Life Is Strange 2 Is the Antithesis to Gaming’s Obsession with Missing Moms

Videogames love telling stories about fatherhood. They love it so much that you’ve probably familiar with the phrase “the dadification of games”—a term used to describe the flux of games with playable dads in the last generation resulting from men on videogame development teams becoming fathers. But, while we’ve certainly seen more fathers in videogames in the last generation, this isn’t an issue of circumstance.
God of War, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, The Last of Us, The Walking Dead, Dishonored, Heavy Rain, Bioshock Infinite, Yakuza, the majority of Final Fantasy games: some of the most well-known games of the last decade have centered on father figures. Although these are vastly different games, one of the few things they all have in common is that their narratives largely exclude or don’t prioritize mother figures. It’s a larger media-wide problem that stories about motherhood are much less common than stories about fatherhood; mothers and their stories are generally less valued. But Life is Strange 2 is one of the few games confident, ambitious and responsible enough to focus on motherhood in addition to fatherhood in its exploration of family and parenthood. It not only avoids one of the most common tropes in videogame stories, but also introduces one of the most complex and powerful mothers in them.
At the beginning, Life is Strange 2 seems to mirror so many other parenthood stories. Brothers Sean and Daniel Diaz live a relatively normal life with normal problems. Sean gets home from school with his best friend, bickers with his little brother, and then goes to the garage to talk to his dad, Esteban. In the garage, he sees an old box and wonders how long his father will keep “all this shit.” He thinks about how his dad should sell the green women’s bike that stands out from the other two blue bikes perched against the wall. When he goes up to the kitchen, he checks the whiteboard listing who gets which chores; only the names of Sean, Daniel, and Esteban are drawn on it. It’s quickly apparent that they must’ve had a mother who isn’t around anymore.
And then their lives change forever when Esteban is killed by a police officer while trying to mediate an altercation, forcing the boys on the run from the police.
Over the course of their time on the road, the brothers find out bits and pieces about their mother—including that she’s alive. Up until a certain point, her fate seemed ambiguous. Since this is a series in which the supernatural is blended with the reality, it’s easy to assume she’s absent because she, like Daniel, has powers. It was easy for me to immediately form the narrative that she was dead; that she had to run away because she couldn’t control her powers; that she was going to remain relegated to whispers and hearsay because once mothers are out of the picture—if they’re ever in the picture at all—they’re rarely ever brought back.
It’s a narrative that many were convinced of prior to her appearance in the fourth episode—all it takes is a quick Google search to see dozens of Reddit threads in which fans speculate about her having powers like Daniel or Max, the protagonist of the first season. And so it came as a surprise that the reason for Karen, Sean and Daniel’s mother, being absent is both the most mundane and radical reason possible: because she wanted to. Because she needed to leave for her own happiness.