Questions Regarding The Ending To Bioshock Infinite.

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RJ 17

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Nov 27, 2011
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Is there a quantum physicist in the house? Because I've got some issues with the ending to Bioshock Infinite. Needless to say, the following box contains spoilers to the ending. Be warned: this box contains The Great Wall of Text, as any ending as mind-crushing as this one practically demands when trying to discuss the details of it.

Alright. The entire game revolves around quantum mechanics and an infinite multitude of possible worlds. That I can understand, but just like with most stories revolving around parallel universes and/or time travel, there's a lot of room for plot-holes that - surprisingly enough - can't be summed up by simply saying "magical quantum physics".

For starters there's the point that the ending would in no way solve anything. Thinking back on the story, in order for Booker to have had Anna and thus sold her away to pay off his debt it means that said Booker and Anna come from a universe in which Booker never accepts a baptism to wash away his sins, thus being reborn as Comstock. Alright, fair enough, the Comstock/Booker of some random dimension used the Device to open a door to a world in which he never became Comstock and thus had a baby that could be stolen.

Now, according to Elizabeth, killing Comstock in the world you play through solves nothing. There's still millions of worlds out there with millions of Comstocks, it'll never be over unless Comstock never exists. Alright, well lets go kill Comstock when he was born. And here comes the big revelation that you ARE Comstock. So in order to kill Comstock when he's still a child, you have to kill yourself. The problem is, doing so is a deliberate choice. And as is the theme behind the entire game (and one of the tenants of parallel universes, I at least know this much) every possible choice that can be made leads to an infinite number of possible universes. So here's the question: sure, by killing yourself, you prevent a Comstock from ever coming into being. But what about in all the potential universes in which Booker refuses to sacrifice himself? Comstock will always exist in those universes and there's not a damn thing that can be done about it. As such, doesn't the plan fail which leads to Booker drowning for absolutely no reason? And for THAT matter, couldn't Booker - armed with the knowledge that he IS Comstock - simply make the concious decision "I won't let that happen. I will NEVER become him!" effectively negate Comstock's existence as well? No, it wouldn't, because that's how Anna got taken from him in the first place: a Comstock from some random world reached into a world in which Booker never became Comstock and stole his daughter. It truly is an endless loop, one that can never be shattered no matter what Elizabeth and Booker try to do.

For that matter, here's a rather large question that I would have asked Elizabeth if I were in Booker's shoes when she insists that it isn't over just because you killed the Comstock in the current universe: "Why?" Unfortunately, Elizabeth, it seems as though the circle will indeed remain unbroken (loved that bit where you pick up the guitar and she sings)...because of the way the parallel universes work, it's impossible to erase Comstock from existence seeing as how his entire existence stems from a concious choice made by Booker, and no matter what you - as Booker - decide to do, there will always be countless other Bookers that decide not to. That being said - since trying to wipe out Comstock is impossible, and this is something Elizabeth should realize since she can see all the doors and what lies behind them - I would have said to her "Look Elizabeth, just because you can see all the doors doesn't mean you should open them. What's wrong with this world? We saved THIS world, our world, the world we're in right now. Columbia has fallen, Comstock is dead. New York won't be set on fire because you're not going to go all bitter, ruthless war-monger due the fact that I never came to save you. Because I did come and I did save you. Let's just forget all this business and go to Paris. We solved OUR problem, trying to fix all the universes will just drive us mad." Seems to me that would be the most sensible thing to do. Sure, there's still going to be countless Comstocks out there snatching up countless Annas from countless Bookers, but absolutely none of them matter to the Booker you're playing as and the Elizabeth that you rescued. For all intents and purposes, they could both move on with their lives and let the rest of the ininite universes solve their own problems the way they did.

