this post was submitted on 10 Feb 2026
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In disco Elysium you live in a nation some time after a failed socialist revolution. Said revolution was sparked off, in part, due to an infectious Prion virus-disease-thing. I never really understood it, neither in game nor metatextually.
Was there actually a virus? Why did it make people socialist?
And metatextually: why make it part of the story? DE has a lot of esoteric stuff going on - the insulidian phasmid, the actual presence of divinity and weird holes in the world. But that stuff usually, to me at least, serves some sort of clear parallel to the real world and a way to critique it - Wonders and loss of nature, climate change, spirituality getting coopted by the state, so on and so forth. Or not exactly clear purposes, but it doesn't strike me as something that's coming completely out of the blue.
The prion disease kind of is. I can see how a plague could lead to social unrest, the game however makes an effort to make it clear it was the disease itself. And also, why make it prion if it was just regular old "plague makes people angry"? Even if that's part of the explanation, there must be more to it.

So whats your take?

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[โ€“] Philosoraptor@hexbear.net 14 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

Prions can lie in wait for years (or decades) before manifesting in symptomatic cases. That's part of what makes them so dangerous--vast swathes of the population can be infected before the first person starts showing symptoms. Most of them also don't have any conclusive non-destructive diagnostic test. They're diagnoses of exclusion and symptom; the only way to know for sure whether or not any particular case is caused by a prion is to do an autopsy after death. Those characteristics together make it the perfect "stealth" plague: invisible until the first cases, and already ubiquitous by then, with no known treatment or even diagnostic instrument.

If we wanted to get really "English-teachery" about it, you might compare that kind of functionality to ideology, and think about the role that ideology plays as a behavior motivator (and historical Prime Mover) under capitalism (that is, under ultraliberalism and moralism). Joyce rejects it as a causal agent of the revolution because she is, as others have noted here, actually a materialist and it is a stand-in for ideology. I have no idea if the devs meant that parallel to be drawn, but it's an interesting reading.

[โ€“] BanMeFromPosting@hexbear.net 5 points 12 hours ago

This is exactly the kind of response I was hoping for. Thank you