naossano
So Old I'm Losing Radiation Signs
You ought to give enough context if you want a conflit to be the central plot point.
Context? In BGS's games? What's that?You ought to give enough context if you want a conflit to be the central plot point.
Raiders are superior beings to the average human due to their abandoning of weak Pre-War morality. They are wild and free, killing and maiming like the Great Old Ones.
Think about it like this: everybody in the CW tries to buy purified water if they can, over irradiated water. If you can afford to live in Megaton/Rivet City/Canterbury Commons, you can probably afford to buy purified water. James' mission was to mass purify all the irradiated water so no one would have spend extra on purified water anymore. At least that's how I see it.They already have water. Lots of it.
Nobody beside James and the two water beggars complain about it.
There is a huge overpopulation in the CW and nobody is starving or dying of thirst.
The purity project is supposed to cater for a need that isn't expressed in the actual gameworld, which render the whole conflict a moot point.
The problem with that is that no vendor in the entire game sells purified water. Even the Doctor in Tenpenny Tower (which have pure water coming out of it's taps) only sells Dirty Water. So purified water is not for sale in the Capital Wasteland.Think about it like this: everybody in the CW tries to buy purified water if they can, over irradiated water. If you can afford to live in Megaton/Rivet City/Canterbury Commons, you can probably afford to buy purified water. James' mission was to mass purify all the irradiated water so no one would have spend extra on purified water anymore. At least that's how I see it.
The problem with that is that no vendor in the entire game sells purified water. Even the Doctor in Tenpenny Tower (which have pure water coming out of it's taps) only sells Dirty Water. So purified water is not for sale in the Capital Wasteland.
Also the value of purified water is the same as a Nuka-Cola or two dirty water bottles, so if it was for sale it is not that expensive to begin with.
You find a group who are so terrified of mutants interbreeding with "pure humans" that they want to wipe out the vast majority of the wasteland's population more compelling than a guy who simply wants to make people more fit to survive in the wasteland and unite people under a common cause?Honestly, I think the Enclave is a much more compelling villain than the Master. They are, after all, still human and have a point other than to destroy humanity by turning them into monsters.
You find a group who are so terrified of mutants interbreeding with "pure humans" that they want to wipe out the vast majority of the wasteland's population more compelling than a guy who simply wants to make people more fit to survive in the wasteland and unite people under a common cause?
And yet we have people who are really old and always consumed dirty water all their lives.Everyone is drinking slightly irradiated water, which means everyone is taking radiation damage slowly and it's killing almost everyone just little by little. This lore rather than a gameplay mechanic. Purified water doesn't kill people little by little. It's not rocket science that it's better than the alternative (Dirty Water).
What is even more stupid is that if anyone scavenged a bit in DC, they would find a lot of purified water bottles.Yet you'd think that if purified water is so rare, someone would take advantage and sell it, creating some measure of power for themselves like the Water Merchants in Fallout 1.
Nah, The Master is probably the best villain in the whole Fallout series. The Enclave's endeavors I found pretty predictable, albeit terrifying, because that's already the same kind of stuff the U.S. government conducts on a daily basis behind closed doors. *X-Files theme plays*The Master is a psychic cyborg flesh-monster who wants to dip people in ooze and enslave them with his powers. He's a cartoonish villain who has no relevance in the real world or social critique value. He's good at his job but I've never felt his story added anything to the actual setting but an antagonist and a sign the writers were great at providing multiple endings.
Villain?The fact that you can manipulate hundreds or thousands of people through religious indoctrination and dipping them into vats for a "mutant peace" makes him the biggest villain of the whole series.
"Do you wish to join the Unity, or do you wish to die? Join!! Die!!"Villain?
It's actually spelled "Hero"
And yet we have people who are really old and always consumed dirty water all their lives.
If the water in the Capital Wasteland was killing people little by little with each drink no one would live until 20 years old.
A bottle of dirty water gives +5 rads, humans die at 1000 rads so a human would die after consuming 200 bottles of water, if one human would need a bottle per day, the human would die in 200 days or less than 1 year... Having a small sip of water from any tap, water tower, fire hydrant gives +2 rads, so one would need to only sip 500 times from those water sources to die.
Let's face it, the Capital Wasteland water problem is not shown at all during the entire game. I assume the only thing purified water would bring to the CW is allowing people to farm, but even food doesn't seem to be a problem in the CW because no one complains of hunger and we don't see anyone dying from lack of food.
Only times people complain about water is the water beggars (and yet some are really old people already with white hair, beards and wrinkles everywhere in their face) and Ben Canning, but that one happily accepts dirty water (the game even prioritizes giving him dirty water).