Diverse Competitors Desperate to Find Halliday’s Easter Egg Have you ever been really invested in a video game, quest, contest, or something that promises a rewarding win? The competitors vying for the large fortune that comes with winning James Halliday’s Easter Egg Hunt sure are. Throughout the virtual reality that is the OASIS, the goal is to capture the several keys Halliday has strategically placed around the OASIS to eventually discover his special hidden egg, leading to a desirable win of fame and fortune. The stakes are high when we consider the fact that many players have invested years in a quest they may be unsuccessful in. On the flip side, though, there is a lot of potential gain with the promise of winning a large fortune for …show more content…
The Sixers, professionally known as Innovative Online Industries, are a clan of no-good, greedy corporate employees who are only fighting for the egg for the sole purpose of the money that comes along …show more content…
When it comes to the motivation behind finding the egg, we can assume that most players would be motivated by the large amount of money and fame that finding the egg would entail. Just about everyone in the OASIS would kill to be financially set for life, along with having their name plastered throughout the vast community that is the OASIS. This is particularly true for Nolan Sorrento and The Sixers. While it isn’t necessarily harmful or unnatural to be motivated by money, there is, however, something especially evil about the motivation of The Sixers. More importantly, their goal is to have full reign over the OASIS, turning it into a capitalistic society in which you must pay to play, along with having many features restricted. This would defeat the true foundation the OASIS was founded on, although it comes as no surprise considering The Sixers don’t seem to care about what is morally right. Furthermore, we can tell that Nolan Sorrento and The Sixers are motivated by all the wrong reasons, given the fact that they are willing to go as far as to kill Wade, a fellow competitor, to pull out a more likely guaranteed win on their behalf (Cline 143). Wade, on the other hand, appreciates the true challenge of hard work that goes into achieving something he has worked at for the past five years. Wade gives me the impression that he cares more about achieving progress throughout the quest than