Palworld: The moral quandry | Laptop Mag


“Palworld” is an indie critter collector survival game, which means that players need to craft supplies and build bases to survive. As we briefly touched on while explaining what exactly is “Palworld”, part of that gameplay loop includes making your virtual animal companions, known as Pals, work in factories to build equipment for you.

Using animal labor as a substitute for machine automation is morally questionable at best. When that labor is used to craft guns you can use against other Pals and players, the morality gets even murkier.

Players have already found ways to capture other humans in-game as well, which takes “Palworld” from the tricky world of virtual sweatshops right to virtual slavery.

Can you avoid it?

Palworld

(Image credit: Pocketpair)

Some aspects of the game’s darker nature can be avoided, yes. You don’t need to capture human NPCs — the game even refers to the capture of other humans as “inhumane” within in-game tooltips. However, the fact that it is a tooltip comment means the ability to capture NPCs isn’t a bug, but a feature. Which is objectively a questionable addition to any game. In a survival creature collector game, it feels both out of place and deliberate at the same time.

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