General Atomics International

General Atomics International (GAI) was a pre-War company specializing in industrial robotics, energy, weapons, and software up until the Great War.

Background
One of the most prominent manufacturers of industrial robotics in the world, General Atomics was one of the first companies to introduce modern robots to the market, starting with the Mister Handy model in 2037, as a general purpose construction and maintenance unit.

By the 2070s, it was an automaton surrounded by more advanced designs utilizing cutting edge neural networks. In order to maintain their market share, General Atomics entered into a joint venture with RobCo Industries, combining RobCo's talent with General Atomics' experience in robotics. The resulting model was capable of self-programming and initiative, more than making up for halving the number of arms to just three. Despite its sophistication, it was also cost-effective, making it the perfect domestic servant robot. The success of the joint venture resulted in the U.S. Army tapping GAI and RobCo to create Liberty Prime around 2072 and spearhead the creation of Robobrains at Robotics Technology Facility RB-2851 in Boston, Massachusetts.

Beyond their robots, GAI also manufactured nuclear reactors for various purposes, such as providing backup power for Vaults (e.g. Vault 13), wave/particle diverters for laser weapons, and even experimented with autonomous, automated robot networks supposed to maintain a facility independently. However, their Director Management System proved to be a disaster, resulting in numerous fatalities at General Atomics Galleria that forced a shutdown of the facility until firmware updates could be delivered to the affected robots. The casualties included the human supervisor who was legally required to be present on site. The fact that the corporation did not go under can be chalked up to their official policy of bribing any survivors into silence or for "immediate financial settlements."

Locations

 * General Atomics factory, Boston
 * General Atomics Galleria and outlet, Massachusetts
 * USA Robotics Technology Facility RB-2851, Boston

Robots


Mister Handy was produced by General Atomics International as a house-keeping and defensive robot, able to help out around the house and defend itself and possibly others with its buzzsaw and flamethrower. Mister Handy is speech-capable, communicating in a polite English accent.

Mister Gutsy
Mister Gutsy is a modified Type-II Mister Handy designed for military use by the U.S. Army. Mister Gutsy comes with a plasma weapon, flamethrower, and significantly better armor than Mister Handy.

Robobrain
The robobrain was created by GAI as a military robot for the US. It uses a real organic brain as its processor. Military models are capable of using integrated laser weapons, sonic projection rays, and have human-enough manipulator claws to wield submachine guns and rifles. The robobrain, by the time of the Great War, was still experimental with the only test runs seen by the general populace and never seeing full-fledged release.

Miss Nanny
Miss Nanny is an alternative to the Mister Handy model, programmed to speak French, and English in a French accent.

Mister Orderly
Mister Orderly, unlike the Mister Handy or Mister Gutsy, is dedicated to medical procedures and experimental surgery. It is not hard to distinguish it from a Mister Handy as it has a white paint job on the body and has white and blue arms, each bearing a red border.

Other products

 * Wave/particle diverter, a critical component of laser weapons.
 * AER9 laser rifle
 * Nuclear reactors: Produced primarily for Vault-Tec Corporation for use at the Vaults.
 * BS7 transistor radio
 * Washing machine
 * Dryer
 * In-Home Servant Interface 3.1
 * Director Management System
 * Askforhelp Helper System

Sentinel power armor
Made in cooperation with West Tek, the Sentinel Control System was developed by General Atomics International, meant to provide military support to Army units by using pre-existing power armor pieces.

Appearances
General Atomics International is mentioned in the Fallout manual, Fallout 76, Fallout 3, Fallout 4 and its add-on Automatron and Creation Club, but the company's products appear in all Fallout games.

Behind the scenes
The company was mentioned in the Fallout design document regarding Mr. Handy.