Whenever my mind goes into the places that need the most serious of reconstruction, I feel like the worlds in fiction spring to mind more so than any other. In particular, movies and video games often find their way into my brain. I don't think that helping them become livable once more is a lost cause, however. If strong suburban development was carried out in these areas, maybe places could become more sustainable as well. Let's hope that whatever evils they had to face off with were long gone first, though.
Many people feel as though the movie "Waterworld" is a disappointment of a movie but it still stands a case of extreme retrofitting. The film features the Earth that we live in totally surrounded by water so that it seems like an endless ocean without neither isle nor civilization in sight. Suburban development may be a noble effort but I feel like this is where the system may not be able to work. Organizations like B.A.B.B. utilize retrofitting means well but even with these, not every scenario can be helped and this is one such time. However, the movie was deemed a failure, so maybe it's not a huge loss after all.
Speaking of worlds that are encased with water, "The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker," sees that the ocean below the hand has become nothing short of Atlantis. Essentially, the game takes place several centuries or ago after Hyrule's reign and the world has been flooded by the Great Sea, which at that point is home to several outsides where different colonies reside. Again, certain places in fiction cannot be helped by the robust tools found in retrofitting.
If my mind had to go to a single game in which retrofitting could actually be conducted, "Fallout 3" and the Wasteland inside of it definitely spring to my mind. In my eyes, the world is still relatively sustainable since such instances as flooding are nowhere to be seen. Yes, many people have disregarded the law and instead carried firearms in order to bring a dispute to rest but at least there's hope for the world to be revamped. In fact, at the end of the game, there's a prospect for hope.
During "Fallout 3," you learn about your father's Project Purity, which entails the use of a giant purifier to bring fresh, clean water to the radiated liquid that people call rivers and oceans. It's a big step, to say the least, and it shows just how much hope that world has. However, it's sad to see that other worlds within the realm of fiction simply can't stand to be mixed. Due to the impact of large bodies of water, places can't stand to be retrofitted and it would be better off to just leave them, as sad as those instances may be.
Many people feel as though the movie "Waterworld" is a disappointment of a movie but it still stands a case of extreme retrofitting. The film features the Earth that we live in totally surrounded by water so that it seems like an endless ocean without neither isle nor civilization in sight. Suburban development may be a noble effort but I feel like this is where the system may not be able to work. Organizations like B.A.B.B. utilize retrofitting means well but even with these, not every scenario can be helped and this is one such time. However, the movie was deemed a failure, so maybe it's not a huge loss after all.
Speaking of worlds that are encased with water, "The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker," sees that the ocean below the hand has become nothing short of Atlantis. Essentially, the game takes place several centuries or ago after Hyrule's reign and the world has been flooded by the Great Sea, which at that point is home to several outsides where different colonies reside. Again, certain places in fiction cannot be helped by the robust tools found in retrofitting.
If my mind had to go to a single game in which retrofitting could actually be conducted, "Fallout 3" and the Wasteland inside of it definitely spring to my mind. In my eyes, the world is still relatively sustainable since such instances as flooding are nowhere to be seen. Yes, many people have disregarded the law and instead carried firearms in order to bring a dispute to rest but at least there's hope for the world to be revamped. In fact, at the end of the game, there's a prospect for hope.
During "Fallout 3," you learn about your father's Project Purity, which entails the use of a giant purifier to bring fresh, clean water to the radiated liquid that people call rivers and oceans. It's a big step, to say the least, and it shows just how much hope that world has. However, it's sad to see that other worlds within the realm of fiction simply can't stand to be mixed. Due to the impact of large bodies of water, places can't stand to be retrofitted and it would be better off to just leave them, as sad as those instances may be.
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