‘Fallout’ Video Game Series’ Post-Apocalyptic Vision of West Virginia Might Not Be Worth the Trip

Video games are often not great at depicting rural life. But all signs indicate that the next game in the “Fallout” series, “Fallout: 76,” is going to be set somewhere in the mountains of West Virginia—for better or worse. The news has been met with a range of responses, from celebratory to cautionary, but either way the short trailer released last week serves as a conscious choice on the part of the game’s developer Bethesda to diverge from expectations that their next big release would continue their popular “Elder Scrolls” series.

Information found in earlier “Fallout” games referring to a “Vault 76” located somewhere in Virginia, as well as a certain iconic West Virginian song making its way into the recent teaser, make it pretty clear that Bethesda is eyeing the Mountain State as the setting for the next big iteration of its best-selling game series.

But while the “Fallout” video game series has never properly given the Appalachian region its unique retrofuturist/post-apocalyptic treatment, the game series’ history of portraying rural areas proves that it might not handle its own vision of West Virginia in a way that’s responsible to the state’s real-life residents.

The “Fallout” series has always been about loss and its implications. The word “fallout” itself has multiple meanings as far as the game’s themes are concerned. Nuclear fallout from a brief but devastating world war results in the physical state of the game’s world (once a gleaming sci-fi utopia, now a decimated landscape dominated by twisting metal and debris), but there’s an altogether different sort of fallout visible in the disastrous condition of so many of that same world’s civilizations and people—namely, that they’ve regressed to a point where killing or attacking strangers has become part of the new post-apocalyptic way of life.

A hefty percentage of the folks who players encounter in the game will either immediately try to kill them or else will ask them to complete some kind of quest on their behalf (at the end of which they may also try to kill the player). But most of them are just trying to survive in any way they can. They’re fighting every day with whatever vaguely weapon-shaped implements they have on hand in order to hold on to what little land they have left. The people of the “Fallout” series’ world are deeply connected to and shaped by their local landscapes, forgotten or ignored by whatever remains of the government, wary of outsiders, and fiercely loyal to whoever (or in some cases, WHATever) they’ve chosen to call their family.

Those images might start to sound pretty familiar to many Southerners, particularly those who have lived or grown up in the Appalachian Mountains. But those hoping that their rural experiences will be responsibly represented in the newest “Fallout” iteration have reason to worry; for an explanation, look no further than “Fallout 3” (the first major game in the series with current developer Bethesda at the helm) and its downloadable content “Point Lookout.”

Set in the Point Lookout State Park region of Maryland on the state’s western shore, the in-game region of ‘”Point Lookout” hardly resembles the present-day region’s outdoorsy New-England-fishing-village vibe.

Instead, the area looks like something out of the movie “Deliverance.”

Deranged “swampfolk” roam the land, killing anyone without “the marks” (disfiguring mutations) and worshipping eldritch gods through blood sacrifices and worse. It’s later explained in-game that the swampfolks’ appearances are the result of intense nuclear radiation as well as (naturally) generations of inbreeding. Much like the horror film “Wrong Turn”, the game trades in on its audience’s preconceived notions of rural residents in order to instill fear and create a feeling of otherness or strangeness in its players. Everything about these enemies is designed to call to mind the “dangerous hillbilly” stereotype, from their threadbare overalls to their broken shouts of “There you is!” when they spot the player character roaming their lands.

 

Credit Bethesda Softworks
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Screenshot from the “Fallout 76” teaser trailer on YouTube

These characters are not human, a fact that the game telegraphs to the player in various ways (some more subtle than others). The swampfolk are implied to be capable of trade and interact offscreen with certain non-player characters. Despite this, there is only one true swampfolk character players can interact with directly, and it’s a young boy who has specifically been outcast from the swampfolks’ society due to lacking their distinguishing disfigurements. The way to know in-game who is a friend and who’s a foe starts to become a question of simply who looks the most traditionally “human.”

One of the few humans tolerated by the swampfolk is a local moonshiner, because of course the swampfolk love moonshine. They use scavenged teddy bears, bizarre idols and wood carvings to mark the boundaries of their territory, and occasionally dead swampfolk can be found carrying around human flesh in their pockets. Even the game’s official downloadable editor lists the swampfolk as “creatures” rather than human enemies, despite their ability to speak, obvious culture, and mostly-human appearances. Consistently, the gameplay and story of “Point Lookout” work in tandem to “other” the swampfolk through stereotypical redneck characteristics, only to follow up this othering by dehumanizing them so the player won’t feel bad later about killing dozens and dozens of them over the course of the DLC.

Again, none of this is surprising on its own, given how important it is in a video game to develop a visual language to signal to players who and what their enemies are. But Bethesda’s use of harmful rural stereotypes as a shorthand for “enemy” reinforces these stereotypes within American culture at large, and its dehumanization of the characters that embody these stereotypes can’t help but also dehumanize people in the real world with the same characteristics.

It’s possible, even given this track record, that “Fallout: 76” will pay homage to the Appalachian region’s unique history and traditions without stereotyping and minimizing the culture it depicts, and many in the game industry are hopeful that it will . And to be fair, we’ll all have to wait until Bethesda’s E3 conference on June 10 to know for sure that the game is even set in West Virginia in the first place.

