Most players spend all six Gears of War games fighting for the COG. The question the series slowly, painfully earns is whether that was ever the right side to be on.
The Coalition of Ordered Governments presents itself as humanity's last line of defence - the institution that kept the lights on long enough to mount a resistance, the apparatus through which civilisation might be salvaged from an underground enemy that arrived without warning. For much of the original trilogy, players have no reason to question this framing.
The Locust are monstrous.
The Gears are outnumbered.
Survival is the only currency.
But the COG is not a flawed institution forced into hard choices by an impossible war. It is a fascist state that existed long before Emergence Day, built on seventy-nine years of resource warfare, ideological conformity, and the systematic dehumanisation of anyone it designated as other. The Locust didn't expose the COG's brutality. T
hey gave it a new target and a new justification.
This is the argument the Gears of War franchise builds across its entire run — not loudly, not didactically, but with the slow accumulation of detail that good political fiction requires. By the time Gears 4 and 5 make the COG's nature explicit, the groundwork has been laid in every propaganda poster, every silent atrocity, every soldier the state has used up and discarded.

Defining the Framework: What Fascism Actually Is
Before applying the label to a fictional government, it's worth earning it rigorously. Fascism is a word that gets stretched until it means little, deployed as an insult rather than a diagnosis. Using it precisely matters — both for intellectual honesty and because the Gears franchise deserves the specific, evidenced reading it was designed to support.
In 1995, the Italian philosopher and novelist Umberto Eco published an essay titled Ur-Fascism in The New York Review of Books. Having grown up under Mussolini, Eco was uniquely placed to identify fascism's structural features rather than its surface aesthetics. He identified fourteen properties of what he called "Eternal Fascism" — not all of which need be present in any given case, but which collectively describe the grammar of fascist states. Several of them map onto the COG with striking precision.
The cult of tradition and the glorification of a heroic past. The selective appeal to a frustrated population that sees itself as under siege. The rejection of internal dissent as betrayal. The equation of disagreement with treason. The contempt for those who choose not to serve the collective war effort. Life understood as permanent warfare — the state not merely tolerating the war but needing it to justify its own existence.
"Fascism was a fuzzy totalitarianism, a collage of different philosophical and political ideas, a beehive of contradictions."
— Umberto Eco, Ur-Fascism, 1995
Alongside Eco, the historian Robert Paxton offers a complementary lens in The Anatomy of Fascism. Paxton defines fascism not as a coherent ideology but as a practice — a set of political behaviours organised around the permanent mobilisation of a community against internal and external enemies. This distinction matters enormously for reading the COG. The Coalition doesn't need a Mein Kampf. It has the Octus Canon, the Pendulum Wars, and E-Day. Its fascism is structural, not declared.
Before the Locusts: The COG's Original Sin
The most common defence of the COG runs like this: whatever its flaws, it was a functioning government that humanity rallied around when an existential threat emerged from underground. The Locust created the conditions; the COG responded. Authoritarianism was a necessity, not a preference.
This defence collapses the moment you examine the chronology of Sera's history. The COG was not born in response to Emergence Day. It was born in blood a century before it, and it spent seventy-nine years waging industrial-scale warfare for a resource called Imulsion before a single Locust broke the surface.
The Pendulum Wars are the key to understanding everything. Fought between the COG and the Union of Independent Republics over global Imulsion reserves, the conflict killed tens of millions, restructured entire economies around military production, and — crucially — shaped a generation of soldiers who knew nothing else. Marcus Fenix's father, Adam Fenix, spent his career as a COG researcher during the Pendulum Wars. Dom Santiago enlisted young enough that war was his entire adult life before Emergence Day. The COG that greeted the Locust threat was not a peacetime government galvanised by crisis. It was a war machine looking for its next war.
Imulsion is worth pausing on as an allegory. It is the resource that causes the Lambent mutation, that corrupts everything it touches over time, that ultimately drives the entire catastrophe of Sera's history. Societies that organise their identity around controlling a single, exploitable resource — that wage genocide-scale wars to secure it — are, in the Gears universe as in our own, tending toward a particular kind of rot. The COG built itself on Imulsion and became something Imulsion-adjacent: a corrupting, consuming force that doesn't recognise the damage it does because it has defined itself as civilisation.
The Octus Canon and the Architecture of Obedience
The COG's founding document, the Octus Canon, functions as the ideological infrastructure of its authoritarianism. Under the Canon, citizens owed the state their productive capacity, their children's military service, and their ideological loyalty. Education was COG-run and COG-focused, teaching a sanitised history of the institution. Students wore uniforms. The curriculum centred government. Dissent was framed not as political disagreement but as moral failure.
