Okay, so let's say that the pilot is NOT drunk, and is a verys sensible and responsible man. Let's also say that the stereo system is much quieter than the engines, and cannot be heard at all. The air force base was actually a rebel/criminal base in disguise. There are still some people walking around the helicopter in-flight since I've never been on a helicopter before, and it doesn't sound too far-off for a very large helicopter. If it's still impossible, let's say that mysterious sentient alien space bats gave them anti-gravity shoes but they look like normal shoes.Simon_Jester wrote:The hell of it is, the really stupid part of Archinist's hypothetical scenario is totally irrelevant to the setup. There's no obvious reason WHY everyone has to be flying out to the remote site in a military helicopter, as opposed to, say, a business jet. There's no reason why the pilot should be drinking. There's no reason why anyone would tolerate the aircraft being armed with machine guns. There's no reason why the flight that takes me to this wilderness chateau should be flown by a drunk, or why all the people with me act like a bunch of chavs.
None of this actually contributes to the story. Since the point of the story is "you're stranded, apparently alone, in an isolated wilderness with limited means of communication and travel."
Sure, eventually Archinist actually "gives" the reader some freedom of action, after literally a day and a night of following the rails of the story full of stupidity. But by that time, the reader already thinks "there is no way I would ever be in this hypothetical situation because I would have to be dumber than a parrot to end up in this situation in the first place." They've quit.
This makes it all the more silly that Archinist keeps piling on ridiculous, unlikely, and insanely reckless actions that are all part of the setup to the real action. All this other stupidity does is distract from the point. It gives people more things to laugh at.
And as I explicitly mentioned in my first response post, because of all this, I stopped paying attention to the scenario long before Archinist even got around to the "what do you do" part. Because things had gotten so ridiculous and stupid that there was no way I could actually imagine myself in the scenario. I can't even bring myself to think "what do you do if you wake up the next morning and everyone's dead or missing," the question Archinist meant to ask, because I can't bring myself to believe I would ever end up there in a helicopter flown by a drunk, while voluntarily seeking out the company of a bunch of chavs, one of whom is inexplicably wealthy and somehow hasn't lost all their money to lawsuits and crappy business decisions made because loldrunk.
The reason why the battery was taken away from the satellite is because Ben required it to power the shack near the mines and it wasn't connected to the electricity for some reason. The machine guns are still on the chopper, but the mates are not idiots that fire them off in the forest for no reason. Instead, they are packed away somewhere where they're still visible, but mostly locked and safe.
The reason for a large military helicopter and not a business plane is because Chad loves guns and military hardware, AND, a more practical reason of Chad wanting his exit vehicle to be close by and easier to access, in case of an emergency. Let's also say that out of all 35 mates and 20 guards, there were also another 4 people other than the main pilot that could pilot rotorcrafts.