • insomniac_743
    insomniac_743 Member Posts: 15

    lace code is something used in punk culture as a flag of sorts to show which group you belong to. red laces signify you are a part of the skinheads/ neo natzi subculture.

  • OnryosTapeRentals
    OnryosTapeRentals Member Posts: 1,035

    This isn't strictly true.

    In some places and groups, red laces were used to signal communism, socialism, or even what football team you supported.

    Lace code was highly regional. Part of the reason it's now defunct is because everyone had a different idea of what the lace colours meant.

  • Nazzzak
    Nazzzak Member Posts: 5,662
    edited February 2

    So I googled Doc Marten lace code and you're actually right. Lace code in the punk scene has red as neo-Nazi. TIL!

    I'll add that I obviously don't think this was intentional on BHVRs part.

  • Skoegul
    Skoegul Member Posts: 22

    It may not be intentional, but that's precisely why BHVR should listen to this kind of feedback. It's often these lesser known cultural and subcultural meanings that matter. And everyone brushing it off apparently needs to read up again on what the Nazi regime stood for and then ask themselves if this type of symbolism has any place in DBD.


    Spoiler: The answer is no.

  • OnryosTapeRentals
    OnryosTapeRentals Member Posts: 1,035

    It may not be intentional

    Enough said IMHO 🤷

    It's obvious this is not what the cosmetic is referring and is simply just a colour scheme thing so why make a song and dance about it?

  • Donkeybqlls
    Donkeybqlls Member, Alpha Surveyor Posts: 81

    Or maybe we should claim these "fashion-statements" back, saying we won't tolerate these types to even say what we can or can't wear?

  • Nazzzak
    Nazzzak Member Posts: 5,662

    Except the site I read said lace code started back in the 1970s, not 2024 lol so blame the hippies I guess?

  • KateMain86
    KateMain86 Member Posts: 2,374

    This isn't about being ignorant of the past. This is about not freaking out over a pair of red shoe laces in a video game.

  • MikaelaWantsYourBoon
    MikaelaWantsYourBoon Member Posts: 6,564

    So just because some spesific group used some colours, now we can't use them? What is this post? Nea's costume is looking pretty normal, you are just trying to see problem here even there is not any problem.

  • KateMain86
    KateMain86 Member Posts: 2,374

    Yep and its downright selfish too. They would rather take a cosmetic appearance away from thousands of other players so they can feel comfortable using a skin for themselves.

    If the devs ever come across this thread please don't think you have any moral obligation to change anything.

  • Zenislev
    Zenislev Member Posts: 160

    The problem here is that neo-nazis, and really just bigots in general, have turned a bunch of things into dog whistles. The OK hand gesture, milk (although that one failed, it's hard to force milk into a conversation in a way that isn't convoluted), pepe the frog, the colors black and yellow together.

    They're going to just keep adopting symbols, and you don't win anything by letting them have and keep those symbols. Do you know why they've largely stopped using pepe the frog and moved on to uglier and uglier wojacks? It's because pepe the frog is such a common image used by everyone online that it can't do its job as a dog whistle anymore. Wojacks aren't uncommon but they're still niche enough that they can do the job.

    If lace code isn't being used any more because it was such a regional thing that meant so many different things to different people then take it back. Don't cede that ground to them. Use red laces if you want. It certainly looks cool in that skin and there's really no way players are going to be able to dog whistle with it. Don't let them keep something as basic as the color of shoe laces in an outfit.

  • Emeal
    Emeal Member Posts: 5,167

    Isnt this skin supposed to be Evil Nea anyway? To give her evil laces seems fine even if the color scheme is coded between nazis.

    But I dont think we can let nazis claim the color red.

  • UndeddJester
    UndeddJester Member Posts: 3,365
    edited February 2

    Quite the philosophical debate here huh? At what point do you draw the line about who and how small a group it's OK to offend?

    For example the f-word regarding homosexual men is an American word that has become so widespread in that particular usage that it transitioned into British English, but where I come from, for my entire childhood it meant a type of meatball similar in composition to meatloaf, and took a while to become socially taboo here because no one understood the American meaning. Obviously can't use it any more because it has now predominantly become used that way in the UK as well, but it would not be taboo were it not for the homogenisation of American and British culture via the Internet.

    If you do this for every culture and sub-culture, you're bound to hit a point where everything becomes offensive to one culture or another, and where the western world has such a mixed culture now, there aren't really rules for any culture, as every individual falls on the various scales somewhere, and any assumption you are making based on their suspected culture is probably wrong...

    Regarding the case here... a significant number of people won't have a clue about this part of Punk culture... even among punks... so the argument is valid one... but what we're effectively debating in this thread is how few people know about it, and therefore how much does it matter?


    Just throwing this out there... I'm offended by Boy Bands.

  • UndeddJester
    UndeddJester Member Posts: 3,365
    edited February 2

    To try and add something useful to this conversation, I think it is important to consider where Nea herself was as a Punk and the connotations therein:

    Nea grew up in the small town of Hjo in Sweden. She had a happy childhood even though her mom and dad worked hard. As the opportunity to move to the US became a reality she started acting out. Her parents didn’t really pick up on this as a reaction to their move. Nea was forced to leave her friends and life behind.

    This would mean that depending on what part of the US Nea was in, lace code might have been prominent enough to warrant a second look. From what I can gather, it was a significant part of US punk culture particularly in California, but I'm not so sure about states like New York (Which I would guess would be more likely for a Swedish migrant). Apparently it was never a thing for punk culture in the UK. If lace code is still carrying the same historic meaning in the US today, and that is where Nea was living when she became a punk, then yes the OPs point may actually be valid here depending on the State.

    However it's also not an automatic issue, because if lace code is no longer practised in Punk culture in California, or she is canonically from a completely different part of the US that didn't have lace code, then it doesn't apply.

    @insomniac_743 I know far less about US Punk culture, would you mind citing and sharing any knowledge you may have (I assume you are far more knowledgeable on the subject than I am).

    Post edited by UndeddJester on
  • HerInfernalMajesty
    HerInfernalMajesty Member Posts: 1,853

    I agree with you, I don’t think it was intentional.

    My sister and cousin used to be super into the punk scene and I remember that Doc Martens with red laces meant neo-nazi/white supremacist.

  • Caiman
    Caiman Member Posts: 2,886

    I think it's reasonably obvious that the red laces on black boots exist solely to match the entirely red and black ensemble Nea is wearing. The whole get-up is two colors, the shoes are just matching. Anyone rational person could work that out.