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@reallifejester
hello!!!! this is my blog where i mostly repost fan art that i like, but also i sometimes post my own art and game essays :)
game essays
my art
V for Veronica
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Midra and Goldmask have matching hats - The political positioning of Elden Ring.
This is an essay I wrote for an online gaming mag a while back, thought I'd publish it here too. If you're familiar with Elden Ring feel free to skip the intro paragraph, this was written for audiences who may not be familiar!
Elden Ring is a game about dogma. Here's what we can learn from it.
If youâre in the video game space, youâve heard of Elden Ring. FROMSOFTWAREâs 2022 Game Of The Year winner, co-written by A Game Of Thrones author George R R Martin, is vast, complicated, widely adored⊠and no one knows what the hell is going on. In classic Fromsoft fashion, the story of the game is elusive, revealed through obscure item descriptions and flowery dialogue that demands players have a thesaurus at hand. And, though the story does have some established beats, Iâm here to propose that none of that really matters. Put down the family tree (try to forget that all the characters are siblings) and just look for a moment. Youâll find two truths in your examination: every character is crazy, and every believer dies.Â
The countless belief systems in the world of Elden Ring can be likened to religions, cults, or political parties. While there are many relevant factions, this essay will focus on Marikaâs Golden Order and the apocalyptic eye-melting cult of the Frenzied Flame. For those who aren't familiar, The Golden Order believes in order (shocker) and reincarnation - Marika, the Orderâs founder, removed the concept of permanent death from the world, and, instead, when a person died, their spirit would be called back to the Erdtree, the object of the Orderâs veneration, where they would be reincarnated. After a plot to release death back into the world, something interesting happened. Some people who died refused to answer the call of the Erdtree. They instead rose in death, "trespassing beyond lifeâs boundsâ. To the Order, this was unacceptable. They sent out hunters to destroy all who had risen this way, using a holy incantation that prevented them from being reincarnated - âThe role of the hunters is to stamp out defiled reason â all for the perfection of the Golden Order.â The dead refused to be reincarnated by the Erdtree, sullying the Orderâs image, so they were not allowed to reincarnate at all.Â
Consider this for a moment. Those who did not conform to the established order were destroyed. No second chances. Itâs worth mentioning that The Golden Order was the dominant belief system in this world, and, with that in mind, there are some obvious parallels that can be drawn between The Golden Order and real-life religions. The image of order and peace, striving for eternal life, the authority over who lives and who dies, and the dehumanisation of those who followed alternate faiths. It starts to feel all-too familiar in a time where abortion bans, restrictions on gender-affirming care and genocide are all implemented in the name of religion. Elden Ring calls it Order. Our world calls it Politics. All of it is dogma.Â
The Golden Order, of course, present themselves as righteous, scholarly. Ironically, their greatest scholar, the radiant Goldmask, discovered issues in the Order through his long and silent prayers, earning the scorn of even his most loyal student. Here, intellectualism and faith are at odds. Understanding the scripture is not necessary to kill in its name, in fact, itâs the antithesis. Do not have compassion. Do not look inwards. Only look up, where your God may be.Â
In contrast to Order, the followers of the Frenzied Flame believe in chaos. In the words of their prophet, Shabriri, âBurn the Erdtree to the ground, and incinerate all that divides and distinguishes⊠May chaos take the world!â. Followers believe that the world is too far gone, and therefore must be destroyed in order to start anew. Fromsoft is a fan of this sort of thing, and these options in their games arenât always presented as the âbad endingâ. In their previous titles Dark Souls and Dark Souls III, the player is given the option to let the flames of life burn out, so to speak, plunging the world into darkness. While this sounds bleak, it allows the world to progress naturally, free from the human-imposed cycles and attempts to exert order over the world in the name of personal comfort. There are similar arguments, then, for melting the world of Elden Ring down to nothing.Â
The words of Shabriri are cleverly crafted. He sells you a world free from oppression and division. A second thought would make one see that, of course, that would only be because there is no world left at all. Itâs no wonder, then, that the loyalest followers of the Frenzied Flame are all blind. This is an important feature. If you turn a blind eye to the hateful, incompassionate rhetoric that arises from well-meaning religious ideas, youâll end up burning the world to the ground. Interestingly, many players are sucked into the frenzied flame ending without even agreeing with the cultâs core beliefs. Along with his speech about chaos, Shabriri offers you an alternative to letting your companion, Melina, die. In all other endings, Melina uses herself as kindling to burn the seal on the Erdtree, allowing you inside to face Marika the Eternal. Shabriri, true to spirit, takes the moral high ground, instead suggesting you house the frenzied flame in your own body and use yourself as kindling. This, he tells you, is the only righteous way to become a lord. Nevermind that fact that Melina will die anyway when you burn the world that she lives in. Extreme political groups use these tactics, too. They construct strawmen to recruit vulnerable people who suddenly find themselves siding with some of the most deplorable people our society has to offer. Again, dogma. Fanaticism. Hysteria. It tracks that wielding the flame builds up madness in its followers until they eventually completely lose their minds in the name of their religion. All because they wanted to protect our women! â Ahem. Save Melina.
