SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
  • More Articles
Reading: All Will Rise devs ‘definitely expect some pushback from Western audiences’ over its depiction of violent resistance and ecoterrorism
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
  • More Articles
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > Games > All Will Rise devs ‘definitely expect some pushback from Western audiences’ over its depiction of violent resistance and ecoterrorism
Games

All Will Rise devs ‘definitely expect some pushback from Western audiences’ over its depiction of violent resistance and ecoterrorism

News Room
Last updated: May 18, 2026 4:33 pm
News Room
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE

All Will Rise is a narrative-driven deckbuilder where you debate and explore ideas through the cards you’ve unlocked and upgraded. It’s also a passionate story about the murder of a river, activism, about holding the powerful to account—using both the law, but also ecoterrorism and violent action.

It’s a topic that’s more important than ever, as we watch the world burn and drown—a harrowing situation both caused and exacerbated by human negligence and greed.

“I definitely expect some pushback from Western audiences around that topic in particular,” says All Will Rise design director Hugo Bille. He notes how the 2022 film adaptation of Andreas Malm’s 2021 non-fiction book How to Blow Up a Pipeline “stirred up a storm” as well.

Latest Videos From

You may like

The film explored the climate crisis and the ethics of terrorism, and while it was well-received, it also received pushback due to its perceived promotion of terrorism. Right-wing critics were particularly galled by it, and the FBI was concerned it would inspire attacks on pipelines in North America.

“And we’re in the same vein as that in many ways,” says Bille, “in that we are an activist story that deals with these topics.”

Narrative director Meghna Jayanth says that what the team at Speculative Agency really wants to do is get stuck into “the conversation” about violence in climate and activist movements.

“I think here in the West, there’s maybe a little bit of a settled notion around like the Extinction Rebellion approach, the Roger Hallam approach of pacifism is the only way, we’re gonna be Gandhian about it. These are core moral principles, right?”

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

Here in the UK, activism is being severely clamped down on by the government and police, and even non-violent activists are risking their freedom to fight against climate change or the genocide in Palestine—or even to just voice their support. Meanwhile, in the US, violent right-wing activists who tried to overturn a legitimate election were pardoned by Donald Trump, and ICE is killing immigration activists. The rules about what is and what isn’t acceptable in regards to activism have been tossed out the window.

But All Will Rise is not set in the West—it takes place in Muziris, a fictional city in a world adjacent to our own. India serves as an inspiration. And that’s an important context.

“I think coming from India, I’m really drawing from, in some of these debates, the struggles of Adivasis, which are our indigenous people,” says Jayanth. “Arundhati Roy has this great video clip where she’s challenged on her support for Adivasi and tribal movements, often characterized as sort of Naxalite movements, which deploy guerrilla tactics and sabotage and violence. And she’s challenged on her support for this, and why can’t they be nonviolent?


What to read next

Well, nonviolence requires an audience. And a lot of these people, their oppression takes place in the forest, away from cameras.

Meghna Jayanth, narrative director

“Well, nonviolence requires an audience. And a lot of these people, their oppression takes place in the forest, away from cameras. If a bunch of cops arrive in the middle of the night to your home and then try to violently displace you, what is the point of asking people who are already hungry to go on hunger strike? What are the means that people have to resist? And when you’re facing brutality and repression in that kind of way without an audience, your tactics have to be different.”

That’s the side of things that Jayanth and the team “really, really wanted to represent”—the plight of indigenous peoples and activists in the global South. People facing an existential crisis. “It’s impossible to sit here in the imperial core in the comfort of my own home and look at people facing suffering and oppression and indignity and repression of a sort that I could not even imagine, and say, ‘Well, I mean, have you really thought about the morality of your actions?'”

All Will Rise itself is both a debate and a conversation between people with opposing or differing views—sometimes between people on the same side. As a lawyer, Kuyili, who’s seeking justice for the murder of a river, you can expect to be “challenged on your opinions”, while also attempting to challenge the opinions of others.

Another character, Kottavai, represents Malm’s philosophy more. “I think it’s clear that she is a proponent of direct action and violence,” says Jayanth. Kottavai is a folk performer possessed by the god of the murdered river, and she harnesses spirituality to stir people into action. In this way, she’s using the tools of oppressors against them, just as the BJP—India’s far-right ruling party—uses spirituality to attack minorities.

“For every Martin Luther King, you need a Malcolm X,” says Jayanth. “And actually it’s through this coalition of forces rather than totally denying anyone who uses tactics that you don’t agree with—we actually need to understand all of these tactics as part of a broad coalition and leverage it.”

All Will Rise invites debate—Speculative Agency strongly desires it, even. The team would consider it a failure on their part if everyone agreed with them. There’s a conversation to be—and it is happening—about what action is necessary to reverse the destruction of the environment. And Speculative Agency also wants to push back against the image of activists being “boring” Birkenstock-wearing do-gooders.

“It’s not boring,” says Jayanth. “I think it’s the farthest thing from boring.”

Personally, I’m fascinated to see the response when compared to other games featuring ecoterrorists—the most famous of which is probably Final Fantasy 7. It’s very much a story of direct, violent action—and one that doesn’t really give you any options. You aren’t debating Shinra—you’re blowing up its power stations and killing its soldiers. And there was very little pushback, either in 1997 or when the remake appeared. But it’s also a game with surprisingly little to say about its themes. It’s more concerned with big swords, big fights and a big adventure. So you never really need to think too hard.

All Will Rise doesn’t have a release date yet, but you can check out the demo now.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Diablo 4: Lord of Hatred review

Remember when Mastercard pressured Steam to remove a bunch of NSFW games? The FTC says that’s not cool—sort of

You’re not paranoid—KCD2’s devs gave Henry photo mode voicelines just to stop you abusing it for stealth runs

Arc Raiders’ players have created a bounty system that’s meant to punish unsportsmanlike behaviour but surprise, surprise, top of the list sits streamer TheBurntPeanut

I feel like my screenshots are coming to life through the oil paintings created by ArtbyEri

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

Games

The problem with bodycam shooters

May 19, 2026
Games

Grand Theft Auto 6 preorders foretold by a Best Buy leak have not come to pass

May 19, 2026
Games

Before landing the lead role in Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag, star Matt Ryan actually thought he was auditioning for a pirate TV show

May 19, 2026
Games

How to get Axum Bacterial Culture in Subnautica 2

May 19, 2026
Games

How to reach the Alien Ruins in Subnautica 2, and what you need to do afterwards

May 18, 2026
Games

Don’t expect to kill fish in a future Subnautica 2 patch: ‘You are here to exist on this planet, not to dominate it’

May 18, 2026

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?