< Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri

Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri/Nightmare Fuel


  • The Mind Worm's method of attack, and several of the Secret Project videos may freak you out considerably.

"Richard Baxton piloted his Recon Rover into a fungal vortex and held off four waves of mind worms, saving an entire colony. We immediately purchased his identity manifests and repackaged him into the Recon Rover Rick character with a multi-tiered media campaign: televids, touchbooks, holos, psi-tours--the works. People need heroes. They don't need to know how he died clawing his eyes out, screaming for mercy. The real story would just hurt sales, and dampen the spirits of our customers." - Mythology for Profit, Morgan Stellartots Keynote Speech.

  • Mary had a little lamb, little lamb, little lamb, Mary had a little lamb, whose fleece was white as snow. - Assassins' Redoubt, Final Transmission.
    • Made even worse by the near total silence - it's the only secret project video in the game without a voiceover (the text given above briefly unrolls on-screen at the end of the video).
  • The torture scene when you defeat a faction is a little disturbing.
    • When you realize exactly what Nerve Stapling is. Brrrr.
      • It matches the description of a Punishment Sphere according to the GURPS supplement. No wonder bases with them have their research halved and lose the ability of their citizens to become talents. Not only that, the GURPS supplement says that it is based on nerve stapling, but instead of performing it every few hours, it does it around every five minutes.
  • As for the Secret Projects:
    • "We must dissent..." from the Self-Aware colony was really chilling the first time, and it still creeps me out.
    • The sudden audio distortion in Zakharovs' speech for the Singularity Inductor is pretty disturbing. Hell, he's probably the single creepiest character in the game, far outstripping Yang. His clinical descriptions of his research often get very disturbing.
      • "I still have it, in fact. As you can see, the damage was not so great as they say..." -- Prokhor Zakharov displaying the lab animal used in the first live teleportation experiment. Though, alternatively, it could have just meant that the rat is perfectly fine.
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