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;Notable Areas
;Notable Areas
# See above section on Brotherhood{{Company
# See above section on Brotherhood
|name=Imagine Software
|image=
|founded=[[1982]]
|closed=[[1989]]
|founder=Mark Butler, David Lawson, and Eugene Evans
|location=Liverpool, UK
}}
 
'''Imagine Software''' was a British video games developer based in Liverpool which existed briefly in the early 1980s, initially producing software for the ZX Spectrum and VIC-20.
 
Imagine Software was founded in 1982 by former members of Bug-Byte including Mark Butler, David Lawson and Eugene Evans. Mark and Eugene had previously worked at Microdigital, one of the first computer stores in the UK. Imagine Software produced several very successful games, including [[Arcadia]] for the Vic 20 and ZX- Spectrum, before running into financial trouble in late [[1983]].
 
Rumors of Imagine's financial situation began to circulate in December 1983 following the revelations that an estimated £50,000 of its advertising bills had not been paid.[3] The following year the debts mounted, with further advertising and tape duplication bills going unpaid, and Imagine was forced to sell the rights to its games to [[Beau Jolly]] in order to raise money. The company then achieved nationwide notoriety when it was filmed the following year by a BBC documentary crew while in the process of going spectacularly bust.
 
On [[June 28]], [[1984]] a writ was issued against Imagine by VNU Business Press for monies owed for advertising in Personal Computer Games magazine, and the company was wound up on 9 July 1984 at the High Court in London after it was unable to raise the £10,000 required to pay this debt (though by this time its total debts ran to hundreds of thousands of pounds).
 
Former programmers went on to establish [[Psygnosis]] and [[Denton Designs]]. The company's back catalogue was owned by [[Beau Jolly]], while rights to the Imagine label were acquired by [[Ocean Software]], which used it to publish home computer conversions of popular arcade games under the name of Imagine Studios. The final game bearing the Imagine name was released in [[1989]].
 


;Notable Characters
;Notable Characters
# See above section on Brotherhood{{Company
# See above section on Brotherhood
|name=Imagine Software
|image=
|founded=[[1982]]
|closed=[[1989]]
|founder=Mark Butler, David Lawson, and Eugene Evans
|location=Liverpool, UK
}}
 
'''Imagine Software''' was a British video games developer based in Liverpool which existed briefly in the early 1980s, initially producing software for the ZX Spectrum and VIC-20.
 
Imagine Software was founded in 1982 by former members of Bug-Byte including Mark Butler, David Lawson and Eugene Evans. Mark and Eugene had previously worked at Microdigital, one of the first computer stores in the UK. Imagine Software produced several very successful games, including [[Arcadia]] for the Vic 20 and ZX- Spectrum, before running into financial trouble in late [[1983]].
 
Rumors of Imagine's financial situation began to circulate in December 1983 following the revelations that an estimated £50,000 of its advertising bills had not been paid.[3] The following year the debts mounted, with further advertising and tape duplication bills going unpaid, and Imagine was forced to sell the rights to its games to [[Beau Jolly]] in order to raise money. The company then achieved nationwide notoriety when it was filmed the following year by a BBC documentary crew while in the process of going spectacularly bust.
 
On [[June 28]], [[1984]] a writ was issued against Imagine by VNU Business Press for monies owed for advertising in Personal Computer Games magazine, and the company was wound up on 9 July 1984 at the High Court in London after it was unable to raise the £10,000 required to pay this debt (though by this time its total debts ran to hundreds of thousands of pounds).
 
Former programmers went on to establish [[Psygnosis]] and [[Denton Designs]]. The company's back catalogue was owned by [[Beau Jolly]], while rights to the Imagine label were acquired by [[Ocean Software]], which used it to publish home computer conversions of popular arcade games under the name of Imagine Studios. The final game bearing the Imagine name was released in [[1989]].
 
{{Company
|name=Imagine Software
|image=
|founded=[[1982]]
|closed=[[1989]]
|founder=Mark Butler, David Lawson, and Eugene Evans
|location=Liverpool, UK
}}
 
'''Imagine Software''' was a British video games developer based in Liverpool which existed briefly in the early 1980s, initially producing software for the ZX Spectrum and VIC-20.
 
Imagine Software was founded in 1982 by former members of Bug-Byte including Mark Butler, David Lawson and Eugene Evans. Mark and Eugene had previously worked at Microdigital, one of the first computer stores in the UK. Imagine Software produced several very successful games, including [[Arcadia]] for the Vic 20 and ZX- Spectrum, before running into financial trouble in late [[1983]].
 
Rumors of Imagine's financial situation began to circulate in December 1983 following the revelations that an estimated £50,000 of its advertising bills had not been paid.[3] The following year the debts mounted, with further advertising and tape duplication bills going unpaid, and Imagine was forced to sell the rights to its games to [[Beau Jolly]] in order to raise money. The company then achieved nationwide notoriety when it was filmed the following year by a BBC documentary crew while in the process of going spectacularly bust.
 
On [[June 28]], [[1984]] a writ was issued against Imagine by VNU Business Press for monies owed for advertising in Personal Computer Games magazine, and the company was wound up on 9 July 1984 at the High Court in London after it was unable to raise the £10,000 required to pay this debt (though by this time its total debts ran to hundreds of thousands of pounds).
 
Former programmers went on to establish [[Psygnosis]] and [[Denton Designs]]. The company's back catalogue was owned by [[Beau Jolly]], while rights to the Imagine label were acquired by [[Ocean Software]], which used it to publish home computer conversions of popular arcade games under the name of Imagine Studios. The final game bearing the Imagine name was released in [[1989]].


