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Diary 1
One thing I've learned: if you don't draw first, you don't get to draw at all.
― Booker DeWitt, to Elizabeth[src]

Booker DeWitt is the protagonist of BioShock Infinite. He is a private investigator and, prior to his reluctant arrival in Columbia, a former soldier and Pinkerton agent. Booker is offered a deal to wipe away his debts if he goes to Columbia and retrieves a girl imprisoned there. Over the course of the story, Booker reveals his past experiences and shows his ability to make decisions independent of the player. Unlike Jack and Subject Delta, Booker has his own personality rather than being a silent and faceless avatar for the player.[6]

Infinite Spoilers


History[]

Booker DeWitt is a man of partial Native American descent,[7] who was born on April 19, 1874. At the age of sixteen, he was a member of the 7th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army and took part in the Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890. At Wounded Knee, a sergeant had accused him of having Native American lineage in front of the men in his unit. To avoid being stigmatized by his comrades, he scalped Native American victims and burned teepees with men, women, and children still inside.[8] Due to his gruesome actions, other members of his regiment, including Cornelius Slate, gave him the nickname "The White Injun," because of his taking trophies from his victims.[2] Booker was ultimately awarded a Medal of Honor[9] and ranked as a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army.[10]

Although he was seen as a hero to his fellow soldiers, Booker felt shame and regret for his part in the massacre. After the battle, Booker, fraught with guilt, attended a river baptism led by Preacher Witting to be reborn as a new man and be absolved of his past actions. At the last second, Booker rejected his baptism, thinking that his sins could not be washed away by a "dunk in the river."

Booker Pinkerton badge

Booker's Pinkerton badge.

In January 1892, Booker became an employee of the Pinkerton's National Detective Agency. While working as a Pinkerton, Booker garnered a reputation for ending labor strikes using extreme violence. Around this time, he married a woman named Annabelle Watson, who became pregnant shortly after. She died while giving birth to a daughter, Anna. This sent him into a depression. He turned to alcohol and gambling, which drove him far into debt.

Booker later became a private investigator (though he preferred to refer to himself as an independent contractor), but his debts persisted. In October 1893, Robert Lutece came to his office, representing Father Comstock. Comstock offered to wipe out of all of Booker's debt in exchange for Anna. Desperate, DeWitt sold her to Lutece and Comstock. Wrought with guilt, he immediately pursued the men to retrieve Anna. Booker arrived as the three were about to enter a Tear to another dimension with Rosalind Lutece. As the men and the baby entered the Tear, DeWitt struggled with Comstock to get Anna back. Comstock succeeded in pulling her through the Tear but as the Tear closed, the tip of Anna's pinky finger was severed.

Booker fell further into depression and later branded his right hand with Anna's initials, "A.D." Nearly twenty years later, in 1912, Robert and Rosalind Lutece returned once more, offering another deal. He agreed and they opened a Tear for Booker to enter. As he entered, he suffered the effects of "transfusing" into another dimension. Robert Lutece theorized that this effect was Booker's mind creating new memories from old ones. Booker confused the sale of his daughter twenty years previous with the task at hand, "Bring us the girl and wipe away the debt." Robert and Rosalind Lutece then took DeWitt to a lighthouse on the coast of Maine.

BioShock Infinite[]

Main article: BioShock Infinite

Reaching Columbia[]

Bookerrocket

Booker riding up to Columbia.

While traveling to the lighthouse, Booker is tasked by the Lutece Twins to enter the city of Columbia, reach Monument Tower, retrieve a girl named Elizabeth, and bring her to New York City unharmed in order to clear his debts. Upon arriving at the lighthouse with information and supplies given by Rosalind, DeWitt enters the Pilgrim's Rocket and ascends to Columbia through the Welcome Center. During his venture, he learns of the city's leader Zachary Comstock, but, because of the effects of Tear-jumping, he does not recognize him despite making the deal twenty years prior. Comstock refers to his stolen child as the "Seed of the Prophet" who is destined to take his throne and destroy the "Sodom Below."

