The Remedy Connected Universe With Control and Alan Wake 2 Opens Doors for Hidetaka Miyazaki to Connect Elden Ring to a Prized Soulsborne

by Pelican Press
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The Remedy Connected Universe With Control and Alan Wake 2 Opens Doors for Hidetaka Miyazaki to Connect Elden Ring to a Prized Soulsborne

There’s really no experience in gaming at the moment that is more unique than the Remedy Connected Universe (RCU), weaving psychological horror with the studio’s love for the zany into a shared narrative web.

A still from Remedy Connected Universe's The Lake House DLC for Alan Wake 2.
Agent Estevez in Alan Wake 2’s The Lake House DLC – Image Credit: Remedy Entertainment.

But while this connected universe continues to grow with multiple games, movies, and TV shows on the way, another such universe may be forming very subtly under our noses. With Sam Lake showcasing how such narrative projects can work in gaming, it’s time for Hidetaka Miyazaki and FromSoftware to fully embrace their own shared universe as well.

What’s the current state of Sam Lake’s Remedy Connected Universe?

A still from FBC's trailer, featuring the bureau's First Responders.
The First Responders in FBC: Firebreak – Image Credit: Remedy Entertainment.

Okay, we know what got you from that intro, but before we get into the FromSoftware stuff, let’s address where Remedy’s currently at with its super ambitious project.

So, what probably started as a small trend-chase attempt in the wake of the MCU and with Control’s AWE expansion, the project has now fully grown into something much more significant than Remedy’s individual games, all thanks to Alan Wake 2’s The Lake House DLC.

Initially, most of us expected a few simple nods at the studio’s older games with each new title. At this point, though, it should be clear to any of us now that these fellas were laying the groundwork for a meticulously planned shared universe that’s becoming increasingly tangible all along.

More importantly, and as mentioned in the intro too, Remedy isn’t stopping at games either. Partnering up with Annapurna, we’ll also be getting adaptations of Control and Alan Wake in the realm of prestige media, though it remains to be seen how that plays out within the larger universe.

The studio’s current projects include Control 2, which is nearing the end of production, and FBC: Firebreak, which is expected to arrive sometime soon. Both these titles are expected to further expand the studio’s ecosystem, bringing and showcasing different sides of a narrative whole.

All in all, it’s a very deliberate approach to the whole thing, and honestly, it most certainly feels like a breath of fresh air when most other games’ “shared universes” end up being nothing more than glorified Easter egg hunts and small wink-nods.

FromSoftware should make its quietly growing universe official now

A still from Shadow of the Erdtree, featuring the Tarnished entering the Ancient Ruins of Rauh.
The Ancient Ruins of Rauh in Shadow of the Erdtree – Image Credit: FromSoftware.

Time to address the elephant in the room. So, whether intentionally or not, we think that all this time, FromSoftware, too, has been building a connected universe of its own in a way.

Now, that shouldn’t come as news to anyone. Most reading this might’ve already tried to form a similar theory: Demon’s Souls‘ bad ending leads directly into Dark Souls.

Then, that world slowly messes up, but people begin to discover the power of blood in Dark Souls 2. Finally, Dark Souls III’s “Blood of the Dark Soul” painting potentially connects that world to Bloodborne.

Thematically, all these games connect the shared theme of people just ruining their own worlds in favor of maintaining a status quo or prolonging the existing powers’ rule for a little longer, too, so all those old theories do make some sense.

But where things get really wild is when you can see a clear link forming between Bloodborne and Elden Ring. As many fans continue to theorize with their tin-foil hats on, both games feature surreal, dreamlike worlds, otherworldly entities, and beings from higher planes of existence.

Could The Lands Between actually be some supermassive dream or a nightmare from Bloodborne, as some speculate? Could the Outer Gods of Elden Ring be the Great Ones of Bloodborne in another guise? For our money, there’s definitely weight to this theory.

Now, we get it—many don’t quite like the idea of all these games being forced into a knot like this—the ambiguity and isolated bits of each game are part of the charm, after all. But let’s be real—wouldn’t it be cool if Bloodborne and Elden Ring served as the beginning of a larger Soulsborne saga?

Plus, we’re not really asking FromSoftware to just jump on some hype train. When you think about it structurally, narratively, and thematically, the pieces are already there, too, so it’s up to Miyazaki to just make the call and get started.

Plus, if anyone could actually build a connected universe that rivals—or even surpasses—all others in any form of media, it’s Hidetaka Miyazaki. It’s a bit of a stretch, at the end of the day, but it would, in our opinion, be the greatest gift FromSoftware can give to us all.

But with all that said, what are your thoughts on this? Would you want to see a Soulsborne universe like this, or do you think FromSoftware should keep its worlds separate? Let us know in the comments below.



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