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Baldur's Gate 3 contains a number of Cultural References to other pieces of media, such as books, television, and other video games. These references are collected here, although this list is certainly incomplete.
Games
Divinity
Most of Larian's previous games are part of the Divinity series, beginning with Divine Divinity (2002) and ending (for now at least) with Divinity: Original Sin (2014) and Divinity: Original Sin II (2017). The latter game has many things in common with Baldurs Gate 3, including the use of "origin characters" who can be chosen as the player character or recruited as companions; physics-based effects like surfaces and dippable weapons; and the ability to talk to most animals.
The Digital Deluxe Upgrade contains several references to Divinity: Original Sin II (DOS2 for short):
- It adds portrait paintings of the DOS2 origin characters Fane, Ifan ben-Mezd, Lohse, Marcus "Beast" Miles, Sebille Kaleran and the Red Prince to Act 1 as loot items.
- Characters who can Perform gain access to three additional songs which reference DOS2: Of Divinity and Sin, The Queen's High Seas and Sing for Me.
- The Divinity Item Pack contains several items from DOS2: the Mask of the Shapeshifter, Cape of the Red Prince, Lute of the Merryweather Bard, Needle of the Outlaw Rogue and Bicorne of the Sea Beast.
Final Fantasy XIV
The popular MMORPG by Square Enix is referenced in an inspiration pop-up in Act II for the Folk Hero background. The quote is from the character Haurchefant, who says it during the main story of the Heavensward expansion. The line in the pop-up says "A Smile Better Suits..."; though the full line is: "Don't look at me so. A smile better suits a hero." The phrase is repeated several times throughout the following expansions as a bittersweet form of encouragement.
Danganronpa
Pre-ordered copies of the Japanese PS5 version of the game from publisher Spike Chunsoft came with a special “Dice of Hope and Despair” die design “with the motif of Monokuma appearing in the Danganronpa series”, which is also published by Spike Chunsoft.[url 1] In the Danganronpa series, Monokuma is a black and white robotic teddy bear who forces the students of Hope’s Peak Academy to kill each other in deadly games. The dice is mostly white, but the "20" face is black with a symbol matching Monokuma’s distinctive red left eye.
Television
Avatar: The Last Airbender
- The NPC Geezer Loryss is a merchant in the Lower City, who bemoans the destruction of his cabbage stand. This references the recurring Cabbage Merchant bit character in Avatar: The Last Airbender, who is a frequent victim of collateral damage from the heroes' adventures. Loryss also has unique dialogue for the Monk class, referencing protagonist Aang's monastic character.
Jojo's Bizarre Adventure
- The greataxe Sethan and its abilities are a reference to a character in Jojo's Bizarre Adventure: Stardust Crusaders named Alessi. Alessi wields an axe and possesses a stand spirit named Sethan that similarly wields an axe and who has the power to de-age people, usually reducing them into young children.
Literature
Poetry
- The Raven summoned by Find Familiar is always named "Quothe", the only standard familiar to receive a name. A raven of the same name is summoned by the Raven Gloves. This is clearly a reference to Edgar Allen Poe's poem "The Raven", which includes the recurring line "Quoth the raven: 'Nevermore.'" (See also the Discworld section below.)
Discworld
Terry Pratchett's Discworld is a series of comic fantasy novels set on a flat world which travels on the back of an enormous turtle. While it developed into its own fantasy universe, it was born from and always contained elements of parody of other fantasy - including Dungeons & Dragons. Larian's Swen Vincke has said on Twitter that the first book he gave to his wife was the Discworld novel Small Gods, and that he has converted "countless people" to the series via that book.
- In addition to the Poe reference (see above), Quothe the Raven is likely also a reference to the talking raven named Quoth (no "e") appearing in the Discworld novels Soul Music, Hogfather and Thief of Time. Quoth was originally a wizard's familiar, but in the novels he is the companion, translator and flying mount of the Death of Rats, the rat equivalent of the grim reaper.
- Lupperdiddle Swires is a gnomish adventurer famed for their ability to leap extraordinarily high. While they don't appear in the game, they're mentioned several times in the name or description of various items, including the Potion of Glorious Vaulting, Arsonist's Oil, Swiresy Shoes and Swires' Sledboard, as well as in notes and letters. "Swires" is the name of two different gnome characters in Discworld: Swires, the first gnome in the series, who appears in The Light Fantastic; and Buggy Swires, a member of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch, who isn't known for leaping but does give aerial support by riding on various birds. (On the Discworld, gnomes are only about six inches tall.)
- The in-game book The Butler's Cane Has A Knob On The End is a reference to "A Wizard's Staff Has a Knob on the End", a bawdy Discworld tavern song frequently sung by the witch character Nanny Ogg.
- The in-game book You've Got Friends in the Guild contains the sentence "Their view is this: if you got to have crime, better it be organised crime!" This is a paraphrase of a line from the novel Men at Arms, attributed to Lord Vetinari, ruler of Ankh-Morpork, explaining the logic behind having a legalised Thieves' Guild.
External Links
- Avatar: The Last Airbender – Wikipedia ● TV Tropes
- Discworld – Wikipedia ● TV Tropes
- Final Fantasy XIV – Wikipedia ● FFXIV Wiki
- Jojo's Bizarre Adventure – Wikipedia ● Jojo's Bizarre Encyclopedia
References
- ↑ Official website: Baldur’s Gate III. Spike Chunsoft. Retrieved 2023-12-23.