Were Vertibirds developed before the war?

I think they're identified in Fallout 2 is pre-war prototypes, but I'm pretty sure they were never taken into production until the Enclave did so after the war.

Not 100% sure though. Ausir will know.
 
They were in prototype phase before the War and entered active service only in Enclave armed forces after the War.
 
Wait, actually, Matthew says in FO2:

The Enclave has developed vertibird technology, flying machines that allow them to move deeply into surrounding territories.

It is Bethesda that made them a pre-War prototype, but I don't see anything canon-breaking here ("developed" can be interpreted in various ways, and the Enclave has pre-war origins, plus the Brotherhood of Steel might simply not know that it was a pre-war prototype that didn't even enter full scale production).
 
I was annoyed the first time I saw it. I mean, a helicopter? Is that really the kind of technology we would have in 2070 + 200 years?

Right now we have something very similar, its called the V-22 Osprey, only a tad larger. I was expecting some kind of cool hovercraft, or something like that.

The Vertibird is one of the things I hate most in FO2 (Seriously). To me its what 'New Reno' is to others.
 
...

Seriously, dropships are way overdone in fiction. Plus, choppers crash and burn much cooler.
 
True and copters make a cooler sound.
Also unlike the Osprey, the Vertibird doesn't break down if someone sneezes near it. :P
 
Mikael Grizzly said:
The Osprey would look awesome as a Dropship, though.

Have you played Half Life Opposing Force? Great intro sequence with one of those... speaking of which whatever happened to Cpl.Adrian Shepherd? I miss him...
 
Alphadrop said:
True and copters make a cooler sound.
Also unlike the Osprey, the Vertibird doesn't break down if someone sneezes near it. :P

You think the Osprey is bad you should see our Canadian SeaKing helicopters. The pilots are trained extensively for when (because it will happen) the helicopter craps out and spins into the ocean. Oh dear, our army....... anyway as for the topic at hand, do you not steal the vertibird plans for the BoS (or Shi) from the army base in Fallout 2? That would lead me to believe it was a pre-war schematic thus at least a portion of its development was pre war. As for the assembly of the metal beast, perhaps the Enclave had it more together then I thought? If thats the case they should get someone to better train the pilots how to fly the damn things so they don't putter out over Modoc.
 
I'm generally inclined to trust Ausir, who could probably beat Chris Avellone himself, Fallout Bible in hand, at a round of FO trivia.

If you're looking for more than that, though, just go back to the Vertibird model in the museum of technology and read the plaque next to it. Their official info didn't have the things in development until the 2080s. As it seems the museum was pretty up-to-date when DC was bombed, logic must dictate that it was a pre-war plan and that the bulk of the post-prototype work was done by The Enclave after the bombs fell. (Unless, of course, they had already been secretly building their fleet in anticipation of what was to come, but anything down that avenue of thought, however likely or unlikely, would just be conjecture.)

As far as the design goes, it isn't a perfect fit for the setting, but I've never really minded the things. Their design, along with the Enclave power armor, had a kind of ominous, otherworldly insectoid thing going for it that I thought was well in keeping with a lot of pulp sci-fi... It just wasn't drawn from quite the same vein, or naturalized into the setting as skillfully, as the pulp inspirations of the first game.
 
Operation: Anchorage is a VR simulation, which doesn't have to be a 100% recreation of the events. They could have tested their new prototypes in the VR environment first.

And, of course, they could have tested one or two prototypes in military situations before going into full production.
 
Basically Beth has to come up with a good explanation... this is where I see them fail... again.

I want some convincing fallout-techno-babble, dammit!!!

But here is another question... what is so good about those Vertibirds anyway?
 
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