Before gaining access to the city, Booker is required to receive a baptism by Preacher Witting, but nearly drowns from it and passes out. In his unconscious state, Booker dreams of his office in New York and witnesses Columbia attacking New York — in the future. Booker, tasked with finding Monument Island, awakens and enters Columbia in the middle of its annual Independence Day Raffle and Fair. Despite earlier warnings from the Lutece Twins, he attends the annual lottery held by Jeremiah Fink and wins the prize. He wins the first throw at stoning an interracial couple. Before Booker can react, the Columbia Police discover the brand on his hand which is referred to as the mark of the "False Shepherd" who is prophesied by Father Comstock to lead "his lamb astray." Booker fights through the Columbia Police force before being contacted by Zachary Comstock and then crash-landing on his zeppelin, and arriving on Monument Island.

Meeting Elizabeth[]

Booker enters Monument Island to discover a vast laboratory with an apartment at its center, where the girl has been imprisoned and observed there all her life. Through an observation room window, he sees Elizabeth tear through her painting of the Eiffel Tower onto an actual Paris street, circa 1983. Booker then accidentally falls through Elizabeth's ceiling into her library. She at first acts hostile and attacks him, but is then relieved by his presence, likely due to the fact that she has never seen another human up close. Booker then helps Elizabeth escape her tower, but not before they are chased and attacked by a giant bird creature.

With Elizabeth intent on enjoying her freedom, Booker convinces her to come with him by saying that he will take her on The First Lady airship to Paris; his actual plan is to take her to New York and complete his job. Along the way, Elizabeth explains her ability to manipulate Tears, saying they are windows to other realities. While Booker is initially shocked and somewhat fearful of the Tears, he becomes more comfortable with them when it is revealed they can be used to his and Elizabeth's benefit in combat. Elizabeth is also inquisitive about Booker's life, asking him in Soldier's Field if "there [is] a woman in [his] life." Booker responds that his wife died during childbirth — when Elizabeth concludes that he has children, he corrects her, saying he does not.

The Hall of Heroes[]

Upon reaching the rail line to the Aerodrome, Booker and Elizabeth find that it is closed down, and they will need to power it using some other electrical source. Traveling to the Hall of Heroes to find the Shock Jockey vigor, they come upon Booker's old war comrade, Cornelius Slate; disillusioned by Comstock's lies about his presence at Wounded Knee and his undercutting of true soldiers' efforts, Slate has taken over the Hall, and Booker and Elizabeth must fight their way inside to retrieve the Shock Jockey.

Inside, Slate reveals to Elizabeth that Booker was present at the Battle of Wounded Knee and that unlike Comstock, Booker is a true soldier. Not wanting to remember or find glory in his regrettable past, Booker attempts to distance himself from Slate's comments, assuring Elizabeth that nothing Slate praises is truly good. They then battle their way through the Hall exhibits on Wounded Knee and the Boxer Rebellion, with Slate sending teams of his soldiers after Booker so that they may "die a soldier's death."

When Booker finally confronts Slate, who himself holds the Shock Jockey vigor, the man asks that Booker kill him. If Booker chooses to spare Slate, the man raises against him, claiming Booker is nothing more than one of Comstock's "tin men." If Booker chooses to kill him, Slate happily remarks that Booker hasn't changed at all since their days in the army. This comment leaves Booker shaken, which Elizabeth notices and comments on.

When they take control of The First Lady, Elizabeth discovers Booker's plan to bring her to New York and begins to cry. Unsure what to do, Booker goes to comfort her, only to have her strike him with a wrench, knocking him unconscious. Elizabeth then leaves Booker and the ship to the Vox Populi, a Populist, anti-Founder movement headed by Daisy Fitzroy. Fitzroy offers to return control of the ship to Booker if he procures munitions from Finkton for their cause.

