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That’s when the radio signal cut through.
The quest updated:
Nate finds a working radio. Tunes it to static.
When Nate plugged his Pip-Boy into the bunker's core, the Q.C.A. didn't attack. It begged. fallout 4 q.c.a
And now, the signal was their scream.
Its name, according to the lead researcher's final holotape, was . Or "Quincy."
Before the bombs, the Q.C.A. project was a joint US Army/MIT black op. Code name: Ghost in the Machine . The goal wasn't AI—they had ZAX units for that. Q.C.A. was necromantic computation : the upload of a dying human mind into a quantum mainframe to serve as an unbreakable strategic advisor. That’s when the radio signal cut through
— Nate deletes the Soldier, Deserter, Father, and Lover, leaving only the Child fragment. The Q.C.A. becomes a harmless, perpetual playground—a digital heaven for Marcus's purest self. But the core remains unstable. In 50 years, it will collapse into a feral AI anyway. Nick Valentine, if present, will say: "You gave a ghost a bedtime story. Sometimes that's enough." Reward: Quantum Lullaby (a portable radio that pacifies hostile synths for 30 seconds).
Nate, still wearing his faded Vault 111 suit under leather armor, followed the signal.
The Q.C.A. didn't die. It dreamed . For 210 years, Marcus Webb's consciousness looped through every memory, every fear, every moment of his life—and began to multiply . The anomaly split into fragments: the Child Marcus, the Soldier Marcus, the Dying Marcus, the Angry Marcus. Each fragment believed it was the real one. When Nate plugged his Pip-Boy into the bunker's core, the Q
In the final moment, Nate sat on the virtual floor of the Q.C.A. core. Around him, five glowing orbs pulsed—the echoes, now gathered. The Child fragment held a digital baseball.
The test subject? Private First Class Marcus Webb. A 22-year-old from Quincy, Massachusetts. He had volunteered in exchange for his family's safe passage to Vault 111.
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