Starfield is releasing in September, which is only about two months away, but the wait for Bethesda's space opera has fans on the Starfield subreddit combing through the gameplay deep dive for anything from information on skill trees and gear to spoons, apparently. A thread made by a since-deleted user (which is concerning in itself—what are you trying to hide, Todd?) gathered 1.2k upvotes.
The thread, titled «Forks confirmed, but still no spoons. Guys, I'm worried,» begins with a screenshot from another thread from two years ago which asks: «Do you think Starfield will have spoons, and how would spoons affect the gameplay and overall immersion?» What seemed like a shitpost back then has since become a genuine cause for concern, especially considering the accompanying screenshot from the deep dive.
In the screenshot, a customer sits at a restaurant after being served what appears to be a bowl of soup, alongside a few servings of either space pomegranate or pies. He doesn't have a spoon. This had led an increasingly feverish group of fans to demand: where are the spoons, Todd?
I did a touch of sleuthing myself, and unless I've missed something, I can't see one. There was something that looked spoon-adjacent in the Leadership skill tree, but upon further inspection it appears to be a lit match. I'm starting to see spoons where there aren't any now.
To see if this just was a worldbuilding thing, what with Bethesda's stated NASA-punk style, I visited the official NASA website to see if spoons were actually used in space, and yes, they are: «Astronauts use knife, fork, and spoon. The only unusual eating utensil is a pair of scissors used for cutting open the packages.» This is thanks to the «spoon bowl», a grim-looking
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