I'd like to think The master more or less predicted the war in the Mojave, the Commonwealth, the capital wasteland, and the enclave. My head canon is that he vaugely predicted these threats, and had a good idea of the death toll. So when he says there's no hope, he is grieving all the people that will canonically go on to die in fallout 2, 3, NV, and 4.
It’s not an absurd theory either, F.E.V *can* give people the ability to vaguely see future events, look at The Forecaster and Mama Murphy, Psykers who have the ability to see the future. And, since Richard was in the vats for weeks and experimented on himself with massive doses of F.E.V, it’s not impossible to come to the conclusion he had that ability but significantly amplified.
That's one theory. Personally, I just think he's aware that without constraint, we inevitably fight each other for almost any reason. No need to have a glimpse into the future to determine that when all the proof you need is in history, from Mesopotamia to Anchorage.
I wonder if The Vault Dweller ever truly realized their impact on the wasteland. Being forced to return to the wasteland after saving the Vault from certain peril… birthed a struggling yet strong republic. And yet still so much more then that.
Not sure what you're referring to. Vault Dweller and other people from Vault 13 founded the small village of Arroyo, which is slowly dying out by the time of F2, and only ultimately saved by the actions of the Chosen One. If you're talking about the New California Republic, then it grew out of the settlement of Shady Sands, which was well established by the time VD visits it for the first time in F1. Although VDs actions did help it to survive and ultimately prosper (both directly, by saving Aradesh's daughter Tandi, the future first president of NCR; and indirectly, by removing the threat of the Master to the Wastes), but those actions happened before his exile from V13 and subsequent journey far to the north-west.
His life's hard work. His magnum Opus. Designated to a joke. A punchline within every sequel that lost it's charm decades ago. His predictions came true, humanity forever spiraling into the sweet embrace of war. Never to truly recover, only finding more reasons to put holes in each other. If given only just a few more years, he would have been our savior. The Master was right.
But supermutants are sterile, so turning humanity into them would certainly doom it to die out eventually. The Master himself acknowledges this if you present him with scientific evidence and self-destructs.
@@Postoronniy Look at every single fallout game afterwards and tell me how good humanity has been going. It's the same certain doom that you spout on and on about Mutant sterility, only just a slower pace. And even then, if we take what Marcus says in Fallout 2 to be canon, all it would take is just a couple of years to "get the juices flowing".
@Kombine_Tmod Bethesda acknowledges that it references the FB for the purposes of canon, and to my knowledge, has not put anything contradicting F1s and FBs information regarding supermutant sterility in any of the new games.
@@derpyoctopus4217 I'm not so sure. If the Master wins Fallout 1 he basically gets to convert all of California if not more people into Super Mutants, including the Vault Dwellers who would become intelligent mutants and thus great officers for that army. Power Armor is great force multiplier but the mutants still have the numbers advantage, which they can use to terrific effects as seen in Fallout 3 (the Brotherhood hasn't taken over DC by the time the game starts because they are stuck in a stalemate against the super mutants despite the eastern Brotherhood having an ample power armor supply and accepting wastelanders and training them to even the odds, the BoS would have won eventually I think but at a catastrophic cost) A full state sized army of mutants all led by competent officers, in turned controlled by a hive mind like entity would give the enclave a run for it's money. Their strongest weapon, Frank Horrigan, isn't even possible if the master stands undefeated and protects Mariposa as a breeding ground for more mutants, or worst, he could be turned against the Enclave through the mind control the master can use on Super Mutants. It would all depend if they can pull off something like Fallout 3's anti mutant bio weapon before the Master leads a mutant fleet to overrun their base at sea.
I got fallout classic collection from epic games a few days ago. I have finished F1 but used the wiki when i didn't know what to do. Should I do it for 2 or would it ruin the expirience?
I mean in a way of If im stuck and don't know what to do I probaply wouldn't have found the Water chip without someone showing me that you have to get in the sewers. In 2 i found a Guy named Vic who was a slave he asked me to get him a radio from a earlier town but i already took it when i was there and sold it. Now should i just Look what he was gonna do because he seems story essential from wiki or just wander the wasteland hoping i don't need him later.
