House's Vault-Tec Deal Was a Single System: Cold Fusion as the Key to a Human Control Infrastructure He Left Running
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House's Vault-Tec Deal Was a Single System: Cold Fusion as the Key to a Human Control Infrastructure He Left Running

80%

Plausibility Score

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Convinced

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#102

of 705 theories

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THEORY ASSESSMENT

The episode ground truth directly confirms the cold fusion diode exchange and House's deliberate concealment of his Vegas project from Vault-Tec, leaving only the specific nature of what cold fusion powers as unconfirmed.

Episode Narrative Fit(?)
88 / 100
Evidence(?)
Primarily dialogue and thematic evidence

STORY CONTEXT

New Vegas fans know House always has a plan, and these theories try to map out his centuries-long chess game. The debate centers on whether his Vegas ambitions connect to larger post-apocalyptic nation-building or something the show might reveal.

WHY THIS MATTERS

If the cold fusion diode is the power component of a human control infrastructure House architected before the War, then the central MacGuffin of the season is not a treasure being chased — it is a key being delivered. Every faction competing for it is unknowingly completing House's original design.

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Other Theories for S2E06

86%

Hank Built the Conditions Under Which Lucy Would Deliver Herself

The simulation room in the Las Vegas management vault is not a generic Vault-Tec facility but a targeted psychological instrument Hank commissioned using his oversight authority — a faithful replica of Vault 33's residential interior built specifically to re-anchor Lucy's identity before she could act on her leverage.

84%

Hank Built the Philosophy Before He Needed the Alibi

Hank's staged surrender is not a man improvising a defense under pressure — it is a man deploying an ideological architecture he constructed in advance of any action that would require justifying.

78%

Dogmeat Knows Exactly What She Is Doing

Dogmeat's refusal to retrieve the Ghoul's vials is a strategic substitution: she selected the hat because it would function as a recognition signal to humans capable of solving the larger problem, accepting the Ghoul's feral deterioration as the cost of a longer play.

77%

Vault-Tec Chose Which Vaults Would Die of Thirst

The show confirms that Vault-Tec knew which water chips would fail before installation.

80%

Hank Built a Mind-Control Empire Before the War

Hank MacLean's substitution into the RobCo meeting was not an act of corporate espionage but the first operational step in a project he has been running continuously ever since, with Vault 33 serving as a decades-long laboratory for solving the signal-tolerance failures that limited the technology's original deployment.

70%

Super Mutants Claim Ghouls as Kindred Enemies

The Super Mutant who pulls the Ghoul from the pole in Freeside is extending a political recruitment: that ghouls and mutants, as shared products of human engineering, constitute a natural alliance with the Enclave as their common enemy.

56%

The Unnamed Super Mutant Is Marcus

The unnamed Super Mutant in Episode 6 is Marcus, and his name is being withheld across every credit and metadata source because confirming it forces the show to honor two games of established lore it has not yet chosen to lock in.

47%

Woody Was Silenced for What He Heard

Woody was removed from Vault 33 not for defiance but for asking a single question, which means the vault's suppression mechanism is calibrated to eliminate awareness before it can spread rather than revolt after it forms.