And for THAT matter, what the hell happens when Songbird takes Elizabeth away towards the end of the game? To my knowledge, you use the Tears to jump to completely different universes/timelines four times. The first time is when you find that the gunsmith is dead, so you go to a world/timeline in which his brother-in-law (or something) is the head of Fink's security and thus he decides not to arrest the gunsmith. Hooray! He's alive! We can get the guns now! But damnit, now all his machines have been taken! So you search them out and find there's absolutely no way to get them get them out of where they're impounded at. But wait! Let's use this handy-dandy Tear to go to a world where they were never impounded at all! BAM! Problem solved and here comes the Revolution. You've now entered a world in which Booker has already been killed as a martyr for the revolution. This is why Daisy lables you an imposter and declares you an enemy of the Vox Populi, thus making the Vox hostile towards you for the rest of the game.

This is the world that the ending of the game takes place in. You proceed towards Comstock House, yadda yadda yadda, Songbird attacks and Elizabeth gives herself to him. Here's the question: how does that translate into her, YOUR Elizabeth, being imprisoned and tortured for (at least) 6 months when in reality it would have only taken Booker a couple hours to catch up to her? You find Voxophones left by Future Elizabeth talking about how she regrets what she has become and what she did. You find more in which the doctors are talking about the process of breaking her down, and you even get to listen to her getting tortured through some Tears (good god.....that was just BRUTAL to listen to....) And given the propaganda playing over the speakers, it becomes clear that you're in a Comstock House in a world in which Elizabeth has already risen to fulfill her role in Comstock's prophesy. I had assumed that the third "shift" occurs during the white-out when you're crossing the bridge and suddenly you see it's snowing and make the comment "It's snowing? In july?" This makes sense with Comstock House being Future Elizabeth's stronghold. This is why you say "But I was coming to get you!" and she says "Songbird always stops you." (that's one thing that bugged me, by the way, you never get to put the bird in his place...I think he would have made a MUCH better main boss battle rather than a "defend the airship" sequence.) Ok, fair enough. But then she uses the fourth "shift" and sends you back in time, giving you the chance to actually save her, the Elizabeth (I'm presuming) that was snatched away from you in the first place. So why does Elizabeth act like she's been stuck there for a very long time? Granted, this is under the presumption that she would have returned you not only to that world, but to relatively the same time as well...as I don't see the sense behind sending you back to a point 6 months after Elizabeth was taken from you...

Another thing I take issue with is the fact that Booker turns out to be Comstock at all. Seems to me that would mean that Comstock actually WAS at Peking and Wounded Knee, despite what Slate was ranting. If Booker was such a true hero of those battles, wouldn't Slate know that Booker is actually Comstock? Or does growing a Moses-beard provide an impenatrable disguise? And then what about the nose-bleed effect? If Comstock is Booker, then shouldn't Booker be having those "double-memory" issues throughout the entire game? Two Bookers are existing in the same world. Hell, you play as the a third Booker when you get into the world where the revolution is in full swing. Why do you get bleeding effects from Martyr Booker but not from Comstock himself?
Whew! Don't think I've spewed out an essay like that for any game that wasn't made by Bioware. Anyways I'm REALLY interested in discussing some of the finer details of the ending, that's why I made this topic. I might not fully understand the sciences and theories involved here, but I do find them absolutely fascinating. So please, if anyone has answers to the questions/points I bring up, please feel free to respond to them. Or, for that matter, feel free to offer up your own! Surely I can't be the only one whose brain exploded about 5 minutes into the ending sequence after the big final battle.
 

John Connor M

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Possible spoilers follow:

If Booker died during the baptism then there would never ever be a Comstock and yes you could say that's a decision and hence there will be a universe where he isn't drowned by elizabeth but I believe the point is she is so powerful (after the sypher gets destroyed) that either a) she somehow makes his death a fixed point in time or b) every elizabeth in every universe will kill booker at that point.

The whole thing with the gunsmith is complete bollocks, only crappy part of the game logic wise.

