WriterforHire
Newbie
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2008
- Messages
- 126
- Reaction score
- 0
Perhaps, but I was fairly certain there was a line from GLaDOS which states that that's what the facility is for. Although I'm equally certain that I'm distorting the line: "Though fun and learning are..."
Yes, GLaDOS does mention that fun and learning are the chief purposes of the Enrichment center (or something along those lines) but it seems pretty clear to me that such is not the case. After all, the subjects aren't having any fun at all. Though the statement might be true if the scientists are having fun watching the subjects take the tests. (See, even more hidden sadism! I knew I would fine some if I dig in it deep enough. I tend to stay away from the lines that GLaDOS gives for they can be interpreted many different ways. The sheer impossibility / danger of the chambers, GLaDOS' attempts to kill you, and the phone are evidence I hold to more strongly, after all such physical evidence can only be taken in so many different lights.
Oh yes, no other species at the time of the Enrichment Center could have done the test. We still don't know when precisely the events occur though and if there's any truth to the android comments by GLaDOS. The reason I mention when is the thought in the back of my mind of catching one of the organisms released after the Resonance Cascade, despite how unlikely that is.
Ugh. The andriods.
If such andriods exist, if they were subjagated to the tests, if they were humanoid in shape and if Aperture would actually be willing to spend even more money on the developement of hundreds of robots simply for experimental purposes, then maybe the Center could have been designed with andriods in mind. But, as you might be able to tell, I don't think that's very likely.
And just what do you mean by catching one of the organisms released after the Resonance Cascade? You wouldn't be talking about Vortigaunts, by chance, would you? They're the only ones who are humanoid in shape and have the sort of inteligence neccesary to even potentially make it to the end. But the problem with this that there is literally no evidence at all, not even a shady, vague comment from GLaDOS this time around.
Although another possibility is one I've noted before, technical constraints of the aging facility making it impossible to change it to a significant degree. The back-areas we go into don't exactly look that nice, after all. What incentive would an AI, GLaDOS, have to live in the first place? We've both been discussing programming limitations, wishes for self-termination, and wishes to survive, but neither of us have asked that simple question.
Good question! And a interesting one too.
Why does anyone wish to live? Especially in environments that are hazardous to them? Because they fear dieing. Granted, this might not work in GLaDOS' case if she knew that she had a backup, but if she doesn't, then it fits perfectly. And even if she did know that a backup did exist, but was unsure if it currently did or in what state it was in, then the fear of being destroyed would still be present. There's also the possiblity, however slim in my opinion, that there is no backup. Which would definitely mean that GLaDOS would want to stay alive.
GLaDOS is stuck there, alone, is the closest mechanical construct built by humans to being alive, and has a load of cores determining its behavior. I'd rather terminate myself than remain in a gradual slope of disrepair.
She also has vast resources at her disposal, a apparently long-lasting line of subjects, and no pesky humans around to tell her what to do. See? It can be taken both ways. And, even if GLaDOS took the negative view that you did, the fear of dieing and the unknown would be enough to keep her from wanting to kill herself. After all, that's the case with a lot of wouldbe suicidal people. Unless you know for 100% certainity what's going to happen to you after you die, death will always hold a tiny bit of sway over the human psyche.
Good point. The only question then is why they didn't hook up maintenance of the back areas to GLaDOS. It would save them the money they had to pay on hired personnel, by a fortune, looking at the size of the Enrichment Center.
Personally, I think we're diving into topics that have very little founding from evidence in the game now. I really think the reason why the backareas look like they do is because the Valve team wanted to make it clear that you were no longer in the actual Chambers and that the area you were wandering through hasn't had human attention in quite a long time. But, for the sake of the argument, let's look at it this way. What would happen if they gave the back areas up to GLaDOS for maintanence? Well. One, they would not need to have any maintanence men at all. Period. And that would surely raise quite a stir if someone managed to find out that Apeture didn't even have a maintanence crew. The question of, "How do they keep the facility running" would be raised and the answer would lead directly to GLaDOS.