Fink Manufacturing[]

Booker finds Elizabeth on the docks at Finkton (getting caught attempting to stow away on a cargo barge), only to have her flee, opening Tears behind her to impede his advance. Her efforts draw the attention of Founder forces, whom Booker fights in order to rescue her. In the struggle, Booker is thrown from a building dock by a Handyman and nearly falls to his death. However, he is saved when Elizabeth opens a Tear, creating a cargo Zeppelin to catch him. Booker immediately suggests a partnership, which Elizabeth initially rejects, calling him a "liar… and a thug." However, she soon admits that he is the only way for her to reach Paris, and agrees to accompany him, despite her anger.

BSI - VoxMartyrPoster

Vox propaganda of Booker.

As they venture through Finkton, Booker and Elizabeth realize that their task cannot be completed in their present reality, due to insurmountable obstacles — the death of the gunsmith who was set to make the Vox munitions. However, they find they can enter different realities, through the use of the Tears, in which these obstacles do not exist. Their travels through the Tears eventually lead them to a universe where the Vox Populi have begun their revolution, and Booker is a martyr of the Vox cause. Fitzroy, confused by Booker's presence, sends Vox soldiers after him, claiming that he is an impostor.

Booker and Elizabeth make it to Fitzroy just as she murders Jeremiah Fink, then turns on Fink's son. At her insistence, Booker boosts Elizabeth into a nearby vent, then distracts Fitzroy by criticizing her violent methods. As Fitzroy fanatically responds, saying that the children of the Founders must die for any gains to be made, Elizabeth stabs her in the back.

When Elizabeth, struck with horror at what she has done, flees to The First Lady, Booker attempts to comfort her before going to the ship controls. When Elizabeth emerges, in a new dress and with her hair cut, she notes that they have a choice to make: New York or Paris. However, before a decision can be made, Songbird appears and takes down their ship.

Emporia[]

After the ship's crash landing, Elizabeth and Booker emerge to find the Lutece twins, who reveal that a special flute can control Songbird. Booker and Elizabeth then set a course for Comstock House. Along the way, Booker discovers a signpost decorated with the scalps of various Founder figures. The Booker of this universe did not show remorse for his actions at Wounded Knee and was just as violent. After exiting Grand Central Depot, Booker and his companion are nearly intercepted by Songbird, and just manage to hide. Afterward, Elizabeth makes a request of Booker: taking his hand and putting it on her neck, she asks him to promise that, "if it comes to it, you will not let him take me back." Upset by this request and refusing to accept the possibility of that happening, Booker presses Elizabeth for answers, wanting to know what happened to her in the tower. She doesn't say what will happen if Songbird takes her back, only noting that it is a fate akin to death.

Upon reaching Comstock House, the two discover that the gate can only be opened by someone with the appropriate fingerprints. Realizing that Lady Comstock is preserved in the nearby Memorial Gardens, Elizabeth takes off to procure her hand with Booker in pursuit.

Booker at first tries to talk Elizabeth down, attempting to draw on any familial love that Elizabeth might have for Lady Comstock. Elizabeth, however, feels only rage and betrayal, particularly after finding a diary by Lady Comstock which suggests she had Elizabeth locked in the tower. Booker eventually relents, saying that he will cut off Lady Comstock's hand to keep Elizabeth from having to do so. However, when he attempts to open the casket, Comstock springs a trap, siphoning away some of Elizabeth's power and using it to revive a foul and ghostly version of Lady Comstock called the Siren. Booker and Elizabeth then follow the Siren around Emporia, to various Tears that she wishes them to see.

Through the Tears, Booker and Elizabeth discover that Elizabeth is not the child of the Comstocks, but rather a child stolen from another reality. Years ago, Rosalind and Robert Lutece made a machine to open Tears to other worlds, which Comstock utilized to become a true Prophet through the use of science. However, the machine caused him to age and become sterile. It is revealed that Elizabeth was simply taken from another universe to serve as Comstock's heir. Lady Comstock rejected this notion, hating the child and believing her to be the bastard daughter of her husband and Rosalind Lutece. When he began to fear that Lady Comstock would reveal the truth of Elizabeth's origins, Comstock murdered her and framed her servant, Daisy Fitzroy, for the crime. Later, he had Jeremiah Fink arrange the death of the Luteces as Fink was the only one who could make it look like an accident, sabotaging the contraption he previously used to procure technology from alternate universes. However, the plan misfired and the contraption's failure caused the Luteces to exist in all possible realities at once and grant them the ability to travel between space, time, and probability at will.

