Meryl Silverburgh

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Meryl Silverburgh
Metal Gear character
Meryl Silverburgh.jpg
Yoji Shinkawa's concept art for Metal Gear Solid
First game Metal Gear Solid (1998)[1]
Created by Hideo Kojima
Designed by Yoji Shinkawa
Voiced by (English) Debi Mae West (MGS, MGS4)
Vanessa Marshall (MGS2:S)
Voiced by (Japanese) Kyoko Terase
Motion capture Eriko Hirata
Fictional profile
Nationality American
Affiliations United States Army
Genome Soldiers (MGS)
USACIC (MGS4)

Meryl Silverburgh (メリル・シルバーバーグ Meriru Shirubābāgu?) is a video game character in the Metal Gear series by Hideo Kojima. She was introduced in Metal Gear Solid in 1998, who serves as protagonist Solid Snake's sidekick and love interest.

Contents

Character design [edit]

Meryl Silverburgh in the Metal Gear series is based on a supporting character of the name in Hideo Kojima's earlier game, Policenauts (1994), where Meryl was originally designed by Tomiharu Kinoshita. Kojima liked the character so much, that he used her name, likeness and other characteristics to the Metal Gear version of Meryl. Meryl's partner in Policenauts, Dave Forrest, also shares the same given name Solid Snake has, whose true name is also Dave (David). In the final scenes of Metal Gear Solid, Meryl wears an orange goose down vest similar to the one Forrest wears in Policenauts.[2][3] Character designer Yoji Shinkawa stated that the staff purposely avoided mentioning her directly in the first sequel to Metal Gear Solid so that it could follow either of the two endings from the first game.[4]

Appearances [edit]

Meryl is first introduced as the teenage daughter of Roy Campbell's deceased brother, Matt Campbell, who died during the Gulf War. Born to a house of military traditions, Meryl trained herself throughout her childhood in the 'arts' of soldiery. She admired the FOXHOUND unit (a high-tech special forces group), viewing the days when her uncle and Solid Snake were members as the unit’s heyday, and wears a paint tattoo of the unit's old logo on her left shoulder. She joined the armed forces after graduating high school and received extensive psychotherapy to prevent any attraction to the opposite sex. Her weapon of choice is a Desert Eagle pistol.

She was recruited by the Next-Generation Special Forces (Genome Soldiers), an U.S. military unit, and assigned to Shadow Moses island in 2005 as an emergency replacement when several soldiers were reported missing. Following her arrival on the island, the unit involved with the exercise revolted along with members of FOXHOUND and took over the nuclear disposal site on the island and the Metal Gear REX weapon being developed there. Meryl refused to join in with the mutiny and was taken prisoner and placed on the same holding cell level with ArmsTech President Kenneth Baker, who gave her the card needed to activate REX. She manages to escape confinement and meets up with Solid Snake, and the two eventually begin working together. Meryl manages to stay hidden by disguising herself as one of the Genome Soldiers using the clothes she stole from Johnny Sasaki, the guard that was watching her cell. When Psycho Mantis takes control of Meryl's mind, Snake knocks her out before fighting Mantis. Later Meryl was shot and subsequently captured by FOXHOUND member Sniper Wolf. In an attempt to rescue Meryl and complete his mission, Snake engaged in a sniping duel with Wolf and was eventually lures into an ambush by her where he was also captured. Snake is then put through a series of torture trials by Revolver Ocelot; at this point, the player's actions dictate Meryl's fate. If the player successfully completes the torture section, Snake rescues a wounded Meryl in the final section of the game and they escape the facility together before their jeep crashes with Liquid Snake's, allowing them to have their deaths faked by Roy Campbell and Mei Ling.[5] However, if the player submits to the torture, Snake discovers that Meryl has died during her imprisonment and he leaves her body to be buried by the collapsing structure with the remains of REX. When Snake informs Campbell of Meryl's death, Campbell reveals that Meryl was actually his biological daughter, conceived from an affair between him and his sister-in-law, and this secret was kept from Meryl by her biological parents and they never get the chance to tell her in this alternate ending (the subject of Meryl's partenity is brought up again in Metal Gear Solid 2: Substance during "Confidential Legacy", one of the non-canonical Snake Tales missions). The fictional publication In the Darkness of Shadow Moses by Nastasha Romanenko, offered as a bonus feature with Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, states that Snake and Meryl escaped together.

