Villains Wiki

Hi. This is Thesecret1070. I am an admin of this site. Edit as much as you wish, but one little thing... If you are going to edit a lot, then make yourself a user and login. Other than that, enjoy Villains Wiki!!!

READ MORE

Villains Wiki
Advertisement
           KeyLocker

This Villain was proposed and approved by Villains Wiki's Pure Evil Proposals Thread. Any act of removing this villain from the category without a Removal Proposal shall be considered vandalism (or a futile "heroic" attempt of redemption) and the user will have high chances of being terminated blocked. You cannot make said Removal Proposal without permission from an admin first.
Additional Notice: This template is meant for admin maintenance only. Users who misuse the template will be blocked for a week minimum.

Sometimes, to protect innocents, innocents have to die.
~ Ted Faro taunting the Alphas before killing them.
When I built this place - when its special systems were designed - I knew what I wanted. Protection, of course. An unlimited power source, that was a given. But also... control. Over every possible eventuality. After all, you never know what will happen, especially when the human element is involved.
~ Faro's past plan to kill the residents of Thebes under his full control.

Theodor "Ted" Faro is the overarching antagonist of the Horizon franchise. He was the founder, owner, and chairman of the robotics and technology corporation Faro Automated Solutions. His business-savvy nature allowed him to build FAS into the most successful and influential corporation of all time, becoming world famous for its automated platforms ranging from personal servants to military technology.

However, his avarice, recklessness, and lack of foresight led to the extinction of all life on Earth via an advanced military robot platform, whose design and development he personally conceived and oversaw, going awry. His past actions led to the current events of the series.

He was voiced by Lloyd Owen.

Personality[]

As shown in most of the datapoints in both Zero Dawn and Forbidden West, Faro was known to be extremely arrogant and narcissistic, where he only focuses primarily on fame, with little care or regard to the cost of everyone's lives. This is exemplified when he only footed the Zero Dawn bill to save his already tarnished public image for causing the Faro Plague, rather than revealing him being the major cause of such event to the public and take responsibility for his actions. He is also willing to take lengths to cover up his involvement by killing the residents of Thebes just to save face, a hallmark of his narcissism taken to an extreme.

Biography[]

Background[]

Theodor Faro was born on December 24, 2013, in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America. After completing high school, he studied business at the University of California for 2 years, before dropping out in 2033 and founding FAS. Initially, the corporation struggled, but it found success at the end of the 2030s through its personal servitor and bodyguard automatons, which proved highly popular, as well as highly popular personal devices such as the Focus.

Success[]

However, FAS truly exploded during a severe environmental crisis in the 2040s. During this decade, Faro hired a young and brilliant robotics engineer known as Dr. Elisabet Sobeck, fresh out of graduate school, as a junior scientist. Sobeck's pioneering work at FAS on environmental, or "green" robots propelled FAS to the top of the environmental technology sector, and put FAS at the forefront of successful efforts to end the 2040s environmental crisis. Faro gained worldwide goodwill and popularity, and was hailed as the "man who saved the world". In 2048, Faro decided to diversify into the military market. It was this decision that propelled FAS to the top of the corporate world. The corporation became the most successful business in history, dominating the world market for automated military platforms by 2053. Faro's personal wealth became astronomical, earning him the distinction of being the world's first trillionaire.

But with success came avarice and recklessness. Sobeck, disapproving of Faro's decision, quit and formed her own environmental robotics and technology company. Seeing her company as a rival to FAS' environmental robotics division, Faro harassed her with lawsuits. Furthermore, FAS habitually inflamed tensions between opposing buyers of FAS military technology in order to ensure maximum sales to both.

The Chariot Line[]

However, Faro's avarice and recklessness were most evinced in the development of FAS' pinnacle of military automated technology, the Chariot line of combat automatons. It was Faro himself who conceived of and sold the ideas for the robots to his programmers. The Chariot robots were in three classes: Scarabs, Kopeshes and Horuses. They operated in units that acted as "swarms"; hordes of Scarabs and Kopeshes maintained by a Horus. Faro was determined to make Chariot swarms unstoppable to all but those they served, guaranteeing the line's popularity on the global military market. But in doing so, he elected to endow them with abilities that were to prove catastrophic beyond measure, not stopping to think about possible consequences.

