Faith Connors

Faith Connors is a fictional character and the protagonist of the 2008 video game Mirror's Edge. Presented in the game as a "Runner", Faith transports items for revolutionary groups hiding from the totalitarian government. In addition to the game, Faith also starred in its comic tie-in, and is set to appear in the game's sequel.

Her voice is provided by Jules de Jongh. Developers placed the game in a first-person perspective partly to connect the player with the character. Faith's design was intended to appeal to both males and females, and balanced her edgy attitude with the game's clean, minimalist aesthetic.

The character received a positive reception with much attention being given to her character design, considered to be unsexualised. She has been featured in many "top character" lists, and is well-received as a female character. However, Andrew Vanden Bossche of Gamasutra criticized her for her lack of personality.

Character overview
Faith earns her living as a "Runner", a courier who carries physical communiqués around the city, her services retained by revolutionary groups who avoid communicating via highly monitored telephone and e-mail channels. Her face has a distinctive tattoo around her right eye, imitated by the game's logo. Faith's attitude towards the totalitarian government is rooted in her past; her parents were active in protest movements when she was young, campaigning to keep the city from shifting to the oppressive regime. Her mother was killed during the "November riots"—peaceful protests gone wrong —and Faith ran away from home when she was 16, living a thief's life on the city streets. Faith became a Runner after meeting Mercury (or Merc), a former Runner who now trains new hires, sources jobs for them, and provides them with intelligence and radio support while on the job.

Creation and development
Before the developers made her the protagonist of the game, Faith was initially conceived as simply another "member of the gang".

The character was designed to appeal to both women and men. Avoiding the cliché of "muscle freak" males and "well endowed" females, Faith was intended to be a "more grown-up, minimalist, and fashion orientated character". The developers wanted her to be, whilst attractive, not a "supermodel" and instead "approachable and far more real". Her appearance also reflected her own athleticism. Her bright red shoes and glove, as well as her tattooed body, is intended to demonstrate her "edgy" attitude. It was important, however, that the design conform to the game's clean, minimalist aethestic.

Developers decided to set the game in first-person in order to connect the player to Faith rather than simply watching her, as well as to add the feel of "being in an action movie, instead of playing it". As a result, Faith's model is largely unseen in-game apart from in reflections, while cutscenes instead present her in a 2-D animated style. Producer Nick Channon felt this added a sense of "mystique" and helped make Mirror's Edge unique. Before the reflections were introduced, another producer John Riccitiello spoke out against the first-person perspective as he wished to be able to see Faith in-game, hence leading to their creation.

Jules de Jongh voices Faith in the game.

When redesigning Faith for the second game, developers began with her colour scheme: "the white, the red, the blacks". Her glove was kept, with the designers considering it an iconic part of her character. Once again, the design had to be "elegant, minimalistic", with "a certain attitude". The colours used for accenting were very deliberately placed. Her design had to reflect her own strength. In the upcoming game, they hoped to explore more of Faith's motives, noting how she tattooed her eye to make a point.

Mirror's Edge
Faith made her debut appearance in 2008's Mirror's Edge. Throughout the game, she is guided via a comm unit by a man codenamed "Mercury". After delivering a package to Celeste, another Runner, Faith hears of trouble where her sister Kate, a cop, is. Faith finds Kate standing over the body of Robert Pope, a candidate for mayor. Kate refuses to leave with Faith and is arrested, while Faith finds a note saying "Icarus" in Pope's hand. She learns that Travis "Ropeburn" Burfield, Pope's head of security, may be involved with his murder from Jacknife, a former Runner. After meeting with Kate's superior officer, Lieutenant Miller, Faith heads to a meeting Ropeburn has scheduled, where he discovers her. Faith manages to win the fight by knocking him off the roof, and interrogates him as he hangs there. Before he can give any vital information, he is killed by an unknown assassin. She investigates the security firm helping the police force fight the Runner and discovers their work on "Project Icarus", a program designed to train their forces in parkour style to oppose the Runners. Faith finds Ropeburn's assassin and discovers she is actually Celeste, helping Icarus in order to ensure her own safety.

Faith ambushes the police convoy carrying the now convicted Kate to rescue her. She gives Kate her comms unit so that Mercury may guide her to the hideout while she distracts the police. When Faith returns to the hideout, she finds Merc dying and Faith recaptured. As he dies, Merc tells Faith that Kate is at "the Shard", the place containing the servers running the city's surveillance systems. With Miller's help, Faith destroys these servers and reaches the building's roof, finding Kate held by Jacknife, who is part of Project Icarus and has been using Faith to discover loose ends. Jacknife tries to leave with Kate via a helicopter, though Faith jumps and kicks him out the helicopter causing it to crash and him to fall to his death. The end credits reveal that though still wanted Faith and Kate have escaped, and that Project Icarus has only accelerated as a result.

