It's thematic. The cycle continues under a different banner.
"Absolute power corrupts absolutely" and all of that.
It's thematic. The cycle continues under a different banner.
It happens in the real world too. Try and read on the shit that happened during the French Revolution.I think my big problem with the vox populi is that I feel like they're made to be artificially bad just to maintain some weird grey balance between factions.
I mean, I can't help but think "yes, people that are slaved by other people, you are allowed to free yourselves and answer to your tormentors with righteous murder" because they are. it's just that they stop making sense after a while. why are they just blowing up everything? where do they even intend to live?
No, this cannot occur. It is a constant. In every single universe where Booker survives Wounded Knee, he goes to the baptism, always. This is a certainty. In every single infinite set of infinites, Booker goes to the baptism if he survives. Basically, all of the universes funnel together (but they are still all different as some sets will have different memories and, simultaneously, some sets will have the same memories with miniscule differences like Booker choosing to take an extra step or eat a chocolate bar and so on). They drown every Booker that goes through Wounded Knee and survives. Booker can never not go to the baptism, it must happen, it's a constant like the coin landing on heads. Universes where Booker dies, or doesn't partake in Wounded Knee, are irrelevant to the plot of the game so considering them is pretty unnecessary. See Stump's explanation above if this isn't clear enough. They change the variable (acception or rejection) to a constant by making the other variable result in a paradox.
Yeah. This isn't literature... The writing team did a good job but they are still operating within the frame work of a big budget commercial video game in the year 2013. What they managed to squeeze from it is commendable, but sure there are plenty of things that don't quite mesh. They're painting in broad strokes."Absolute power corrupts absolutely" and all of that.
one question: so when Robert Lutece hires Booker to free Liz in the "becomes not Comstock" timeline does he have a child/Anna or not? If not, why then the AD tattoo? so Booker sees it as chance for a better life for them both?
I disagree. The very fact that they chose to drown Booker at the baptism, rather than going back to Booker's birth and "smothering him in the crib", means that there are still other Bookers and other Annas in the multiverse, versions untouched by the tragic events of the game.
I disagree. The revolution seemed to be inspired by the French Revolution in all of its clusterfuckness.Yeah. This isn't literature... The writing team did a good job but they are still operating within the frame work of a big budget commercial video game in the year 2013. What they managed to squeeze from it is commendable, but sure there are plenty of things that don't quite mesh. They're painting in broad strokes.
When we see Comstock absconding with Anna (the pinky-cutting scene), Robert's dialogue seems to indicate that he has not traveled through a tear before. He is very hesitant about crossing over. This is evidence to suggest that the Robert that Rosalind contacted is the Robert from Booker's universe, and that Robert and Anna were brought to Columbia at the same time.
I'm going to have to play through the game again, but I remember on one of those electro-scope? devices it mentions about the brother suddenly appearing/arriving, which could tie into your theory that the brother was from booker's timeline.
At one point, I thought Lady Comstock was Anna.
Booker after getting baptized became Comstock and made columbia.
and Made his daughter Anna, Lady Comstock. (why fuck own daughter? coz hes an evil daughterfucker)
and Killed Lady Comstock coz she knows that Eliz is a younger version of herself.
Damn, I am a sick human being for imagining all that. :l
Robert Lutece never hires Booker to free Liz from Columbia. This is a false memory that Booker makes up to make sense of his situation. He has the AD carved into his hand because every Booker DeWitt has Anna and every Booker DeWitt gives her away. When the twins brings him through the tear for the first time (right before the rowing scene) Comstock's memories mix in with Booker's memories. They start to overlap, delete each other, corrupt each other, etc. and Booker's mind tries to make sense of the situation by clinging to something he has been reliving everyday of his life for 20 years "Bring us the girl, wipe away the debt" The phrase is meant to be talking about him giving away Anna but his mind applies it to this situation as well to make sense of things.