The parallels here are not accidental. Ancient Sparta's agoge — the compulsory military formation system that took boys from their families at age seven — created soldiers who were COG soldiers by another name: trained from birth to see the state's survival as identical with their own. Rome's concept of virtus, martial virtue as the highest civic expression, is there in the texture of every interaction between Gears — the contempt for weakness, the stoic acceptance of loss, the sense that to grieve openly is somehow indecent. And the Nazi party's Volksgemeinschaft, the idea of the people as a single organism to which the individual owes absolute service, echoes in every COG recruitment poster and every speech about what it means to "be a Gear."
The Aesthetics of Power: What the COG Looks Like and Why It Matters
Fascism is not merely policy. It is spectacle. The Nazi propagandist Leni Riefenstahl understood this, which is why Triumph of the Will is still studied as an aesthetic object decades after its politics have been universally condemned. The designers of the COG's visual world understood it too.
The gear-cog iconography is a starting point. The gear as symbol carries specific ideological freight: it suggests industrialism, productivity, the citizen as interchangeable component of a larger mechanism.
It strips the individual of uniqueness and elevates the function.
Every Gear is a Gear — identifiable not by name but by role, not by face but by armour. The deindividuation this creates is not an accident of game design. It is the visual argument the franchise is making about what the COG does to the people inside it.
Environmental propaganda — the posters visible throughout the games, particularly in Gears of War: Reloaded — shows a state actively producing ideological consent. These are not historical artefacts in the game world. They are current, maintained, newly printed. The COG is still selling itself to whatever population remains. Compare the visual grammar: the bold primary colours, the simplified heroic figures, the slogans of collective purpose. Soviet constructivist propaganda and Nazi mass-media messaging both used the same techniques for the same reasons. A population that is perpetually afraid needs perpetually renewed permission to be afraid of the right things.
The architecture of COG settlements continues the argument. Where the buildings appear, they are brutalist in the truest sense — massive, ordered, monumental, designed to communicate permanence and the insignificance of any single person measured against the institution. Albert Speer's plans for Welthauptstadt Germania, the never-built "World Capital" Berlin, proposed architecture specifically scaled to make human beings feel small.
COG urbanism achieves the same effect with less grandeur and more concrete.

The Necessary Enemy: Dehumanisation and the Logic of Genocide
Every fascist state requires a dehumanised enemy. The enemy provides the justification for every curtailment of liberty, every economic sacrifice, every atrocity committed in the name of collective survival. Before the Locust, the COG had the UIR. After Emergence Day, it had something far more useful: an enemy that genuinely was trying to exterminate humanity.
What the COG did with that enemy is the telling thing. The Locust are never offered terms in the original trilogy.
They are never negotiated with, never studied as a culture, never addressed as anything other than a pest problem.
The word "Grubs" — the standard derogatory term used by Gears for the Locust throughout the series — is not casual. Naming an enemy after larvae, underground vermin, things that exist below the threshold of civilised life, is a documented technique of genocide-enabling propaganda.
Rwandan Hutu media called Tutsi people inyenzi — cockroaches — in the months before the 1994 genocide. Nazi German press used Ungeziefer — vermin — as standard vocabulary for Jewish people. Language that places the enemy beneath the category of the human makes extermination feel like sanitation rather than slaughter.
The Scouring of Jacinto, the COG's climactic solution to the Locust threat, deserves to be read carefully. The choice to flood the Hollow — to drown Jacinto, the COG's own capital, in order to destroy the enemy - committed the COG to the destruction of its own population centre rather than surrender. Stalin's scorched earth policy during Operation Barbarossa made the same calculation: deny the enemy the resource even if it means destroying your own people. This is not heroism in any meaningful sense.
It is the logical endpoint of a state that has decided its own survival as an institution matters more than the lives it was supposedly created to protect.
The Revelation That Changes Everything
Then comes the late-series revelation that the Locust were, in origin, human. The Sires — early experiments conducted in COG facilities on Mount Kadar — were the precursors of the Locust Horde. The enemy that justified seventy-nine years of war and then a genocidal extermination campaign was a product of COG science, created in COG laboratories, abandoned by the COG when the experiment produced results the institution found inconvenient.
This is the Gears franchise at its most structurally sophisticated. The COG did not just benefit from having a dehumanised enemy. It manufactured one. And then it waged a genocide against its own creation while insisting on its moral necessity. The soldiers who carried out that genocide - including Marcus, Dom, Cole, and Baird - had no way of knowing this. They were, in Hannah Arendt's phrase, engaged in the banality of evil: ordinary people doing terrible things not out of malice but because their society had built structures that made those terrible things feel like duty.
Gears 4 and 5: The Mask Comes Off
The original trilogy allows players to be complicit in the COG's violence without fully confronting it. Gears of War 4 and Gears 5 are where the franchise does its most honest political work, staging the COG's nature as the explicit subject of the narrative rather than its background.