Comstock House[]

After confronting the Siren, Booker and Elizabeth head to Comstock House, but are attacked by Songbird before they can reach it. Booker is thrown through a nearby building and briefly lapses into unconsciousness before Songbird comes to finish him off. Too injured to move, Booker is only saved by Elizabeth's intervention, when she offers her freedom in exchange for Booker's life. Booker then pursues Songbird, desperate to save Elizabeth from whatever fate awaits her.

While crossing the bridge to Comstock House, Booker passes through a blinding fog, on the other side of which is unseasonably cold weather. In Comstock House, Booker finds several Voxophones and Tears, suggesting that Elizabeth was exposed to experimentation, torture, and mental conditioning for at least six months waiting for Booker to come for her. Booker responds with astonishment, unaware of how this situation could be possible, or how much time has truly passed.

When Booker finds Elizabeth, she has aged decades and has become the indoctrinated heir to prophecy that Comstock wished. She shows him the New York City of 1984 under attack by Columbia, the mountains of men being drowned in flame. Booker weakly objects, saying that he was always going to come for her. She explains that he did, many times, but Songbird always stops him. Regretting her fate, Elizabeth gives Booker a card to deliver to her young self, and opens up a Tear, sending Booker back to the right reality and time.

Arriving in the Comstock House laboratory, Booker follows Elizabeth's screams until he finds her being operated on by Comstock's scientists. Filled with rage, Booker shuts down the Siphon canceling out Elizabeth's power, at which point she opens a Tear to a field beset by a raging twister, where the scientists are blown away. Booker then carefully releases her from her restraints and spinal tap, delivering the message from Elizabeth's older self. When Elizabeth says she intends to kill Comstock, Booker refuses to let her, saying he plans to do it himself for what Comstock has put her through.

Comstock and Songbird[]

Booker and Elizabeth pursue Comstock to his ship, The Hand of the Prophet. When they arrive, Comstock attempts to shake Elizabeth's faith in Booker, saying that everything that has happened to her was Booker's doing. A struggle begins between Comstock and Elizabeth, as Comstock demands that Booker tell Elizabeth what happened to her missing pinkie. In a rage, Booker smashes Comstock's head into a baptismal font and drowns him. In doing so, Booker reveals he does have any knowledge of what happened to Elizabeth's finger, saying, "You [Comstock] cut off her finger, and you put it on me!" Elizabeth demands to know what he means; Booker, equally confused by his own outburst, tells her that it means nothing. However, Elizabeth questions Booker's honesty when she sees his nose suddenly bleeding.

Booker and Elizabeth soon discover that the only way to leave Columbia for good is through a Tear out of the city, but this ability is prohibited by the Siphon still in the remains of Monument Island. Elizabeth realizes that the card given to Booker by her alternate self is a set of instructions on how to control Songbird — a drawing of a cage symbolizing the musical notes C, A, G, E — and she takes an instrument called the Whistler from a nearby statue, giving it to Booker. Using the Whistler to control Songbird, Booker destroys the Siphon. However, the Whistler breaks and Booker loses control of Songbird, who turns on them.

Revelation[]

Elizabeth then transports herself, Booker, and Songbird to Rapture, where Songbird is killed by ocean pressure. Elizabeth reveals to Booker that with the Siphon gone, she can see and open Tears to "infinite" worlds, perceive all alternate realities at once. She also reveals that Comstock is not truly dead, because, in other worlds, he is still alive.

Bookerthelighthouse

Alternate version of Booker in the Sea of Doors.

On a quest to stop him for good, Elizabeth and Booker go through Tears manifesting as doors, which reveal Booker's true history. Booker, reluctant and anxious, asks Elizabeth to leave with him, telling her to open a Tear to Paris for them. Elizabeth, however, is intent on revealing the truth to him.

