Occupy Wall Street influencing BioShock Infinite

BioShock Infinite takes some cues from political revolution, making creator Ken Levine reflect on its similarities to current protest movements.

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Even if he usually doesn't dip his toes into specifics, the tone of Ken Levine's games is more than enough to identify him as someone interested in history and politics. So it isn't very surprising that he's been paying attention to the recent Occupy Wall Street protests, and seeing parallels to his own upcoming game BioShock Infinite. The conflict between the xenophobic Founders and the communist-turned-militant Vox Populi is the centerpiece for a lot of the action, and Levine recently spoke about where the groups intersect with modern politics.

"As we developed these opposing groups, the Founders versus the Vox Populi, it was interesting to see this play out in real time, so that the fictional movements we're creating that are set in this heightened past are almost being duplicated in reality," he told the Washington Post (via Gamasutra). "Of course, we have these extreme movements [in the game], but they have to start somewhere. As you write, you ask, 'Do they evolve in a peaceful way or not?'"

He says the Vox Populi was originally based on a German student movement called the Baader-Meinhof Group. He calls the evolution of extremism fascinating. "They start in a peaceful, understandable place and end up somewhere very different."

He says the historical context could be "reassuring or concerning" in light of current events. "Some of those movements, dating back to the French Revolution, have had similar complaints to what Occupy Wall Street has," he said. Levine suggests that leftist movements are less organized because those groups rebel against authority. "So Occupy Wall Street has been helping me because I've been struggling to figure out how the Vox Populi get to the point in the demo. Throughout the game, you’re actually watching them — you see in the beginning of the game that they're a dead movement and a movement that really fails, and it picks up steam based upon your actions."

Of course, the Vox Populi eventually breaks out into all-out violence, and no one wants that part of the game to be prophetic. "I hope the real-life movements don't head to the same place, though," Levine said. "I'm not going anywhere nice, I'll tell you that much."

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From The Chatty
  • reply
    October 28, 2011 10:00 AM

    Steve Watts posted a new article, Occupy Wall Street influencing BioShock Infinite.

    BioShock Infinite takes some cues from political revolution, making creator Ken Levine reflect on its similarities to current protest movements.

    • reply
      October 28, 2011 10:27 AM

      I think he is confusing left wingers with anarchists. Leftist movements typically end in something that is quite authoritative.

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        October 28, 2011 12:07 PM

        Because all of the riots throughout history (that can SOMETIMES happen from events like this) are completely authoritative. :D

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        October 28, 2011 4:17 PM

        A great majority of leftist movements either end up being absorbed into the mainstream, co-opted, or ruthlessly put down.

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        October 29, 2011 4:53 AM

        You're right about that, but anarchist tend to ride the coat tails of left wingers. In European movements, at least.

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      October 28, 2011 4:08 PM

      Comparing Baader-Meinhof to the Occupy XY movement is quite a leap. Baader-Meinhof were left-extreme terrorists / anarchists who kidnapped and murdered politicians.

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        October 29, 2011 4:44 AM

        "Behead the rich who won't be reeducated" "eat the rich... Literal canabilism as a kind of communion" those are paraphrases, but these are things I have heard coming from protesters. I don't see those actual things and they aren't there yet, but don't tell me when push comes to shove these guys won't get violent.

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      October 29, 2011 4:50 AM

      My best friend was apparently one of the ones who stormed the chase bank in L.A. or something like that.

      I thought it was funny that he liked the ham-fisted anti-industrialist story of the first one but hated the same treatment with socialism in the second, so at least they strike a chord with people. I loved both of them, and I like how they treat their games with a little political spice.

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