Nah, Bethesda is just really shallow.
Quoting Scripture. Any kind of Scripture, is completely fucking irrelevant to anybody who isn't raised to consider your Scripture profound.
Christians do it all the time because they are raised to assume there's more wisdom and literary pedigree in it to be had in it than actually exists.
I think giving Bethesda the benefit of the doubt that they had any intentioned political narrative at all is giving them too much credit.
The fact that they have this generically admirable All-American war hero as their protag in FO4 just shows that they're fish so deeply submerged in water that they have no concept of water. Or they're just actively pandering to their audience. Take your pick.
Heh, I agree. I am having to jump over plenty of hurdles to say that Bethesda is saying anything even remotely political. The games are so filled with clichés and crap we've seen before. For god's sake, their "innovative" move in
Skyrim was to add dragons. Oh boy, never seen those in a fantasy game before. It is interesting to note that they chose a generic "All-American war hero" for
Fallout 4 though. I'm gonna go with the target audience idea. This game is marketed to fans of FPS's. The most popular FPS's are war-themed (
Call of Duty, Battlefield, whatever else (I'm not a big expert on popular FPS's) so it makes sense that they'd try to make the most awesomest badass backstory ever.
I'm trying to figure out what it is about Bethesda's writing that makes me feel there is a political bias to it. Now that I've given it a bit more thought though, I don't think there is any "right-wing" or "left-wing" thing to it. I think it is that Bethesda (or at least Emil and the other writers) have an accepted world view of good and bad. Pro-democracy, pro-capitalist, anti-racist, pro-individual freedom, pro-family. It's all very safe and very bland. I think it's more that they don't want to challenge or upset their target audience more than anything. You're not going to see diverse viewpoints analysed seriously by Bethesda at any point like you do in
New Vegas. In
New Vegas one of my favourite lines is "a polite society is an armed society" but I never felt like there was a judgement being made on this viewpoint one way or another. It's a character's viewpoint, not necessarily other character's or the developer's. But it's treated with respect. I recall there was that nice article written by that Mormon guy, saying how
New Vegas is one of the few places in modern media that doesn't place any judgement on his religion. If Bethesda had Mormon characters they'd be presented as overly-religious annoying idiots. Not necessarily because they believe that but because that's the popular perception of Mormons so it's a cheap joke. Same with anarchists, communists, gun-nuts, racists, hippies, Fascists, Nazis, junkies and whatever other sidelined groups there are in American culture. All of them will be ridiculed in some way because they don't fit the public norm, but at the same time none of them are particularly toxic groups of debate that will cause people to start twittering profusely.
It's sad that the moment I say that we should keep the discussion specifically on the politics of Bethesda's Fallout games, everyone immediately continues bitching at each other about welfare systems and the war in the middle east. How are these things relevant to the discussion? The closest I can think of that relates to these topics is the similarity between Caesar's Legion and IS. Sadly, that's not a Bethesda game, so again, irrelevant to the discussion. Sigh. The moment politics is mentioned in any discussion on the internet, no matter what it is, people can't keep their politics in their pocket.