The rebuilt COG under First Minister Jinn has learned nothing. DeeBee enforcement robots patrol settlements and suppress dissent with mechanical efficiency. The Outsiders — people who simply chose to live beyond the COG's jurisdiction — are treated as criminals and enemies of order. JD Fenix and Delmont Walker, both trained Gears, went Outsider rather than continue serving an institution they had come to recognise as something other than what it claimed to be.
The central theme of Gears 4 is inheritance. The new generation lives inside structures built by the old one, constrained by decisions made in desperation that have now calcified into permanent policy. The COG's original sins have been institutionalised. The emergency measures of the Locust War are now just how things work. This is how authoritarian states sustain themselves across generations: not through continuous violence, but through the normalisation of that violence until it becomes administrative.
Gears 5's central theme is accountability — not just for actions, but for origins. Kait Diaz discovering her lineage as the granddaughter of the Locust Queen is the moment the franchise forces the COG's founding crime into the open. Her identity crisis is the franchise's crisis: if the enemy was ours all along, what does that make the war? What does that make the people who fought it? What does that make the institutions that orchestrated it and then suppressed the evidence?
The COG's response to this revelation is to bury it. Every authoritarian state requires a sanitised origin story - one that places the state on the side of necessity and righteousness. The Soviet Union airbrushed inconvenient figures from official photographs. The Nazi state rewrote Germany's WWI defeat as a "stab in the back" by internal enemies. The COG buries the Sires programme and maintains the fiction of a war it had no choice but to fight.
Tools and Victims: The Complicity of Marcus Fenix
None of this makes Marcus Fenix a fascist. And that is precisely the point.
Marcus is a man whose entire sense of self was formed by an institution that needed soldiers. His loyalty was never to the COG as an idea — it was to his squad, to Dom, to the people physically beside him in the foxhole. But his squad was the COG's weapon. The distinction feels meaningful from the inside. Structurally, it changes very little.
Dom Santiago's arc is the emotional argument the franchise makes most openly about what perpetual war does to people. Dom's search for his wife Maria, her mercy killing, his years of functioning grief, and his final act of self-sacrifice in Gears 3 — these are not the story of a winner. They are the story of a man the COG used up. His death is the franchise's most honest statement about the cost of this kind of war: the soldiers who believe most completely in what they're doing are the ones it destroys most completely.
"The most direct route between two points on Sera was always through someone's body."
Hannah Arendt, covering Adolf Eichmann's trial in Jerusalem in 1961, coined the phrase "the banality of evil" to describe how monstrous outcomes can be produced by ordinary people performing bureaucratic functions without engaging their moral imagination. The Gears are not Eichmann — they fight and bleed and grieve in ways that desk-bound administrators never did. But the structural point holds: the COG's greatest crimes were carried out by people who were, individually, not monsters. They were soldiers doing what soldiers do inside the systems soldiers serve.
The story of Gears of War: Judgment makes this tension most explicit in its tribunal framing. Kilo Squad is judged not for outcomes but for obedience — for the act of prioritising survival and effectiveness over procedural loyalty to the chain of command. The COG has decided that the crime is the deviation from authority rather than the circumstances that forced it. Authority demands obedience even when obedience is insane. That is what authority always demands.
Why This Matters: What Gears of War Is Actually Saying
Military science fiction has a persistent tendency to arrive at anti-war conclusions. Paul Verhoeven's Starship Troopers. Spec Ops: The Line. Apocalypse Now and its source text, Conrad's Heart of Darkness. The genre keeps asking the same question — what does permanent war do to the people and institutions that wage it? — and keeps finding the same answer: it makes them into something they would not have chosen to become.
Gears of War belongs in this tradition. The writers — particularly Karen Traviss, whose novelisations expanded the political texture of the games, and the narrative teams at The Coalition who built out Gears 4 and 5 — were making a franchise-length argument about what militarised states do to people and to truth. That argument asks whether a society can build its entire identity around war and still be worth saving.
But the people inside that society — Marcus, Dom, Kait, Cole, Baird — are worth saving precisely because they keep choosing each other over the institution. Because they grieve. Because they question. Because Marcus went to prison rather than abandon his squad, and Dom died in a fuel truck rather than let his friends die, and Kait walked into the truth about her own origins rather than live with the comfortable lie.
The COG is the villain of Gears of War. It was the villain before Emergence Day, during it, and after it. The franchise earns this conclusion slowly, across the full breadth of its run, with the patience that genuine political fiction requires. The Locust gave the COG its perfect war. But the COG was always what it was.
The question the series leaves open — the question worth sitting with — is whether there was ever a version of the Coalition worth fighting for, or whether the rot was structural from the first line of the Octus Canon.



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