New Outlast Demo Playable at PAX, Some Back-story Information Revealed

Outlast

Today, Red Barrels revealed some information on the back-story to the upcoming PC (and PlayStation 4) horror game Outlast. In Outlast, you take control of a reporter who’s armed with just a camcorder, so you had better practice your escapist skills. The perfect time to do this will be at PAX this weekend, where the Logitech booth will feature a new playable demo. The full back-story can be found at the bottom of this post.

Outlast will be available for Steam on 4th September 2013, which you can pre-order now and save 20% off the full price of £14.99. Outlast will also be available for PlayStation 4 in 2014.

 

THE DEVIL’S BARGAIN
How Murkoff Turned the Global Water Crisis into a Billion Dollar Revenue Stream
by Miles Upshur

May 9, 2013  2:19pm

ACCRA, GHANA

Nine-year old Akosua stands before the water-vending machine with its bright “ALSAB” logo, a few bills clutched in her small hand. You can still see the blank place on the machine’s hull where the words  “Freeflow Global Charities” was pried away last year. 

She explains that 2 cedis (about $1) will buy her five liters of purified water, which her Cholera-afflicted mother desperately needs.  But 17 cedis at the Worldfree Clinic would buy her mother the course of antibiotics that would shorten the disease’ course and possibly save her life. It’s a terrible choice for a child to make, and one facing more and more of the world’s 1.6 billion inhabitants without access to clean drinking water. 

More than a quarter of Accra’s citizens buy their water from Wellspring Industries, either monthly through their taps, or directly from the ubiquitous, bright yellow Alsab machines. What few Ghanians know, however, is the hidden connection between Wellspring Industries, Alsab, Freeflow Global Charities, and Worldfree Clinics.

All of them are subsidiaries of the multinational Murkoff Corporation. 

In an increasingly clear partnership between Western Capitalism and Third World corruption, the Murkoff Corporation has used its dozens of subsidiaries to open back doors into selling the source of life to drought-starved populations in Africa, India, and Southeast Asia. 

Here’s how it works: a newly-started charity, fueled largely by donations, establishes a water supply and sewage systems for communities whose well water has been rendered non-potable by industrial runoff. Murkoff gets the tax write-off for charitable spending, while their subsidiary Alsab gets the profits for building and installing the system.  When the cost of running the system becomes too great, the charity (in Ghana’s case, Freeflow Global) declares bankruptcy and abandons the project.  Then Murkoff subsidiary Wellspring Industries (or another Murkoff shell company) steps in and offers the local government completion and maintenance of the project in return for the construction fee and complete deregulation of the water supply, allowing Wellspring/Murkoff to name the price of the population’s water.

As Murkoff is also the owner of the three most active pharmaceutical manufacturers to the Third World, they’ll profit nicely whether the locals choose clean water or cholera.

It’s only the latest in Murkoff’s near-century long history of playing both sides against the middle, maximizing profits at the cost of human rights.  Whether licensing aggressively pollinating, genetically-modified rice with a built in “suicide gene” to India, flipping blood diamond real estate in Angola and Sierra Leone, or peddling amphetamines to the Nazis in World War II, you can’t swing a dead cat in an arena of human suffering without knocking over a Murkoff piggy bank.

Water is fast becoming the new oil, an issue largely ignored by the developed world, by wealthy Americans and Europeans comfortable with their hot showers and iced drinks. 

But earlier this year Murkoff subsidiary Heartland Springs Charity began construction of three Alsab-built water purification plants in Detroit. Welcome to New World Water.

About Chris

I've been gaming since around 1994 when I was introduced to Sonic the Hedgehog on the SEGA Mega Drive. Since then I have continued to pursue my gaming interests, purchasing new consoles as they come along with each generation.
This entry was posted in News, PC, PlayStation 4 and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment