Apex Legends vs Dragon Age: The Veilguard: Which Is More Woke?
Dragon Age: The Veilguard appears more woke than Apex Legends based on AI analysis, with a difference of about 7 points. Community votes are split or too thin to call a clear winner yet.

Community (votes): not enough data yet
See full breakdown for Apex Legends
Community (votes): ~90/100
See full breakdown for Dragon Age: The VeilguardAI vs community
AI verdict
Dragon Age: The Veilguard is more woke than Apex Legends (AI).
Dragon Age: The Veilguard leads by 7 points on the AI scale.
Community verdict
Community averages are too close to call (or one side has no votes yet).
Why the scores diverge
- The 7-point gap reflects how much ideology steers each story on our six-dimension pass, not just vibes.
- Dragon Age: The Veilguard highlight: Dialogue serves the fantasy RPG experience, with minimal overt messaging.
- Apex Legends highlight: Dialogue serves gameplay rather than overt messaging.
- Apex Legends: Characters have distinct abilities but are not solely defined by identity.
- Dragon Age: The Veilguard: Characters have distinct backstories but risk feeling like archetypes for representation.
Dragon Age: The Veilguard reads higher on legacy rewriting than Apex Legends, which nudges the overall profile message-forward. Dragon Age: The Veilguard reads higher on protected protagonist pattern than Apex Legends, which nudges the overall profile message-forward. Dragon Age: The Veilguard reads higher on message-first dialogue than Apex Legends, which nudges the overall profile message-forward.
Browse more
More comparisons
Trending now
- One Battle After AnotherTrending· movie
Frequently asked questions
- Which is more woke, Apex Legends or Dragon Age: The Veilguard?
- Dragon Age: The Veilguard scores higher on the AI pass (20/100 vs 13/100).
- What do community votes say?
- Community averages are within the tie band or too close to call (n/a vs 90 on our vote-weighted scale).
- Why might AI and votes disagree?
- AI scores come from a structured model pass; votes capture how people read the politics or messaging. Trailers, culture-war framing, and release timing can push votes away from the model.