Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Legacy Archives

BioShock for PS Vita is ‘a new game’ and ‘weird experiment,’ according to Ken Levine

Add as a preferred source on Google
bioshock-infinite
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Sony brought out the big guns for its E3 2011 press conference last month, revealing just about everything there is to know about the upcoming PS Vita other than its official release date. The best reveal came, however, when Irrational Games’ Ken Levine took the stage and confirmed that a BioShock game would be coming to the handheld. That’s all the detail he shared, but it was enough for the time being. Now Levine has spoken a little bit more about his plans for the Vita game, in a new interview with IGN.

“That’s a new game. That is going to be strange and surprising to people,” he said. “I think when we launched Infinite, people said, ‘Wait, what, what are you doing?’ I think we always want to surprise people.”

Recommended Videos

“For us, it’s like, ‘Hey, here’s this weird experiment you want to do.’ Experiments always carry risks, though. That’s been the experience of working on BioShock Infinite. And working on BioShock. People saying, ‘This is weird, risky, I don’t understand.’ I’m fortunate that I get to do things that are risky, my team gets to do things that are risky.”

Damn right he’s fortunate. Then again, BioShock wasn’t Irrational’s first dazzling effort; System Shock 2 opened plenty of doors in the early days, no doubt.

Levine also confirmed that this is a game being built from the ground-up for Vita, though he wasn’t as clear in separating it from Infinite completely. He did say that the Vita game won’t be “mobile” in the sense that we think of the term nowadays; in other words, expect chunks of gameplay that last longer than five minutes. There’s more to the interview as well, three pages worth of talk about Irrational and BioShock. Go check it out.

Adam Rosenberg
Former Gaming/Movies Editor
Previously, Adam worked in the games press as a freelance writer and critic for a range of outlets, including Digital Trends…
Topics
The Steam Machine launch hasn’t even happened, but the resale circus has begun
Scalpers are already trying to cash in on Valve’s Steam Machine
Valve Steam Machine Featured Design Coverplate

Valve has started sending out reservation emails for the Steam Machine ahead of its June 30 launch, and scalpers have wasted no time turning the whole thing into a comedy act.

The Steam Machine is already an expensive device, as RAM and SSD prices have made hardware pricing miserable across the industry. Valve has previously said it would like to lower the price if component costs improve. That makes the resale listings even harder to take seriously, because the official price was already higher than many people expected before scalpers added their own fantasy tax.

Read more
Valve would love to lower the Steam Machine’s price, but the timing couldn’t be worse
The gaming giant blames the ongoing component crunch for pushing its console-PC hybrid into four-figure territory.
Valve Branding on the Steam Machine

When Valve finally revealed the Steam Machine's $1,049 starting price, the reaction was almost unanimous: the hardware looks fantastic, but the price hurts. Now, the company has confirmed what many gamers suspected all along: it never wanted the Steam Machine to cost this much in the first place.

Valve says the Steam Machine wasn't meant to cost this much

Read more
Don’t breathe easy just yet. Apple and Microsoft aren’t done with price hikes.
Xbox and Apple device price hikes could be a warning for the rest of the tech industry.
Apple logo glass building

Earlier today, Microsoft raised the price of its Xbox consoles by up to $150 in the U.S. Just a few hours before that, Apple announced a similar move for its Mac and iPad portfolio, while also raising the sticker price of its Vision Pro headset and several other products except the iPhone. But it seems these two giants are not done with price hikes yet.

Neither company has explicitly said that more price hikes are coming, but their statements suggest otherwise. Take, for example, this statement that Apple shared with The Washington Post earlier today.

Read more