Quantum mechanics are a lot about probability vs chance, take for example the Lutece's coin toss, ALWAYS HEADS, and they only ask the many Bookers that they visit.


For your last paragraph the whole point is that he was there, technically, and the "nose bleed" effect only happens when Booker knows/remembers something from an alternate universe, e.g. the pinky finger thing. If you replay that section with the knowledge his ramblings become pretty funny and sad...

Whenever you die (without elizabeth) you have to go through a door with the classic haze on, and I'm not certain but I take that to be a different booker picking up from where the last one died --> evidence for this is an early Lutece section with the coin flipping.

ps: the Lutece's are the same person (pretty obvious), the telegraph near the start of the game was the female Lutece's attempt to sabotage the "experiment" (because it would result in her and her "brother" being apart) and also the part at the very start where they say "he doesn't row" they mean that every Booker they've ever taken there doesn't row so the male Lutece shouldn't expect him to row because he never does etc.

Wall of text, maybe that clarifies some things?
 

John Connor M

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Oh and if you can be arsed read this:

http://michaelthekyle.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/understanding-bioshock-infinites-ending.html

Pretty neatly explains most things, or at the very least gives the most in depth discussion I've found.

The only thing that I don't understand is how Comstock is so racist, since Booker seems to be fine with minorities even though he has 'reason' to hate them (wounded knee, boxer etc).
 

Redem

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Huh they seemed to be some timeloop business involved in the story I can't quite understand, can someone explain it to me?
 

Extra-Ordinary

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John Connor M said:
Oh and if you can be arsed read this:

http://michaelthekyle.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/understanding-bioshock-infinites-ending.html

Pretty neatly explains most things, or at the very least gives the most in depth discussion I've found.

The only thing that I don't understand is how Comstock is so racist, since Booker seems to be fine with minorities even though he has 'reason' to hate them (wounded knee, boxer etc).
Yeah, this was the same thing I was going to post.
I go by THIS explanation.
Granted, I'm STILL trying to get my head around it, even with the explanation but it'll all click eventually.
 

RJ 17

The Sound of Silence
Nov 27, 2011
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John Connor M said:
Possible spoilers follow:

If Booker died during the baptism then there would never ever be a Comstock and yes you could say that's a decision and hence there will be a universe where he isn't drowned by elizabeth but I believe the point is she is so powerful (after the sypher gets destroyed) that either a) she somehow makes his death a fixed point in time or b) every elizabeth in every universe will kill booker at that point.

The whole thing with the gunsmith is complete bollocks, only crappy part of the game logic wise.

Quantum mechanics are a lot about probability vs chance, take for example the Lutece's coin toss, ALWAYS HEADS, and they only ask the many Bookers that they visit.


For your last paragraph the whole point is that he was there, technically, and the "nose bleed" effect only happens when Booker knows/remembers something from an alternate universe, e.g. the pinky finger thing. If you replay that section with the knowledge his ramblings become pretty funny and sad...

Whenever you die (without elizabeth) you have to go through a door with the classic haze on, and I'm not certain but I take that to be a different booker picking up from where the last one died --> evidence for this is an early Lutece section with the coin flipping.

ps: the Lutece's are the same person (pretty obvious), the telegraph near the start of the game was the female Lutece's attempt to sabotage the "experiment" (because it would result in her and her "brother" being apart) and also the part at the very start where they say "he doesn't row" they mean that every Booker they've ever taken there doesn't row so the male Lutece shouldn't expect him to row because he never does etc.

