Village En Marais

"NO CEDA NO MILITARY STAY OUT!"

- Banner sign "If anyone could survive the infection, it would be these people..."

- Rochelle

The Louisiana community named Village En Marais is the setting for the last three chapters of the Swamp Fever campaign in Left 4 Dead 2.

The second chapter is centered on the entrance and Earl's Gator Village. The third chapter takes in the swamp town, and the finale moves to a riverside setting featuring a third huddle of buildings next to the decaying remains of 19th-Century plantation house.

"Village En Marais" translates literally from French into English as "Marsh Village," which transposes into colloquial English as "Swamp Town." This community is predominately Cajun who thus owe their origins and culture to French settlers forcibly removed from Canada's Nova Scotia region at the time of the French and Indian War in the late 1750's.

History
This rural town was always seen as being independent from the rest of the world. They choose a more physically demanding and labor-derived lifestyle such as living in shacks, mobile homes, and wooden houses and farming. The main source of income for this town was most likely the tourism industry as they have several swamp and alligator tours, fishing, and tours of the plantation house. They also had a couple convenience stores, a lounge, and several shacks both on and off the swamp that people could rent.

Current Status
When word of the infection reached the small village, its residents immediately barricaded themselves inside their homes, the main roads and houses were blocked up, and a sign refusing help from CEDA and the military was put up at a nearby highway gas station. Their efforts to keep the infected out were definitely noticeable with barricades and signs; however, when the infection did reach the village, they killed all infected and livestock (same is seen in Blood Harvest). The town is overrun by the time the Survivors pass through, but graffiti in the plantation house indicates that the village itself lasted longest against the Infected; longer than Shreveport and Bossier City. With the arrival of the four to the village, none of the villagers were found, and their homes were broken up by the infected. And it may be concluded that the villagers themselves turned as the infected on the location.

Landmarks in Village En Marais

 * A large swamp surrounding most of the village
 * Unnamed convenience stores
 * Alligator Observation Deck
 * Earl's Gator Village
 * Plantation House
 * Wilsons Gas Station (just off Interstate 10)