October 19, 2010
Fallout 3: Game of The Year Edition
Posted by: kk : Category: PC Games
Fallout 3: Game of The Year Edition
- Take in the sights and sounds of the vast Capital Wasteland! See the great monuments of the United States lying in post-apocalyptic ruin!
- Vault-Tec engineers bring you the latest in human ability simulation – the SPECIAL Character System! Utilizing new breakthroughs in points-based ability representation, SPECIAL affords unlimited customization of your character.
- The wizards at Vault-Tec have done it again! No longer constrained to just one view, experience the world from 1st or 3rd person perspective.
- Feeling like a dastardly villain today, or a Good Samaritan? Pick a side or walk the line, as every situation can be dealt with in many different ways.
- Rain death and destruction in an all-new cinematic presentation featuring gory dismemberments and spectacular explosions.
Fallout 3 Game of the Year Edition PC
Rating:
(out of 78 reviews)
List Price: $ 49.99
Price: $ 31.95
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October 19th, 2010 at 2:32 pm
Review by NeuroSplicer for Fallout 3: Game of The Year Edition
Rating:
I am old enough to have played the original game when it first came out in 1997. I was a great fan of the series that followed and, thus, was very eager to get my hands on this latest installment. In a short sentence: FALLOUT-3 is A DREAM COME TRUE! And now the dream is complete.
It is a cRPG game in which the player can alternate between the First and Third person perspective roaming a world comparable in size with OBLIVION. The action has moved from Vault 13 and Southern California to Vault 101 and Washington, D.C. and the story brakes away from the previous bloodlines. However, the atmosphere of the original has been maintained and its scents sharpened: veterans will find it fitting like and old glove – whereas the new gamers are in store for a bag of pleasant surprises.
The graphics are wonderful, the guns detailed and the environments highly interactive. Short of a screenshot, imagine what would HalfLife-2 would look if released today. And similar to HL2, FALLOUT-3 does not require an…ubercomputer to run smoothly. Once you see a NPC move though, you understand where the corners were cut.
Character customization is carried out in great style using the new and improved PIP-BOY at the beginning. You exit the vault and the harsh reality of a world that barely survived annihilation slaps you on the face. Adapt or perish.
The main storyline is there to be followed but FALLOUT-3 offers the greatest number of alternative choices I have ever encountered in a game! There is always a great number of paths to follow in order to achieve any goal – but every choice comes with a consequences tag. This is common feature of most classic cRPGs but in FALLOUT-3 I saw it implemented like never before. If nothing else, this sends replayability through the roof.
Side-quests offer little besides distraction and experience points (XP) to be spend on character improvement. XP are gained solely by completing quests, emerging victorious from fights, finding locations, picking locks and hacking terminals – and they are not limited by the action they were earned. Leveling up is based on 7 basic attributes [Strength, Perception, Endurance, Charisma, Intelligence, Agility & Luck - acronym?;)] that, in turn, affect your (13) specific skills. Leveling up used to be capped at Level-20 (increased to 30 by installing the DLCs), as the game designers wanted to encourage replaying the game. However, with this increase, now your character can realize its full potential. Replaying the game is still a joy though.
The game is violent and gory but well within tasteful limits. Not so with the language – but it is trade off with realism. In a radioactive world, Sunday-school niceties are bound to go out the window.
What deserves a special mention is V.A.T.S. (:Vault-Tec Assisted Targeting System) which opens new vistas in cRPG design. It is an ingenious system which lets you pause the game and target specific body parts of your opponents. The success of your attack still depends on your skills but the end effect is cinematic and amazing (remember SWORDFISH?).
This GOTY edition includes all 5 DLCs released so far: OPERATION-ANCHORAGE, THE PITT, BROKEN STEEL, POINT LOOKOUT and MOTHERSHIP ZETA. Compared to the basic FALLOUT 3, applying the above improves the experience immensely! As mentioned above, since one used to reach the Level 20 cap long before the endgame, increasing this by 10 levels will give you a brand new ballgame.
