That’s why we ended up with ‘Sing’
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Hideo Kojimahas one big regret surrounding Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker, and it’s all to do with one song.Be warned: story spoilers for Peace Walker follow!
Near the conclusion of the PSP game, The Boss takes control of the Peace Walker AI weapon, and has it effectively commit suicide by drowning itself. The machine, or rather, The Boss, sings the track ‘Sing’ by Joe Raposo, which was originally written for Sesame Street, but then shot to greater fame when it was covered by The Carpenters.
It’s this moment that Kojima has a lot of regrets about. In the tweet below, the director reveals that another song was originally planned to close out The Boss' section in Peace Walker in the ending segment, but Kojima andKonamicouldn’t secure the rights to the song itself, even though they went and apparently visited the family that the track belongs to.
Instead, Kojima had to use Sing instead, which wasn’t his first choice, but is still nonetheless a “great song” according to the director. Kojima doesn’t reveal which track was the first choice for The Boss' final scene, but it fit “perfectly” with Peace Walker’s themes of “peace” and the 1970s at large.
Elsewhere, Kojima expands on how Peace Walker came about, since the game celebrated its fourteenth anniversary yesterday. Apparently the game was originally called Metal Gear Solid 5: Peace Walker, until Konami’s marketing department “heavily opposed” the idea. We’d have to wait four more years to get the next numbered entry in the Metal Gear Solid series.
“The target age group was lowered to elementary, junior high, and high school students because it was for the PSP. The aim was to discover the younger generation and acquire fans of two generations: the kids and their parents,” Kojima adds.
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