
Going from murderously raving to earnestly begging, Jack comes across as desperate, sad, and very alone. Jack's final moments are appropriately pathetic.It's a little sad knowing that it's gone forever. Even ignoring the catastrophic loss of human life it caused, and even ignoring the sadness caused by Loader Bot's apparent Heroic Sacrifice, Helios was a constant fixture in the sky for players of Borderlands 2 and you actually got to visit it in The Pre-Sequel. The destruction of Helios itself can be sad for some.After Vallory and her boys show up with Rhys and give Athena to the Vault Hunters, which is a tearjerker in and of itself if you beg Vallory not to hurt Athena, Rhys has one question that doesn't get answered.

The fact one of the eventual dialogue options is to tell Valory that you will kill her for this, says everything about how much Athena had really come to mean to her. Fiona being unable to save Athena from Brick and Mordecai, especially since Athena had started to become a mentor and friend.This implies that no matter what, Rhys may come to regret trusting or not trusting Jack. No matter which option you choose, it cuts to Rhys looking heart-broken and Fiona swallowing whatever snide comment she has to offer once she sees him.He tries to cite that Rhys "can even ask Athena" that he always looks out for his team, but his normal irreverent tone briefly cracks into a quiet stutter as if ashamed of how badly he burned that bridge considering that half of the "team" he's trying to use as an example is dead and the other half hates him. From that same exchange, Jack tries to assure Rhys that he can be trusted.On top of that, he makes it known that he's somehow very well aware of how much people hate him he just hoped that it would be different with Rhys. Though he ends the conversation with venomous threats, Jack seems genuinely shocked and hurt if Rhys decides not to trust him, implying that his offer of partnership was a sincere one.After his death, Catch-A-Ride becomes owned by Ellie, his sister and other prevalent character. This is also where he dies on a trip to Pandora's moon gone wrong. In Tales From The Borderlands, Scooter is a major character. His Catch-A-Ride stations are prevalent throughout the game, and interacting with them makes Scooter's voice sound. He resides in New Haven in Borderlands, and Sanctuary in Borderlands 2.

He even gives you missions- both story and side missions. He is a recurring character in the story, and one you will surely remember after playing Borderlands. As a result, he is worth a great deal to the Vault Hunters. The Catch-A-Ride systems are points throughout the map where Vault Hunters can summon unlocked vehicles to greatly assist in your journey. In Borderlands, Scooter is the owner of the Catch-A-Ride systems. His way of speaking can only be known from actually listening to him talk. However, Scooter has his more unique way of speaking, and is more comedic than Ellis due to Borderlands being a comedic game in general.

Both of them are friendly but can become hostile because of the things that they want to protect. They both have a Southern accent and can rant on about random things. Scooter's personality is kind of like Ellis from Left 4 Dead. He wears a durable warm tan pair of pants fastened by a brown leather belt, as well as brown boots. He wears the dark green hat on his head with a green shirt covered by a vest of light brown shade, however it seems to also appear sage. You can tell he likes ladies because of the image on his hat. You can tell he likes cars from all the black stains all over his body. Scooter "loves cars, women, and cars, in that order".