;Notes
;Notes
# Get reward for freeing the Brotherhood initiate.{{Company
# Get reward for freeing the Brotherhood initiate.
|name=Imagine Software
|image=
|founded=[[1982]]
|closed=[[1989]]
|founder=Mark Butler, David Lawson, and Eugene Evans
|location=Liverpool, UK
}}
 
'''Imagine Software''' was a British video games developer based in Liverpool which existed briefly in the early 1980s, initially producing software for the ZX Spectrum and VIC-20.
 
Imagine Software was founded in 1982 by former members of Bug-Byte including Mark Butler, David Lawson and Eugene Evans. Mark and Eugene had previously worked at Microdigital, one of the first computer stores in the UK. Imagine Software produced several very successful games, including [[Arcadia]] for the Vic 20 and ZX- Spectrum, before running into financial trouble in late [[1983]].
 
Rumors of Imagine's financial situation began to circulate in December 1983 following the revelations that an estimated £50,000 of its advertising bills had not been paid.[3] The following year the debts mounted, with further advertising and tape duplication bills going unpaid, and Imagine was forced to sell the rights to its games to [[Beau Jolly]] in order to raise money. The company then achieved nationwide notoriety when it was filmed the following year by a BBC documentary crew while in the process of going spectacularly bust.
 
On [[June 28]], [[1984]] a writ was issued against Imagine by VNU Business Press for monies owed for advertising in Personal Computer Games magazine, and the company was wound up on 9 July 1984 at the High Court in London after it was unable to raise the £10,000 required to pay this debt (though by this time its total debts ran to hundreds of thousands of pounds).
 
Former programmers went on to establish [[Psygnosis]] and [[Denton Designs]]. The company's back catalogue was owned by [[Beau Jolly]], while rights to the Imagine label were acquired by [[Ocean Software]], which used it to publish home computer conversions of popular arcade games under the name of Imagine Studios. The final game bearing the Imagine name was released in [[1989]].
{{Company
|name=Imagine Software
|image=
|founded=[[1982]]
|closed=[[1989]]
|founder=Mark Butler, David Lawson, and Eugene Evans
|location=Liverpool, UK
}}
 
'''Imagine Software''' was a British video games developer based in Liverpool which existed briefly in the early 1980s, initially producing software for the ZX Spectrum and VIC-20.
 
Imagine Software was founded in 1982 by former members of Bug-Byte including Mark Butler, David Lawson and Eugene Evans. Mark and Eugene had previously worked at Microdigital, one of the first computer stores in the UK. Imagine Software produced several very successful games, including [[Arcadia]] for the Vic 20 and ZX- Spectrum, before running into financial trouble in late [[1983]].
 
Rumors of Imagine's financial situation began to circulate in December 1983 following the revelations that an estimated £50,000 of its advertising bills had not been paid.[3] The following year the debts mounted, with further advertising and tape duplication bills going unpaid, and Imagine was forced to sell the rights to its games to [[Beau Jolly]] in order to raise money. The company then achieved nationwide notoriety when it was filmed the following year by a BBC documentary crew while in the process of going spectacularly bust.
 
On [[June 28]], [[1984]] a writ was issued against Imagine by VNU Business Press for monies owed for advertising in Personal Computer Games magazine, and the company was wound up on 9 July 1984 at the High Court in London after it was unable to raise the £10,000 required to pay this debt (though by this time its total debts ran to hundreds of thousands of pounds).
 
Former programmers went on to establish [[Psygnosis]] and [[Denton Designs]]. The company's back catalogue was owned by [[Beau Jolly]], while rights to the Imagine label were acquired by [[Ocean Software]], which used it to publish home computer conversions of popular arcade games under the name of Imagine Studios. The final game bearing the Imagine name was released in [[1989]].
 
# Get the quest to scout the northern area for Maxson.
# Get the quest to scout the northern area for Maxson.



Revision as of 08:05, 12 January 2014

Notable Areas
  1. See above section on Brotherhood
Notable Characters
  1. See above section on Brotherhood
Notes
  1. Get reward for freeing the Brotherhood initiate.
  2. Get the quest to scout the northern area for Maxson.

Go to the first level and speak with Talus. Tell him that you have finished the quest, and ask him for your reward. Pick whatever you want. (Choose Power Armor if you don't have it.)

Go to the fourth level, speak with Maxson, and talk to him about the war, mutants, etc. and offer to scout the area to the north for free. If have not done so yet, ask for some weapons. Go back to Level 3 and ask Vree about the mutants and get the holodisc if you haven't done so.

Go to the outside Brotherhood entrance and save the game. Leave the area, scout to the northwest, and enter the area enclosed in the green circle. This is the Military Base.

If you want to complete the Military Base/Cathedral, this is the checklist that you should follow:

  1. Ditch your NPC's.
  2. Have the COC robes and Vree's Mutant Autopsy Disk with you.
  3. Have the sets of both standard and electronic lockpicks with you.
  4. Don your Power Armor and put your combat shotgun in one of your item slots, but you shouldn't let it be in your active item slots. (Only applies for infiltration approaches)
  5. Ignore number one for the cowboy military base approach. Your NPC's will be dead anyways. If you're intending on going to Necropolis for the water chip or want to complete the Boneyard level, then don't worry about ditching your NPC's. Or you can leave them outside and pick them up after you've wiped out the mutants.
  • You have to ditch the NPC's for the infiltration approach because the Super Mutant guards will come and attack you if you have NPC's with you.
  • Simply destroying the mutant threats will allow you to beat the game. You need not find the water chip!
  • You can finish the Military Base first or the Cathedral (either way is okay).
  • If you don't have the robes, go to the Cathedral first.