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Spec ops: The line's conventional subversion of the military shooter

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 17:45 authored by Brendan Keogh
The contemporary videogame genre of the military shooter, exemplified by blockbuster franchises like Call of Duty and Medal of Honor, is often criticised for its romantic and jingoistic depictions of the modern, high-tech battlefield. This entanglement of military shooters and the rhetoric of technologically advanced warfare in a "militaryentertainment complex" is scrutinised by Yager's Spec Ops: The Line. The game's critique of military shooters is as complex and messy as the battlefields the genre typically works to obscure. Initially presented to the player as a generic military shooter, The Line gradually subverts the genre's mechanics, aesthetics, and conventions to devalue claims of the West's technological and ethical superiority that the genre typically perpetuates. This paper brings together close, textual analysis; comments made by the game's developers; and the analytical work of videogame critics to examine how The Line relies on the conventions of its own genre to ask its player to think critically about the cultural function of military shooters.

History

Start page

1

End page

17

Total pages

17

Outlet

Proceedings of DiGRA 2013: DeFragging Game Studies

Editors

C. Pearce, H. Kennedy, and J. Sharp

Name of conference

Digital Games Research Association Conference (DiGRA 2013)

Publisher

Digital Games Research Association

Place published

United States

Start date

2013-08-26

End date

2013-08-29

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 Authors and Digital Games Research Association DiGRA

Former Identifier

2006048571

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-15