I don't think this is an accurate assessment. A robotics or photonics lab isn't going to help you find a 'cure'. And how many laboratories will have radiation leaks in them? What's releasing the radiation? HolbenilordTalk₪ 11:47, September 10, 2012 (UTC)
True. Also this makes it almost look like that finding a "cure" is a piece of cake. Even the best experts in modern pathology take many months, years, even decades to find cure to many diseases.
- It's a very "video game"y assessment of labs. Still, while it needs a total rewrite, it is worth having a labroatory article. Studying the virus/phenomenon may lead to a cure. A movie where the survivors dismiss this has foolhardy survivors - even if the audience knows it never works. Also, there is the possibility that the phenomenon started as a biological weapon.
- As a base, a lab is a pretty darn good one, even though there is no reason to think it would be well stocked with food, water or supplies. Still, easy to defend. Radiation shouldn't be a problem, unless it's got nuclear power, and I think hardly any would. Generators would provide power, and most would consume their fuel supply extremely quickly.
- — <<— Philodox —>> talk 00:03, September 13, 2012 (UTC)