BioShock Infinite Complete Edition includes the following DLC:
BioShock Infinite: Burial at Sea - Episode One
BioShock Infinite: Burial at Sea - Episode Two
BioShock Infinite: Clash in the Clouds
BioShock Infinite: Columbia's Finest
Indebted to the wrong people, with his life on the line, veteran...
BioShock Infinite Complete Edition includes the following DLC:
BioShock Infinite: Burial at Sea - Episode One
BioShock Infinite: Burial at Sea - Episode Two
BioShock Infinite: Clash in the Clouds
BioShock Infinite: Columbia's Finest
Indebted to the wrong people, with his life on the line, veteran of the U.S. Cavalry and now hired gun, Booker DeWitt has only one opportunity to wipe his slate clean. He must rescue Elizabeth, a mysterious girl imprisoned since childhood and locked up in the flying city of Columbia. Forced to trust one another, Booker and Elizabeth form a powerful bond during their daring escape. Together, they learn to harness an expanding arsenal of weapons and abilities, as they fight on zeppelins in the clouds, along high-speed Sky-Lines, and down in the streets of Columbia, all while surviving the threats of the air-city and uncovering its dark secret.
Key Features
The City in the Sky – Leave the depths of Rapture to soar among the clouds of Columbia. A technological marvel, the flying city is a beautiful and vibrant world that holds a very dark secret.
Unlikely Mission – Set in 1912, hired gun Booker DeWitt must rescue a mysterious girl from the sky-city of Columbia or never leave it alive.
Whip, Zip, and Kill – Turn the city’s Sky-Lines into weaponized roller coasters as you zip through the flying city and dish out fatal hands-on punishment.
Tear Through Time – Open Tears in time and space to shape the battlefield and turn the tide in combat by pulling weapons, turrets, and other resources out of thin air.
Vigorous Powers – Throw explosive fireballs, shoot lightning, and release murders of crows as devastatingly powerful Vigors surge through your body to be unleashed against all that oppose you.
Custom Combat Experience – With deadly weapons in one hand, powerful Vigors in the other, and the ability to open Tears in time and space, fight your own way through the floating city of Columbia to rescue Elizabeth and reach freedom.
1999 Mode – Upon finishing BioShock Infinite, the player can unlock a game mode called “1999 Mode” that gives experienced players a taste of the kind of design and balance that hardcore gamers enjoyed back in the 20th century.
Instead of a storyline narrative, what exists in Bioshock: Infinite is a copy/pasta of religious psychobabble whereupon the main character is forced to be inducted into a cult of religious fanatics before the game can even begin. What ensues is gerbil fodder for the lobotomized and brainwashed, fare for those undiscerning enough to accept blatant propaganda and mind control in lieu of interesting, compelling fiction. Zealots who've literally paid to be brainwashed and are too senseless to realize it, giving their rodent feed overwhelmingly positive review scores.
See these reviews. There is really not one good thing about this game.
https://www.gamespot.com/reviews/bioshock-infinite-a-fan-scorned/1900-6415464/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdNhwb7iuI4
NOTE: I did not purchase this from GOG, but on XBox One.
After seeing the woke nonsense infesting Arkane thanks to Anita Sarkeesian that destroyed Dishonored, the spiritual successor to the greatest game series I've ever played, it does not surprise me that this game has finally hit the flush lever on the Looking Glass Software legacy.
Pros: It's beautiful. The voice acting is well done. It says "BioShock" in the title.
Cons: Literally everything else. Racist strawman storyline against anyone with light colored skin. Distorted presentation of American History. Mary Sue character who can magically find ammo, health, and "salts" as needed. Irritating writing: One moment she's upset that you're killing people and taking their stuff, and the next she's literally pointing them out for you to kill.
Further, I am sick of being preached to by hypocrites. Arkane makes a huge deal out of the simpleminded "Racism iz bad!" theme without giving any kind of amplification or depth to characters, while at the SAME TIME showing their own racism. For example, their staff makes a big deal out of one point where you can choose to throw a baseball at a mixed race couple and start a stoning or you can throw it at the announcer. They were so smugly proud that "Not one playtester threw it at the couple!"
Great. Good for you. Now can you explain the racism behind NOT EVEN BOTHERING TO NAME THE COUPLE?! Seriously, they are "Bride" and "Groom" even when you meet them later. They were so insignificant (beyond their skin color) that the production staff couldn't even be arsed to give them names. THAT is blatant racism: the focus entirely on a character's race above all other features.
This is a child's primer to why "Racism iz bad!" with nothing else behind it.
The second most obnoxious part of this crap game is that it isn't a BioShock game at all. They literally bolted less than two minutes of a recycled BS2 level into this JUST to be able to get name recognition for sales.