Meryl is mentioned by name in Metal Gear: Ghost Babel. According to No. 4 in the Special Stage Select mode, she is said to be an U.S. Army recruit who is taken captive in order to coerce Colonel Campbell into leading the Gindra operation. Olga Gurlukovich, a character resembling Meryl, appeara in Metal Gear Solid 2 and plays a vital role within the story. Hal Emmerich "Otacon" points her resemblance to Meryl in a radio conversation with Snake, which is emphasized further in the Japanese version by the fact that they shared the same voice actress. Meryl herself appears in Metal Gear Solid 2: Substance (an expanded version of MGS2) as a supporting character in a '"Snake Tales" mission titled "Confidential Legacy", in which she takes Olga's place as the boss of the Tanker stage. Her new polygonal model was also used in Substance's "Missions"' mode, as well as in "Casting Theater" mode.

Meryl returns in Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots as the commander of "Rat Patrol Team One" (RAT PT 01), a fictional division of the United States Army Criminal Investigation Command sent to investigate Liquid Ocelot's private military company activities.[6] She is now aware that Roy Campbell is her true father, but openly resents him due to his marriage with Rosemary, who is her own age.[7] She reconciles with him at the end of the game. At first, Meryl dislikes her subordinate Johnny due to his clumsiness and stomach problems, but forgives him after learning he does not have nanomachines in his body and falls in love with him after he saves her life on their missions and ends up marrying him at the end of the story. She also appears in Metal Gear Online as a playable character.[8]

Meryl appears in both volumes of the Metal Gear Solid Drama CD series. This radio drama adaptation of Metal Gear Solid contained non-canonical storylines set after the Shadow Moses incident featuring the characters from the game, where Meryl is an independent covert-op agent working for UN Peacekeeping Force and is wearing the same type of sneaking suit Snake wore in the original game, which was depicted by character designer Yoji Shinkawa in the CDs' booklet. Meryl's sneaking suit from the Drama CD was made into an unlockable extra in Metal Gear Solid: Integral, and later in Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes (without the bandana). Meryl themed figures and action figures were produced by Yamato,[9] McFarlane Toys,[10] Studio Saru Bunshitsu,[11] and Square Enix.[12] Meryl also makes a cameo appearance in Super Smash Bros. Brawl and her costume is available to download in LittleBigPlanet.

Reception [edit]

The character of Meryl was mostly very well received by media. She was named as the favourite character of GameSpot's Shane Satterfield for being a "a hottie, plain and simple" and "a cute redheaded soldier with a tough-girl attitude and a husky voice."[13] Meryl was the first "gaming crush" of GamesRadar's David Meikleham, who commented: "This mangled mess of fugly 32-bit polygons and even fuglier textures was the equivalent of sex on a CD back in 1999. Sexy, sassy and with a strength that reminded me of Ellen Ripley, Meryl was a true pioneer for strong female gaming characters in a time when Lara Croft was a role model for lower back pain."[14] Similarily, Wesley Yin-Poole of VideoGamer.com placed her on the top of his 2010 list of "video game crushes".[15] IGN PlayStation Team included "Love Connection: Snake and Meryl" on their MGS4 wishlist in an open letter to Kojima.[16]

In 2007, Rob Wright of Tom's Games listed Meryl as one of the 50 greatest female characters in video game history, adding that she should be played by Rachel McAdams in a live-action film adapatation.[17] (In 2012, IGN proposed Emma Stone, Jennifer Lawrence or Alia Shawkat.[18]) In 2011, Peter Rubin and Ryan Woo Complex ranked her and Solid Snake as their seventh most favourite video game couple.[19] Meryl was also ranked by Complex's Larry Hester as the 42nd "hottest" woman in video games in 2012,[20] while the magazine's Michael Rougeau ranked her as the 26th greatest heroine in video game history in 2013.[21] In 2013, Scott Marley of Daily Record ranked her as the seventh most attractive female video game character.[22]

Voice acting role by Debie Mae West as the character was also well received; Kotaku's Brian Crecente excepted West to win the Spike Video Game Awards 2008 in the category "Best Performance by a Human Female".[23] GameSpot's Collin Oguro featured the Peeping Tom style scene featuring Meryl in MGS on the list of the ten greatest easter eggs in gaming.[24] Meryl was included among "the hottest asses in gaming" by GamePro in 2007,[25] also placing as number one "best ass in gaming" on the list by ZoominGames in 2012, who called her "the most important ass in gaming."[26] She was also as ranked as the 19th top video game redhead by Game Informer in 2012.[27] In 2010, Marissa Meli of UGO.com listed her among the 20 best Jewish characters in video games, calling her "the sexiest fictional Jew since Rhoda Morgenstern."[28]

