QUOTE(Phosphor @ Feb 26 2005, 08:18 PM)
I merged with Helios. It seemed the most rational path to take after being jerked around by everyone you meet, it was high time I took control of things. Besides, it was so satisfying "deleting" whats-his-face.. That smarmy tool.
Same. I evaluated all the options:
1) Destroying modern civilization so everyone can be free. Uhhhh...no. An interesting option, but even beyond the obvious damage done, I don't follow the logic that destroying the biggest, baddest dictator around is going to make anyone free. More likely, the result will just be a bunch of petty feudal dictatorships scattered across the world....which, given Tong's connections with a powerful underworld syndicate, may be exactly what he had in mind.
Nix that idea. I have to admit, though, I really enjoyed watching Bob Page freaking out as he saw what I was trying to do.
2) The Illuminati were tempting, if only because they seemed to offer the greatest chance for a return to normality....but I couldn't help thinking of all the subtle hints about the Illuminati's true nature sprinkled throughout the game.
In the end, I just felt like Morgan Everett was completely untrustworthy, and I wasn't sold on his idea of a 'benevolent conspiracy', even if he believed it himself (which is questionable.) Absolute power corrupts absolutely and all that.
3) Helios. Programmed to bring peace and prosperity to the world and looking to use you to understand what human beings want. Unlike the Illuminati, quite likely
incapable of being corrupted by power; it lacks all ambition, if we're to believe it, and exists only to see the human race thrive.
The possible negative is a
1984 scenario....or, for the pen-and-paper RPGers out there, more accurately a
Paranoia scenario. The gigantic, borderline-inhuman, all-powerful computer thinking it knows what's best for the world and incapable of being stopped by anyone or anything.
On the other hand, the positive might just be a new beginning for the whole human race; a completely objective and ambitionless ruler with the compassion of a good human being (I played J.C. Denton as a goodie two-shoes, rarely killing anyone unless I had to) and the limitless knowledge and cold logic of an A.I., all rolled into the spitting image of the truly enlightened despot.
Between the three, it was the only one which offered a leap forward rather than a return to the status quo or a stunning fall backwards into medieval barbarism. But I still felt uneasy picking it; unchecked power in the hands of anyone or anything is an incredibly risky gamble, and the idea of
any dictatorship never sits well with me.
Still, it was a great philosophical dilemma, and I've wavered between all three options at different points.