Just kidding. Obviously there is a major plothole in Aliens 3, which is why I'm so happy Blokkamp and Scott have decided to shun the even existence of these sequences for Alien 5. If we are lucky more biology of the aliens will be explained, hopefully to bridge those gaps that we misunderstood. Sadly
We just can't win. Its so funny because every theory is disprovable, by the movie that left a hole for theories. I do have one last theory however. What if the Queens eggs start out very small? Of course they'd have to actually fit in her body when they are first conceived, but what if the eggs themselves grow over time (this process is sped up when she uses here egg laying attachment). If this is the case, then the queen could indeed lay an egg in the bay, but it would slowly grow over time, which makes sense because the actually egg is a living being, not just the facehugger.
Quote from: Local Trouble on Nov 29, 2016, 04:41:55 PM
Quote from: whenderson272 on Nov 29, 2016, 04:25:08 PMOne last theory...Newt...poor little newt. What if she was infected with an embyro already, and it just didn't hatch until the ship left. I do understand that there was a facehugger for her in the room, but what if that one was actually headed towards Ripley since she caused motion in the room. I'm squeezin all the theories out of every nook and cranny. But the most probably of all of these explanations is
Then why did the aliens take her back to the nest with the clear intention of having another facehugger impregnate her?
I was saying that Newt, was infects off camera while in the nest. Once she got there, she was impregnated, but it looks to us like the nearby facehugger was going to impregnate her, but it was actually going to latch onto Ripley, who triggered the motion. This brings about another question. How was the xenomorh in Alien able to create a nest, if it was not a queen? It had trapped a few of the members of the Nostromo if you remember, but none of them (or at least we are led to believe) that none of the victims had been impregnated, but if this is the case, then why was the xenomorph setting up a nest? This leads me to believe Xenomorphs have the ability to impregnate hosts with living embryo's, without the use of facehuggers, possible by use of their extremely long and thin tails.