Comic tie-in
After Mirror's Edge's release, a six-issue comic series was created. Set before the events of the game, Faith stars as the main character. Production of the comic resulted from an agreement made by EA Games with DC Comics.

The game's writer Rhianna Pratchett wrote a 6 page mini comic as a trial submission which was released at Comic-Con 2008. This was successful and she was hired to work on the comic by the Wildstorm division of DC. The comic series allowed Pratchett to examine the characters and world of Mirror's Edge in greater depth than had been possible in the game.

Other games
The character is set to star in Mirror's Edge's "reboot", exploring her origins. In addition, Faith was revealed as a cameo appearance in MySims SkyHeroes, though ultimately does not appear in the game itself. She similarly made a cameo appearance in MySims Agents, as a trophy.

Reception
Faith received a positive reception. GamesRadar awarded her place number 96 on their list of "100 best heroes in video games", praising her motives and tattoo. Although Faith ultimately did not make the cut, Game Informer staff considered her inclusion in their "30 characters that defined a decade" collection, with Meagan Marie saying "combined with strength, intelligence, and perseverance, Faith’s tough demeanor in a petite package had her running heads and shoulders above the crowd of cookie cutter female leads". Complex's Drea Avellan put her at number 3 in a list of 50 most "badass" game characters.

Prior to the announcement of a sequel, Faith was included on Annette Gonzalez of Game Informer's list of characters they wanted more of. UGO Networks similarly bemoaned her lack of future appearance, noting how "she was built to be athletic rather than sexy" unlike most other female characters. Similarly, Mariusz Koryszewski writing for Polish site GameStar called her one of five female video game character that deserved more recognition, commenting on the game's relative lack of mainstream success.

Visual appearance
Her visual design drew attention. Prior to the game's release, 1UP.com's Scott Sharkey placed her number 4 on his "Top 5 Most Attractive, Non-sexualized Women in Games" list, commenting "looking at her makes us wonder what her story is, not how many man hours were spent tweaking her breast physics." After its release, Game Informer listed Faith as as one character well-designed to be memorable, praising her practicality, feminity, and "rough and tough demeanor". In Brett Elston of GamesRadar's list of "top 7 tasteful game heroines", Faith came #5, noting her sensible outfit. Elston commented on how Faith "walks the extremely thin line between tough girl and “grrrl,”" and how "sometimes in the pursuit of making a strong leading lady, creators go too far. Faith was a case of just-right balance." In addition to their praise in their best heroes list, GamesRadar called her tattoos one of the "sickest" in gaming in an article written by Ashley Reed and Matt Bradford. They praised how they fleshed out the character's history, as well as how they stood in the face of the totalitarian government of the game.

However, Gamasutra's Andrew Vanden Bossche commented "again, Mirror's Edge seems to step forward only with its visuals: Faith’s character design is far more revolutionary than her personality", calling her personality common among video game heroines and criticising her lack of proper motivation.

Kotaku's Brian Ashcraft reported on a fan's redesign of the character, catered to Asian beauty standards. Tom Farrer, the game's producer, found the image "kind of sad", commenting on how Faith was designed to be "real". Ashcraft similarly reported on Japanese comments leveled against her design in the upcoming Mirror's Edge game.

As a female
Faith has drawn attention as a female character. GamesRadar's Andy Hartup called her one of "12 most inspirational female characters in games", making note of the game's comfortability with a first-person persective. SFGate listed her as one of the 9 greatest video game heroines, comparing the game to Run Lola Run partly as a result of their "driven" protagonists. CNET included her in a list of "video game ladies who rock", noting her sensible pants and shoes. Noting how she bucked many trends for female game characters, Michael Rougeau, writing for Complex, listed her as one of "The 50 Greatest Heroines In Video Game History". Entertainment Weekly also listed her as one of "15 Kick-Ass Women in Videogames". GameZebo's Dant Rambo felt the developers succeeded in making the character appealing to both genders without sexualizing her. IGN called her "one of the strongest women in the modern gaming landscape", placing her as number 3 in their top 10 list of female gaming heroines. Faith was similarly voted #3 of female gaming characters in 2008 by IGN readers, receiving 14% of the votes.