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The Brotherhood of Steel is a fictional organization from the post-apocalyptic Fallout video game franchise. The Brotherhood collects and preserves technology , but they are not known for sharing their knowledge, even if doing so would improve the quality of life among the people of the wasteland.
Vault Boy is the mascot of the Fallout media franchise. Created by staff at Interplay Entertainment, the original owners of the Fallout intellectual property, Vault Boy was introduced in 1997's Fallout as an advertising character representing Vault-Tec, a fictional megacorporation that built a series of specialized fallout shelters throughout the United States prior to the nuclear holocaust ...
The Steelmark is a logo representing steel and the steel industry owned by the American Iron and Steel Institute, and used by it to promote the product and its manufacturers. The logo was incorporated as the emblem of the Pittsburgh Steelers and Huachipato , the first initially using the same design as the Steelmark, but later modified to ...
Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel features both a single-player mode and a cooperative mode, in which two players can play through the game together. [2] Some critics have compared the gameplay of Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel to that of a hack and slash game, due to its emphasis on fast-paced combat and encounters with large groups of enemies.
The New California Republic (NCR) is a fictional post-War republic from the post-apocalyptic Fallout franchise. Operating primarily out of Southern California, it serves as an attempted governing body for the wasteland, [2] including some portions of Oregon and Nevada, [3] along with further colonization efforts in Arizona and the Baja California area of Mexico.
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After the Superman reboot story The Man of Steel, the symbol's story was that it was designed by Jonathan Kent and was derived from an ancient Native American symbol. The symbol was featured on a medicine blanket given to an ancestor of the Kent family by a Native American tribe after he helped to cure them of a plague and was supposed to ...
The steel companies took advantage of the change in the political climate, publishing articles exposing Foster's past as a Wobblie and syndicalist. The steel companies also played heavily on nativist hatreds and implied that immigrant steelworkers were communists. The use of state-sponsored violence against the union was widespread.