So Elizabeth could help Tenenbaum and Jack, in an alternate version of Bioshock 1. So in an alternate branching version of the Burial at Sea universe, a version of Elizabeth could be reborn in a working version of the Prototype Vita-Chamber.Īnd in Bioshock 1, Suchong's Lab is not too far from Tenenbaum’s hideout.
Now imagine an alternate version of the Burial at Sea universe, where Elizabeth's DNA sequence was programmed into a working version of the prototype Vita-Chamber. There are clues in the other Bioshock games (and the earlier System Shock games) that there is a way that a version of our Elizabeth can cheat death.Įlizabeth delivers her own DNA sequence to Suchong, and it ends up in his lab alongside the prototype Vita-Chamber. Originally posted by matt:Does our elizabeth die in burial at Sea? She goes to the only single universe with an alive comstock with her see all possibility powers yet is caught off guard when she is killed, it makes 0 sense They're all stuck in a time loop of infinte suffering and exploitation. It is unfortunate, but what we thought was a noble and virtuous deed by rescuing her from the 'prophet' in the original game, turns out it was all for naught. What happened to Elizabeth was aweful and sad.
In light of what's going on in the world today, I wonder if this entire game series is a scathing commentary on the exploitation of children and the abuse of the young. Yes, the Elizabeth, whom Booker rescues from Infinite, dies horribly by bludgoning at the hands of Atlas/aka Fontaine.įuthermore, Elizabeth states: "Our world values children, not childhood. This game was good mechanically, but horrible plotwise.