Iâd like to share the imagery from the game that inspired this analysis. On the right, Goldmask, a Golden Order scholar, and on the left, Midra, Lord of the Frenzied Flame. Both have obscured faces. Both are bursting with light; fire. Both have their arms raised in prayer. Both are withered, emaciated, grey. This is the most striking commentary Elden Ring has to offer on dogma. The burning flames of passion completely replacing your identity, obscuring your humanity with a silent, insidious prayer. The loss of care and comfort, even for yourself, until youâre nothing but a sack of bones and insanity. These images serve as a lesson. There is no peace to be found in dogma. You must not turn a blind eye to the suffering of your fellow human. And most importantly, most profoundly, you must search your beliefs for flaws. That is how we mend a shattered world.
Messmer The Impaler đŁ
An Act of God: My favourite cutscene in RE4R
The cutscene where Ashley has to resist shooting Leon is my favourite cutscene in the entire franchise - it always sticks in my mind, itâs so visceral, so I wanted to drop some thoughts here.
DISCLAIMERS: Obviously we are taking game events with a pinch of salt, imagining that your behaviour as the player aligns with Leonâs intentions, and that dying doesnât happen to him in-character. You may think that this is an over-analysis of a fleeting moment, but I think media is always more enjoyable when you take it seriously and interact with it earnestly. So here we are!
The Only Act of God in Resident Evil 4
The interesting thing about this scene, I think, is that relief never comes, even after we see that Leon is safe. Ashley does aim at Leon, she does pull the trigger. Ashley could not resist the plaga's mind control anymore - from here on out, something sinister bubbles. This scene serves as a turning point in the misson - we are shown that mental strength isn't enough to resist the plaga anymore.
You have to take a moment to consider the unbelievable odds of the gun jamming. This only happened once the entire game, we know the gun was in working order until now, and it shoots perfectly fine after the scene. Iâve seen arguments about Ashleyâs shooting technique causing a misfire, and sure, that could be the case, but this is just the way I like to interpret this moment artistically.
The ONLY reason Leon didnât die here was this luck - Ashley did pull the trigger - a sort of divine intervention, some miracle where the bullet doesnât fly. Youâre forced to acknowledge this when you hear the gun click. In a more objective sense: the mission failed right here. This moment should have been the end. In Leonâs mind, this should have played as the biggest failure in his entire career. I wish this was harped on more in the game, honestly. Saddler won against Leon hereâŠ. but he didnât win against whatever invisible force jammed the gun. I like to think of this moment as an act of god - the only genuine act of god we see in the entire game.
I think that a game based around cults, worship, and religion having its only on-screen divine act happening to the forces opposing that religion is actually really really interesting. All the stuff weâve seen Saddler/los illuminados do is based in science and manipulation of the plaga, the game does a lot to position the actual forces behind the cultâs control as purely scientific. It can all be biologically explained (in-universe) and even Saddler knows that - he owes his âdivinityâ to the plaga infection. He is taking the mantle of god but he isnât actually divine, heâs co-opting phrases like âsacrificial lambâ to enhance his godly facade, but he knows itâs science. Leon and Ashley's divine survival of this encounter only serves to highlight how much of a sham the cult is - power and control go to the few on top, while the universe itself opposes its evil. It jams the gun. It saves Leon and Ashley.
Iâm not trying to canonise god or whatever in RE4R (especially since itâs meant to be set in real life, pretty much) but you cannot ignore the sheer LUCK on display here, whether you want to call that god or coincidence, it was a genuine miracle that Leon didnât die here. I always think thatâs so chilling. Ashley pulled the trigger.
Anyway. Thatâs my thematic analysis of my favourite cutscene. I love this game.
"Asteroid," poem assembled from quotations from Wikipedia articles
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