Who are the mascots of PC gaming?
I recently read a thread elsewhere that says one big reason for Nintendoās enduring popularity is their use of mascots: Mario, Link, Kirby, and Samus. But I have to say, PC gaming has its own mascots too. And if you grew up on PC gaming, you know exactly who Iām talking about. To me, these are the most obvious PC gaming mascots:
Sir Graham
Sierraās signature character. Heās the protagonist of Kingās Quest, the game that pretty much āmadeā PC gaming. If youāve ever typed ālook at treeā only to die instantly, you know this guy.
Guybrush Threepwood
For a good long time, the Monkey Island series was the jewel of PC adventure games, and Guybrush was the poster child. For an entire generation of smart-alecks, Guybrush was what made pointing and clicking actually cool.
Commander Keen
PCās answer to Mario, but with a football helmet and a pogo stick. If you played Keen, you knew that saving the galaxy could happen in between spelling homework and dinner. The alien menace never stood a chance.
Duke Nukem
Duke started out as just another run-and-gun guy, but Duke Nukem 3-D turned him into a legend. Those one-liners were the soundtrack of every ā90s gaming session. If your parents ever walked in at the wrong time, you know exactly which line I mean.
B.J. Blazkowicz
Possibly the oldest mascot here, since Wolfenstein dates back to 1981. But it was Wolfenstein 3-D where B.J. got a face and a vendetta. Heās been fighting Nazis since before most of us knew what a floppy disk was.
Jill of the Jungle
Jill is the game that put Epic on the map. She was Epicās answer to Commander Keen, and while the graphics werenāt exactly cutting edge, the level design made up for it. Plus, Jill could turn into a bird. That never gets old.
Doomguy
Probably the most recognizable of the bunch. When people think of PC gaming, Doomguyās battered face at the bottom of the screen is what flashes in their mind. Doom is forever, and so is the guy with the shotgun.
Gordon Freeman
For a whole generation, Half-Life is PC gaming. Gordon Freeman in that orange hazard suit, holding his crowbar, is basically the Valve logo in human form. He never says a word and still manages to be iconic.
Vault Boy
You donāt actually play as Vault Boy, but heās everywhere in Fallout. His little thumbs-up and cheesy grin follow you from the vault to the wasteland. With the TV series, heās basically mainstream now. No mascot is more cheerful about the end of the world.
Kerrigan
The Zerg Queen of Blades herself. If youāre into Starcraftāand millions areāKerrigan is the face you remember. Blizzard made her the ultimate badass, and she wears it well.
Geralt of Rivia
Geralt first found fame on PC. The original Witcher didnāt even get a console port, so for a while Geralt was our little secret. Now heās everywhere, but if you played those early games, he still feels like a PC icon.
Chell
Portalās silent protagonist. You only ever see her in reflections or through portals, but somehow she sticks in your memory anyway. If thereās ever a Hall of Fame for āquietly iconic,ā Chell gets a spot.
Faith Connors
Maybe not as famous as some others here, but Faith deserves her place. Mirrorās Edge is the best first-person parkour youāll ever play, and Faithās red glove and city-leaping acrobatics are instantly memorable.
Madeline
Celeste is one of the greatest indie platformers ever made, and Madeline is what makes it work. Sheās determined, stubborn, and endlessly relatable. Iāve never wanted to climb a mountain so much in my life.
Goose
The newest mascot, but maybe the most beloved. Untitled Goose Game turned one honking bird into the hero none of us expected but all of us needed. An awkward bird never looked so adorable.
So there you have it: the PC gaming mascot hall of fame. They may not have a theme park, but letās be honest, nobodyās ever wanted to watch Mario lock eyes with Doomguy at the breakfast table. The world just isnāt ready for that much star power in one room.
The PC mascot is obviously either Clippy the Paperclip, Tux the Penguin, or Beastie the BSD daemon.
All you have listed are IP, as Nintendo one; the issue is that Nintendoās IP can be commercially produced for Nintendoās hardware only. PC donāt have ācompany IPā (and thatās one of its strength, openness), even Commander Keen appeared on Gameboy Color.
In order to keep with PC openness nature, I would suggest something that come from and to the community itself:
https://vsbattles.fandom.com/wiki/PC-Tan
Weaknesses: Often spaces out remembering old consoles that have passed on (e.g. Dreamcast, Super Nintendo), bursts into tears from these memories as well
I wonder what the most popular/recognizable video game character that has never appeared on a console is. Up until a year ago I wouldāve thought SHODAN but itās probably between MOBA or WoW characters at this point.
Reflecting my own biases here, but Iād say itās either Jill of the Jungle or Jazz Jackrabbit.
This reads like chatgpt
I have a long posting history on the Fediverse. You are welcome to check out the rest of my posts.
Was this written by ChatGPT or not?
Nope! And I can provide receiptsāshow you the original draft as well as revisions. I even made further edits to this post after submission.
But, to you, would receipts even matter?
Or is your purpose here simply to be a comment hall monitor?
(Youāre probably going to tell me this comment is written by ChatGPT because it has em-dashes.)
Whatās a hall monitor? Lol
I just donāt want to have more chatbot sludge on the internet. Glad you didnāt use ChatGPT š
Itās gotta be Gordon Freeman, anyway!
I get a lot of people who basically think any post with an em-dash is a sign of ChatGPT. I call āem hall monitors because they think em-dashes are a gotchaābut Iāve always used em-dashes, and Iām not stopping.
Why should I stop using perfectly good punctuation on account of LLMs?
Not sure why youāre asking me š¤·āāļø does ChatGPT use em dashes a lot? Also what is a hall monitor?
I would argue that a platform mascot has to stay exclusive (or near-exclusive to allow for some weird spinoffs). This would trim down your list significantly: no Doomguy, no Gordon, no Geraltā¦
In fact none of the big ones would make the cut. Maybe Jill of the Jungle (and Jazz Jackrabbit ?), but they do not have many games to their names. Note even the Elite iconic Cobra ship would fit the bill, as Elite Dangerous was released on consoles.
The Dopefish. Many used it over the years, and most have at least seen it.