Not much new going on, but Bethesda did post this today on their site: https://bethesda.net/#en/events/game/welcome-to-fallouts-legendary-vault-77/2015/10/12/36
Not much new going on, but Bethesda did post this today on their site: https://bethesda.net/#en/events/game/welcome-to-fallouts-legendary-vault-77/2015/10/12/36
Not seeing anything about a new series being made. You'd think that we'd have seen it by now as we're getting pretty close to release.
So that gaint Rad Scorpion is a actual thing out there in the Waste? I really hope it doesn't appear in Fallout 4
I stopped following PA when they sold their souls to EA when DA2 came out. Haven't really missed them tbh.
Basically to let the Enclave (who the pre-War government intended to be the real survivors) better their own chances of survival through social experimentation (not sure how putting a vault where everybody thinks they need to sacrifice their overseer on an annual basis or where all disputes are resolved by gambling contributes to the survival of the Enclave, but hey, its not my field)
Thanks for the link! I never saw the original - and this was great!
The Vaults really are one of several victims of Fallout 1/2's jumbled lore.
Since the whole "build a rocket and go to another planet" part of the Enclave's master plot got cut from the game, and since they were just going to purge all life on the planet using FEV, the entire Vault plot turned into "we did it for [censored] and giggles" rather then for an actual purpose.
Ghouls, mutant animals, the vault project, all got screwed in some way or another.
What's ironic is that even their Societal Preservation Experiment failed because of technology. Supposed control vaults and experimental vaults failed mainly due to technology not able to replaced and other assorted issues.
Also the people living in some of these vaults are actually outliving the forces that put them into them so will live their lives completely unaware that any data from their experiment is now usless (with the destruction of the US government/Enclave on the former Oil Platform there is no no one overseeing the experiment project.
I wish PA did a new Comic for Fallout 4. Its b een 8 years and while the original is still thematically appropriate it would be great for a new one.
Being willing to sacrifice a single person for the good of the group and being able to resolve disputes without bias would, in fact, be very important to the survival of the Enclave on a multi-generational trip through space.
The problem with that vault( I forgot the number but I want to say 11) is they got rewarded for not leaving someone behind. If they tell the robot they refuse to kill anyone they are allowed to live when they please and come back.
Would certainly like to know what happened in Vault 43.
Vault Security proceeded to gun down the panther with relative ease immediately upon finding said feline.
Vault residents wondered immediately what the [censored] just happened, shrugged, and proceeded about their daily business.
And Enclave scientists scratched their heads wondering who the hell thought that genius idea up. Turns out it was an intern.
Remember this is in the frame of 40-70's era experimentation and ethical evolution. The vaults aren't as outlandish in that frame of reference.
A couple examples of the kinds of ridiculous experiments from the era:
Bats with napalm attached to them were considered for use to fire bomb japan
Pigeons were put in bomb warheads so they could peck in the direction of targets and guide bombs to the surface.
The stanford prison experiment where civilians were assigned roles of prisoner and guard for experimental research into conflicts in jail systems. The guard volunteers were encouraged to use psychological torture techniques by researchers to induce feelings of helplessness in the subjects... It worked, very well. One man even underwent a temporary mental breakdown.
LSD experiments where volunteers were given psychoactive drugs and the effects were studied.
Various forms of tear gas and chemical weapons were tested against African American soldiers around WW2 to determine their efficiency.
The milgram experiment lead volunteers to believe they were giving another volunteer severe electric shocks to the point of execution while being encouraged to do so by an overseer like authority figure. Most people went all the way to the execution button and did as told. It turned out to be an actor and no electricity was involved but many volunteers were obviously very distraught over what they had seemingly done.
I'm not even scratching the bottom of the barrel here either.
In the frame of reference of the 40-70's scientific culture the vaults are nearly perfectly reasonable ideas.
Following the experiment thread from above (copied from wikipedia):
The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment (/t?s?ki?ɡi?/)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuskegee_syphilis_experiment#cite_note-timeline-1 was an infamous https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinical_trial conducted between 1932 and 1972 by the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Public_Health_Service to study the natural progression of untreated https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syphilis in rural African-American men in Alabama. They were told that they were receiving free health care from the U.S. government.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuskegee_syphilis_experiment#cite_note-timeline-1
Exactly what I'm talking about.
The vaults are "Lore friendly" for the era the represent.
That is the most depressing use of "lore friendly" ever I think.