The Incredible, Absurd World of Disco Elysium: The Final Cut
In pursuit of that vision, Final Cut’s addition of political vision quests answers your selection of one of four deranged political ideologies with a fever dream on day three about your woeful political inaction. You can then resolve upon waking to bring about a new, tyrannical order instead of wasting time with police work.
This can involve agreeing that war crimes are subjective with dejected students grumbling about the hypothetical hypotheticals of authoritarian communism, or contacting the radically moderate Coalition gunship looming over the city in order to ask when, if ever, centrism will achieve something.
Other ludicrous ideologies include ultranationalism, and hypercapitalism, because your character isn’t sane enough to possess a normal political opinion. But I didn’t check those out—partly because you have to emphatically agree with them at least 5 times for them to unlock. My sense of satire wasn’t powerful enough to do that ironically.
It’s worth noting that all politics is beautifully mocked here, but of course fascism gets no dreamy silver lining. It’s smartly dissected bare, often quite grotesquely, to illustrate its perfect ugliness from the inside. Usually white creators develop alternate-world settings to escape uncomfortable conversations, though in Disco Elysium they seem clearer than ever, whether you’re indulging them or not. Inescapable at the sharp ends of society, alive and kicking in the game’s postcolonial setting.
The humor the game ingrains in these dark things is something that Kurvitz described in an interview with GamesIndustry.biz as a kind of hollow laughter. The natural response to absurdly bleak truths.
This prompted me to ask Kurvitz if the team may have aimed a little high with everything that Disco Elysium tries to discuss. “Not particularly,” he says.
“Since we didn’t set out to provide any answers or resolutions to these (big) cans of whoop-ass we opened,” he says, “they’re there for the player to encounter, offer an opinion on, get shaped by— but not to solve. Elysium is realistic— and that’s good,” he explains.
“I think people like Kim Kitsuragi, your partner, represent a systemic metaphor for the game. What he does for the officer is what Disco Elysium tries its darndest to do for the player. Let’s get through this shit, it says. It’s not fair, or easy, but it’s not entirely impossible either … And hey, it’s not much, but you have me. It’s not really that high a bar to set. What made it hard to accomplish is that the game needs to not collapse itself—from errors, production problems, or quality lapses.”
As Kurvitz claims, somewhere near its end you realize Disco Elysium is about a broken man working an unworkable case, but also broken people surviving an unworkable world, and the Sisyphean will it takes to see it resolving the way it ought to when you know it likely won’t. Masterfully, it does this without really being a downer. The game can’t bring itself to sugarcoat the exhausting pain it reflects, but it leaves you fuller than before. Achingly aware of how there’s no destruction from which you cannot rebuild, and that hope will never die.
Motion video footage posted by Gamespot shows Kurvitz describing the complexity of Disco Elysium’s initial concept, and how it was painstakingly chiseled into the base game. I asked whether he’s satisfied with the Final Cut update.
“To my own amazement, I’m gonna say: yes. Disco Elysium is not perfect, of course, but I’m very proud of the effort everyone made. We’ve worked on the game for 7 years now. And we truly did our best with the time,” he says.
“But above all, I’m glad we got that feeling in there. The world of the game—Elysium—has this very specific feeling. To describe it we use the adjective ‘elytical.’ Sometimes—when we encounter the same feeling in our world—we say: very elytical, or ‘elüütiline,’ in Estonian. People have also used ‘eerie’ and ‘magical,’ which makes me very happy. It’s the same feeling we got when we played Elysium in its tabletop roleplaying origins, when we were teenagers. Walking those streets, staring into the pale,” he reminisces. “That we were able to bottle this strange and familiar feeling, and then transport it to so many people is, for me, an achievement that eclipses any regrets or issues I might have.”
Simply put, Disco Elysium is a tour de force of the absurd catastrophe we call the human experience. Terrible, beautiful, and disco as hell.
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