That really doesn't have anything to do with what I was saying. Avellone isn't speaking in terms of "Suffer not the mutant to life!" He thinks the west-coast setting is becoming too peaceful and safe and is in need of a shake-up. He has been arguing that since the conception of Van Buren.SajuukKhar said:http://www.gamebanshee.com/interviews/105836-fallout-new-vegas-and-dlc-post-mortem-interview-part-one-v15-105836.html
Lastly, with regards to the DLCs, I believe Ulysses is correct, a new framework of civilization is the only solution for the Mojave and the Legion and NCR are self-destructive institutions (the Legion is more a slow burn than NCR is) and both should be cleansed with fire. ~ Chris Avellone
The leader writer of Fallout 2 and New Vegas saying purging the world in nuclear fire is the correct choice.
Uh, no.Also, neither the Master, the Enclave, or Ulysses have been considerd "evil" just very extremest.
In Fallout 1, you either kill the Master or talks him into realizing that he what he does is wrong, leading to his suicide.
In Fallout 2, you destroy the Enclave.
In Lonesome Road, you either kill Ulysses or talk him into realizing that he what he does is wrong, leading him to change his views.
The NCR still identifies itself as a constitutional democracy and has a treaty with Mr. House that recognizes New Vegas as a independent state and him as its leader. And the common NCR citizen has no quarrel with him; to them New Vegas is a benign tourist resort. Wilfully breaching a treaty without cause just doesn't fly when you are a democracy.Attempting to use present day politics in a world where there are no other nations to worry about objecting or retaliating to any action you make, along with the fact House IS considered hostile by the NCR for his use of the three families, and his small squad of securutorns ,as a small army to prevent the NCR from immediately annexing New Vegas, along with the overall corruption of the NCr, you REALLY think they wouldn't?
EDIT:
That is the cynical way to see it, and Fallout just isn't at its heart a cynical series. It is actually rather optimistic and hopeful.The whole point of Fallout, ever since the first words of Fallout 1's opening, has been,
"humans are screwed forever" the end.
Lonesome Road's final words makes it pretty clear: "It is said that war never changes. Men do, through the roads they walk." If war never changes, then people must.