el Chi
Newbie
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2003
- Messages
- 7,439
- Reaction score
- 2
It's pretty fair to say that, despite his snazzy briefcase, his...employers... were not BMRF and it's very unlikely that, despite his name, he was working for the government.
So who wanted to cover it all up? The govt certainly did, as the sent in the troops, who not only tried to wipe out anything and anyone, but also planted a nuke.
However the G-Man restarted it after Shepherd turned it off, so if he wasn't from the govt, what were his (or rather his employers) vested interests in destroying Black Mesa?
The G-Man was also, or so it seems, encouraging the test at BMRF to go ahead so what did he have to gain from that? Perhaps he deliberately the control of Xen, seeing as at the end of HL1 he remarks about how Xen is "in our control" which of course begs who "our" refers to.
But who would want Xen? It's an extremely important area - it's the last stand of the Nihilanth's subjects; it's the slingshot for Eli's teleportation tech; the Combine used it to get through to Earth; it's the border world - clearly there's more dimensional significance to it than simply a passage to Earth.
So did Freeman unwittingly help the Combine to conquer Xen? This would make the "our" a reference to the Combine, and the G-Man's employers would be the Combine too, but this seems somewhat unlikely as this would mean he turns on them pretty sharply in HL2.
If he was never working for the government, then he can't have meant that it's in human control either and there's no way it was back in the hands of the Xenians. It's also highly unlikely that he himself is in control of Xen.
It's got to be true that he is now longer bound to his employers, whoever they may have been over the course of HL1.
Oh he's a puzzle wrapped in a shadow wrapped in an enigma alright.
So who wanted to cover it all up? The govt certainly did, as the sent in the troops, who not only tried to wipe out anything and anyone, but also planted a nuke.
However the G-Man restarted it after Shepherd turned it off, so if he wasn't from the govt, what were his (or rather his employers) vested interests in destroying Black Mesa?
The G-Man was also, or so it seems, encouraging the test at BMRF to go ahead so what did he have to gain from that? Perhaps he deliberately the control of Xen, seeing as at the end of HL1 he remarks about how Xen is "in our control" which of course begs who "our" refers to.
But who would want Xen? It's an extremely important area - it's the last stand of the Nihilanth's subjects; it's the slingshot for Eli's teleportation tech; the Combine used it to get through to Earth; it's the border world - clearly there's more dimensional significance to it than simply a passage to Earth.
So did Freeman unwittingly help the Combine to conquer Xen? This would make the "our" a reference to the Combine, and the G-Man's employers would be the Combine too, but this seems somewhat unlikely as this would mean he turns on them pretty sharply in HL2.
If he was never working for the government, then he can't have meant that it's in human control either and there's no way it was back in the hands of the Xenians. It's also highly unlikely that he himself is in control of Xen.
It's got to be true that he is now longer bound to his employers, whoever they may have been over the course of HL1.
Oh he's a puzzle wrapped in a shadow wrapped in an enigma alright.