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Nukage is some form of a nuclear by-product. This by-product can be dangerous in a variety of ways (e.g. this stuff may mutate a human body or cause cancer). This stuff could also affect the health of a human being. bugs could spread diseases via nukage exposure (i.e. beware!!!).
Nuclear power plants can spread a massload of nukage if they aren't maintained properly. Atomic bombs can spread a massload of nuakge at ground zero (e.g. atomic bombs were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki).
Nukage in Pop Culture
Nukage is featured in the hit FPS (first-person shooter) game DOOM. Although it isn't mentioned in the game (with the exception of the level "Nukage processing" in Final DOOM), there are pits of nukage all over various levels in the DOOM series games (e.g. DOOM, DOOM II, Final DOOM, DOOM 3). Other DOOM-based games could feature nukage (e.g. Chex Quest has fake nukage in the form of flemoid slime). Nukage in DOOM games is a user-hostile by-product of UAC's scientific experiments and so fourth. Nukage is the name of a series of floor textures for the DOOM engine; that is where some people can learn that term.
Duke Nukem games also feature nukage. The term nukage isn't even used in Duke Nukem games but there is plenty of it in the games. The boss level on the episode "LA Meltdown" features some kinda nuclear facility located in Long Beach, CA.
The future of Nukage
In the future, mankind may start an interplanetary industry (i.e. cosmopolis) via nuclear power. The situation with nukage pits aforementioned in the document may arise in outer space. If man ever sets foot on Mars, they might bring aresal oxygen cans (like in the sci-fi comedy Spaceballs) to breathe on the planet. Someday, nuclear technology will become obsolete and be replaced with energy in the form of lava. Lava technology is the storyline in a downloadable custom DOOM level on the Internet.
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