![]() At least one of the Bookers in another universe. It hints this in a letter inside the lighthouse that says something like, "Kill the man before he comes." -C (C as in Comstock) It is suggested that this man did indeed kill Booker. The dead guy in the lighthouse was and is supposedly a man sent by Comstock (also Booker) to kill Booker (pre-Comstock Booker). what i hate is that there are alot of plot holes that are never explained like who is the dead guy in the lighthouse, how does elizabeth get her powers, and how are there such advanced weaponry in 1912 Yup but whats interesting is that if you wake up as booker in a different dimension where comstock never existed because of the drowning so that booker cn be with anna. Αναρτήθηκε αρχικά από Dwerklesberry:You watched the entire credit sequence right? Its still a stupid ending, why not make a simple ending not a quantum entanglement ending that literally makes THE ENTIRE STORY POINTLESS Search "Quantum Entanglement" to get a better understanding of this. Elizabeth says something like, "All different versions of us, but we've ended up in the same place." Of course each choice you make has a minor change and thus, another universe is created in which you did NOT make that choice. This is strongly supported when Booker and Elizabeth arrive at the area with all the lighthouses near the end of the game. Every 'choice' you make in the game leads to the same ending. This correalates the main central theme, which I'll leave for you to interpret. This suggests that Booker has been here many times in order to save Elizabeth and every time he has choosen heads. ![]() He says, "Heads" and what do you know? He gets heads! Then you see Robert turn around and 'heads' has been marked a ton (123 times to be exact) and 'tails' has not been marked a single time. Take the scene where Rosalind Lutece and Robet Lutece tell Booker to flip a coin for example. It would make sense that there is no alternative ending, for the game suggests at many points that this has and always has been. ![]() This correlates to the central theme, which I'll leave for you to interpret.
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