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Well, the ones that arrived initially where just randomly from the resonance cascade. They're scared, they're in a very alien environment (the sterile, flat corridors of Black Mesa are a fair bit away from Xen) and there're wierd aliens everywhere. There is a great scene at the start of Blue Shift that shows an alien slave inspecting a scientist until the scientist freaks out and tries to run away and the slave zaps him.To answer your question, yes, the controllers control vortigaunts telepathically, but they weren't controlling them in Black Mesa. The vortigaunts were given an order, and were teleported by the Nihilanth to carry it out. Put in on an unfamiliar and seemingly hostile world, with orders from a superior who--at the time--seemed the biggest threat, they did what they were told.
That's a bit like the difference between seeing a tiger on TV and then facing an one in real life.I wonder about that, though. Vortigaunts had seen humans on Xen before the incident, to an extent anyway, so they weren't completely surprised by them.
Because that would suck for gameplay.And if the first vortigaunts came through because of the resonance cascade, why not controllers or grunts?
But why would only wild animals be cought in the storm and not the sentients? Nihilanth holding them back seems a bit odd if the RC was a suprise to him.Assuming the Nihilanth was using his power to hold those species to the borderworld, I would think he'd do the same for the vortigaunts. I can't imagine the controllers wanting their slaves to be loosed.
How far into the RC is Xen Attacks based does anyone know?Plus, the two slaves in "Xen Attacks" had a mission to retrieve the crystal, so I'd think that the vortigaunts sent in all had missions, and above all were told to exterminate humans.
Don't say that, you wouldn't have a bloody clue what you would do. Did you wait to see where the Vortigaunts friendly when you saw one (assuming of course, you hadn't read much about the game beforehand), I sure as hell didn't.The very first vort you meet in Half-Life, the one who bursts out of that storage closet, is immediately hostile toward you. I know if I was blinked to an alien world and confronted with a strange creature, I'd be scared and wary, but not hostile unless the situation called for it.
Actually they captured a couple people before the RC happened, so I'm sure they might've had time to poke and prod. Well, the controllers would've done that bit. The vortigaunts undoubtedly had a hand in the capture, though.That's a bit like the difference between seeing a tiger on TV and then facing an one in real life.
It would have. But in the context of the storyline...Because that would suck for gameplay.
Well it stands to reason that if he held back controllers and grunts he would've done the same for the vortigaunts. Other Xenian fauna came through because he didn't care.But why would only wild animals be cought in the storm and not the sentients? Nihilanth holding them back seems a bit odd if the RC was a suprise to him.
No idea. I'm guessing it happened almost right after.How far into the RC is Xen Attacks based does anyone know?
Actually I do know what I'd do, and it'd be that. Haha, believe me, I've got one of those daydreamer-type imaginations, and on top of that I'm actually terrified of the idea of extraterrestrials (well, of those "grays," the little gray men in saucers that cornfield hicks say come and abduct them [even though I don't really believe in their existence anyway--grays, not hicks]), so I've played out the scenario in my head a bunch of times. That's pretty much what I'd do. Terror, but not immediate hostility. Not at first.Don't say that, you wouldn't have a bloody clue what you would do. Did you wait to see where the Vortigaunts friendly when you saw one (assuming of course, you hadn't read much about the game beforehand), I sure as hell didn't.
But you fight grunts don't you?No idea. I'm guessing it happened almost right after.
Yeah, that's true. Being able to shoot electricity from your hands would definately change the way you handle things.
I believe so. I don't have the game handy to check, unfortunately. Here's hoping Valve will eventually get it out on Steam...didn't they say they were going to?But you fight grunts don't you?
