If the story of Burial at Sea is about Elizabeth, then it seems inevitable we'll end up back in Columbia at some point - it's where the character was formed, if not first born.

The difference with Burial at Sea, Levine explained, was the amount of time and effort needed to re-create Rapture within the BioShock Infinite engine. "We had a choice. Minerva's Den is terrific

Dr. Brigid Tenenbaum is a geneticist who discovered ADAM and helped develop it into products for commercial sale. She is also the "mother" of the Little Sisters. She created them, and eventually came to care a great deal about their safety, calling them her "little ones", acting as a mother to them, and regretting her part in helping create them.
The problem with that particular venue of explanation, is that it suddenly ignores the 'infinite possibilities' that choices create. Jack saving the little sisters is just one possibility in the 'multiverse', it is by no means THE definitive possibility (especially since bioshock 1 gives you the option of harvesiting the little sisters rather than saving them).
Just finished beating the DLC for the first time and I loved most of it, some confused me though. How does Elizabeth go back to Rapture after the…
BioShock Infinite is a Game of the Year contender due largely to its impactful storytelling, complete with an uppercut punch of an ending -- the result of over a dozen hours of character
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bioshock infinite burial at sea ending explained