Wall of text, maybe that clarifies some things?
A good attempt...
I still don't think there's anything they can do to kill off Comstock. Even if killing off Booker before the baptism, there's the little problem of the fact that she gives him one last chance to back out, asking him "Are you sure you want to do this?" That simple question creates a new ocean of lighthouses, so to speak. What if he DID say "No. No screw it. I just want out of this mess." I went back and watched the ending again (pretty nice, I gotta say, that all you have to do is load up the last chapter to watch the whole ending again) and saw that Booker DOES suggest just leaving, but Elizabeth insists they go on until they find Comstock. What if he had reasserted himself? It was technically an option which would therefor mean a new possible outcome was created. In short, the way I understand it, the fact that Comstock was ever a possibility means that he will always remain a possibility, just like the male Lutece (and yes, I knew that Reynald was just a male-version of Rosiland from an alternate universe) says ater Booker says "We'll go back and kill him before this all happens." Reynald says "But how would you know how far back you'd need to go?" Rosiland even chimes in with "Events would be set in motion."

Indeed, just how far back does the chain of events go that lead to the "birtch" of Comstock? Go back and kill Booker's mother to prevent him from having ever been born? Well that's a decision to kill, so there's a possible decision to not kill. The Lutece's even hint at this with more of their riddle-speak mumbo jumbo. "What was will be." "Will live. Lives. Had lived. Will die. Dies. Dead." or something like that. The very fact that Comstock ever existed in any universe means he cannot be erased from any of them, because no matter what you do you're making the choice to erase him, which means there's always the choice to not erase him.
That said, maybe the stuff I'm talking about is in your link. I'll check it out tomorrow as I'm already pretty tired.

P.S. You know, despite all of Elizabeth's power........I think Eleanor could take her. :p
 

Extra-Ordinary

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John Connor M said:
Possible spoilers follow:

If Booker died during the baptism then there would never ever be a Comstock and yes you could say that's a decision and hence there will be a universe where he isn't drowned by elizabeth but I believe the point is she is so powerful (after the sypher gets destroyed) that either a) she somehow makes his death a fixed point in time or b) every elizabeth in every universe will kill booker at that point.

The whole thing with the gunsmith is complete bollocks, only crappy part of the game logic wise.

Quantum mechanics are a lot about probability vs chance, take for example the Lutece's coin toss, ALWAYS HEADS, and they only ask the many Bookers that they visit.


For your last paragraph the whole point is that he was there, technically, and the "nose bleed" effect only happens when Booker knows/remembers something from an alternate universe, e.g. the pinky finger thing. If you replay that section with the knowledge his ramblings become pretty funny and sad...

Whenever you die (without elizabeth) you have to go through a door with the classic haze on, and I'm not certain but I take that to be a different booker picking up from where the last one died --> evidence for this is an early Lutece section with the coin flipping.

ps: the Lutece's are the same person (pretty obvious), the telegraph near the start of the game was the female Lutece's attempt to sabotage the "experiment" (because it would result in her and her "brother" being apart) and also the part at the very start where they say "he doesn't row" they mean that every Booker they've ever taken there doesn't row so the male Lutece shouldn't expect him to row because he never does etc.

Wall of text, maybe that clarifies some things?
I still don't get the "multiple Booker" thing. I'm seeing left right and center that this whole thing has been done a hundred times over and the coin flip is proof of that. But I don't even know what that means. I have no idea where to start with multi-Booker. Why were there multiple Bookers all trying to do this thing? Where do they come from? Are they all from different universes and they all go into the same universe to try to do the same thing at the same place after each one fails? I just don't GET IT. Ugh, it's all making my head hurt, it really is.
 

SlaveNumber23

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Aug 9, 2011
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TopazFusion said:
- Songbird. Why did he turn hostile again after destroying the siphon? The pan-pipe thing seems to stop working on him.
If I recall correctly, Booker accidentally drops/breaks the instrument, thus is no longer able to control Songbird.

TopazFusion said:
- Finally; a bit of a physics gripe but, when you fall from a great height (like bailing from a zeppelin), and latch-on to a sky-line, the force of momentum, and the speed at which you're falling, would cause your arm to be ripped clean out of its socket. Why does this not happen to Booker?
This annoyed me a little too, I suppose its just one of those things in gaming where it is essential to suspend our disbelief, like the fact that Booker can devour food to instantly heal bullet wounds etc.
 

