Wolfhorn Ranch, the abandoned farm, the sharecroppers, and there is a large farm in the northwest that I forget the name of. These aren't enough to sustain the population, but they do serve as representative examples to show that the food isn't being pulled out of the ass of bad writing. The Brahmin actually have plenty of grazing land, if you look around. Further, the game references 'brahmin barons' repeatedly, who apparently have huge ranches. They aren't on screen, but the reference is enough to establish "Oh, alright, there are actually people producing something of value in this setting." Fallout 3 doesn't have the same legs to stand on, there is no reason given that people have no obvious trouble getting food.
I said yes they failed in FO3, however the stuff we see in New Vegas is what we see there's nothing else to it, the share cropper farms could barely support all the outposts and it's obvious they can't, in case you missed it I said
tended to this might come as a shock, but farms don't grow by themselves they take a lot of hard work. This pasture you speak off all I see is brown tufts of grass with maybe a little green chucked in here and there, this might be another shock for you that was in FO3 and no Brahmin would not survive on that, so it comes back to crops being used to feed Brahmin which equals less food for people. A poor attempt is only slightly better than a horrible attempt.
And everyone in the game who knows it reacts in shock that he made such a full recovery. Ever worked in a hospital? Full recoveries like this do happen, it just isn't common.
but the tech we have in
hospitals not some shack is lightyears beyond what Doc Mitchell would have access to.
*facepalm* Fail argument is fail. If having arable land is dangerous, it's just as dangerous to have a huge supply of clean water to tempt theft.
fail retort is fail, seriously water on the ground doesn't belong to anyone, unlike the crops they would belong to the people who got the G.E.C.K working, they would take enough so they could live in realtive comfort in relation to food then the left overs would be given out on a 'first in best dressed' policy, it creates more problems than it solves. On the other hand
IF bethesda had opened the tidal basin to help purify more of the potomac it keeps parties out of each others way. all they got to do is walk down to the river and fill a few bottles, they aren't stealing it, it's just there. Which is completely different to there being only
one location to procure fresh food.
Wrong. The PC has witnessed these men murder one PERSON in cold blood, during a railroad cutscene made of pure fail. They kill one scientist when the world's most overrated deadbeat dad decides to resist (they don't have the right to take the project over, but resisting the heavily armed and armored men and risking your team is still awful leadership) like a moron and sabotages the project. The Enclave doesn't kill the scientist that actually cooperates, as you learn in Raven Rock.
Your father knows the Enclave are shady if you listen to him when they first land, he doesn't exactly sound very pleased to see them and no they didn't kill her they would more than likely wait until her usefulness wore off and then dispose of her, Like Eden would have disposed of you. Your father isn't exactly an idiot listen to him next time the Enclave take the purifier, he knows what they would do, everyone would die in that project he gave them a chance (very slim albeit) to escape.
Eden isn't innocent, and I never claimed he was. Like so much else in Fallout 3, Eden is a victim of terrible writing.
Neither did i, it was in reply to your 'just should have made him tell a lie that made the plan seem innocent' after all the PC went through, a lie isn't gonna work. even on some naive kid straight out of the vault
You're making my point for me. Sweet talking won't help, and there is obviously no chance that the PC is going to actually go along with Eden's plan, so there is no reason to give the vial to the player.
The premise itself is stupid, but a lie would raise the odds of getting what he wanted done. Honestly, if Eden had lied how many dim players would have put the vial in thinking that he was actually being honest? Lots, I guarantee. Of course that would be a surprising twist and would punish a stupid player for making a bad decision, and Bethesda can't have something like 'that'. The kids would get angry and want to know why everything wasn't spelled out for them.
If you think people would be that stupid... just wow
don't know about you but if some people had been trying to kill me whenever they saw me, then I read some documents about the president being a shifty b*stard i'm not going to be inclined to help them out at all.