AluminiumWolf said:
AluminiumWolf said:
Y'see, I vehemently disagree with the idea that those two quotes are mutually-exclusive concepts.
I really like the idea of Vampires as predatory creatures for whom humanity is a fading echo of memory at best. I've held this belief for a long time. I've run Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay campaigns using Vampires as exactly that. Whether or not the Vampires themselves are sexual creatures (at least in a recreational sense - being dead, reproduction is often regarded as impossible within the genre) is largely irrelevant to the issue of what the Vampires are like as individual creatures.
I think Vampires are cool. I don't, however, believe that thinly-veiled necrophilia (which is, at its heart, what having sex with the undead would be) is worthy of aspiration… and to my eyes, the frequently-portrayed "vampire boyfriend" trope is never displayed as anything normal, but instead as inherently unnatural and disturbing (the vampire would-be-suitors frequently start off as mysterious stalkers with unknown intentions… as if that's normal behaviour likely to attract positive attention, and so frequently the relationship is compared against a hypothetical "normal life", inherently marking it as abnormal).
Back to the matter of the Astartes.
For me, it's a matter of sacrifice - a Space Marine sacrifices his humanity, his place within mortal existence so that he can stand guard over it. This, I feel, is a common element amongst many of the defenders of the Imperium - give up something significant about your life in order to protect the Imperium. Those who serve the Inquisition sacrifice their innocence so that the rest of Mankind can remain blissfully ignorant of the terrors of the universe. The Imperial Guard give up their home and leave behind their family in order to fight the necessary wars elsewhere. The Adepta Sororitas sacrifice their normal existence in favour of one of servitude to the divine. Space Marines give up their very humanity, to be made into something beyond human, so that they are everything that mankind needs them to be.
Their own desires don't come into it. As with so much about the Imperium, the needs of the individual are irrelevant compared to the requirements of survival.