John Connor M

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torno said:
John Connor M said:
Possible spoilers follow:

If Booker died during the baptism then there would never ever be a Comstock and yes you could say that's a decision and hence there will be a universe where he isn't drowned by elizabeth but I believe the point is she is so powerful (after the sypher gets destroyed) that either a) she somehow makes his death a fixed point in time or b) every elizabeth in every universe will kill booker at that point.

The whole thing with the gunsmith is complete bollocks, only crappy part of the game logic wise.

Quantum mechanics are a lot about probability vs chance, take for example the Lutece's coin toss, ALWAYS HEADS, and they only ask the many Bookers that they visit.


For your last paragraph the whole point is that he was there, technically, and the "nose bleed" effect only happens when Booker knows/remembers something from an alternate universe, e.g. the pinky finger thing. If you replay that section with the knowledge his ramblings become pretty funny and sad...

Whenever you die (without elizabeth) you have to go through a door with the classic haze on, and I'm not certain but I take that to be a different booker picking up from where the last one died --> evidence for this is an early Lutece section with the coin flipping.

ps: the Lutece's are the same person (pretty obvious), the telegraph near the start of the game was the female Lutece's attempt to sabotage the "experiment" (because it would result in her and her "brother" being apart) and also the part at the very start where they say "he doesn't row" they mean that every Booker they've ever taken there doesn't row so the male Lutece shouldn't expect him to row because he never does etc.

Wall of text, maybe that clarifies some things?
I still don't get the "multiple Booker" thing. I'm seeing left right and center that this whole thing has been done a hundred times over and the coin flip is proof of that. But I don't even know what that means. I have no idea where to start with multi-Booker. Why were there multiple Bookers all trying to do this thing? Where do they come from? Are they all from different universes and they all go into the same universe to try to do the same thing at the same place after each one fails? I just don't GET IT. Ugh, it's all making my head hurt, it really is.
I'm guessing the Lutece's thought that they'd hedge their bets and bring Booker after Booker into each different world/version of Columbia because they knew that if even one rescued elizabeth and "killed" comstock that they would have the 'ending' that Robert wanted. Also if you pay attention to the opening dialogue that is nearly word for word as follows;

Robert: "one enters into an experiment knowing one can fail"
Rosalind: "Yes but one does not enter it knowing they have failed"

I hear that as Rosalind saying they've attempted the same thing with other Bookers (presumably from other timelines/worlds/doors/whatever) and they have failed and hence should give up, which makes sense since all she wants is to be with her brother (ergo a male her). And as the opening quote says the Bookers will invent memories and justify their presence and "mission" to themselves. I think the Lutece's are perhaps the most important characters in the whole thing...
 

Mike Richards

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I'm pretty sure the choice to drown Booker at the end comes from Elizabeth, not Booker, meaning that there wouldn't really be a reality in which he chooses differently, and I'm pretty sure that she's a complex enough event in spacetime that we don't have to worry about alternate branches splintering off from her in quite the same way.

The way I like to look at it is that everyone who plays the game is experiencing a different timeline, a sequence of events that contains the same constants with slight variables. Will he pick the Bird or the Cage? Will he take this bit of gear or that one? That sort of thing. Booker's death in any one singular ending isn't enough to remove all instances of Comstock from the multiverse, rather it's the cumulative effort of all realities in which this has played out. Every playthough, every player, does their part to clean up the damage, with the Luteces and Elizabeth by the end being the only ones who can see the whole scope of the thing.

As far as the death mechanic goes, I think it's the Luteces watching out for each instance of Booker, shifting him into a nearby world when he dies. The major differences between the old world and the new are obviously that Booker is no longer dead, but we still remember it just like Chen Lin or the soldiers, which also changes the state of the battlefield somewhat. I also like to think that rather than actually paying for resurrection you are simply being deposited into a world in which you've found less money, it's small and innocuous enough that it could be enough of a change to differentiate both worlds.
 

