@dralutfi you should play bioshock one then... one beats two, infinite beats one in story. in gameplay, I always liked bioshock 1 more... but it's because of the creepy atmosphere and perpetual playing.
@DrowNoble @guitardude1243 @redhawkt7 easy as pie. they ask you this "2+x=y" you can say that every value of x will be equal to y-2 which really tells you nothing OR you could take an eraser and erase the problem. that's what elizabeth did,
@sethfrost you sir, even if well read, haven't considered something of outmost importance. the whole point of a book is to tell a story, you can see the character yet you are not involved in the story. interactive media enthralls you to the character so that you become the character in question. you are, you see, you think and evolve WITH the game. of course a book can have moments of sudden revelation but paper is much less powerfull when the matter rests on making your reader, your player, become one with your character. for example, what's written on paper will forever stay that way. In a game, you search, you discover, you do whatever pleases you and that turns you into the character. you're much more free to modify the adornments of the story even if following a set plot.
@jomipira I disagree. If the ending to the story was to vary with each possible universe, then the story could be thought of as bland. Thanx to the genius of whoever wrote the plot, BI serves as a great example for multiple universe story telling. since the ending is always the same, we actually feel like our contributions where substantial. it is not lazy story telling it is genius.
@bearcomputerrep no. Booker is the true comstock since he is Elizabeth's father. in the universe where Booker becomes Comstock, Comstock is left sterilized by an experiment perfomed by lutece. this forces him to seek for HIS child in another universe where he can actually have children.
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