Ok, it seems you've kind of confused the two answers to some extent. So:
Robert Lutece never hires Booker to free Liz from Columbia. This is a false memory that Booker makes up to make sense of his situation. He has the AD carved into his hand because every Booker DeWitt has Anna and every Booker DeWitt gives her away. When the twins brings him through the tear for the first time (right before the rowing scene) Comstock's memories mix in with Booker's memories. They start to overlap, delete each other, corrupt each other, etc. and Booker's mind tries to make sense of the situation by clinging to something he has been reliving everyday of his life for 20 years "Bring us the girl, wipe away the debt" The phrase is meant to be talking about him giving away Anna but his mind applies it to this situation as well to make sense of things.
The Luteces don't exactly hire Booker to free Elizabeth from Columbia, but they do want him to do that. When they pull Booker into the tear at the lighthouse, they hear him muttering about "bring us the girl, wipe away the debt". They take advantage of Booker's muddled mind by giving him props that support his false view of what's happening - the box full of instructions, for example.
To answer Raviolico's question, the Booker at the beginning of the game HAD a child who was taken away from him. But because he was just pulled into a different universe, he can't remember that very well.
To answer Raviolico's question, the Booker at the beginning of the game HAD a child who was taken away from him. But because he was just pulled into a different universe, he can't remember that very well.
well, thanks.. ;-)
now i feel very dumb. every Booker has Anna? even the Comestock one? so the baptism was after Anna`s birth in whatever universe??
and the Lutece deal was just a mockup memory from Booker? so what exactly are the Intention of the Luteces??? revenge on Comstock? if they not hire him why they "guide" him? oh man..my little, simple brain....
Ya, I missed a lot, thanks for the explanation. I must say telling a complicated story via small audio recordings might not be the best idea. Maybe Ken thinks to highly of this media for story telling. Maybe more explicit flashback sequences might work better.
I disagree. The revolution seemed to be inspired by the French Revolution in all of its clusterfuckness.
I should read up on all that. I am not so familar with American History.There is clear and explicit inspiration from the French Revolution; Elizabeth directly compares the sound of the crowd outside in the third Gunsmith dimension to Les Miserables.
In terms of American inspiration, the closest would probably be lynch law / justice which was common at the period of time the game takes place. We don't know which American presidents exist in the BI universe post-Lincoln so it's hard to say whether lynching remained normalized. The tide really turned in the US around 1905 when Teddy Roosevelt started using the bully pulpit of the presidency to oppose lynch justice (particularly after the Delaware lynching--before then, lynching was seen as a nasty remnant of the post-Reconstruction south, but seeing it in the heart of the union was shocking to many).
I suspect that Roosevelt would not have been president in the BI-verse. I mention it because I think the treatment of the Vox as anarchists doesn't explicitly reference McKinley's assassination (it was VERY easy to scapegoat anarchists after McKinley was shot)... hard to say. I'm not sure whether or not Levine has considered the issue of politics post-Lincoln.
I want to agree with you but this game puts unneeded restraints on the usual quantum theory idea. They say there are some constants and some variables and they heavily hint to the baptism scene being a constant. They may not have smothered Booker in his crib because he was still the Hero of Wounded Knee, he still did other important things in his life before the baptism occurs and they may not have wanted to erase those things from history.
Actually, if we want to be thorough, they want Columbia to never exist in the first place. I don't think they really know how that come come to fruition but they know Liz is the key. They just want Booker to get to Liz and start interactions with her and they start honing their plan more as they see what these interactions do.
I don't understand the ending credits scene. If the Elizabeths killed all forms of Booker at Wounded Knee, how is he alive with Anna after the fact?
The baptism is a constant in the context of the game because there has to have been a baptism in order for the universe-hopping to occur. No baptism means that Elizabeth does not get her powers. So by drowning every Booker who shows up to the baptism, you eliminate every universe where Booker becomes Comstock, every universe where Anna is stolen, every universe where Booker goes to Columbia, every universe where Elizabeth becomes omniscient.
It does NOT eliminate every universe where Booker doesn't go to the baptism, has Anna, and lives semi-happily ever after.
See my post above.
lol should have refreshed before I posted. So then are we to assume that the only Bookers who Elizabeth drowns are the ones ready to receive the baptism? If I recall we see the Booker who rejects the baptism before that scene, but the story continues.
lol should have refreshed before I posted. So then are we to assume that the only Bookers who Elizabeth drowns are the ones ready to receive the baptism? If I recall we see the Booker who rejects the baptism before that scene, but the story continues.