The truth was, in 1893, Booker met Robert Lutece, who offered him a deal on behalf of Zachary Hale Comstock — Comstock would wipe all of Booker's debts away in exchange for Anna. On October 8, 1893, Booker sold Anna, but regretted his choice immediately, and pursued Robert. Booker finds him with Comstock and Anna in an alleyway, near a strange portal with a woman inside. Booker grabbed Comstock as the latter stepped through the portal and tried to wrestle Anna from his grasp as Comstock ordered the portal shut. Comstock was able to shake Booker off, and the portal closed just as Anna reached out to Booker, severing her pinkie finger in the process. Overcome with regret, Booker fell even further into alcoholism and his gambling habits worsened. He closed the door in his rotting apartment to Anna's room and eventually branded his right hand with Anna's initials, "AD."

Nearly twenty years later, Booker re-encountered Robert Lutece, who offers him an opportunity to get Anna back; all he must do, he says, is simply step through a portal Robert summons in his office. Traveling through the portal leaves Booker dazed and unable to consolidate his memories (a side-effect of traveling between realities), and he begins creating new, different memories from the old. When he has stabilized, Booker believes that he has been tasked with entering the floating city of Columbia to retrieve a girl named Elizabeth, thereby paying off his debts. With the demand, "Bring us the girl, and wipe away the debt," still in his mind from twenty years ago, Booker remembers this phrase as the job description, rather than the deal he already made with Comstock. Robert and the woman from the portal, Rosalind, then take Booker to a rowboat and discuss how Booker's altered memories confirm the man's theory about memory loss as related to trans-dimensional travel. Booker awakens just as the boat arrives on a small island off the coast of Maine. Now, with his memories returning, Booker realizes that Elizabeth is actually Anna.

Blaming Comstock for everything that happened, Booker tells Elizabeth that they need to go back to when Comstock was an infant, and smother him in the crib. It isn't until she brings Booker back to his baptism that he realizes what has occurred: while he rejected the baptism in his world, he accepted it in another — in that universe, Booker DeWitt became a deeply religious man and changed his name to Zachary Hale Comstock.

Multiple alternate versions of Elizabeth and Anna appear to reveal this truth to Booker. Booker then realizes that the only way to erase the atrocities committed by Comstock (himself), and the harm visited upon Elizabeth, is for him to die before he can accept or reject his baptism, thus canceling out either outcome. Several Elizabeths drown Booker, and all realities in which Comstock exists are erased. One by one, the different versions of Elizabeth fade away, due to the fact that Comstock never existed. The original Elizabeth from Booker's universe, however, does not disappear, and her story is continued in Burial at Sea - Episode 1.

Epilogue[]

Anna? Is that you?
― Booker DeWitt[src]

Booker awakens in his residence on October 8, 1893—the same day on which he lost Anna—and opens the door to her room, where he sees her crib and calls out her name before it cuts to black. This reveals the possibility that Booker and Anna are still alive together in a universe in which Booker never sold her to Comstock, as he did not exist or one where Booker never went to the baptism. It is possible that Booker remembers some or all of what happened in Columbia as indicated by his apparent fear of Anna not being in her crib, but there is no conclusive proof. If Anna is not in the crib this points to Booker "waking up" after he sold Anna and allows for the possibility of Booker rescuing his daughter from Comstock.

Burial at Sea - Episode 2[]

Main article: Burial at Sea - Episode 2

Elizabeth, waking up following the events of the first episode, sees Booker sitting in a chair with his guitar instructing her on what to say to Atlas to ensure her survival. His presence goes unnoticed by Atlas and his Splicers, but he shows knowledge of Yi Suchong and Atlas' plan to invade Rapture. This Booker is revealed to be just a hallucination created by the trans-dimensional trauma Elizabeth experienced as well as the parts of her memories she cannot access due to losing her ability to see all outcomes and probabilities.

Booker, you there?… I miss you.
― Elizabeth[src]

While searching for the Hair Sample for Suchong in Columbia, Elizabeth encounters Booker and herself in Fink Manufacturing at the elevators. They are distracted while talking with Daisy over the phone and don't notice Elizabeth. She tells "Booker" that she misses him and that he was her only friend.