Denamic

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John Connor M said:
The only thing that I don't understand is how Comstock is so racist, since Booker seems to be fine with minorities even though he has 'reason' to hate them (wounded knee, boxer etc).
I believe that's because of him being 'free of his sins'. The 'good' Booker were constantly tormented by what he did, constantly reminding himself that he's essentially a mass murderer. Basically, reflecting on his actions caused him to be emphatic with his victims, becoming a better person.

But the Booker that became Comstock accepted his baptism and perceived himself as free of his 'sins'. He believed that he had done the right thing and was forgiven by god. Free of guilt for mass murder isn't exactly a very good thing in my book.

At least, that's my take on it.
 

Smeggs

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John Connor M said:
Oh and if you can be arsed read this:

http://michaelthekyle.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/understanding-bioshock-infinites-ending.html

Pretty neatly explains most things, or at the very least gives the most in depth discussion I've found.

The only thing that I don't understand is how Comstock is so racist, since Booker seems to be fine with minorities even though he has 'reason' to hate them (wounded knee, boxer etc).
I think it's because

Comstock was reborn as a "new man" and did not need to cope with the wrongs he had committed to the Indians at Wounded Knee. He felt he was above them, a clean, better human being.

Booker we play as did not get baptized, and so he had to mentally and spiritually come to terms with the things he had done. This most likely humbled him, and he realized that despite the color of your skin, no matter your beliefs, people are people. This can actually be backed up by not only the player's choice at the Raffle, but his lines when they speak about Wounded Knee; he is not proud of the things he did, and seems to regret the quite a bit.
 

Smeggs

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SlaveNumber23 said:
TopazFusion said:
- Songbird. Why did he turn hostile again after destroying the siphon? The pan-pipe thing seems to stop working on him.
If I recall correctly, Booker accidentally drops/breaks the instrument, thus is no longer able to control Songbird.

TopazFusion said:
- Finally; a bit of a physics gripe but, when you fall from a great height (like bailing from a zeppelin), and latch-on to a sky-line, the force of momentum, and the speed at which you're falling, would cause your arm to be ripped clean out of its socket. Why does this not happen to Booker?
This annoyed me a little too, I suppose its just one of those things in gaming where it is essential to suspend our disbelief, like the fact that Booker can devour food to instantly heal bullet wounds etc.
He says when you first use the hook that it's magnetized, so...fucking magnets, how do they work?

Not like that, but hey, suspension of disbelief, you're fighting robots in the early 1900's using grenade launchers and Sith lightning.
 

PissOffRoth

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John Connor M said:
The only thing that I don't understand is how Comstock is so racist, since Booker seems to be fine with minorities even though he has 'reason' to hate them (wounded knee, boxer etc).
Because Christianity.
 

Pebkio

The Purple Mage
Nov 9, 2009
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Here's the ending of Bioshock Infinite:

"I 1000 pointed it so it went back to the store so I could get 40 bucks back."

The end.

...what? Okay okay, prologue:

" I then used that 40 to repurchase Bioshock 1 and 2."

Happy End. ^_^
...thpppppt...

---

Seriously though, the only explanation that anyone will be happy with is the one they come up with themselves. One for each individual. Because we don't know what can happen in the 5th-dimension. Everyone who calls the ending stupid, or is confused, or says that there are plot holes to the ending... all of them are trying to apply the rules they assume to be true of the 4th dimension (of which we STILL don't actually know)to something that we actually haven't been able to even FIND in the real world. Do you know why we don't know? Because we live on, and all of our measuring equipment works in, and all of our senses only registers stuff on, the 3rd dimension. How could anybody actually claim that "this is what happened" or "this could never happen"? Lies and pictures of also lies. Anyone who has a definite answer such as "this is a paradox and doesn't make sense" is talking right out of their butt.