But Bethesda’s past missteps have made it unclear whether or not the company values making the kind of effort required to portray rural working class people with any kind of dignity. And if other recent big budget games like “Far Cry 5” are anything to go by, mass-appeal games still have a long way to go before they’re able to evoke rural themes and imagery without completely flattening or misrepresenting the very folks they’re working so hard to call to mind.

Ryan Scott Morris (@Ryabn_Morse) is a North Carolina writer based in the Research Triangle. He attended Appalachian State University, and his work has appeared in Scalawag Magazine, Show Your Skin, and Timothy McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. He lives in a little white house with a baby blue porch over a basement full of dying plants.

Pokémon GO Fever Catches W.Va.'s Historic Towns

By now, you may have heard of a new app for smartphones called Pokémon GO. It was released in the United States on July 6 and has taken the country by storm – including West Virginia. There’s a feature in the game that encourages you to visit historic, unique, or touristy spots in the real world, and West Virginia Public Broadcasting has been exploring the interest in this widely popular game.

But first – for full disclosure, I have been a big fan of the Pokémon franchise since it came to the U.S. in the late 90s. Pokémon was created in Japan in 1996, and through video games and trading cards, players collected Pokémon or Pocket Monsters unique to the game and even battled them.

Jump ahead 20 years and Pokémon can now be played on your smartphone.

I ran around Shepherdstown last week with a few friends who also play Pokémon GO. All of us are millennials who spent our childhoods either battling or trading Pokémon after school in the cafeteria or on Saturday mornings at the local book store.

Games Editor for Mashable, Chelsea Stark says what made the game so popular for the generation was the built-in sense of adventure and self-importance. And millennials are reliving that experience today at the touch of a finger.

“It was all these people who grew up loving Pokémon and becoming, like, huge Pokémon fans, and are now kind of adults and like, are able to have this awesome experience of kind of playing with Pokémon in the real world,” Stark said.

To fully play the game, you have to get out and explore the world around you. Pokémon GO uses something called augmented reality to bring those Pokémon to your front yard, your living room, or to your nearby park. The game’s main screen looks like a GPS map with your avatar standing in your current location.

Credit Pokémon GO
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A Pokémon called Nidorina appears on my phone in front of Knutti Hall on Shepherd University’s campus.

As you walk around, wild Pokémon appear on your screen. Tap them with your finger, your camera turns on, and suddenly you see that Pokémon standing right in front of you.

“The fact that it kind of takes on this real world feeling, and gives you a feeling like there’s a layer of magic around us, it’s, I think, may have helped it spread like wildfire,” Stark explained.

That “layer of magic” comes in many forms, from the Pokémon themselves to little, blue, floating boxes that appear as you explore. These blue boxes are known as PokéStops, and they’re often placed at historic locations or landmarks.

There are dozens of PokéStops in historic Shepherdstown, from the Sweet Shop to the Rumsey Monument, celebrating James Rumsey – thought by locals to be the real father of the steamboat, the first of which was showcased in Shepherdstown.

So, is the game having an impact on local tourism? My friend Austin Susman, who is a student at Shepherd, and like me grew up in Charleston, thinks it’s entirely possible.

“The weekend it first came out, I was actually home in Charleston,” Susman said, “and I found some statues downtown that I’d never seen before; stuff in front of buildings I’d driven by every day that I never stopped to look at the statues before.”

Already, institutions like Shepherd University are looking at ways to incorporate this new phenomenon into their services, like a scavenger hunt for incoming freshmen to learn about Shepherdstown. 

And even the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park has taken notice.

John Lustrea has been a seasonal park ranger there for the last four years. He’s also a Pokémon GO player. Lustrea says he’s noticed more people in the park playing the game, and he says rangers at the National Mall in Washington, D.C. are actually talking about starting hikes incorporating Pokémon GO.

Credit Pokémon GO
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PokéStops in Harpers Ferry, WV.

“The idea is they will lead a group of people playing the game and help them catch Pokémon, and then they’ll probably talk about the variety of the monuments and historic things on the Mall,” Lustrea said.

There are concerns that come with the game, though, from distracted driving, to players getting mugged, to one player finding a dead body, and then there are also concerns in-game over data tracking and privacy.

Many of my friends say the privacy issue doesn’t really deter them from playing, including, Dylan Meushaw.

“I mean, I’m already on social media and all that crap, so my stuff’s out there already probably,” Meushaw said.

Chelsea Stark with Mashable says just a few days after the game’s release, programmers did improve some privacy aspects for users signing in with a Google account. As for the data tracking –

“I mean if you’re concerned about that, then you shouldn’t own a smartphone, because your smartphone – Apple is tracking you, Google is tracking you already if you own an Android phone, and your cell carrier is definitely tracking you,” Stark noted.

Pokémon GO has only been out for about two weeks, and it’s already left a mark on our culture. In just the first few days, it became the most downloaded cell phone app. EVER. During a summer full of political and social strife, many say the game has provided a nice getaway even if it’s only for a few moments.

So, to all my fellow GO players, get out there, explore your communities and catch Pokémon.

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