Alternate Bookers[]

Revolutionary[]

In an alternate version of Columbia, Elizabeth was already gone when Booker arrived at Monument Island. He joined forces with Daisy Fitzroy in an attempt to find her and became a notable leader of the Vox Populi. He eventually encountered and joined forces with Cornelius Slate in the Hall of Heroes. There he also encountered Preston E. Downs, who had been hired to kill DeWitt as well as Fitzroy. Speaking the Sioux language, he was able to help Preston communicate with a maimed Lakota child that Preston had been caring for. The boy related details of his oppressed existence, prompting Downs to join the Vox Populi.[11] Slate and Booker then destroyed the Hall of Heroes, reportedly dying in the process. Booker's martyrdom became a rallying call for the revolution of the Vox.

Visionary[]

Main article: Zachary Hale Comstock

While one version of Booker refused baptism after the Battle of Wounded Knee, another chose differently and took the name, Zachary Hale Comstock. Believing the baptism absolved him of all his past sins, Comstock became a xenophobic and charismatic political figure. He was responsible for funding Rosalind Lutece's research (which he utilized to view future events and make a prophet of himself) and convincing the U.S. Congress to fund the construction of Columbia. Owing to the sterility and premature aging caused by exposure to the Luteces' technology, Comstock used their Tears to retrieve the daughter of an alternate version of himself to raise as a messiah in Columbia.

Investigator[]

BaS1 DeWitt Investigations Rapture

DeWitt Investigations on Market Street.

Main article: Burial at Sea - Episode 1

In one reality, a version of Booker lived in Rapture, where he worked as a private investigator and eventually came to look after an orphaned girl named Sally. One day Sally disappeared while Booker was gambling at Sir Prize and he desperately searched for her, going so far as to interrogate Dr. Yi Suchong for fifteen hours. His investigation proved fruitless and he gave up when Sullivan told him she had been found dead. On New Year's Eve 1958, he was contacted by a woman named Elizabeth that hired him to find Sally and insisted that she was missing, not dead.[12]

Upon finding Sally in Fontaine's sunken department store, Booker's attempts to pull her from a vent and discovers that she had been turned into a Little Sister, triggering the return of his memories before Rapture. He discovers he was actually a version of Booker that chose to accept Preacher Witting's baptism and became Comstock. Like so many versions of Comstock in different realities, he had attempted to steal Anna away from her father and ended up

Bookertakinganna

Booker struggling to keep Anna.

struggling over the girl between dimensions as the Lutece Tear was closing. His path diverged dramatically when Booker proved stronger in the struggle over Anna, and she was not securely on Comstock's side of the portal when the Tear closed. Instead of severing the baby's pinkie finger, it closed upon her neck, decapitating the infant. To escape his guilt, Comstock had the Luteces open a Tear to Rapture. He lost his memory of all that had occurred and began a new life as private investigator Booker DeWitt.

Horrified by his recovered memories, Comstock attempted to apologize to Elizabeth. The Luteces appeared and remark that Comstock always ran away from his problems and stole the lives of others instead of facing his own past. Elizabeth told him that he wasn't sorry, but he soon would be, after which he was impaled and killed by a Bouncer Big Daddy.

Hallucination[]

Main article: Burial at Sea - Episode 2
BioShockInfinite 2014-03-29 01-28-46-649

Booker leading Elizabeth to Suchong's clinic

The Booker encountered by Elizabeth in Burial at Sea Episode 2 reveals himself to be just a hallucination created from memories as well as the trauma of her inter-universal jump into Rapture. Every time Elizabeth tries to say he is Booker he is quick to remind her that he is not. After their first encounter, his voice is mostly heard over Atlas's radio. No other characters can hear or see him, with them usually commenting on Elizabeth seemingly talking to herself. Booker helps Elizabeth by giving her ideas to guide her along her path, such as posing as Suchong's lab assistant in order to prevent Atlas from killing her. When Elizabeth says that she misses him (Booker), he replies with his belief that the real Booker would miss her too.

