catpower1980: Quick reminder: "that dragon, cancer" is a game/interactive fiction about a child dying of cancer and his parents. Game got kickstarted, got much coverage and was released on steam.....
steam, steam never changes....
..... well, needless to say that the game got a lot of critics from steamers on its forums for various "reasons" (price, religious POV, "it's not a game", bio story, etc....).....
The battlefield is there:
http://steamcommunity.com/app/419460/discussions/
It looks like there are some upset people who don't understand or appreciate the game, art, expression or life.
Some people may have gone through a similar experience and would like to relate to it in a game. I'll raise my had there. I've spent a lot of time in a hospital with my son. He won't be able to walk again for a month and have limited mobility for almost the whole year in a few months -- surgery #6 for a boy of the age of 6. His 3rd birthday was celebrated in pain, lying on a bed. And playing a game on my own and working through someone else's pain and joys sparks something grand in me. It's a piece of sadness mixed with love. (I often think of the sadness-mixes in that Pixar movie that came out recently)
I have a friend who's a gamer who has lost a few very-grown children through miscarriages. He wouldn't touch this. He likes to be happy and he disdains sadness. And that's what works for him. That's okay.
What should have happened on the Steam forums is one person help the OP understand that the game isn't for them, and then move on. Instead, there's infantile name-calling and people throwing irrelevant opinions around. That's okay, I guess. It's just not a good read.
I hope to see more games dealing with deep, personal issues like That Dragon, Cancer. But I won't necessarily play them if I don't care or it would hurt too much.