Rating: 8.5/10
I personally own most of the games in the Fallout franchise. Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout: Tactics, Fallout 3, and Fallout: New Vegas are all in a disk case somewhere around here… But I believe Fallout: New Vegas really stands out. For one it was the first of the Fallout series lacking the typical vault obsession. While it did have many Vaults in the game, the player didn’t start in a Vault, or with any intention of going to one like most of the previous games. Even in Fallout: Tactics you start in a bunker rather than a Vault but they’re still very closely related. In New Vegas you start off in a rather “backwoods” kind of town called Goodsprings. Which, if anyone didn’t know was based off a real town in Nevada. It’s a strange change from the norm but they still managed to work the Pip-Boy in there anyway. The main lacking point of the game however was the fact that there wasn’t a big change between Fallout 3 and New Vegas game wise. The controls are the same, the bulk of the system seemed unchanged, and alot of the additions to the game seemed alot like rip offs of the mods made for Fallout 3 on the PC. None the less it’s a very interesting game, with the same gore and humor of the predecessors. I play games like Fallout, Halo, CoD, and Oblivion for their stories mostly and New Vegas didn’t disappoint. New Vegas had a very engaging story with plenty of very interesting characters. Many of my favorite characters include the ingenious Mr. House, the insane Tabitha, and the (mostly) emotionless Boone. Aside from the main storyline and quest line in New Vegas there were many many side stories and side quests to keep the player entertained. One of the major pros to buying the computer version instead of the Xbox 360 version is the ever growing number of player created mods for the game. Many websites have hundreds even thousands of mods absolutely free. I know I must have at least 30GB of my hard drive full of mods for New Vegas alone. The only con is that you have to have a pretty high end PC to run New Vegas on it’s higher graphics settings. But if you’re like me and computers are the only thing you don’t cheap out on, then that shouldn’t be an issue. Another pro of New Vegas is the fact that they’ve added iron sights to many of the guns by default. So that rather than just zooming in like in Fallout 3 you get to actually look down the sight like in a normal FPS. While the game might be a bit too similar to Fallout 3, it has enough of a difference to be unique. However the major sign that they’re very similar is that one of the free mods I mentioned allows you to combine Fallout 3 with Fallout: New Vegas. After a bit of clever copying, pasting, and extracting of files and folders you can start up Fallout: New Vegas and travel back East to the Capital Wasteland and play through Fallout 3 and it’s storyline. But on the other hand that just makes the game all the bigger and all the better. Any fan of the Fallout franchise, FPS games, or needless gore and explosions should definitely get this game, at least for the Xbox 360. Anyone who has a powerful gaming PC like mine at home should absolutely buy this game for the PC, they’d be squandering their computing power otherwise.