Fallout 3 was my first roleplaying game period. I saw the Prima Games guide at my library and then I bought my friend’s PS3 from him and a new copy.
PS3 was easily the worst way to play that game, but I did not care.
I eventually played New Vegas, and I would say I like that game more. But, I don’t think it ever recreated the feeling I had stepping out of Vault 101 for the first time.
I don’t think any Fallout will quite live up to exiting 101. There’s the history there, both played through and implied, the level of threat you face, choices to be made… You fight your way through, say goodbye, possibly while asking your best friend to come with you, and step out into…
Peaceful nothingness. No gunshots, no ones following you. From tight corridors to open space, a ceiling to the sky, cold steel to warm stone underneath your feet. Your radio springs to life, picking up the Enclave station quickly followed by GNR a few steps away. Springvale and Megaton off in the distance, setting a natural course.
It gives you a narrow, linear corridor and then says “Here it is. Welcome to the world”. Something Oblivion also did, but not quite to the cinematic level Fallout 3 provided.
Man, you were blessed. Maybe it was because I had all DLC installed, but I had a lot of hard crashes in Fallout 3 if I played for multiple hours, especially above level 20.
New Vegas would hard crash every 2 hours on PS3 as well, I imagine it was just a Gamebryo engine thing.
What a great game at a great time in my life. Fallout 3 gave me the same feeling if not a better one.
Fallout 3 was my first roleplaying game period. I saw the Prima Games guide at my library and then I bought my friend’s PS3 from him and a new copy.
PS3 was easily the worst way to play that game, but I did not care.
I eventually played New Vegas, and I would say I like that game more. But, I don’t think it ever recreated the feeling I had stepping out of Vault 101 for the first time.
I don’t think any Fallout will quite live up to exiting 101. There’s the history there, both played through and implied, the level of threat you face, choices to be made… You fight your way through, say goodbye, possibly while asking your best friend to come with you, and step out into…
Peaceful nothingness. No gunshots, no ones following you. From tight corridors to open space, a ceiling to the sky, cold steel to warm stone underneath your feet. Your radio springs to life, picking up the Enclave station quickly followed by GNR a few steps away. Springvale and Megaton off in the distance, setting a natural course.
It gives you a narrow, linear corridor and then says “Here it is. Welcome to the world”. Something Oblivion also did, but not quite to the cinematic level Fallout 3 provided.
I also played on PS3. I never had any issues with it though.
Man, you were blessed. Maybe it was because I had all DLC installed, but I had a lot of hard crashes in Fallout 3 if I played for multiple hours, especially above level 20.
New Vegas would hard crash every 2 hours on PS3 as well, I imagine it was just a Gamebryo engine thing.