The tragedy of the NCR is that they actually bought the flawed version of the American republic, thus ironically failing to live up to its title of one. Democracy was never a core value that was a part of the founding of the United States because democracy is ultimately 'mob rule', where the will of the many crushes the will of the few. This is how the NCR, consisting of five united member states, proceeded down the path of imperialistic behaviour because "the many have decided that these smaller settlements should submit." This is in direct opposition to the foundational beliefs of the United States as a republic (and why things like the Electoral College are a thing): to protect the small but valuable members from the tyranny of the mob.
You’d think that any pre-war ghoul would try and correct the N.C.R, but on the other hand: If you were offered a nation extremely similar to the one you lost to a g3n0c!da| conflict that you firsthand witnessed, would you take it? I think I would. Just, the comfort and familiarity of it all would make me feel at home.
Damn, and he was right
We would tear ourselves apart fighting each other
we are tearing eachother
@@ens7890Rip and tearing you could say
But turning people into mutants wouldnt change anything to this problem
It's human nature
@@dsfsdggfggdfd3791 patently false
I'd like to think The master more or less predicted the war in the Mojave, the Commonwealth, the capital wasteland, and the enclave.
My head canon is that he vaugely predicted these threats, and had a good idea of the death toll. So when he says there's no hope, he is grieving all the people that will canonically go on to die in fallout 2, 3, NV, and 4.
It’s cause he knows that War…war never changes
He foresaw Bethesda buying fallout
It’s not an absurd theory either, F.E.V *can* give people the ability to vaguely see future events, look at The Forecaster and Mama Murphy, Psykers who have the ability to see the future.
And, since Richard was in the vats for weeks and experimented on himself with massive doses of F.E.V, it’s not impossible to come to the conclusion he had that ability but significantly amplified.
That's one theory. Personally, I just think he's aware that without constraint, we inevitably fight each other for almost any reason. No need to have a glimpse into the future to determine that when all the proof you need is in history, from Mesopotamia to Anchorage.
@@KremlinReport Know your joking but get over it lol.
Fallout more socially relevant than ever.
How
@@WhaleManMan Fallout TV show and the world is on the brink of war.
@@phantom.wreath
Always has been
@@WhaleManMan yeah but not with nuclear weapons you fucking artard
yep, capitalism will kill us all
Wondering how the actual hell a 50 second edit of fallout took 200 hundred times that amount to make it.
epileptic warning
What music was used
@@F-104lover California Dreaming
@@F-104loverCalifornia dreaming’ by the mommas and the poppas
@@princessbaldinistudios thanks
0:15 Nate the Rake!
"Who else but Nate!"
I wonder if The Vault Dweller ever truly realized their impact on the wasteland.
Being forced to return to the wasteland after saving the Vault from certain peril… birthed a struggling yet strong republic. And yet still so much more then that.
Not sure what you're referring to. Vault Dweller and other people from Vault 13 founded the small village of Arroyo, which is slowly dying out by the time of F2, and only ultimately saved by the actions of the Chosen One.
If you're talking about the New California Republic, then it grew out of the settlement of Shady Sands, which was well established by the time VD visits it for the first time in F1. Although VDs actions did help it to survive and ultimately prosper (both directly, by saving Aradesh's daughter Tandi, the future first president of NCR; and indirectly, by removing the threat of the Master to the Wastes), but those actions happened before his exile from V13 and subsequent journey far to the north-west.
His life's hard work.
His magnum Opus.
Designated to a joke. A punchline within every sequel that lost it's charm decades ago.
His predictions came true, humanity forever spiraling into the sweet embrace of war. Never to truly recover, only finding more reasons to put holes in each other.
If given only just a few more years, he would have been our savior.
The Master was right.
But supermutants are sterile, so turning humanity into them would certainly doom it to die out eventually. The Master himself acknowledges this if you present him with scientific evidence and self-destructs.
@@Postoronniy Look at every single fallout game afterwards and tell me how good humanity has been going. It's the same certain doom that you spout on and on about Mutant sterility, only just a slower pace. And even then, if we take what Marcus says in Fallout 2 to be canon, all it would take is just a couple of years to "get the juices flowing".
@@Kombine_Tmod Fallout Bible clarified that Marcus was just joking.