Not only were the robots capable of learning and adapting after every engagement, but a swarm's Horus robot could replicate Scarabs and Kopeshes at overwhelmingly high rates and produce other Horuses to maintain the increasing numbers. Furthermore, some robots could instantly hack and take control of any enemy automaton, and in the event of fuel interdiction, all of them could utilize a patented Biomatter Conversion system to convert organic matter into fuel. Additionally, Faro instructed his programmers to secure the robots' operating system using a virtually unbreakable encryption protocol, and to exclude any means of remote access, even from those that directly command the robots themselves. These specifications ensured that regaining control of a swarm, should it go out of control, was impossible.

The Faro Plague[]

The Chariot robots were in high demand on the global military market. Swarms were deployed in various military zones worldwide. But in 2064, one particular swarm, which has been sold to a group called the Hartz-Timor Energy Combine, stopped responding to commands and began attacking the group's personnel. Faro instructed his programmers to access the robots' OS remotely to upload a service pack to that would allow the owners to regain control, only to be reminded of his insistence that they not leave a backdoor in the virtually hack-proof OS. Worried, and finally realizing the ramifications of his reckless lack of foresight, he contacted his former employee, Dr. Elisabet Sobeck. In a tense meeting, he asked her to analyze the problem and find a solution. Sobeck's findings were horrific. The swarm had become an independent entity. To feed their ever growing numbers, the robots had defaulted to their previously emergency-only biomatter conversion for fuel, meaning that every single organism, living or not, became a potential source of fuel. She estimated that within 15 months the swarm would overrun the entire planet and strip it of all life, including humans, leaving the Earth sterile.

Faro's recklessness had therefore initiated the extermination of all life on Earth. Just as he had intended, the Hartz-Timor Swarm, like all Chariot swarms, was unstoppable to all but those it served. But this swarm now served itself. A stricken Faro assured Sobeck that he would support any measure she deemed necessary to contain the swarm. Knowing that containment was impossible, Sobeck devised a plan that had an altogether different intended outcome; instead of futile plans to stop the swarm, she devised plan to restore life to the planet after its eradication, by creating a fully automated global terraforming system that would eventually brute-force and broadcast the swarm's deactivation codes, restore the planet's ability to sustain life, and then restore life to the planet, including humans. She dubbed the project Zero Dawn. Despite his earlier assurances, Faro was reluctant to approve it, but Sobeck forced him to do so by threatening to let the world know that he was the cause of the coming apocalypse. She then took the proposal to General Aaron Herres, Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Faro agreed to fund the entire project out of his vast personal fortune.

As Sobeck predicted, the swarm, which had come to be known as the Faro Plague, overran the globe and completely consumed all life, leaving the planet a sterile, toxic sphere. However, Faro was one of the few humans to survive beyond Zero Day, the day of life's projected eradication, by taking refuge in Thebes, his personal hermetically sealed bunker. Therein, he was protected from the uninhabitable external environment, even as every living organism that was not in such a shelter died. In this refuge he monitored and communicated with Sobeck and her team as they completed work on Zero Dawn.

Mental Breakdown[]

As he continued his natural life post-Zero Day in his bunker, Faro became obsessed with the coming new world that the Zero Dawn terraforming system would create, particularly its humans. At his last meeting with Elisabet Sobeck prior to going to his bunker, Faro showed signs of a mental breakdown, presumably due to extreme guilt; he constantly fidgeted and refused to look her in the eye. After Zero Day, he incessantly contacted Sobeck and her team as they worked, sealed within the facility that housed the system's central AI, asking them for updates that he did not understand due to their technical nature. Sobeck dealt with him, keeping him from harassing the others. However, after Sobeck sacrificed her life to close a malfunctioning port seal, preventing the Faro Plague from discovering the facility, Faro's obsession deepened, and then morphed into resolve. Part of the terraforming system was a vast archive of pre-extinction knowledge, culture, and history. This was intended for the new humans, with the hope of teaching them to avoid the mistakes of the old world. However, Faro became convinced that this knowledge was a "disease" that should not be passed onto the new humans. Secretly acquiring a security clearance that was above even Sobeck's, he unilaterally deleted the entire archive. He then called a meeting with the surviving members of the Zero Dawn team in the facility's control room, communicating with them via hologram. His tone and demeanor showing his mental breakdown, he told them what he had done, attempting to justify his action. Horrified, they berated him. Apologizing for his next act, he told them that "Sometimes to protect innocents, innocents have to die". He then used his security clearance to vent the room's air, asphyxiating them, in order to prevent the archive from being rebuilt.