Granted, I'm assuming two things here: First, that the overall public knows about certain parts of the facility (the above ground parts) but are clueless to others, (the underground parts). Secondly, I'm assuming that the public doesn't know about GLaDOS. Both of which are very shaky, so please don't hold me to this.
You're right, there isn't one that says it isn't valid. I simply thought they had an idea related to it, had it put in the game, and then decided to scrap it. I'll have to check it out, but I see what you mean about the phone, commentary node regardless.
But here's the thing. This argument only works if the phone hadn't been placed in the game, but I managed to find out about it anyway through a commentary node or the internet or something. Take the Cremator, for instance. We know that this is a idea that the Valve team was thinking of but that they decided not to go through and make him a enemy, however, a Cremator's head was still found in game which cemented the fact that such creature's do exist in the Half Life world. Whether or not they'll be the same as the original concept art is another matter entirely. In the same way, while the team did not go into depth to explain away what the phone meant, since its there it means that it's cannon and in some way relates to the back story of Portal.
Definitely unstable considering GLaDOS has been running ever since activation as far as we know. The thing that has me interested now, since you continue mentioning it, is who would conduct the foul play.
No fricken idea.
Literally, the game gives us nothing about that, nothing at all. They pratically scream at us that something went horribly wrong here, but left the when, why and how all up for debate. I have a couple ideas in mind that I think would serve for a interesting fanfic story, but wouldn't serve for anything better than that - fanfiction.
GLaDOS has definitely been running since activation, which also brings up a interesting point. It seems that GLaDOS is entirely self-sufficent. She doesn't need scientists to be continually tinkering of computers to keep her online. Also, more than that, she has a wide range of capablities. At the least (backed up with the most evidence) she has surveilance cameras everwhere and can speak at almost any point in the facility, at most (backed up with the least amount of evidence) she can deploy turrets at any point in the back areas, can clean up / maintain the Chambers and can somehow clear the facility of dead bodies. For a while, simply looking at that and the way that GLaDOS said "I flooded the Enrichment Center" (italtics by me) I thought that maybe GLaDOS stagged the coup de tat all by herself, viewing the scientists as unneeded and impedding towards the progress of science. But then there's the fact she staged it, on what seems to be, the first day she was activated. Surely GLaDOS would need some time before she came to such a conclusion.
(Huh. After promising I wouldn't get into shady speculation I went ahead and went into shady speculation.)
True, whenever you put it like that, he's the only other existing presence we're aware of that is likely to have done it.
But I'm not as sure anymore. The thing is, the one thing we know for sure about the Ratman was that he was a test subject. How would a test subject get their hands on any neccesary blasting materials? So, if the pipes were blown open, then someone other than the Ratman must have done it. However, if its due to natural causes, then not much explanation is needed.
I'm not an advocate for self-delusion, so I try to maintain an open mind and level head in arguments, accepting that the arguments the other is making are just as sound and that mine do have flaws. At the very least, it helps keep the discussion going without going in complete circles.
I think these are qualities that all debaters want in some way. However, even if people recognize that they can't be bias, need a open mind and a level head, that doesn't mean that they actually do those things. To be honest, there is no such thing as unbiased. In some way, a bit of yourself is going to come out on the page, even if its only in something as small as word choice.
Which is completely possible. However, consider the song Still Alive, if we count that as canon, as I do, that couldn't possibly be part of its programmed protocol if the intent was to survive and terminate Chell at all costs.
I too think the song Still Alive is canon, and I also think its the cincher against the arguement that the backup of GLaDOS is in the Borealis. I think, from the song, it's rather clear that the backup is actually in another part of the same facility. GLaDOS is using the same subjects, performing the same tests, and is fine and dandy while Chell is out struggling in the real world. I don't see how the song Still Alive goes against GLaDOS programmed protocal at all. Chell was a threat, she took care of it, and Chell is now gone. GLaDOS is now continuing on as normal and is gloating in a song / goodbye message, that she's is, in fact, Still Alive. (I've always wondered how Chell would react if she actually ever heard the song, Still Alive. Would she go out to hunt down GLaDOS again? To make sure she stays dead this time?)