Augmented weapons, new territories, novel foes and unexpected story branching – all for the price of the original game. I own the original game and coveted after these DLCs in the past months, waiting for a complete edition such as this GOTY one. When it became available I jumped at the opportunity to get them all. And did not regret it for a moment.
After the nuclear summer of 2008 (with all the Limited-Installation/defective EA releases), this seems like a post-apocalyptic dawn indeed! BETHESDA decided to listen to the gaming community and did NOT cripple this beautiful game with any idiotic DRM scheme. Inputting a serial number and a DVD-check is more than reasonable.
The publishers of FALLOUT-3 understand that there is a fine balance between “protecting the product” and…”insulting your own customers”. And they obviously view respect as the two way street that it is – and for this they deserve our support: buy this game, today.
Voting with our wallets is the only argument the gaming industry cannot afford to ignore. And it is about time to cast some well deserved positive votes.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
October 19th, 2010 at 3:24 pm
Review by Alabaster Jones for Fallout 3: Game of The Year Edition
Rating:
Fallout 3 is just an amazing game in every respect. If you’re familiar with Bethesda’s other RPGs, you will have a fair idea of what to expect. It is an open world “sandbox” RPG with elements of a FPS. When it was released a year ago, Fallout fans somewhat derisively called it “Oblivion with guns”. Truth be told, on the surface, it is a very fair assessment of this game, but that’s not a bad thing at all! It’s definitely a similar kind of game, but the setting and humor are quite unique. At no time does it feel like any other game you’ve played before, other than the fact that it’s got Bethesda’s signature style all over it. There is so much to do in this game that you can easily get as much or more playtime as a normal game without even touching the main storyline quests. When you take into account the 5 add-on packs that come with this GOTY edition, the “bang to buck” ratio is increased quite a bit in favor of the bang. The add-on packs alone retail for the price of this package. If you already have Fallout 3 without the add-ons, you may as well get this edition and sell your original. If you don’t already have Fallout 3, then there is absolutely no reason to pass on this edition of the game. It was named Game of the Year for a very good reason. In fact, it’s easily one of the best games of the last 10 years.
October 19th, 2010 at 4:06 pm
Review by Nelson F. Puig for Fallout 3: Game of The Year Edition
Rating:
Rated 4 stars alone but with the all the expansions (and including broken steel that like magic
wil make the games fantastic by adding 10 more levels and increasing the degree of difficulty a lot
from the beginning of the game not the expansions only) So you install all of them and start the
game from the very beginning and it becomes more difficult a lot faster. Stronger enemies, Great new weapons, and fantastic variety of locations, etc. to me there is nothing out there that can match this game as a total package. So I rated 5 stars. This will only apply to the PC version… NP
October 19th, 2010 at 4:55 pm
Review by Paul Tinsley for Fallout 3: Game of The Year Edition
Rating:
I already own Fallout 3 and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I was holding out for the GOTY edition, as it would have been way too expensive to obtain the expansions separately.
What can I say … you mean you haven’t bought it yet! Not only do you get an immensely immersive first-person shooter / role-playing game, but an immensely rich diversity of places to explore and weapons and equipment to use.
Also, vote with your wallet. This game only has a simple disc check and not the draconian limited install nonsense that EA is so fond of. I want to support companies that use lighter DRM schemes and I recommend that you do too. EA is a dangerous giant and if left unchecked by competition, it could have us all locked into endless cycles of micro payments and activation hurdles, dispensing more money than we need to for much less value. Support the makers of Fallout 3 and you will preserve that essential level of competition that keeps the PC Games Market so innovative and vibrant.
October 19th, 2010 at 5:55 pm
Review by MPB for Fallout 3: Game of The Year Edition
Rating:
I had some trouble getting started on a Windows 7 computer with an i5 processor. At first I thought the problem was W7, but it turns out that F3 does not work well with more than 2 cores. Here is the fix:
Open up the fallout.ini file in: My DocumentsMy GamesFallout3
Find the line:
bUseThreadedAI=0
change it to:
bUseThreadedAI=1
Add another line after it and insert:
iNumHWThreads=2
This worked for me.
I’m only getting started but the game is beautiful so far … it’s amazing to be IN the vault, rather than viewing it from the top down.