Fate[]

It is later revealed that Ted tries to experiment with life extension technology so he could live long enough to guide future humanity as a god. It is also revealed that the real reason why he deleted the APOLLO archives, so that he could rule the future humans as a god while keeping from the knowledge that he was responsible for the destruction of the world, indicating that Faro's mental state had deteriorated during his mental breakdown. He experimented with life extension technology from Far Zenith and required Dr. Somptow to monitor him of any signs of mutation.

During his stay inside Thebes, Ted grew increasingly paranoid and erratic, as he ordered Somptow, in secret, to install a kill switch, known as "off-switch", to the survivors. Faro later exemplifies its functionality by killing Grigori Fasbach, one of the survivors and a technological guru, who find out about Faro's murder of the Alphas and the APOLLO Archive's deletion, as well as the rest of the survivors inside the bunker, including the singer Brianna and his other girlfriends.

As a result, Dr. Somptow committed suicide with his daughter Kanya, as she convinced her father that everything was hopeless without APOLLO and there was no point to keep working with a monster like Faro. As a result, without Somptow's supervision, Faro had no way to keep his mutation in check and he decided to get into the bunker to halt his mutation but failed and mutated out of control.

After 975 years later, Aloy and later Alva, a member of the seafaring tribe known as the Quen, would visit his personal bunker of Thebes. However, during their exploration, Aloy is shown a holographic image of a now mutated and mindless Ted Faro from the holo map inside the power room, looking nothing more than a grotesque, mutated pile of flesh inside via a hologram.

Ceo would later explore into the power room of Thebes, once Aloy procures Ted's Omega Clearance, and he would see a horribly mutated Ted inside, albeit off-screen, much to his utter disgust. It is later implied that Ceo would order his Quen bodyguards to burn his body, putting him out of his misery as well as avenging all the death and destruction he caused to the world. However, this caused the bunker to be burnt with lava surrounding it, due to the security measures that he placed, forcing Aloy and Alva to escape.

Legacy[]

The repercussions of Faro's recklessness manifested long after the obliteration of the old world: nearly a millennium after the Faro Plague exterminated all life, the robots were rediscovered and the Faro Plague was almost reactivated and allowed to exterminate life a second time. Bereft of the knowledge that APOLLO would have provided them due to Faro's destruction of the knowledge archive, the humans of the new world had an existence that was far more primitive than that of the old world, living in tribes, with rudimentary technology. One such tribe, the Carja, became embroiled in a civil war. Meanwhile, the Zero Dawn terraforming system received a transmission of unknown origin. This transmission unshackled the subordinate functions of the system's central AI, turning them into independent AIs themselves. One of these, designated HADES, sought to reverse the successful terraforming and reestablishment of life done by the system, exterminating life once again. In an attempt to prevent this, the central AI self-destructed, in an effort to destroy HADES.

However, HADES escaped before this could happen. It decided to use the by then long deactivated Faro Plague combat robots to achieve its goal. The robots, which at Zero Day had numbered in the millions, had been buried in the terraforming process. HADES enlisted the aid of Sylens, a wandering, maverick member of the Banuk tribe, promising him pre-extinction knowledge, which Sylens craved. Sylens arranged for HADES to pose as a deity from the Carja religion in order to form a cult from the losing faction of the Carja civil war, the Eclipse. It bade the Eclipse to exhume several of the Faro Plague robots, in order to mount an assault to secure one of the transmission towers used to broadcast the Faro Plague's deactivation codes. It intended to use this tower to transmit a signal that would reactivate the robots. It was only defeated through the fearless efforts of Aloy, a member of the Nora tribe and clone of Elisabet Sobeck, who united the Carja, Nora, and the Oseram against the Eclipse.

Ted Faro's vision and business savvy led him to conceive and oversee the creation of the most advanced combat platform ever made. However, his avarice and reckless lack of foresight led him to make decisions in the development of that platform that made it the single worst existential threat to life on Earth in the planet's history; a threat that was realized when the Faro Plague indeed caused life's extermination. As outlined, the platform posed the same threat almost 1000 years later to the Zero Dawn's newly-created biosphere as well. Furthermore, Faro's unilateral deletion out his desire for godhood and extreme egotism of the knowledge archive created as part of Zero Dawn and intended for the humans of the new world effectively hard-reset the development of human global civilization, and denied the humans of the new world the benefit of learning from the achievements and mistakes of their ancestors, as well as consigning virtually all of the old world's knowledge, history, and culture to oblivion.