Honestly, come up with your own explanations and try to make them clever enough to encompass all of your question. No one else's answers are going to be satisfactory because everyone everywhere is just guessing. So make your own guesses for yourself and you WILL like those answers more.
 

aivalera

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Smeggs said:
TopazFusion said:
- Finally; a bit of a physics gripe but, when you fall from a great height (like bailing from a zeppelin), and latch-on to a sky-line, the force of momentum, and the speed at which you're falling, would cause your arm to be ripped clean out of its socket. Why does this not happen to Booker?
This annoyed me a little too, I suppose its just one of those things in gaming where it is essential to suspend our disbelief, like the fact that Booker can devour food to instantly heal bullet wounds etc.
He says when you first use the hook that it's magnetized, so...fucking magnets, how do they work?

Not like that, but hey, suspension of disbelief, you're fighting robots in the early 1900's using grenade launchers and Sith lightning.[/quote]

I like to believe that the shield infusion he was given by the Luteces helped. Or the Possesion Vigor gave him special metabolism.

You know, if you're picky on "realism".
 

Abomination

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I thought it was very simple. Also obvious spoilers.

After Booker's successful baptism he becomes Comstock and in turn DOES found Columbia but does NOT sire Anna due to the trans-dimensional technology making him infertile and aging him. This in turn allows the Luteces to have the funding and patronage needed to actually create a tear to unite each other, piggybacking on Comstock's abduction and adoption of Anna/Elizabeth.

In the reality where Booker refuses the baptism he does NOT found Columbia but he DOES sire Anna AFTER the baptism refusal, who in turn he hands over to the Lutece brother to wipe away some gambling debt - that was likely created by Comstock in the first place.

Booker is taken to the point in time where he was to be baptized, which is also where Comstock is 'born'. "Smothered in the crib" takes on a new meaning and now due to Elizabeth's unlocked power EVERY Booker who was to be baptized is drowned in the process. This prevents Comstock ever being 'born' but in turn would prevent Elizabeth ever being abducted, adopted and created.

I like to think there are realities where Booker never even considers the baptism and in turn probably still goes on to sire Anna. But without a Comstock there is no Lutece sister with the patronage and funding to ask a Lutece brother to demand Anna in payment for a debt... whatever happens there is no Columbia and therefore no trans-dimensional travel - at least caused by Booker/Comstock.

Not only does Elizabeth kill Booker and therefore any possibility for Comstock, she also creates a situation where she never existed as Elizabeth. This is the paradox. How could Elizabeth go to a time to prevent herself ever existing and still exist to perform the act? My theory is that is why the game just cuts to black on the final piano note - due to her causing the paradox the reality never existed at all. Hence the sudden blackness.
 

Chimpzy_v1legacy

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John Connor M said:
The only thing that I don't understand is how Comstock is so racist, since Booker seems to be fine with minorities even though he has 'reason' to hate them (wounded knee, boxer etc).
At first I thought he was just a clever tyrant with a cult of personality keeping up a charade. But there are some serious implications in the game that Comstock is pretty bat-shit crazy. For example, it was the Lutece's technology that allowed Comstock to peek into other universes, but Comstock really seems convinced that those glimpses are prophetic visions bestowed upon him by angels (there's a Voxophone about this). And when you and Elisabeth confront him at the end, he sticks to this story, even though if he were sane, he should know Elisabeth knows the real story.

Maybe when he took the baptism, they dunked him under a little too long. And the Lutece's experiments gave him accelerated aging, maybe they also fried his brain.

Besides, there are loads of real-life examples of people changing drastically when they find religion. And not always for the better. And there's about 20 years between the baptism and the events in the game. Plenty of time for someone to change.

Something that has come to bother me during my second playthrough. When Elisabeth and Booker go through a tear for the second time, they end up in a universe where the Vox uprising is in full swing and alternate Booker died a martyr.