This Booker is last seen guiding Elizabeth toward the memory of the location of the "Ace in the Hole" which she had once seen when she had the ability to see all probabilities and outcomes. He disappears, leaving Elizabeth crying and screaming for him to come back and not leave her alone before he is replaced by Sally, who guides her the rest of the way.

While this Booker exists only as a figment of Elizabeth's imagination, the real one from Infinite's main campaign is briefly seen in the Factory level, at the moment when Daisy Fitzroy phones him in the elevator he and Elizabeth are taking towards The First Lady.

Personality[]

Booker is a taciturn and serious man who feels deep regret for the atrocities and wrongdoings he committed in his past. In conversation with others, he expresses deep-seated self-loathing, remarking that there needs to be "more Daisy Fitzroys" because of men like him, and telling Elizabeth that she shouldn't get mixed up with him for her own sake. It is possible this attitude spawns from even earlier bouts of self-consciousness: Comstock claims in a Voxophone recording that a commanding officer once suggested that he had Native American ancestry, and the comment led him to brutal acts against Native Americans to reclaim the respect of his comrades.

While Booker is often surprised and sometimes frightened by objects and situations encountered in Columbia, he is quick to adapt — he speedily takes to Vigors, and utilizes Elizabeth's Tears in combat. He is also perceptive in regard to dangerous situations, though whether he responds to them with violence is partially up to the player (particularly in the game's early stages).

Initially indifferent to Elizabeth, Booker becomes curious about her after entering the tower on Monument Island, and more protective of her as the story proceeds. He is noticeably disturbed when she asks him to kill her, and desperately pursues her when she is captured by Songbird. While he cares about Elizabeth, he is also afraid of her and what she has the potential to become. This fear is possibly a part of the reason he volunteers to kill Comstock on her behalf.

Abilities[]

Booker DeWitt is an experienced detective and former U.S. Army Cavalry soldier. This has given him the skills needed to survive his trip to Columbia. Most apparent of these skills is his combat abilities. He is able to fight and kill dozens of enemies with weapons and Vigors he had never seen before. While he certainly learned to fight while in the U.S. Army, nearly twenty years in a violent and corrupt Gilded Age New York City honed those skills greatly. It is unknown how good at being a detective Booker was, but he demonstrates a high degree of skill in manipulating and lying to people. He also demonstrates skill in accurately reading other people's personalities and realizing he is in a dangerous situation. These skills notably tend to fail when dealing with Elizabeth however.

A number of Booker's abilities are never directly shown by Booker himself in the game. For example, from his time with the U.S. Seventh Cavalry, he would have learned to be an expert horseman, if he had not been one before. This training also would have included the use of the Model 1860 Light Cavalry Saber which was still issued to U.S. Cavalry units at the time. His skills in leadership are shown by the slain revolutionary Booker from the Vox revolt reality who was able to attain a position of prominence among the Vox Populi in a very short period of time. Another alternate version, Zachary Hale Comstock, makes use of his leadership and public speaking skills to convince the U.S. Congress to fund the construction of Columbia and then become its ruler.

From Comstock's cabin aboard the Hand of the Prophet, we see that Booker has the potential to do high order math and understand quantum physics. This shows that Booker is much more intelligent than he may first appear. He just never had the drive or education to make much of his intelligence, though we do see hints of it. Booker's ability to figure out how to use the new weapons he encounters as well as being able to figure out how to pilot Columbian zeppelins without any training points to him being smarter than he seems. Booker also knows how to play the guitar, may have unrealized musical talent, and is at least somewhat fluent in one of the Sioux languages as stated by Preston E. Downs.[13]

Voxophones[]

BioShock Infinite[]

Gallery[]

In-Game Images[]

Concept and Promotional Art[]

Behind the Scenes[]

  • In the tradition of BioShock protagonists having a distinct mark or tattoo on their hands or arms, the back of Booker's right hand bears the brand "AD" (Which stands for Anna DeWitt).
The False Shepherd sign

The "AD" brand on Booker's hand.

