Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Bioshock Infinite: Trouble in the district of Columbia.

The current hysteria surrounding the US immigration policy, or lack thereof, seemed to reach new heights this year after Arizona put its now infamous "may I see your papers" law on the books, and the issue has already made it into movies such as the Robert Rodriguez 'mexploitation' flick Machete, so I must assume that the team at Irrational Games, creators of the incredible first-person adventure Bioshock, had an ear to the street when they began work on the game formerly known as "Project Icarus"

This week saw the release of gameplay footage from that project, and the news that it's indeed the pseudo-sequel to Bioshock 2-Bioshock Infinite.

Yes, it's awesome.

The opening scene is a brave one for a video game, depicting images of racial caricatures cowering beneath a triumphant George Washington with the ten commandments in his right hand, the Liberty bell in his left and the words: "It is our holy duty to guard against the foreign hordes"
As the games protagonist moves further into the mysterious city of Columbia, more protests signs read: "They'll take your gun.They'll take your wife.They'll take your business.They'll take your life."

With some politicians flirting with the idea of repealing the 14th Amendment, the line reads like a picket sign from an over enthusiastic Tea Party protester and it seems that the city of Columbia is dealing with the aftermath of some type of civil unrest pitting the isolationists against those pursuing a more open society.

Born on the 4th of July 2: Dead on the 5th of July

The theme in Infinite, just like the first two Bioshocks, is some aspect of American exceptionalism gone mad.
Where the first two installments saw Rapture as a metaphor for the height (or depth) of free market capitalism, Infinite's Columbia is looking like a twisted representation of American superiority, and of course its military dominance, depicted in a graphical style reminiscent of 19th century America.



Lead artist Shawn Robertson, speaking in an interview for GameInformer magazine explained that, "when you're trying to build a city in the sky, you need to have some grounding elements to it to make it feel realistic. "I feel like pulling from real history-but not sticking to it- gives you another grounding point."

In other words, anyone who still thinks gaming is a total escape from the issues happening in the real world, well,  it's time to find a new past time.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Yeah, I hear ya on that last part. Not many games left that actually let you forget about real life issues and such. Good article, brother!