ronri
Super Freak
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2012
- Messages
- 2,524
- Reaction score
- 27
Its a huge story of misinterpretation... maybe Ocelot didn't fully understand Big Boss's plan, the attempt to understand someone's intetions is a big part of MGS4, just like MGS2 that game was involved with things beyond the game's story and context
Yup, it's exactly why I love Ocelot as a character. For all the good he did, he still had a very twisted zero-sum mentality about the world (seriously, for him it was either absolute control vs absolute chaos). Let's not forget that for all his seeming "heroism" (something i get tired of hearing even as an Ocelot fan), this is still the very same sadistic b@st@rd who absolutely enjoyed torture (something he learned from Volgin of all people, not to mention at the time when Volgin was torturing Big Boss, good lord). Whether or not you think Ocelot's end plan justified his means (again, he still failed to achieve one part of his plan, the other half being that he at least freed Big Boss), is entirely up to the person. I for one think he's a very cool and twisted character, but one that greatly contributed in actually doing a lot of good in the long run.
Again, I LOVE the ideas Kojima was going for with Ocelot in MGS4, but I just hated how it was all communicated very poorly with all the random stuff being crammed into its story. So yeah, conceptually I liked MGS4 (heck I really want HT figures of Old Snake and Liquid Ocelot), but overall it was clunky and messy and eugh.
@ronri:
I'm really not convinced about the "achieving anarchy" part as one of his main goals; because it follows that if Ocelot were to free Big Boss by taking the AI systems offline, then the economies of the world would destabilize as a result (and hence, it would become the "Wild West"). I think Ocelot's end quote was more of a realization, and grandiose speech that The Patriots had finally been defeated and the world was now free from their grasp.
That's not to say that Big Boss may not have liked the idea of ruling over another Outer Heaven. But, Outer Heaven itself, was a just a means to an end to defeating The Patriots, and since Ocelot succeeded in his mission, I guess Big Boss just decided to call it quits in his life and everything else.
And that's perfectly fine! I don't know, it's just from a lot of material I've gathered there's just a lot of evidence that showed that Ocelot possessed such a mindset. Mind you, it's not like I'm saying that Ocelot was a literal anarchist, I'd say it's more appropriate to say it's a mentality he was forced to adopt by living under the Patriots rule for so long. If anything, this goal of "anarchy" felt more like a last resort than anything else, and one he's perfectly happy about to actually happen since it fits in Big Boss's old ideal somehow. I don't necessarily think he's evil-incarnate nor do I think he's scum because of it, but it did make for a dangerous mentality that even I'm sure that Big Boss wouldn't have wanted it for himself or anyone else in the end. It's why Naomi and Sunny's contribution was hyped up so much (even by Big Boss at the end), beyond Ocelot's work, Sunny's modifications was what saved society from being the complete wasteland that Ocelot had projected. And it's not like Snake was the only way for Ocelot to achieve his plan. If Snake had died along the way, Ocelot would've still launched the nuke, and heck without Sunny's FOXALIVE, it would've actually achieved his projected Outer Heaven unlike what happened at the end of MGS4 where FOXALIVE prevented just that .