  • Booker can play the guitar, mirroring his voice actor Troy Baker's talents.
  • Despite being only seventeen years old on the issue date of his Pinkerton contract, Booker appears to be much older in the ID photo. This could either be an oversight, a model for a young Booker that was never created, or Booker just naturally looked much older than his age.
  • Before Troy Baker was hired to be the voice of Booker DeWitt, Irrational Games had Stephen Russell (the voice of Garrett in the Thief games) do the part.[14]
  • Booker DeWitt's office is at address "108 Bowery (Street), New York City, New York State (Zip Code would be 10013)," according to a picture left on the desk on the first floor of the Lutece laboratory.[15]
    • According to his contract, Booker was employed at the Arkham, Massachusetts office of the Pinkerton Agency. Arkham is a fictional city created by author Howard Phillips Lovecraft and a major setting in the Lovecraft Mythos.
  • During his time in the Army, he held the rank of Corporal, but at one point he attained the rank of Staff Sergeant, as seen in his 7th Cavalry display in his office. While in the Army he garnering a number of unknown awards and medals. His rank is an anachronism, as the U.S. Army would not create the rank of Staff Sergeant until after the First World War. Additionally, in 1890, NCO chevrons were worn point down, not point up, as shown in the display. The Army only settled on point up chevrons in 1902.[16]
  • The tally marks on the chalkboard worn by Robert Lutece at the Fairgrounds represent the number of times a version of Booker had reached that point when attempting to accomplish his goal of freeing Elizabeth.
  • If the player decides not to draw Booker's weapon or does nothing at the ticket booth in Battleship Bay, the man behind the counter will stab Booker in his right hand. For the rest of the game, Booker will sport a bandage with a small bloodstain on his right hand. However, during certain animations, such as acquiring a new Vigor, his hand is shown without the wrap or the stab wound.
  • On the cover of the game, in most promotional material, and in any depiction of Booker throughout the game (barring his own actual character model, ostensibly), he is shown with a medical bandage wrapped around his hand and wrist. The bandage can be best viewed when using any of the "Decoy" Tears that Elizabeth can activate. The aforementioned bandage is different in appearance to the dress hem that Elizabeth wraps Booker's hand with in-game, should the player make the appropriate contextual decision.
    • Booker works all levers with his left hand rather than his right. From an in-game standpoint, this might be because he would have to holster his weapon, or that he is very comfortable using his left hand, possibly being ambidextrous. Elizabeth in Burial at Sea - Episode 2 also works all levers with her left hand as well, indicating it could be a family trait.

References[]

  1. You Shall Know The False Shepherd By His Mark! Poster (the AD mark on the poster is identical to DeWitt's branded hand)
  2. 2.0 2.1 Cornelius Slate's Voxophone: A Soldier's Death
  3. DeWitt! Martyr of the Revolution Poster
  4. Booker DeWitt's Pinkerton's National Detective Agency Contract
  5. "See the voices of Booker and Elizabeth at PAX" article at IrrationalGames.com
  6. "Ten Things You Should Know About BioShock Infinite: Day 2" article by Chris Remo at IrrationalGames.com
  7. "Twitter" Ken Levine confirming Booker DeWitt's partial Native American heritage.
  8. Zachary Hale Comstock's Voxophone: The True Color of My Skin
  9. The medal is seen on Comstock's army uniform on The Hand of the Prophet. It was awarded for the soldiers at the Wounded Knee Massacre.
  10. Booker's shadowbox display in his office, featuring U.S. Army rank insignia, confirming his rank as staff sergeant.
  11. Preston E. Downs' Voxophone: Coming for Comstock
  12. http://www.polygon.com/2013/10/4/4801862/playing-through-bioshock-infinites-compelling-burial-at-sea
  13. Coming for Comstock
  14. "Troy Baker, the industry's 'new' Nolan North" article by Thierry Nguyen at Joystiq.com
  15. The Picture of Booker's Address
  16. "A Short History of the US Army Noncommissioned Officer" article by L.R. Arms at http://www.armystudyguide.com/
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