@@Postoronniy And the bible hasn't been canon in decades. Whats your point.
@Kombine_Tmod Bethesda acknowledges that it references the FB for the purposes of canon, and to my knowledge, has not put anything contradicting F1s and FBs information regarding supermutant sterility in any of the new games.
I wonder how the Enclave vs the Master's Supermutant Legion would've turned out
Enclave would’ve wiped unity out easily
@@derpyoctopus4217 I'm not so sure. If the Master wins Fallout 1 he basically gets to convert all of California if not more people into Super Mutants, including the Vault Dwellers who would become intelligent mutants and thus great officers for that army.
Power Armor is great force multiplier but the mutants still have the numbers advantage, which they can use to terrific effects as seen in Fallout 3 (the Brotherhood hasn't taken over DC by the time the game starts because they are stuck in a stalemate against the super mutants despite the eastern Brotherhood having an ample power armor supply and accepting wastelanders and training them to even the odds, the BoS would have won eventually I think but at a catastrophic cost)
A full state sized army of mutants all led by competent officers, in turned controlled by a hive mind like entity would give the enclave a run for it's money.
Their strongest weapon, Frank Horrigan, isn't even possible if the master stands undefeated and protects Mariposa as a breeding ground for more mutants, or worst, he could be turned against the Enclave through the mind control the master can use on Super Mutants.
It would all depend if they can pull off something like Fallout 3's anti mutant bio weapon before the Master leads a mutant fleet to overrun their base at sea.
without curling-13, enclave wins with lots of difficulty
with deployable curling-13, the unity wouldn’t even be there in the first place
Definitely not easy at all but the enclave would have won eventually
Two words- Frank Horrigan.
The Ultimate Tragedy of Life. No matter how peaceful you are, someone else will force you to raise arms
I think California dreamin is the official fallout anthem
Bethesda: as long as the lore has differences the fandom shall tear itself apart their must be one lore ,one setting, one fandom to move forward.
It ain't Bethesda tho
The master: there's no hope?
Player: never was
GOD BLESS THE UNITY
God bless the Enclave
Yes... I agree
@@Special_Agent_Frank_Horrigan insane larp
Enclave Supremacy
@@Evaggelos1 One America! One Enclave!
God bless america
Reminds of that other fallout edit called " F A L L O U T"
Yeah that ones great. Just finished the game and had to think of it.
I actually just watched that one a couple days ago
He was right.
He was always right.
I would turn the music down a tad bit
Great edit
Cant believe Nake did that
nice
Pavlov VR aah profile pic
nuh uh
Крутоэ эдіт
спасибо, мужик
I got fallout classic collection from epic games a few days ago. I have finished F1 but used the wiki when i didn't know what to do. Should I do it for 2 or would it ruin the expirience?
theres no intended way to play the classic fallouts
dont use the wiki, make your own story
I mean in a way of If im stuck and don't know what to do I probaply wouldn't have found the Water chip without someone showing me that you have to get in the sewers. In 2 i found a Guy named Vic who was a slave he asked me to get him a radio from a earlier town but i already took it when i was there and sold it. Now should i just Look what he was gonna do because he seems story essential from wiki or just wander the wasteland hoping i don't need him later.
@@chichennugetdinosaur4722 vic is just a mid companion
fyk you can get vault city marked without him, i only freed him after getting all the quests
The tragedy of the NCR is that they actually bought the flawed version of the American republic, thus ironically failing to live up to its title of one. Democracy was never a core value that was a part of the founding of the United States because democracy is ultimately 'mob rule', where the will of the many crushes the will of the few. This is how the NCR, consisting of five united member states, proceeded down the path of imperialistic behaviour because "the many have decided that these smaller settlements should submit." This is in direct opposition to the foundational beliefs of the United States as a republic (and why things like the Electoral College are a thing): to protect the small but valuable members from the tyranny of the mob.
Manifest destiny
True
You’d think that any pre-war ghoul would try and correct the N.C.R, but on the other hand: If you were offered a nation extremely similar to the one you lost to a g3n0c!da| conflict that you firsthand witnessed, would you take it?
I think I would. Just, the comfort and familiarity of it all would make me feel at home.
🤣