Fallout vaults have always felt needlessly cruel. One exposed its inhabitants to FEV, creating an entirely new species - the Super Mutants. Another fed its people subliminal messages while dividing them into two factions, red and blue, leading to a violent civil war. And one had a faulty door that wouldn't close properly. But as it turns out, this wasn't just some sick corporate joke before the end of the world, but a carefully constructed plan.
Co-creator Tim Cain says each experiment was to prepare for a self-sufficient starship that could leave Earth (thanks, PCGamesN).
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Vault-Tec didn't believe that a post-nuclear Earth was worth rebuilding or repopulating. Seeing what we've seen, it's hard to blame them. Shantytowns with dwindling resources have been erected in horribly radioactive zones plagued by mutated monsters while factions have arisen to try and take back the world under militarised police states and old-styled empires that thrive on fear and brutality. Maybe going to the stars is a better idea.
"There is no Earth to come back to," Cain said. "And so, the head of the Enclave and the highest levels of government were like 'let's build a starship, and take it to nearby stars.' But that would take forever, so it has to be a multi-generational starship, and the only technology we know how to build is atomic power. So we can make an atomic power plant that would help us build a starship for hundreds of years, but we don't know how to do anything else. So the Vault-Tec director, not being a great person, says 'Why don't we use the vaults to figure out the technology we'll need on the ship?'"
Maybe Starfield is a far-flung future where all the
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