Likewise, it's very clear what happens in the "drowning" scene. It doesn't take place in ambiguous time at all. There is a fork in time that separates all universes where Booker takes the baptism from all universes where Booker does not take the baptism. So imagine a Y fork--the Elizabeths cut off one prong of the Y by ending all possibilities where Booker takes the baptism. It's not a third parallel universe, it's a node that is the ancestor of all possible Columbia-verses.
One question that I'm still mulling over -- what explains Comstock's vision/prophecy? I understand that it must have something to do with the Luteces/tears, and him struggling to get a child because the vision told him he had one but was sterile has something to do with the memory dissonance that tears cause, but I'm still not entirely sure how these prophecies came to be. Can someone help me clarify this?
The tear machine that the twins create is what is being used for prophecies. They can't control where the machine opens a tear to so they are just basically always watching it and taking notes on important events.
So then what specifically tells Comstock he needs to have a daughter? Do they just see a tear that shows them this?
He sees his "seed" raining fire down on New York (the same scene that Old Liz shows you). He knows he won't live long enough to have that plan happen but the tear shows him that his child will take up his mantle and continue things.
I think the diaries are a great way of story telling. They make it so that the story isn't intruding into gameplay every 3 seconds while still telling a story better than most other games. Bioshock is a game meant for exploring and if you don't do that then you deserve to be punished story wise. Just from general looking around, I found 76 out of 80 diaries my first time through and I never felt like I had to comb over every little detail to find them. There would always be one in an area that the game didn't want you to go to, simple.
Next Stop... A City on the moon in the 70s.
I mean Rolling Stones and "Moonpeople" said too much already.
I was confused why Columbian forces would have an Abraham Lincoln fighting machine, but then figured out it was the Vox Populi's![]()
I found this, all voxphone diaries, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ULH_TsB_Eg
I found many (not sure how to tell), but often the playback is interrupted by other dialog or combat. I had the same issue in Bioshock 1 & 2, where I often didn't know what was happening. I guess it's my ADD.
They actually handled that pretty well in this one (and the damn prompt popped up on the screen tons of times during my playthrough so I definitely never forgot). (On xbox) if you pressed down on the d-pad, it would always play the last diary you received so if you got interrupted for whatever reason you could always wrap up what was going on then go hang out in a quiet room and hit down to hear it again. The menu for the diaries also has all the diary transcripts written out for your reading pleasure.
In the first bioshock the first thing the female solider says when she sees Jack, is is it someone new?
The first thing the priest says when he sees Booker, is is it someone new?
God I love these little details.
This is probably the most beautiful way to put what happened there:
Okay, actually, I could get behind this. If Elizabeth only drowns the Bookers who accept baptism, it still negates Elizabeth's powers, since Comstock never exists and never steals Anna. It also negates "our" Booker, since he would never have traveled to Columbia.
I think my original idea still makes sense, though. It's simply a difference of whether Elizabeth drowns ALL Bookers who show up to the baptism, or only the Bookers who accept the baptism. The game is not clear on this fact, so both views are acceptable, and both views support the post-credit scene.
No, we know, for a fact that she drowns every single Booker "before the choice is made". https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=F-VJ3j2bPJk#t=946sOkay, actually, I could get behind this. If Elizabeth only drowns the Bookers who accept baptism, it still negates Elizabeth's powers, since Comstock never exists and never steals Anna. It also negates "our" Booker, since he would never have traveled to Columbia.
I think my original idea still makes sense, though. It's simply a difference of whether Elizabeth drowns ALL Bookers who show up to the baptism, or only the Bookers who accept the baptism. The game is not clear on this fact, so both views are acceptable, and both views support the post-credit scene.
Both views are acceptable but I agree with your original idea (at least in terms of what happens at the baptism). I think I misunderstood Stump and my original post is edited to reflect that. I'm tired this morning and I must not have comprehended what he wrote the first time I read it.