Right. Thanks. I understand if it can't always be done, but we want to maximize our chances of success, after all.
Second question's similar, but on the other end. Both of these times now, we've had to leave pretty quickly once we had the orb. But that means leaving people in a bad situation sometimes. Newton regretted not being able to stick around after the first mission so he could treat his patients in the city, and after this second mission, I'm worried we left a power vacuum when we took the orb that's going to cause a lot of pain for the people there, and maybe we couldn't have done much about that, but it feels wrong to leave so quickly and not even try to take the time to make things right. What I don't want is for us to be as disruptive as the orbs themselves, or maybe even more damaging. Defeats the purpose, if we're trying to contain them to keep people from getting hurt.
So. What are the chances we can have more time afterward, to set things right so that we're not leaving people worse off than they were when we got there?
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Second question's similar, but on the other end. Both of these times now, we've had to leave pretty quickly once we had the orb. But that means leaving people in a bad situation sometimes. Newton regretted not being able to stick around after the first mission so he could treat his patients in the city, and after this second mission, I'm worried we left a power vacuum when we took the orb that's going to cause a lot of pain for the people there, and maybe we couldn't have done much about that, but it feels wrong to leave so quickly and not even try to take the time to make things right. What I don't want is for us to be as disruptive as the orbs themselves, or maybe even more damaging. Defeats the purpose, if we're trying to contain them to keep people from getting hurt.
So. What are the chances we can have more time afterward, to set things right so that we're not leaving people worse off than they were when we got there?