Probably everyone here noticed this ages ago, but I only started playing SMAC about a month ago, and I'm a bit slow at picking up on subtleties.
I had a moment of fridge logic a little while ago after completing the game and noticing that one of the options for Deirdre's book suggested that the recycling tanks also incorporated human waste.
Okay, I thought, I guess that makes sense. It could be used as fertilizer, and this would help explain how the tanks can increase nutrients and energy, rather than just minerals.
It was only when I started my next game and built the first rectank that it hit me:
This always seemed like an odd quote, both because you'd expect someone like Deirdre to be the one who provides the quote for the recycling tanks and because of the way it's worded. But I figured that this was just Yang's poetic way of saying that every citizen must contribute to the greater society in every way he can, right down to making sure things he has no more use for don't go to waste. Which I guess is technically right in a sense, because let's look at that quote again:
[s]Soylent green[/s] Hive nectar is people!
(Technically, they may just be used as a resource and not food specifically. Details.)
In retrospect, the fact that you get recycling tanks as a result of biogenetics research probably should have tipped me off. Anyway, has anyone more perceptive than I picked up on any other implicit/understated setting elements like this?
Edit: No strikethrough on these boards, I take it. Oh well, you get what I meant.
P.S. This question doesn't seem like it warrants its own thread. The manual states that sensor arrays cover a 2-tile radius. Does this mean that they cover everything that's up to 2 tiles away from them, including diagonals (i.e. a square of 5*5 tiles)? Or is word radius meant to imply that the shape of the area they cover is more "circular", like that of a base (i.e. a square of 5*5 tiles, minus the corners)? Or am I misinterpreting this statement entirely, and sensor arrays are included within the aforementioned 2-tile radius (i.e. they cover a square of 3*3 tiles)?
I had a moment of fridge logic a little while ago after completing the game and noticing that one of the options for Deirdre's book suggested that the recycling tanks also incorporated human waste.
Okay, I thought, I guess that makes sense. It could be used as fertilizer, and this would help explain how the tanks can increase nutrients and energy, rather than just minerals.
It was only when I started my next game and built the first rectank that it hit me:
Originally posted by Yang
It is every citizen's final duty to go into the tanks and become one with the people.
(Technically, they may just be used as a resource and not food specifically. Details.)
In retrospect, the fact that you get recycling tanks as a result of biogenetics research probably should have tipped me off. Anyway, has anyone more perceptive than I picked up on any other implicit/understated setting elements like this?
Edit: No strikethrough on these boards, I take it. Oh well, you get what I meant.
P.S. This question doesn't seem like it warrants its own thread. The manual states that sensor arrays cover a 2-tile radius. Does this mean that they cover everything that's up to 2 tiles away from them, including diagonals (i.e. a square of 5*5 tiles)? Or is word radius meant to imply that the shape of the area they cover is more "circular", like that of a base (i.e. a square of 5*5 tiles, minus the corners)? Or am I misinterpreting this statement entirely, and sensor arrays are included within the aforementioned 2-tile radius (i.e. they cover a square of 3*3 tiles)?
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