But they do, in a way. When I started writing this paper it kept striking me how similar we behave. Given what we know about their behavior, sure they would have been a little hostile naturally, that's a given, being placed in an unfamiliar situation with creatures who, up until this point, you've had a handle on. To bring up Riom's "tiger" analogy, in this case it's less like seeing a tiger on TV but rather seeing a tiger up close, in confinement, on your own turf. In Black Mesa, there were a bunch of tigers loose and you were on their terms.And for another thing, you're giving the Vorts human characteristics, which you can't automatically assume. ><
Hehe, not partially. Whole top of the head = gone. The crab literally shears off everything but the lower jaw, leaving direct access to the base of the skull. Which shows they don't need a brain at all. Blew my mind when I first saw it, 'cause I'd been waiting for EpOne for that exact reason: to see what was under a zombine's headcrab.Aren't Combine soldier's partially lobotomised?
Yarr. Which is why I say they don't even need heads. "Nervous crabs" would be a terrible name for them though.From examining the beaks on a headcrabs and looking at the way it sits on a host it looks like none of the beaks would actually pierce your face. My guess is that the headcrab taps into the the nervous system via the back of the spine.
I think he meant lobotamized prior to headcrabing, which they are.Hehe, not partially. Whole top of the head = gone. The crab literally shears off everything but the lower jaw, leaving direct access to the base of the skull. Which shows they don't need a brain at all. Blew my mind when I first saw it, 'cause I'd been waiting for EpOne for that exact reason: to see what was under a zombine's headcrab.
Hehe, not partially. Whole top of the head = gone. The crab literally shears off everything but the lower jaw, leaving direct access to the base of the skull. Which shows they don't need a brain at all. Blew my mind when I first saw it, 'cause I'd been waiting for EpOne for that exact reason: to see what was under a zombine's headcrab.
Yarr. Which is why I say they don't even need heads. "Nervous crabs" would be a terrible name for them though.
I believe so. I don't have the game handy to check, unfortunately. Here's hoping Valve will eventually get it out on Steam...didn't they say they were going to?
But they do, in a way. When I started writing this paper it kept striking me how similar we behave. Given what we know about their behavior, sure they would have been a little hostile naturally, that's a given, being placed in an unfamiliar situation with creatures who, up until this point, you've had a handle on. To bring up Riom's "tiger" analogy, in this case it's less like seeing a tiger on TV but rather seeing a tiger up close, in confinement, on your own turf. In Black Mesa, there were a bunch of tigers loose and you were on their terms.
But I think if we would've met under different circumstances, if they didn't have their orders, they wouldn't have immediately started blasting us. Especially unarmed civilians. It's dishonorable. It's a complete "What If" scenario, but I think that if the resonance cascade happened and free vortigaunts came through, we would've hit it off that much sooner. At least, the vortigaunts and the scientists.
There is only the one area where the Vorts dont just attack you as soon as you pop in so I think the only reason they do not is because you are on Xen and they have a job to do. They have Grunts to fight you there and are not really combat units. When they are stranded on Earth they are commanded to fight because that is all there is to do, on Xen they fill their real roles and rely on the Grunts to battle and defend facilities
My interpretations:
At first they attack because they're scared shitless. They're in an alien world and there are utterly terrified. They take up a fight or flight reaction, and when you can shoot lightning out of your hand fight is probably the best damn option. Especially if things like headcrabs are their natural enemy, you most certainly don't want to turn your back on a headcrab.
Later they attack because they've been ordered to. Nihilanth/the controllers want (what is in their view) the aggressors wipped out. Grunts and Vortigaunts are sent in to kill.
As for the factory. That could be multiple things.
A: They don't know who you are and they don't give a shit. They're working, they're in a safe and familiar environment and they don't feel that threatened. On the other hand, they do feel threatened by their masters and don't want to get cought slacking off, or zapping something they weren't supposed to. This, of course relies on the idea that the collars (or perhaps the barrier between the worlds) somehow blocked communication with the Vortessense, otherwise they'd probably recognise the suit.
B: They know who you are and are scared shitless to attack you. They know what you've done and they you could wipe them all out. They ignore you in the hope that you'll do the same.
C: They know who you are and want you to take down their oppressors. They leave you through, hoping that you will take out Nihilanth.
Yes thats right, its after you blow up the osprey at the refuelling pad, and just before you go into the garage/repair bay area.
Also, just before you go into the second garage, with the garg, a load of vorts teleport onto the roofs of the surrounding buildings.