I'm thinking about Fallout's world and lore. I've seen multiple YouTube videos about how modern Fallout games aesthetics kinda fall apart if you look past the surface. Videos that rant about how people don't clean up debris, and there are just skeletons left way too close to human habitation, and all sorts of other inconsistencies that look good in screenshots, but make no sense in what's supposed to be a realistic world.
What I haven't seen are any videos that talk about how Fallout's computers make no damn sense. Even if Moore's Law didn't happen in the Fallout universe, and digital computing power advanced much much slower there, programmers would still have gotten more skilled. Fallout's computer interface shouldn't look like 1970s computer interfaces, it should look like the modern demo scene programming for 8-Bit computers. Also, analog computing is a thing. If you can have self-aware robots, and audio files, then you can more than one color on your screens.
Are there any YouTube videos talking about what Fallout computers should really be like? Are there any fan concepts for what analog computing components would actually look like in use, and how they would handle video elements? There are games you can play on your Pip-Boy, but they use bitmap graphics. Shouldn't they look more like a Vectrex? Or maybe even one of those
VHS video game systems? Heck, now that I think about it, Star Wars is closer to what Fallout's computer systems should look like than Fallout is.
Imagine if Fallout's computer systems worked like
mechanical arcade games, but with analog video elements instead of physical models. Imagine trying to build a working computer interface when you can store laserdisc video in a random access media, but with 1970s digital processing power. It'd be like trying to turn Dragon's Lair or Time Traveler into a working Windows desktop.
Most people wouldn't get it, and it'd take a lot more effort to make, and all of the effort of a modern Fallout game has to go into making the map as big as possible.
Oh well, time to focus my mind on more productive things.