PC GAMER (US)

A Mortician’s Tale

Explore death positivity in A Mortician’s Tale.

- By Philippa Warr

I’ve just hooked a cadaver up to an embalming machine. First I made an incision with a scalpel, then I dragged a tube called a cannula to the carotid artery, and connected the rest of the tubing for fluid delivery and drainage. As the machine comes to life, I start tracing patterns with my mouse over the body. This simple action is there to represent the way a mortician massages the body to evenly distribute preservati­on chemicals. A Mortician’s Tale is a curious project. It takes the death positive movement, especially the work of people like Caitlin Doughty and The Order of the Good Death, as its inspiratio­n, and marries it to the simple inputs you’ll find in those free browser games where you heal horribly mangled Disney princesses or deliver babies. What you end up with is a thoughtful tool for presenting ideas around death.

The core of the game is concerned with destigmati­zing death, returning to it as a natural thing which it’s okay to think and talk about instead of something to hide from.

You join a family-run funeral home as a mortician. Your first job is preparing a body for a closed-casket service and burial where the family has requested no embalming. All that’s required of you is to wash the body with a sponge and leave her with a colleague to be dressed.

Cremations require you to remove items—pacemakers, jewelry, and so on—then run the remains through a cremulator. Embalmings involve the most steps, and require you to think about the logistics of presenting a corpse. For example, one step is inserting eye caps. Eye caps look like spiked contact lenses. The curvature of the cap helps give the impression of a rounded eyeball under the eyelid, and the spiked surface helps hold the eyelids in the closed position.

All of the actions are simplified, compulsory, and repetitive. In A Mortician’s Tale I think that actually works—it lends a sense of ritual to the game which feels important, plus the fact that nothing is optional means that players aren’t given the space to disrespect their cadavers. You must go through all the steps, including paying your respects at the service. The game itself is short enough that even if you chafe against the lack of choice, I don’t think it’s a dealbreake­r.

The simplifica­tions do mean the game doesn’t confront putrificat­ion, mess, disfigurem­ent, or gore but I think here, although that might be one of the realities we shy away from, presenting death full-force might detract from opening up conversati­on and making death less abhorrent.

You must go through all the steps, including paying your respects

Dying art

The influence of the death positive movement and, particular­ly, sites like The Order of the Good Death and Death and the Maiden, is clear. You’ll find it in the far-ranging death- related subject matter which flows through your character’s inbox— mushroom suits, water cremations, behaving at a funeral.

You’ll also see it in the messages your character’s friend sends about her work in a pathology museum and it’s reflected in how the game positions your initial employer—a small family-run business—and the subsequent intrusive upselling and impersonal attitude of the megacorp which acquires it.

You’ll even see it in the look of your character, Charlie, whose dark hair with blunt bangs seems to reference both Caitlin Doughty and Sarah Chavez—prominent voices in the death positive community.

Without any direct experience of the funeral industry, I can’t speak to how accurate the story is—suffice it to say that it presents small-scale, green, personal funeral experience­s which take account of individual­s as the ideal and an impersonal profitdriv­en funeral corporatio­n as bad. As with the mortician processes, that feels heavily simplified and the ending inevitable. But the flow of engaging and curious informatio­n through Charlie’s inbox about so many facets of death will, I hope, still end up tempting players to investigat­e further and allow the game’s ideas to spill outside the confines of its play space.

So far, in the time since playing I have Googled: “Pathology museum near me”, “eye caps for embalming”, “home burials”, “massage for rigor mortis”, “how deep do you have to bury a body?” and, “can I bury a body myself?” All of those produced fascinatin­g results. Alas, my current search—“can I bequeath my teeth to a friend?”—is not yielding such a clear answer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States