Comment on Polygon - Was Bioshock good?
MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz 5 months ago
Was confused for a second there, the title doesn’t specify that the article is about Infinite, so I thiugh we were discussing the first game or franchise in general for a second.
The first game obviously has a lot to say where rampant freedom is concerned. You might consider it anti-capitalist, but really it’s anti-anarchy, if anything.
I always found the games to be more potent as a starting point for tackling the bad shit a lot of humans will try to pull given power, but Rapture was twice the setting that Colombia was in that regard.
Rapture pulled me into Bioshock.
But Colombia didn’t pull me into Infinite. Booker and Elizabeth did.
As a cleverly written and somewhat complex personal story, Infinite shines. It’s got compelling characters that make you care, and then it puts those characters through the wringer in their search for contentment.
I cared a whole lot about where Elizabeth and Booker would end up, but I can’t say I ever spared Colombia at large a second thought.
godzilla_lives@beehaw.org 5 months ago
Oh snap, thanks for catching that! I edited the title.
That’s a great point I hadn’t considered, and can’t believe I hadn’t. Rapture felt like its own character to the story in a way that Colombia never really did, but it’s undeniable how well-done the characterization between them was.
MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz 5 months ago
And the “twins”. They were fun to run into every time.
Even Comstock, despite barely appearing, was a good villain in the way that he was used to flesh out Booker and the multi-universe plot.
So not really a villain at all, but a clever detail in Bookers detailed personal journey.