What Videogames Teach Us About World War II
Learning history is a bit of a tricky process. Most of us form our opinions based on what we’re taught in school and what we pick up from the media we consume. For me, and many others of this generation, that media includes a good number of videogames. This makes talking about World War II games kind of difficult. War has always been a popular topic for videogames to explore, perhaps for no greater reason than the old “us vs. them” binary being a well-ingrained part of our collective psyche. And World War II, with its impossibly dramatic stakes and seemingly clear cut heroes (the Allies) and villains (the Axis), lends itself well to games with exciting mission objectives and enemies the player doesn’t have to feel weird about killing en masse, unless they get to thinking too hard about it.
The only issue—and it’s actually a really big one—is that WWII isn’t an imagined event. It’s a part of our history with political ramifications that are still felt very strongly throughout the modern world. Given this, it seems pretty important that WWII games use the setting in a responsible manner, that they at least make an honest attempt not to overly simplify the complexities of a catastrophic event into easily digestible action narratives. Largely, videogames have failed in this respect. In the pursuit of crafting fun gaming experiences, many developers have neglected to pay more than basic lip-service to the complicated facts of history. And the lessons we have been taught—whether through omitted or distorted facts—are sometimes concerning.
Lesson One: Only Soldiers Fought Battles
Videogames teach us is that WWII—an all-encompassing conflict that touched the lives of most everyone in the world—was fought exclusively by soldiers. From Medal of Honor to Call of Duty (before it was a game about war in the Not Middle East), players are used to fighting only uniformed aggressors on battlefields. But so many events from the war involved ordinary people and their homes and livelihoods, including ones replicated in the two series mentioned above, such as the Battles of Okinawa and Stalingrad. The glorification of the organized military also ignores the efforts of partisan forces. The Dutch and French resistance movements were instrumental in weakening the Nazi grip on Europe and helped prepare and support the Allied invasion. Further east, the Polish Home Army, constantly seeking to undermine German occupation throughout many years of subjugation, nearly reclaimed Warsaw with little outside support. The Polish Jews led a major uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto that sought to save the community from transportation to concentration camps. These are only a few examples. Too many WWII videogames teach us that it was only soldiers who fought, ignoring the loss of civilian life and efforts of those who helped win the war despite suffering under Axis occupation.
Lesson Two: The United States Single-Handedly Won the War
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