The ROMANOV Archive Manifesto: On the Defense of Russian Culture

The ROMANOV Archive Founding Manifesto

The ROMANOV Archive Founding Manifesto

The ROMANOV Archive ("Russian-Originated Media Archetypes & Narratives in Occidental Videogames") has released its inaugural manifesto, a long-form declaration that outlines the project’s guiding mission: to catalogue, analyze, and defend Russian cultural representation in videogames at a moment when culture itself is being reshaped, politicized, and, in many cases, utterly erased.

The text makes plain what ROMANOV stands for. Beyond documenting mere Russian tropes, the archive positions itself as a repository of memory in an era where Russian culture itself is under siege, treated less as heritage and more as a proxy for politics. It confronts the reality of Russophobia, of double standards in Western media, and of Ukraine’s own cultural and political contradictions.

The manifesto insists on a simple but urgent truth: culture is not an army. Statues, novels, music, games, and language are not to be confused with governments or wars. In citing examples from history—from German and Japanese art censored in wartime, to today’s bans on Russian books and performances—the document draws a clear line: when culture is conscripted, nuance dies, and entire cultures are reduced to censored enemies worthy only of being erased.

The manifesto underscores the archive's commitment to cultural endurance. It affirms that Russian art, memory, and language must survive politics, propaganda, and conflict. To put it plainly: Russia matters. And will continue to matter.

By A. Sylazhov