Thunderbird Strike

Thunderbird Strike
Developer(s)Elizabeth LaPensée
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, Android, iOS
Release2017

Thunderbird Strike is a side-scrolling video game created by Elizabeth LaPensée. In this game the player controls Thunderbird, a legendary creature from the mythology of some North American indigenous peoples, which flies from the Alberta tar sands to the Great Lakes, and along the way attempts to destroy oil industry infrastructure and equipment while trying to revive dead wildlife. LaPensée says the game is a protest about pipeline construction on Indigenous land, while telling stories from her culture and encouraging players to take care of Turtle Island.[1][2]

The game is available for Microsoft Windows, Android and iOS.[3]

The game opens with an introduction video of dump trucks driving across the screen with a backdrop of pollution-releasing factories. Controlling Thunderbird, the player is tasked with collecting lightning from the clouds and using the power of the lightning to disable various infrastructure components associated with the oil industry such as dump trucks, factories, oil rigs, and pipelines.

There is a major artistic component to the game and lots of indigenous imagery scattered throughout.[4] LaPensée calls the art style "woodland" or x-ray," and in Anishinaabe culture, this relates to the connection between breath, lightning, and energy.[5] The introductory video in addition to videos shown between each level provide some context and awareness of the underlying protest message. After completing the first level, there is a video presenting individuals protesting against the construction of oil pipelines on indigenous lands. In the third level, the player encounters a giant animated snake portrayed as a pipeline and must use lightning to destroy it. Following the third level, there is another video that appears to show animals returning to the area after the victory over the oil pipeline snake. There is an additional scene of oil rigs transitioning to wind turbines, indicating a support for more sustainable, renewable energy.

Indigenous communities have had a long history of struggles with the oil industry such as the widespread controversy surrounding the Dakota Access Pipeline.[6] Thunderbird Strike offers a form of protest to this pervasive issue through the media of video games.

  1. ^ "Thunderbird Strike: Controversial video game takes aim at oil industry". CBC: Unreserved. CBC Radio. November 5, 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  2. ^ Dubé, Jacob (5 December 2017). "This Game Developer Wants to Create Space for Indigenous Stories". Motherboard. Vice. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  3. ^ "About". Thunderbird Strike. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  4. ^ November 28; Comments, 2018 | Emma Cregan |. ""It's Your Journey": Native Innovation in Video Games". Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage. Retrieved 2023-11-27.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "Is Thunderbird Strike a fun learning tool or an ecoterrorist's version of Angry Birds? | Great Lakes Echo". greatlakesecho.org. 2018-02-14. Retrieved 2023-11-29.
  6. ^ "What to Know About the Dakota Access Pipeline Protests". Time. 2016-10-28. Retrieved 2023-11-21.