Talk:Skyline (level)

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Billboard

Why would the billboard be listing Elysium City, Eridanus II as a possible construction site of another tether? Eridanus was glassed nearly 30 years prior to this. This seems very similar to the Quito Space Tether listing Charybdis IX as a destination in 2552 when it was glassed in 2535. Could this possibly be some sort of easter egg?--Spartacus TalkContribs 14:27, 25 February 2013 (EST)

I think it is a canon confirmation that these glassed planets have been reclaimed by the UEG/UNSC.— Destiny sign.pngDESTINY 20:35, 25 February 2013 (EST)

Flying cars?

I noticed that there are flying vehicles way in the background(not the hornet!). These aren't just a couple or handful of vehicles either, but rather they are flying grouped together in "lanes" almost. Now these flying cars may not be alarming, but I've personally never seen travel like this in Halo before, or at least they've never been mentioned. I think this is a significant/radical addition to Halo lore. It shows that humans are way more advanced now or at least improved their tech after the war. This seems important to mention, but I don't know if they have already been mentioned before (I never read the Forerunner or Post-war books). It looks like Halo just received a sci-fi staple.--File:1221751884 I-animated-this-for-you.gifEnder the XenocideFile:1221751884 I-animated-this-for-you.gif 22:10, 28 February 2013 (EST)

I noticed this as well and it reminded me of the planet Coruscant in Star Wars. Seems like way too many to be a group of UNSC Pelicans/Hornets/Falcons.--Spartacus TalkContribs 22:18, 28 February 2013 (EST)
That caught my eye, too. I will admit it definitely looks like lanes of flying traffic. That being said flying personal vehicles, or more specifically flying cars, have never been mentioned or even hinted at in Halo canon (not even in the Kilo-Five Trilogy). Human vehicles in the Halo universe have always either been terrestrial automobiles or traditional aircraft, not both. I personally find it hard to believe that humanity went from zero flying cars to having enough to fill multiple lanes of traffic in just 5 years. If I had to theorize I'd say an environment artist decided inserting that sci-fi staple would look cool (and even I must admit, it does). But to take it as canon that humanity has developed flying cars as consumer goods is a bit of a stretch. It's definitely worth a note in the trivia section, but I don't think we should rush to create pages for flying cars.--Emblem 1.jpg Rusty-112 Admin comm 22:29, 28 February 2013 (EST)
Keep in mind that this is supposed to be a simulated environment within the Infinity's training deck. Therefore the flying cars could in fact be a "cool sci-fi staple" and still be canon, as they may simply have been added by whoever programmed the simulation... We don't exactly have a solid bead on which time period (ie: present or future) is represented in the Skyline simulation. It's possible that it's supposed to take place in the "near future" & the programmer may have been speculating that we would have flying cars at that time, based on a better understanding of Covenant & Forerunner antigrav technology. Or it could simply be artistic license. "Simulation of a simulation" scenarios like this are where sci-fi tends to cause headaches, because the real-world 343i programmer is crafting the playing environment of the level by imagining it as a simulation seen through the eyes of the in-game, fictional, UNSC programmer.... "Simulating a simulation" is the 2nd most confusing sci-fi staple after time travel. - DJenser (talk) 11:09, 1 March 2013 (EST)