The Fog





The Fog is a hazardous weather condition in the Fallout 4 add-on Far Harbor. It is worshipped as a blessing of Atom by the Children of Atom and feared by the people of Far Harbor.

Characteristics
The Fog is radioactive in nature, and therefore dangerous to the residents of The Island, except for members of the Children of Atom and the synths of Acadia, who are immune to radiation. While the Fog has engulfed almost the entire island by 2287, fog condensers created by Acadia are capable of protecting small areas from the effects of the Fog by condensing the Fog into a liquid form. Condensed fog can then be used to craft several useful items.

Originally, the Fog was merely an occasional presence. However, ever since the arrival of the Children of Atom, it began steadily growing until it threatened to cover the entire island. The residents of Far Harbor believed that the Children of Atom were somehow "feeding" the Fog, while the Children believe that the growth of the Fog was Atom's reward for their faith. However, Old Longfellow recounts that in the days of his early childhood, the whole island was covered in fog, and that many people on the island are quick to forget its threats in the years it recedes as it leaves the land in relative normalcy and allowing for some amount of prosperity in its absence.

The native fauna of the Island was mutated by constant exposure to the Fog, creating abominations such as anglers, gulpers and fog crawlers. These creatures are highly aggressive, and sometimes attack Far Harbor en masse. The threat of these hostile mutants, in addition to exposure to the Fog, drove many human inhabitants of the Island insane, turning them into psychotic cannibals known as Trappers.

Behind the scenes
undefined The fog may be a cultural reference to author Stephen King's "The Mist", a short story that told a tale of a small Maine town engulfed in a Fog bank that contained many dangerous creatures and insect like monsters.

The fog may also be a metaphor for climate change. When Old Longfellow brings you up the mountain to Acadia, he remarks how the fog has expanded before many times, and people forget that it has always receded. This is similar to climate change and its correlation with solar flares. end