Hmm, I can't say I agree. The entire point of the baptism to Comstock is that all of your sins up to that point are erased, that your past is irrelevant and all that matters is what you do from then on. As a result I wouldn't think it's too unbelievable for somebody from 'the sodom below' to be accepted into Columbia and 'reborn' as a citizen of Columbia.
I don't really see how the bolded works though. If there was a memory bleed over, the new Booker would be entering the same universe as the one where Booker died which would result in cognitive dissonance and nose bleeds, wouldn't it?
That Vox Populi story arc ended up being pretty truncated, huh
I thought that 'phone was referencing Songbird, what with that diagram right beside it.And the Handyman took the concept of the irreversible man/machine melding of the Big Daddies.
Seems to me like she's only talking about Infinite. That you leave regular space via Rapture (in the way you came in BioShock 1) suggests that it's representative of the 'doorway' between reality and Elizabeth's omniscienceness. You have to go into a Rapture lighthouse/universe to get to all the Columbias, too.Just speculation based on what and how Elizabeth presents the information to you. She goes out of the way to say that each lighthouse is its own reality and in each reality there is always a lighthouse, man, city, etc. It just heavily implies that only one fanastical city occurs in each lighthouse reality, no more, no less.
The cognitive dissonance only occurs if he is remembering drastically different things up to that point. The whole death/new Booker thing comes with the package that the new Booker does everything the same so there really wouldn't be much dissonance. Each Booker doesn't seem to realize that he died so that information wouldn't be imparted.
I thought that 'phone was referencing Songbird, what with that diagram right beside it.Seems to me like she's only talking about Infinite. That you leave regular space via Rapture (in the way you came in BioShock 1) suggests that it's representative of the 'doorway' between reality and Elizabeth's omniscienceness. You have to go into a Rapture lighthouse/universe to get to all the Columbias, too.
I agree. But you said the line when he wakes up (about the 'idiot priest') was from memories bleeding over. That's exactly when the cognitive dissonance occurs, when memories conflict. Him remembering drowning and him remembering surviving would conflict if they happened in the same universe. All of the other dying Bookers don't remember dying because it all happens in seperate timelines and as a result, they can never remember the previous Booker's experience.
I feel like I'm answering a lot of questions about this whole baptism scene at the beginning so I'd like to throw a question out to all of you. Why does Booker wake up in a different area after the baptism?
She obviously isn't just talking about infinite with that line. If she were just talking about infinite, why make mention of Rapture at all?
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I feel like I'm answering a lot of questions about this whole baptism scene at the beginning so I'd like to throw a question out to all of you. Why does Booker wake up in a different area after the baptism?
In my version of things, Booker doesn't realize he died after the baptism. He "wakes" up after what he thinks was just a baptism but in the new reality he was never baptised. The only dissonance is that he thought he was baptised but he wasnt and this isn't that huge of a deal, the nose bleeds only happen when it is large chunks that are different or if impossible things are happening.
As neat as it is to discuss the game, I feel that its inelegance is a failing. The discussions are not about character motivations or themes, they're about what happened. That's not something one should have to question given enough thought.
She obviously isn't just talking about infinite with that line. If she were just talking about infinite, why make mention of Rapture at all?
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I feel like I'm answering a lot of questions about this whole baptism scene at the beginning so I'd like to throw a question out to all of you. Why does Booker wake up in a different area after the baptism?
In my version of things, Booker doesn't realize he died after the baptism. He "wakes" up after what he thinks was just a baptism but in the new reality he was never baptised. The only dissonance is that he thought he was baptised but he wasnt and this isn't that huge of a deal, the nose bleeds only happen when it is large chunks that are different or if impossible things are happening.
I presumed at the time that this particular occurrence wasn't anything that serious. The people at the baptism picked him up and carried him into Columbia while he was passed out.
If you look up where you came from it leads to the baptism area. Why he wakes up is difficult but I think it might be the cognitive dissonance from having crossed over the first time. When Booker is pulled through the tear by the Lutece to the lighthouse the same thing happens. Maybe he isn't yet completely 'over' the universe shift as he remembers both the office and the 1983 tear before waking up.
Holy shit can someone please make a ringtone of the tune that plays to call songbird?
What you're saying makes sense, with the whole death thing. The only issue I have is the baptism scene at the beginning. If he died, why does he wake up coughing water? How did he get there? He walked into Columbia, passed out in some water? So lets say he didnt die, how did he get there? The more likely scenario is he passed out during the baptism and the priests carried you in, and dumped you where you wake up.
Neither explanation makes a lot of sense, and your version definitely gels with the rest of the games rules. But it doesnt make alot of sense =\
Well when he first enters that time the twins obviously drag him to the boat. That is shown and obvious. I don't think I can get behind the fact that after a baptism, the group just picked him up and tossed him into Columbia. At a baptism, the priest talks to you afterwards. That is such a common occurance that I want to say there is a purpose to it that is lost on me because I was not baptised as an adult.
So you cant get behind being carried into an adjacent area by people who watched the event unfold, even offhandedly commenting on the priest being too rough. But you can beleive that he snuck in passed the priest, and passed out in some water in the next room, with people commenting on something else?
You actually just made me rethink something. It seems to coincidental that the new Booker wakes up coughing water but it may not be a coincidence at all. Maybe Booker does have a cognitive reaction at the point where something is different and it causes a lapse in what is going on and he goes right into the water. I mean, Chen Lin was still using tools where there were none, who's to say that Booker wasn't trying to cause a baptism where there wasn't a priest?
