

For Episode 2, where the player controls Elizabeth, the team at Irrational Games tweaked the game to include more stealth and survival horror elements. In terms of gameplay, Burial At Sea Episode 2 is the rare instance where a studio radically changed a game’s systems for DLC. The story brings closure to some lingering questions about Bioshock Infinite‘s story and connects back to the story of the original Bioshock.

Yi Suchong, Atlas/Frank Fontaine, and Rapture founder Andrew Ryan.īurial At Sea remains of one of few pieces of essential single player Downloadable Content across video games. Overall, the story focuses on Elizabeth’s harrowing journey through Rapture as she jockeys with a host of characters from the original Bioshock including Dr. Burial at Sea allows the player to play as a woman for the first time in the series. While Booker plays a key role in Episode 1, the DLC is Elizabeth’s story. Burial at Sea includes a version of Bioshock Infinite‘s Booker Dewitt and Elizabeth, though the Booker in Rapture is not the same man who accompanies Elizabeth in Bioshock Infinite. Released in two parts across 20, Burial At Sea returned to Rapture, the iconic underwater city from the first two Bioshock games (a city which had a quick cameo in Bioshock Infinite). Irrational Games released several Downloadable Content Packs to support the game, with the most important being Burial At Sea. Lastly, the ambitious and ambiguous ending of Bioshock Infinite left a lasting impression on many players and launched countless theories about how players should interpret the ambiguous and mind-bending conclusion. The young woman was brought to life with motion capture by Heather Gordon, along with incredible voice work by Courtnee Draper. Elizabeth served as an important predecessor for other highly emotive companion characters. The story was also praised, with special appreciation for the relationship between protagonist Booker Dewitt and companion character Elizabeth. The game was lauded for its incredible art direction, its solid mechanics, and its ambitious design ideas. Lastly, the game was the final game from Irrational Games, an iconic studio that was closed after completion of the game’s post launch content.įor all its flaws, Bioshock Infinite still stands as an incredible accomplishment in video game design and storytelling. The game’s exploration of these topics has contributed to a sense of long lasting controversy that has helped shape the game’s image. In terms of critical reception, Bioshock Infinite‘s imperfect exploration of subjects like classism, racism, religion, American Exceptionalism, and violence become a lightning rod for controversies with a variety of different groups of people.

In addition to drastic changes in game design, some of the major story and character concepts shifted throughout development. The game had a notably troubled development cycle that result in many design ideas being scrapped or changed before the game’s final release. Nearly eight years after its release, Bioshock Infinite remains an ambitious and controversial video game. Overall, if you've played Bioshock Infinite, you really should play this because it ties up the story and it's also a blast to play.Examining Elizabeth’s Harrowing Journey In Bioshock Infinite: Burial At Sea This article includes major spoilers for the entire Bioshock series. The second episode's story is great and it really sells the package. Also there's great elements to it, like certain thing on the floor (glass, water) let enemies hear you and a vigor that allows you to become invisible. You can sneak through the entire game and not kill a single enemy. There is a new game play in the second episode and that's sneaking. It's five hours long and filled to the brim with plot twists (again, can't give much details without ruining the story). It's only 90 minutes, and it's story is a little predictable (can't really give details about the story without ruining it) but still the same fun Infinite game play in Rapture makes it worth it. The first episode is definitely the weaker of the two, but that doesn't mean it's not a lot of fun. And it does it extremely well, for the most part. It ties together the Bioshock Infinite game and the entire franchise. Bioshock Infinite: Burial At Sea takes you back down to Rapture, the place that started the Bioshock franchise, for a two part DLC.