So ... where is alternate Elisabeth?
 

DrunkenMonkey

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Sep 17, 2012
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Abomination said:
I thought it was very simple. Also obvious spoilers.

After Booker's successful baptism he becomes Comstock and in turn DOES found Columbia but does NOT sire Anna due to the trans-dimensional technology making him infertile and aging him. This in turn allows the Luteces to have the funding and patronage needed to actually create a tear to unite each other, piggybacking on Comstock's abduction and adoption of Anna/Elizabeth.

In the reality where Booker refuses the baptism he does NOT found Columbia but he DOES sire Anna AFTER the baptism refusal, who in turn he hands over to the Lutece brother to wipe away some gambling debt - that was likely created by Comstock in the first place.

Booker is taken to the point in time where he was to be baptized, which is also where Comstock is 'born'. "Smothered in the crib" takes on a new meaning and now due to Elizabeth's unlocked power EVERY Booker who was to be baptized is drowned in the process. This prevents Comstock ever being 'born' but in turn would prevent Elizabeth ever being abducted, adopted and created.

I like to think there are realities where Booker never even considers the baptism and in turn probably still goes on to sire Anna. But without a Comstock there is no Lutece sister with the patronage and funding to ask a Lutece brother to demand Anna in payment for a debt... whatever happens there is no Columbia and therefore no trans-dimensional travel - at least caused by Booker/Comstock.

Not only does Elizabeth kill Booker and therefore any possibility for Comstock, she also creates a situation where she never existed as Elizabeth. This is the paradox. How could Elizabeth go to a time to prevent herself ever existing and still exist to perform the act? My theory is that is why the game just cuts to black on the final piano note - due to her causing the paradox the reality never existed at all. Hence the sudden blackness.
It's not really a theory, but a fact the final piano note and the screen turning black signifies that the whole plane of existence on which the omnipresent Elizabeth simply vanishes, hence why it's not a paradox. If all the elizabeth's vanished except the last one that would be a paradox. It's strongly implied that the worlds created from Comstock's interactions just wink out of existance. In order to make all of this work you have to keep in mind the theory that one of the Luteces proposed, where time is not a straight line, but an ocean where changes are not small and not particularly kept track off. What I'm trying to say the grandfather paradox does not apply to the plot, if the plot makes note of the fact that time is not singular and does not flow in a straight line, which infinite definitely acknowledges.
 

bastardofmelbourne

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chimpzy said:
Something that has come to bother me during my second playthrough. When Elisabeth and Booker go through a tear for the second time, they end up in a universe where the Vox uprising is in full swing and alternate Booker died a martyr.

So ... where is alternate Elisabeth?
I think (and this is pure conjecture, because otherwise it's a massive plot hole) that Elizabeth isn't hopping between two different dimensions, but is actually altering the reality that they're in. She mentions this when she hypothesises that her ability works as wish fulfillment - she doesn't know if they're travelling to another reality, or if she created the alternate reality in the first place. I think it's the latter.

When they go through a tear, the resulting world is a mooshed-up combination of their home reality and the new one she desired (where the Vox were armed and in revolt and Booker was a hero of the revolution.) That's why there's no alternate Elizabeth, and it's also why the Songbird they fight later in the game is the same Songbird from Monument Island (you can tell by the injured eyeglass). It also explains why most of the city is suffering from tear sickness later in the game, because Elizabeth has confused the two realities together - if only she and Booker were strangers, they would be the only ones suffering from tear sickness.

See, if tear sickness is only caused by travelling between realities and what Elizabeth is doing is creating a portal between two distinct dimensions, there's no reason for Chen Lin or the dead soldiers to suffer from tear sickness, because they haven't moved anywhere. The fact that Chen Lin has tear sickness means that Elizabeth has done more than just dimension hopping - she's overwritten the original universe with the new one, and now the universe has to reconcile a dead Chen Lin with a living Chen Lin.