You actually just made me rethink something. It seems to coincidental that the new Booker wakes up coughing water but it may not be a coincidence at all. Maybe Booker does have a cognitive reaction at the point where something is different and it causes a lapse in what is going on and he goes right into the water. I mean, Chen Lin was still using tools where there were none, who's to say that Booker wasn't trying to cause a baptism where there wasn't a priest?
Um, she doesn't. "I can see them through the doors. You, me, Columbia, Songbird."She obviously isn't just talking about infinite with that line. If she were just talking about infinite, why make mention of Rapture at all?
You're trying to hard, the simple explanation - that he didn't die and simply passed out, explains everything. You are having to make up extra events to make things fit your theory.
Well when he first enters that time the twins obviously drag him to the boat. That is shown and obvious. I don't think I can get behind the fact that after a baptism, the group just picked him up and tossed him into Columbia. At a baptism, the priest talks to you afterwards. That is such a common occurance that I want to say there is a purpose to it that is lost on me because I was not baptised as an adult.
You're trying to hard, the simple explanation - that he didn't die and simply passed out, explains everything. You are having to make up extra events to make things fit your theory.
The simple explanation was to say fuck it all and just fly the blimp to Paris. The game felt the need to reach so to understand it, I feel like we all need to as well.
That's just how it's done in Columbia. New people are baptized symbolically and they're carried in and left in the shallow water until they wake up and are greeted by the disciples there.
Him being in a dark apartment doesn't mean he's dead, it's a transition for him being temporarily unconscious.
Ah, good to know. Man, replaying this game lets you notice a whole host of hidden things. Like the code you've given by the Luteces to open the bell door is 1-2-2. That's the number of Bookers before you.
Well, his point is strong due to the way Booker behaves when he dies. Think about it, it seems to me like the office stuff happens when he dies. This would be, I think, the only time in game where its debated he didnt die before going to the office?
Or am I completely understanding this game wrong?
JC, you son of a bitch! I was just replaying the game trying to find that scene... I wanted to screencap that gold statue. (Knowing those awesome Liz animations are in that scene is a sweet bonus.)I actually grew more of an appreciation for the earlier Finktown section on my second playthrough. I really liked how in Shantytown, everything is dark and dingy, except the big ol' gold Fink factory you can see standing in the middle of it all. The man has no shame. And I love all the rationalizations Fink keeps sending out for his shitty working conditions. "Idle hands are the devil's play things, it's my duty to work you 14 hours a day!"
I also liked that one elevator scene, if nothing else but for Elizabeth's animations
From the previous thread:This needs to happen/
Totally making this my ringtone: https://soundcloud.com/jsparakov/combinedstreaming-sfx-00610
There's no turning back.
Don't try and change the subject - lets stick to the baptism at the beginning of the game.
Just because dying (without Elizabeth) results in a trip to the office does not imply that every trip to the office means that he died. He goes there several times in the game without dying.
A -> B does not mean B -> A.
Even though every other time the apartment is shown is for death reasons?
That's just how it's done in Columbia. New people are baptized symbolically and they're carried in and left in the shallow water until they wake up and are greeted by the disciples there.
Him being in a dark apartment doesn't mean he's dead, it's a transition for him being temporarily unconscious.
I wasn't changing the subject, I was saying the simple answer is almost never the correct one in this game.
He goes there several times in the end game for non-death reasons.
I wasn't changing the subject, I was saying the simple answer is almost never the correct one in this game.
Can you please give me another time he goes to the office without dying? And don't say the end of the game because that is the only time you have a time lord showing you the important moments of your life.
Even though every other time the apartment is shown is for death reasons?
I will say end game, it is the exception that disproves the rule.
Define "every other time."
Another event was falling into Battleship Bay, as you said.
When you wake up, she says "Are you ok? You almost drowned."
So I don't understand why you'd instead think that he died and he traveled to a different universe, inhabited a different Booker, etc. instead of just taking her word for it. That you almost drowned.
So basically, he doesn't die every time he's in that office.
Every other time literally means every other time except for when someone else brings you to the office. Why does songbird just leave you at battleship bay instead of killing you in your version of things?
From the previous thread:
There you go. I think the first one is Bioshock Infinite's version of Girls Just Wanna Have Fun (I know nothing about music, I don't know if that's the right name) and the second one is what was requested (Songbird tune).
Every other time literally means every other time except for when someone else brings you to the office. Why does songbird just leave you at battleship bay instead of killing you in your version of things?
I don't have time to read through all of the last several pages. But throughout the conversation regarding the baptism at the start and whether or not Booker died at that scene, has anyone talked about how he wakes up in his office?
And if he wakes up in his office that means he has died.
So he had to have died during that baptism at the start right? He wakes up where his dead body would have floated to. You can see where the tunnel opens up behind the priest.
Is this death treated just like any other death that would happen during gameplay? I would think so.
But I am curious what people think happens every time you die in game. Is this the same Booker just simply respawing? Or is this a new Booker in a near identical timeline?
And I am extremely curious about what is said on the voxophone that talks about baptism creating two seperate beings. The clean new one comes out of the water and asks if there is still a sin filled version of that being elsewhere.
Bioshock Infinite indeed.
Because it realizes the water is killing it - the game is pretty clear on that.
The game is clear that he is weak to high pressure, not knee deep water.