View from the Vault, Part 3 is a note in Fallout 4.
Locations[]
The note can be given along with Parts 1 and 2 to the player character by talking to Nat outside the Publick Occurrences building in Diamond City, only after completing Story of the Century for Piper and 24 in-game hours have passed. The version of the transcript received is dependent on the player character's chosen gender and the answers given to Piper during the interview.
Transcript[]
Note 3A[]
View from the Vault Part 3 By Piper Wright
Continued from Part 2.
It's easy for us to be cynical about the missing. We have spent so long knowing the Institute is out there, but knowing so little about them. They are not the only ones responsible for kidnappings, but the fact that they sometimes are, and the fact that we have been so powerless to stop them when they do, causes us to treat all victims of kidnappings as if they are a lost cause.
But the people left behind, those loved ones, friends, and neighbors who may never see the faces of those taken from them again, they do not have the luxury of being able to just look away. They have to carry that lost with them, even if everyone else tells them to move on and forget.
I asked [Name] to make a statement to Diamond City. To give us an outsider's perspective on what it means to lose a loved one, and how [he/she] feels. Maybe, in some way, it's how we all should feel. Maybe we've forgotten what the right, human response to these tragedies are.
"No matter how much you want to give up, don't." [He/She] said. "You have to have hope. That you'll see them again. Or at least, that you'll know the truth."
END
Note 3B[]
View from the Vault Part 3 By Piper Wright
Continued from Part 2.
It's easy for us to be cynical about the missing. We have spent so long knowing the Institute is out there, but understanding so little about them. They are not the only ones responsible for kidnappings, but the fact that they sometimes are, and the fact that we have been so powerless to stop them when they do, causes us to treat all victims of kidnappings as if they are a lost cause.
But the people left behind, those loved ones, friends, and neighbors who may never see the faces of those taken from them again, they do not have the luxury of being able to just look away. They have to carry that lost with them, even if everyone else tells them to move on and forget.
I asked [Name] to make a statement to Diamond City. To give us an outsider's perspective on what it means to lose a loved one, and how he feels. Maybe, in some way, it's how we all should feel. Maybe we've forgotten what the right, human response to these tragedies are.
"Find who's responsible, and make them pay." [He/She] said. "Simple as that."
END
Note 3C[]
View from the Vault Part 3 By Piper Wright
Continued from Part 2.
It's easy for us to be cynical about the missing. We have spent so long knowing the Institute is out there, but knowing so little about them. They are not the only ones responsible for kidnappings, but the fact that they sometimes are, and the fact that we have been so powerless to stop them when they do, causes us to treat all victims of kidnappings as if they are a lost cause.
But the people left behind, those loved ones, friends, and neighbors who may never see the faces of those taken from them again, they do not have the luxury of being able to just look away. They have to carry that lost with them, even if everyone else tells them to move on and forget.
I asked [Name] to make a statement to Diamond City. To give us an outsider's perspective on what it means to lose a loved one, and how he feels. Maybe, in some way, it's how we all should feel. Maybe we've forgotten what the right, human response to these tragedies are.
"You can only take it one day at a time." [He/She] said. "Just keep going. That's all anyone can do."
END