Sn1p3r187
Carolinian Shaolin Monk
The Pitt.......There I said it. The Pitt represented everything about Fallout that Fallout 3 should've 100% have been and is easily....One of the best well written stories of its own in the Fallout series. So good, that I actaully want to meet the guy who wrote the Pitt's story and shake his hand and hope that he would've at least help Obsidian with writing New Vegas. There's a part of me that is a slight Fallout 3 apologist- I know, I admit. But it might come from a place of nostalgia because 3 was the first Fallout game I played in full when I was a kid. But I will not deny credit for how good and well written the Pitt is. Which just makes the rest of Fallout 3 look that much worse btw. To the point that I feel siding with either Ashur or Wernher is a giant mistake and a death sentence for everyone. You don't know if Ashur will keep his word in the long run and use his daughter to help cure the Trog condition and get rid of slavery when society has developed enough to not require it. (In the short term it seems bad but in the long run=functioning civilization), Wernher lies to you and doesn't seem to care that much about the slaves but slavery is bad and what justification is there really to use Raiders as soldiers to enforce Ashur's will on other's to forced labor (More so a short term gain, possibly long term loss that follows principals that justifying barbaric practices of old to build a new future is setting the bar low for next generations to the point they will think it's okay to do so and as people we have to keep moving forward and never look back). Getting most of their slaves from Paradise Falls to build the city back.
It represents the focus of Necessary evils versus the notion of Progress that we should never look back to the past to build the future. In a weird way it makes Ashur more like Caesar than people care to admit and Wernher who strikes me as a odd mix of a disgruntled would be slaver in disguise of a follower of the apocalypse. Thoughts yall? Ill go more in detail soon.
It represents the focus of Necessary evils versus the notion of Progress that we should never look back to the past to build the future. In a weird way it makes Ashur more like Caesar than people care to admit and Wernher who strikes me as a odd mix of a disgruntled would be slaver in disguise of a follower of the apocalypse. Thoughts yall? Ill go more in detail soon.
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