Or it might be part of that foul play idea you've been wafting about. GLaDOS may never have been hooked up to those systems initially, and prior to activation, was hooked up. Without any core to determine or limit its behavior with those systems, it was just a matter of the "Foul Player" hoping for the intended results via Neurotoxin Release.
Perhaps. As I said, I really don't want to get into that. Even though its my own personal theory, I realize it has some shaky foundation. It could be that the "Foul Player", if such a person (or persons) exist, designed it so that GLaDOS could kill off any/all people in her chamber. Or, the scientists could have stupidly given the weapons to her as a safety precaution. Either works.
That they are indeed. However, wouldn't GLaDOS have known from our prior experience with the rocket sentry that, through the usage of the portals, we could redirect the rockets? Obviously GLaDOS activated the first one we encountered, meaning it had its eyes there so it could have easily seen our actions.
Now let's not assume that since the rocket sentry had eyes that meant that GLaDOS could see through them. I would have even gone as far as saying that we couldn't know for certain if the cameras allowed GLaDOS to see what was happening if it weren't for the words, "She's Watching You" in the Ratdens. But even if that was the case and GLaDOS did know that Chell could redirect the rockets, there's always protocal to consider. After all, why would the scientists have installed a rocket sentry if not to have GLaDOS use it against anyone that was attempting to harm her? (Which, by the way, is even more evidence pointing to foul play. Because why would the scientists even bother installing defences around GLaDOS if they didn't expect something shady to happen? It's pretty effective to. Lock the bad guys in GLaDOS' chamber, start the Neurotoxin, and let the rocket sentry have at them. And yes, this assumes that the Neurotoxin is only for GLaDOS' own chamber.)
It would be a complete waste. Why it didn't make it any easier though is up to any number of possible factors. Why didn't it just reattach the Morality Core? Obviously it wanted you to get rid of it. Why would it want to get rid of it? It also obviously contained some sort of programming limitation, barring GLaDOS access to something. It may be that GLaDOS couldn't raise the rocket sentry with the Morality Core still intact. The Neurotoxin Release shortly afterward may not have been intentional, at least, not intentional on the part of the GLaDOS personality we were familiar with. As you have to admit, its personality takes quite a bit of a change once we get rid of the Morality Core. It's still sarcastic, still morbid, but more bluntly so. In fact, if the GLaDOS we witness during the fight is precisely like the one activated, it supports GLaDOS's statements about the Neurotoxin Release. As some have thought it bluffing, this would disprove it.
For your first question, I want to point out that reattaching the Morality Core is strictly impossible without some other outside help. How is GLaDOS suppose to reattach it, by sending down a crane and lifting it back up? Also, I wouldn't be so hasty in saying that GLaDOS "obviously wanted you to get rid of it". Either she was doing reverse psychology or else she was really, really, afraid and lost some of her wits in the desperation. But even if she wanted Chell to destroy the Morality Core, that in no way indicates that she herself wanted to be terminated, after all, it seems as if the Morality Core's chief purpose was to stop GLaDOS from releasing the Neurotoxin, which is her best shot at killing Chell. After all, doesn't she say "If I were you, I would let the turret hit me" which pratically admits that the only way the rocket sentry would hit her was if she stood still? And I agree, GLaDOS' personality does undergo a change, or, more correctly, the final change after the destruction of the Morality Core. From what I can tell, GLaDOS' personality changes twice. Once when you escape (the end of all scripted narration and the beginning of GLaDOS' own dialogue) and once again after the destruction of the Morality Core. As for this disproving that GLaDOS was bluffing...that's certainly not the case. You can be bluntly sarcastic and morbid and still lie through your teeth. Until we witness the scene firsthand or is told by a reliable source no amount of evidence in Portal will ever "prove" or "disprove" what happened to the Enrichment Center.
( I actually had to split this up into two because it was too long! That's rather impressive, isn't it?)