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**One can assume that it is a particularly extreme means of ensuring that only one person can board, and that they cannot bring any luggage with them. The fact that Booker lost his pistol may simply be an unfortunate coincidence.
 
**One can assume that it is a particularly extreme means of ensuring that only one person can board, and that they cannot bring any luggage with them. The fact that Booker lost his pistol may simply be an unfortunate coincidence.
 
**It also raises the question of where the rocket's main reactors are situated. Being a cone-shaped vehicle, there is evidently no space around the seating assembly or underneath it.
 
**It also raises the question of where the rocket's main reactors are situated. Being a cone-shaped vehicle, there is evidently no space around the seating assembly or underneath it.
*Unlike the bathyspheres of Rapture, the Pilgrim Rocket only accommodates a single occupant. This would make traveling to Columbia very time-consuming for a large group of people.
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*Unlike the bathyspheres of Rapture, the Pilgrim Rocket only accommodates a single occupant. This would make traveling to Columbia very time-consuming for a large group of people. Since Columbia had stopped excepting large groups of people from the surface years before this was not a real problem.
 
*The Pilgrim Rocket, in terms of design, is similar in appearance to the Gemini Spacecraft used by [[wikipedia:NASA|NASA]] in the 1960s. The fact that this anachronistic design appears in 1912 can be explained by [[Tear]]s.
 
*The Pilgrim Rocket, in terms of design, is similar in appearance to the Gemini Spacecraft used by [[wikipedia:NASA|NASA]] in the 1960s. The fact that this anachronistic design appears in 1912 can be explained by [[Tear]]s.
 
*The chair in the Pilgrim Rocket was designed by [[Mauricio Tejerina]].<ref>[http://www.coroflot.com/mauriciotejerina/Bioshock-Infinite Mauricio Tejerina Portfolio]</ref>
 
*The chair in the Pilgrim Rocket was designed by [[Mauricio Tejerina]].<ref>[http://www.coroflot.com/mauriciotejerina/Bioshock-Infinite Mauricio Tejerina Portfolio]</ref>

Revision as of 20:10, 2 December 2016

File:K1r98n8go.jpg

The Pilgrim Rocket.

WrittenintheCloudsbadge
Five-thousand feet… Ten-thousand feet… Fifteen-thousand feet… Hallelujah.
― Countdown Voice[src]

The Pilgrim Rocket is a means of transportation to the floating city of Columbia. Ten different launch stations in the United States served as the means for travelling to the city. After Booker DeWitt is transported by Rosalind and Robert Lutece to the lighthouse off the coast of Maine, he ascends to its top to find the door sealed with a bell-keyed lock. After ringing the bells in the correct sequence, the door unlocks and a stylish chair appears. When Booker sits in the chair, he is automatically strapped in, and the launch capsule closes up around him. Booker's Broadsider drops from his grasp as the rocket accelerates into the air, eventually reaching Columbia.

Gallery

Concept Art and Models

In-Game Images

Behind the Scenes

  • The boosters that propel the "Pilgrim Rocket" to Columbia can be seen on the roof of the top floor of the lighthouse. In theory, whenever the rocket is used, the contents and occupants of the room below would be incinerated by the boosters.
  • The Pilgrim Rocket is the equivalent of the Lighthouse bathysphere found in Rapture.
  • The reason for the seating section of the Pilgrim Rocket flipping downwards before lift off is hard to determine.
    • One can assume that it is a particularly extreme means of ensuring that only one person can board, and that they cannot bring any luggage with them. The fact that Booker lost his pistol may simply be an unfortunate coincidence.
    • It also raises the question of where the rocket's main reactors are situated. Being a cone-shaped vehicle, there is evidently no space around the seating assembly or underneath it.
  • Unlike the bathyspheres of Rapture, the Pilgrim Rocket only accommodates a single occupant. This would make traveling to Columbia very time-consuming for a large group of people. Since Columbia had stopped excepting large groups of people from the surface years before this was not a real problem.
  • The Pilgrim Rocket, in terms of design, is similar in appearance to the Gemini Spacecraft used by NASA in the 1960s. The fact that this anachronistic design appears in 1912 can be explained by Tears.
  • The chair in the Pilgrim Rocket was designed by Mauricio Tejerina.[1]

References