![]() ![]() I’ve played through the rest of series at least three times. I’ve spent, roughly, 1000 hours between Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas. Because it makes me think it will be a lot like Fallout 3, one of my favorite games ever – which would be a very bad thing.Īnd that’s going to take a lot of explaining. That’s extraordinarily rare for a AAA game, a welcome surprise, and also something that scares the hell out of me. We don’t know much about the gameplay, and we know absolutely nothing about the story. The other absurd thing about Fallout 4’s release being so soon is that we still know pretty much nothing about it. Say those words in January, you’d be weighed down with rocks, set on fire, and cast into the river just for getting people’s hopes up. ![]() Not because I think it’ll be delayed, but simply because I waited for so long for its existence to be confirmed that that it is less than a month away feels like a dream. ![]() Pick up my sci-fi novels, The Last Exodus, The Exiled Earthborn and The Sons of Sora, which are now in print and online.I’m still in a state of disbelief that Fallout 4 is coming this November. If handled properly, they have the potential to turn Fallout 4 into a vague approximation of a wasteland Pokémon simulator, and that’s a whole new level of awesome for the series.įollow me on Twitter, on Facebook, and on Tumblr. The point is, as excited as I am about new mission and story content, I actually think these other two pieces of DLC sound pretty great as well, and are more than just “companion/workshop” DLC as they’re being described. Kill an enemy to almost dead, then spring a trap on them and have Preston Garvey get off his quest-giving butt and haul them back to town for you. I think it would be better (and more Pokémon-like) if you could do this in the wild. I’m not sure how exactly the “trap” system works for these, whether you just set it up in a settlement and hope something awesome wanders into it, or if it's more involved than that. Then you can keep them in a collection, or battle them to the death. Yes, there are obvious choices like finding that prize Legendary Glowing Alpha Deathclaw, but there are a lot of high-end enemies that would be cool to “trap,” from top-tier ghouls to Super Mutant Masters to Raider leaders and Gunners in full power armor. I’m picturing the ability to try and catch the most elite enemies from all across the Commonwealth, and building a collection either through taming them, or through taxidermy. Trapping, taming and battling live creatures from the Wasteland? This is now officially post-apocalyptic Pokémon, whether you want to admit it or not. ![]() The Wasteland Workshop also includes a suite of new design options for your settlements like nixie tube lighting, letter kits, taxidermy and more!”Īlright now come on. “With the Wasteland Workshop, design and set cages to capture live creatures – from raiders to Deathclaws! Tame them or have them face off in battle, even against your fellow settlers. But if that’s not enough for you, here’s the description for Wasteland Workshop, aka the pet DLC: You are essentially hunting robo-Pokémon to build your own robo-Pokémon to help you battle in the wild. But the $10 DLC is actually introducing a bunch of new robots into the world, and you’re supposed to hunt those down for their parts so you can assemble them into your own companion.Ĭomparing this to Pokémon may be a bit of a reach, but anything that has you roaming an open world hunting down a variety of enemies to “collect” seems like the same concept to me. When most people, myself included, heard “build your own robot companion,” I thought it would be just another workshop where you assembled bots out of scrapped materials in the game already, turrets, synths, toilets, etc. ![]()
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