
And yet the game also wants to show America as flawed and its military as arrogant.Ĭan it do both? Sure, but not without sacrifices. The franchise can’t break free from its pro-America stance, and the latest, a game set amid the stress of the early 1980s Cold War, frames Ronald Reagan as a movie star hero who viewed the presidency as the role of a lifetime. But the modern single-player “Call of Duty” campaigns are full of narrative tension that speaks to those the game publisher believes are its intended players.Ĭontradictions are present in the newest installment.

These are games designed by global teams of hundreds of people, crafted largely as multiplayer powerhouses that generate money long after the initial sale. This was the conclusion I reached after finishing the single-player campaign in the latest “Call of Duty,” a realization that I don’t believe was entirely unintentional.

The United States of America: Boy, we sure are exhausting.