However, GamesRadar's Chris Antista critcized the character for "fact that she’s got the shoulders of a teamster topped with the fugly hair style of a LPGA Pro" and reminded her of Cooking Mama.[29] Kojima Productions representative Ryan Payton acknowledged criticism that her romance with Johnny felt forced, stating that fans were expecting the character to be paired with Snake following the announcement of her appearance in the game, but then went on to state that he did not expect Snake and Meryl to be romantically paired while reading an early script.[30] In addition, Kijima-approved Square Enix's Play Arts Kai line figure of Meryl was criticized by Tony Ponce of Destructoid.[31]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Meryl Silverburgh - IGN
  2. ^ "TGS '07: Kojima speaks". GameSpot. Retrieved August 30, 2011. 
  3. ^ "PSone Books Policenauts site - Introduction" (in Japanese). 
  4. ^ "Metal Gear Solid2 -Sons of Liberty - Yoji Shinkawa Interview: Segment 4". "It can be either. When you escape with Meryl, Otacon is alive. When with Otacon (in MGS2), it is not mentioned that Meryl has died." 
  5. ^ The Memory Card .95: The jeep chase - Destructoid
  6. ^ "Metal Gear Solid 4 Official Site". 
  7. ^ Kojima Productions. Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of The Patriots. "Snake: He's your father / Meryl: As far as I'm concerned, we're still uncle and niece. I'll never forgive that womanizing piece of shit. [...] He... Remarried [...] His new wife's about my age. I hear she's even got a kid. It's as if he's given up on making up with his own daughter."
  8. ^ Yoon, Andrew (July 17, 2008). "Metal Gear Online free and paid expansions available today". Joystiq. Retrieved April 4, 2012. 
  9. ^ Metal Gear Solid - Meryl Silverburgh - 1/6 (Yamato) - MyFigureCollection.net
  10. ^ Metal Gear Solid - Meryl Silverburgh (McFarlane TOYS) - MyFigureCollection.net
  11. ^ Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes - Meryl Silverburgh - 1/6 (Studio Saru Bunshitsu) - MyFigureCollection.net
  12. ^ Metal Gear Solid - Meryl Silverburgh - Play Arts Kai (Square Enix) - MyFigureCollection.net
  13. ^ QOTW: Who is your favorite game character?, Page 9 - GameSpot.com
  14. ^ Who was your first gaming crush? | We remember the characters that won our adolescent hearts, minds and hormones, GamesRadar US, April 21, 2009.
  15. ^ Wesley Yin-Poole, Top 10 Video Game Crushes | The female game characters who waggled our joysticks., VideoGamer.com, 30/03/2010.
  16. ^ IGN PlayStation Team, IGN's PlayStation Ten: MGS4 Wishlist | What we want to see come Q2., IGN, February 27, 2008.
  17. ^ Rob Wright, The 50 Greatest Female Characters in Video Game History, Tom's Games, February 20, 2007.
  18. ^ Lucy O'Brien, Metal Gear Solid Movie: Our Dream Cast | We build our ideal cast for the recently announced Metal Gear Solid movie., IGN, September 23, 2012.
  19. ^ Peter Rubin, Ryan Woo, 7. Snake & Meryl Silverburgh — Love In The Time Of Coleco: Our 10 Favorite Video Game Couples, Complex, February 24, 2011.
  20. ^ Larry Hester, The 50 Hottest Women In Video Games, Complex, June 27, 2012.
  21. ^ Rougeau, Michael (March 4, 2013). "50 Greatest Heroines In Video Game History". Complex. Retrieved March 24, 2013. 
  22. ^ Scott Marley, Top Ten Most Attractive Female Video Game Characters, Daily Record, 28 March 2013.
  23. ^ Our Spike TV Video Game Award Picks - Kotaku
  24. ^ Collin Oguro, The Greatest Easter Eggs In Gaming, GameSpot.com.
  25. ^ Tenacius Moses, The Top Asses in Gaming, GamePro, January 05, 2007.
  26. ^ Top 5 - Best ass in gaming, ZoominGames, 13 March 2012
  27. ^ Kyle Hilliard, Top 43 Video Game Redheads, Game Informer, August 23, 2012.
  28. ^ Marissa Meli, The Greatest Jews in Video Games, UGO.com, August 9, 2010.
  29. ^ Chris Antista, Mediocre Game Babes | We give semi-sexy ladies another brief moment in the spotlight, GamesRadar, July 25, 2008.
  30. ^ "Interview: Kojima Productions' Ryan Payton from 1UP.com". 
  31. ^ Tony Ponce, Solidus Snake figure lookin' hot, Meryl not so much, Destructoid, 01.29.2012.

External links [edit]