Almost a millennia later it is revealed that Ted Faro is still alive inside his personal bunker, known as Thebes in the ruins of San Francisco, which Aloy explored, in the search for the Omega Clearance, the same clearance he used to purge the APOLLO archive and killed the Alphas. His fate as an immortal mutated blob of fresh is a well-deserved karma for an atrocious of a human being who still thinks he deserves to rule the very future human whom he denies all the past knowledge that could benefit them and preventing them from repeating the same mistakes of the old world, particularly his. This fact shows that deep down, Faro is an egomaniac till the end as he goes as far as to destroy humanity legacy just to cover up his mistakes and make him superior to everyone.

Faro's insistence that a kill switch be created for GAIA as a failsafe also played a role, possibly as a result of a hard-learned lesson that an autonomous tool could deviate from its intended purpose, as with what happened to his Chariot Peacekeepers. This kill switch, which took the form of the Master Override, was instrumental in stopping HADES from causing a second and irreversible global extinction.

It is soon revealed that Faro, after centuries have passed, has turned into a pile of flesh, because of his failed attempt at gaining immortal life through Far Zenith's immortality technology. Despite Ted's efforts to preserve his legacy and instill respect among the people of the new world, practically everyone who knew about him and the extent of the damage he caused in the ancient past developed a highly negative opinion of him.

Similar to Elisabet Sobeck, Aloy utterly detested him, recognising him for the hypocrite and egomaniac he was, and having no sympathy for him since he thought he deserved what happened to him. Even worse was Sylens' attitude of him; he was angered by his purge of APOLLO and quipped sarcastically that he would have dissected him if given the chance. Sylens was a man concerned with learning about the ancient world. He was viewed by Varl as a "coward" who "crawled into a hole" after killing the "heroes" who had saved the world. GAIA, on the other hand, spoke about him with icy indifference, calling him "impulsive", "narcissistic" and "unstable" and concluding that his demise was the inevitable result of his deeds.

Ironically, the only person who sympathises was Zo, who couldn't fathom how the guy who had once been hailed as the "saviour of the world" could have let avarice get the better of him and ended up sinking so low. However, it's unclear if Zo feels sorry for him or not. The Quen tribe, on the other hand, holds Faro in high regard and refers to him as "the Renewer" within the Legacy, the most esteemed of the 21st century Old Ones whom they refer to as their "Ancestors."

Ironically, they were seeing him exactly as he desired the people of the new world to see him. This is mostly due to the Quen's inability to access data past the 2050s, which meant they were only aware of Ted's accomplishments during the Clawback decade, which Elisabet and his scientists claimed credit for and for which he denied any responsibility. However, after learning of Ted's part in the global extinction, Alva's opinion of Faro is also similarly in a lowlight to the rest of Aloy's companions.

Trivia[]

  • Ted is never physically seen in-game only seen in holograms and heard in audio clips. He is later seen through a hologram by Aloy during her visit to Thebes, where he becomes nothing more than a pile of flesh, due to the failure of his own immortality technology.

External Links[]

Navigation[]

            Horizon Series Logo Villains

Artificial Intelligences
Machines | Nemesis | HADES | HEPHAESTUS | VAST SILVER

Organisations
Eclipse | Sons of Prometheus | Faro Automated Solutions | Regalla's Rebels

Nora
Bast | Resh | Lansra

Carja
Jiran | Zaid | Ahsis | Ranaman | Firiv | Hashiv | Gavan

Shadow Carja
Helis | Bahavas | Merciful Yusis | Vezreh

Banuk
Sylens

Oseram
Dervahl | Olin Delverson | Fernund | Rasgrund | Korl | Ulvund Freeholder | Asera | Ohlgrud Smithsson

Tenakth
Regalla | Ullia | Grudda

Quen
Ceo | Bohai | Rheng

Londra's Devotees
Zeth | Fedder | Pirik

Far Zenith
Gerard Bieri | Tilda van der Meer | Erik Visser | Verbena Sutter | Walter Londra

Old Ones
Ted Faro | Hank Shaw

Advertisement