Finishing the Fight, One Step at a Time: Seriality in Bungie’s Halo

Authors

  • Jens Bonk Osnabrück University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7557/23.6156

Abstract

The computer game series Halo has become one of the largest and most profitable transmedia franchises in the world, with lifetime sales of more than $3 billion in 2013 (Halo Waypoint). The narratives within the Halo universe unfold across several computer games, comic books, novels, short films (including advertising) and ARGs. On top of these corporate products that form the core ‘canon,’ fan communities have built intricately connected, additional narratives (e.g. Rooster Teeth’s Red vs. Blue) based on the story and/or the technology provided by the Halo games. This paper seeks to explore the different modes of seriality that Halo engages with. It thus traces Halo’s narrative across what Denson and Jahn-Sudmann have called “intra-ludic, inter-ludic and para-ludic” boundaries (2013). Obviously Denson and Jahn-Sudmann’s approach lends itself to the analysis of the complex fiction of Halo as a whole, but also of its constituent parts and their interrelations. As with a lot of modern transmedia franchises, Halo’s narrative universe is at the same time splintered and unified, each installment standing on its own, but also being connected to a larger, fictional history. Consequently, it represents the culmination of what Marsha Kinder first described as “transmedia intertextuality” (1993) and what Henry Jenkins has developed further in several volumes and articles (e.g. 2003, 2011). Beginning with the big picture of Halo as a transmedia universe, this paper will analyze the relationships between the different layers of seriality that make up Halo as a singular, yet disjointed, narrative. While para-ludic and inter-ludic elements of Halo’s seriality as a narrative universe are relatively obvious and clearly delineated, intra-ludic seriality within the Halo computer games is less visible and more subtle. Thus, in an effort to give a more detailed explanation of the role intra-ludic seriality plays in Halo as a whole, a large part of this paper will consist of a close reading of Halo 3’s first chapter. A central concept for this analysis will be the notion of “serial one-upmanship” or “outbidding” (cf. Jahn-Sudmann and Kelleter 2012), which is at the core of Halo 3’s intra-ludic seriality. While Halo 3 is divided into clearly marked chapters, this paper will argue that its intra-ludic seriality extends further and is shaped by elements of the gameplay itself. In order to offer a detailed analysis of these elements, Aki Järvinen’s terminology for elements of games will be employed (2007).

Author Biography

Jens Bonk, Osnabrück University

Jens Bonk is a PhD candidate and research assistant in American Studies at the University of Osnabrueck, Germany. His MA was completed in 2012 with a thesis on the modes of serialization in the video game series Halo. Currently Jens Bonk is working on a project tentatively titled Property and Authorship in Digital Culture. His research interests include comics studies, game studies, genre fiction, popular culture, technology and culture, law and humanities, intellectual property, copyright and cultural representations of the law.

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Published

2014-12-12

How to Cite

Bonk, J. (2014) “Finishing the Fight, One Step at a Time: Seriality in Bungie’s Halo”, Eludamos: Journal for Computer Game Culture, 8(1), pp. 65–81. doi: 10.7557/23.6156.

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Articles