Agayek said:
According to 343 Guilty Spark in the first game, the activation of the Halos destroys all organic life large enough to support a Flood infestation. As that pertains to just about everything larger than a breadbox, there were no real human ancestors at that point. Just a bunch of different species of rat.
*slams head against desk* The entire purpose of the Ark was to keep all of the protected species out of range of the Halos so that the galaxy could be reseeded after they are fired. The Forerunners spent decades cataloging and capturing every species on a few dozen planets. Meaning every species on every planet they deemed worthy was studied, cataloged, and stowed away on the Ark. Then, once the Halos fired and wiped the entire galaxy of anything more advanced than single-cell organisms, the automated systems on the Ark started reactivating the slipspace portals and reseeding all of the selected planets with the specimens that were in stasis. Humans had already evolved by the time the Flood-Forerunner war started. After all, it was only 100,000 years ago, and humans have been around in some form or another for over four million years. We didn't have time to re-evolve. Earth was reseeded. It talks about the Librarian cataloging all the species in Halo 3 and then shows the actual reseeding itself in Halo: Legends.
If the threat posed is sufficient that you need wipe out all life in the galaxy bigger than a few crumbs, you do not keep any alive that you can find. You eliminate every specimen you can find and pray they never come back.
Also, none of that was actually discussed in any of the games, thus it's fairly irrelevant when discussing the story of said games.
Hoping just isn't good enough. What happens if the Flood comes back again? Hope the species you protected from the Halos are advanced enough to combat them successfully? Not good enough. There's a big chance that they will get assimilated anyway and everything you've done, the entire hundred year war, was for nothing.
Also, it was discussed in the games. Did you read the terminals? The terminals in Halo 3 are messages from The Librarian, the Forerunner in charge of cataloging and protecting the species, and her partner. They also have sorts of journal entries from Mendicant Bias, the Forerunner AI that went rampant and defected to the Flood and prevented the Forerunners from making it to their shield worlds and surviving the Halo activation.
So he initiated a coup against the most militarily powerful (and, debatably second, most fanatically loyal) segment of the Covenant, in the middle of a Crusade. Thus starting a civil war that at absolute best would severely hamper the Covenant's military might just when the humans started winning.
That's either incredible stupidity or very shoddy writing. And considering he was supposedly the great mastermind behind the whole Covenant thing in the first place, he must be fairly smart. Thus it is safe to conclude that the writers just wanted to cram it in there regardless of established canon.
The humans winning? Are you fucking crazy? Nearly every human colony had fallen, even Reach. Earth's location was known, its defenses already in pieces. I don't know where you're getting the idea that humanity was winning. They were close to being completely exterminated. If it wasn't for the Flood, Truth's plan would have worked. Humanity would have been wiped out and the Sangheili would be in ruin.
If that is true, why did they not immediately start attack the humans when the Covenant was finally dismantled? Humanity was defiling their most holy relics just by existing. At least some of the Sanghelli forces would have turned on the humans as soon as the danger was past.
How do you know the Sangheili
didn't start attacking the humans? When Halo 3 ended, 'Rtas and the Arbiter were leaving Earth to go back to Sanghelios, to make sure it was still under Sangheili control and to rebuild the Sangheili. The only other piece of fiction regarding the Sangheili after the war is that story from Evolutions, but it never says anywhere in there that the Sangheili allied with the humans either. It says that the Sangheili still harbor serious hatred for the humans, but are mostly ignoring them and going after the remnants of the Covenant because starting another war with the humans wouldn't do any good. Plus, they've realized that the only reason they were fighting the humans to begin with was because the hierarchs were afraid the Covenant would fall apart and they'd lose their power if it came to be known that the humans were the chosen successors of the Forerunners, and not them. Most of the Sangheili are probably torn between hatred, guilt, and fear.
They couldn't have embedded markers in any DNA, unless it was to be shared by nigh every species on the planet. The activation of the Halos destroys all organic matter large enough to support the Flood (which is basically everything larger than a few cells). There's no way they could embed markers in anything and then have them still intact millenia later. The only way it could have possibly worked is if the Forerunners somehow simply manufactured some advance life and thrown that on Earth, and there's no mention of that anywhere.
I explained earlier that humans didn't re-evolve. They couldn't have in 100,000 years. The automated systems on the Ark reseeded Earth and the other protected planets using all of the specimens that had been put in stasis.
Like I said, I don't actually care enough to put any effort into this. You are already decided, regardless of anything I say.
Of course I'm decided. Why wouldn't I be? I just explained all of your new complaints, too. You still haven't brought up an actual unexplainable plothole. Everything you've said is just stuff born from your ignorance (not saying that as an insult, though. You really are just ignorant about the Halo lore.).
Edit: And I shall also say this again since it seems you didn't get it last time: I enjoy the Halo games (except ODST, which I haven't played). I play through all 3 campaigns regularly, and it's a lot of fun. The story is told quite well and it does a good job of keeping the gameplay flowing. All I am trying to say is that the story has faults, some rather significant and/or glaring. That's not a terrible thing, considering what the games get right, but it's not a good thing.
I understand that you enjoy the Halo games' gameplay. I also understand that you think that the story has a lot of glaring faults. The issue I have is that you haven't actually been able to list any of the socalled significant and glaring faults. All of the faults you've brought up can actually be completely explained without ever leaving the Halo games. All the information required is either implied, downright stated, or hidden (in the case of the terminals in Halo 3, which you apparently never read).
Velvo said:
Agayek said:
According to 343 Guilty Spark in the first game, the activation of the Halos destroys all organic life large enough to support a Flood infestation. As that pertains to just about everything larger than a breadbox, there were no real human ancestors at that point. Just a bunch of different species of rat.
The Grunts never got infected, and they're almost the size of humans. They don't have enough calcium (I assume they are referring to bone mass?) and nor do Jackals.
Indeed. Unggoy are mostly muscle. There's not much actual calcium in their bodies. I guess Kig-Yar just have less dense bones. That's why neither of them are straight-up infected by the Flood, like the Humans, Jiralhanae, and Sangheili are. I'd imagine the Unggoy, Kig-Yar, San'Shyuum, Yanme'e, and everything else with too little calcium are just lumped together and assimilated into larger entities like Brain Forms and Pure Forms. They're probably used to coat the insides of the ships and buildings, too. All that Flood biomass probably comes from all the species unsuitable for Infection Forms.