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Nuka-Cola: Fallout (video game) 1997: In the video game franchise Fallout, Nuka-Cola is a unique soft drink inspired by Coca-Cola that gained widespread popularity sometime before the Great War, an atomic war between China and the United States. It comes in multiple flavors, such as Nuka Cola Quantum, which is distinguishable by its blue ...
Jones' Nuka-Cola was re-released from 2014-16 and 2020-22 to capitalise on the release of Fallout 4 and Fallout 76. [17] Flavours included the original Nuka-Cola , Nuka-Cherry , Nuka-Victory and blue Nuka-Cola Quantum.
Nuka-World takes place in an amusement park in the series' post-apocalyptic setting.. Nuka-World is an expansion pack for the action role-playing game, Fallout 4. [1] [2] The ability to swap between first-person and third-person perspectives is available in both the expansion and the original version. [3]
A particle-beam weapon is a weaponized version of this technology. It accelerates charged particles (in most cases electrons, positrons, protons, or ionized atoms, but very advanced versions can accelerate other particles such as mercury nuclei) to near-light speed and then directs them towards a target.
In the video game Fallout 3, one of the consumable items is called the "Nuka-Cola Quantum", which supposedly gets its unique properties from the addition of strontium-90 in its formula. In Island of Terror, bone-eating monsters appear to be unstoppable until doctors discover that strontium-90 is deadly to them.
Microsoft’s AI Copilot can be weaponized as an ‘automated phishing machine,’ but the problem is bigger than one company Sage Lazzaro August 13, 2024 at 2:15 PM
Exploding ammunition or spiked ammunition is an ammunition and other ordnance that is sabotaged (propellant replaced) and left behind for enemy forces, generally insurgents, to find and use. It is designed to explode and destroy the weapon it is used in and perhaps injure or kill the person attempting to fire the weapon.
Rigetti Computing, IonQ, and other quantum stocks plunged after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told Wall Street analysts that “very useful quantum computers” are likely 20 years away.