Even the U.S. under Trump didn't do this. Wow.
nxdefiant
Having played the absolute shit out of all of them at launch, including the non canon ones, Fallout 2 is my favorite, followed by New Vegas and 76. 4 was fun, but I spent more time building bases in 4 than I did in the story.
I've probably put more hours in 76 (since beta) than 4 at this point, specifically because it's multiplayer, and Im pretty sure I had at least 400 hours in four.
reproducibility: Intermittent
I want to hate it, but it's a bullpup on a robopup, so I'm torn.
Yes.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_Maritime_Self-Defense_Force
This is all actually just props used in live-action anime.
Exactly, yes! They were self-limited, and the valar trusted them to be so, which is why Saruman turning evil caught Gandalf super off guard!
LotR magic is interesting. Sauron bred all kinds of monsters essentially "hacking the system" to produce something in a world where no one but Illuvatar can create life, and Melkor got around the whole life/sentience thing by convincing lesser spirits to inhabit this creations. Balrogs, werewolves, etc.
Other creations Melkor imbued with his own vast power, essentially spreading his "divine fire" out amongst his thralls, and thereby diminishing himself. Sauron eventually does the same, in creating the One Ring.
So, when Gandalf became Gandalf, his power to affect things was explicitly limited. , The basic difference between The Istari and Sauron: they did not seek to usurp their position in 'the song of Illuvatar'. In fact the five Istari (Gandalf, Saruman, Radagast and the other unnamed two) were maiar spirits that had until that point stayed out of Arda (Earth) and all its shenanigans on purpose!
So, the staff served as a badge of office mostly. And thought it never stated, it's kind of implied that some of their power is imbued within it. This is why Gandalf looks totally different when he comes back as the White, he took Saruman's job as the head of the order, and had some more of his power unlocked as a result. The main strength of the Istari was their wisdom, knowing how the world worked and to a point, how "the song" was supposed to go. They were trusted to do the job (of taking down Sauron) because they wouldn't use their knowledge and power to 'hack the system'.
IMHO, Gandalf needed his staff not as a conduit of power here, but as an emblem of his station: He had to show Grima that his boss had just been fired.
It houses the flame of Anor! Thirty rounds of it!
His own words! "I'd finish the problem". Sweet merciful fuck that guy is mask off evil and still people decry harm reduction.