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''The Veldt'' could easily take place before the Great War, with the incident likely covered up by whoever was involved and the Happylife Home discontinued, possibly because of potential hazards but probably because /General Atomics didn't want lawsuits or bad press.\\ The holograms are extremely realistic with temperature changes, smell, etc, so while not on the scale of the Operation: Anchorage sim or the Vault 112 virtual reality it could be an early form of that tech or a downgraded variant for the general public. and the holographic nursery manages to murder the parents, both of which are neatly in line with the AIIsACrapshoot and casual-to-nonexistant safety regulations of ''Fallout'' the nursery was even originally a tool to monitor and analyze child subjects, which sounds like the kind of dubious tech/experiments that proliferate in the ''Fallout''-verse. The house is implied to act independantly thanks to its A.I. The house is noted to be cutting-edge and expensive so it might have been a prototype or first-run /General Atomics product, maybe an attempt to expand on their household robotics line it's also called the "Happylife Home," a cutesy name thematic with ''Fallout''-verse consumer-grade products like Mister Handy and Miss Nanny. It's set in an unspecified future where 50s-era American society coexists with futuristic technology, most notably a fully automated SmartHouse where the nursery is basically a holodeck.
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