Personally, I'd say Fallout 2 (but that's where the series peaked for me). It might be a bit clunky by modern standards, but is well worth it. If that doesn't work out for you, Fallout 3 isn't a bad second choice.
That's not a very good deal, honestly. $5.99 for vanilla, whereas the Ultimate Edition tends to go to that price regularly during Steam sales. And, with New Vegas, you really want the DLC.
You need to make some changes to the ini. Google around for "inumhwthreads" for a guide of what values you need to change.How are you PC, win 7, folks avoiding the crashes with Fallout 3 (steam)? I seriously have to save everything I think about it to avoid losing progress from the inevitable crash.
Fallout 1, 2, and New Vegas all take place in the west-- California, Nevada, Utah. 3 takes place in the east (DC area) and has its own canon. You lose nothing by skipping 3.Mmmm would playing NV skipping F3 altogether be a good idea, story wise? Don't you lose references or something like that?
If you want a third-person shooter, play Fallout New Vegas. If you want a tactical role-playing sim, play Fallout 2.
Play 1 and 2, skip the others.
Are Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas radically different than one another?
Not sure there is such a thing as a good first-person stealth game. But yeah, you can certainly "stealth" (crouch) a whole lot in New Vegas.Alternately, if you want a first-person stealth and diplomacy game, play Fallout New Vegas.
Gotta say, the anti-FO3 stuff in here is embarrassing. It's not written in the traditional manner of Fallout and suffers the typical pitfalls of Bethesda titles, but it's still a damn good game. Plus playing it before NV can highlight what Obsidian improved upon in NV.
I don't know why people are recommending Fallout 1 or 2.
They don't hold up well at all today, like at all. I became a huge fan of the series with 3, and you couldn't pay me to play those old games, it will definitely turn someone off that isn't a fan.
I suggest Fallout 3 and New Vegas, that's all you pretty much really.
I advise against Fallout 1 or 2.
When there's an "I'm new to Assassin's Creed" thread, nobody seriously suggests the 2D platformer. It might be a good game, but it isn't representative of the series. Given this is an "I'm new to Fallout" thread, well....
When there's an "I'm new to Assassin's Creed" thread, nobody seriously suggests the 2D platformer. It might be a good game, but it isn't representative of the series. Given this is an "I'm new to Fallout" thread, well....
Maybe, just maybe, some people aren't bothered by the older look, gameplay, or isometric view. Better to recommend it and allow them to decide then to impose upon them.
It's just like the Fallout 3 trashing. It has a weaker narrative and mission design than Obsidian's New Vegas, but it's still good to where someone should at least have the opportunity to form their own opinion.
It's not like these games are much of an investment (monetary-wise) at this point. Even with DLC I'd be surprised to see them more than $15, and Steam sales usually bring them to around $5-8
And given this is about their interest in the Bethesda developed Fallout 4, would it not be more apt to recommend their game over Fallout 3 in your example?
I mean, he said he is excited for Fallout 4. Those older games are very different from that. The best way he will get set up for that is to play the newer games. Like I said, the old style might just turn him off from the series, so I wouldn't go for those for first impressions. That is my advice.
He said he wants to be as prepared as possible for Fallout 4. The best way to prepare for that is to play the good games that are representative of the series and why people like it. He shouldn't play Fallout 3 first and use that as a baseline to compare the other games to. He should play the other games first, then play Fallout 3 so he can properly lower his expectations.
If you intend to play both 3 and New Vegas, play 3 first. I love 3 (it's a really good game), but it's hard to go back to after New Vegas.
Skipping to end of thread so sorry if it's already been asked but are the PS3 versions of the last two games any good?
I had them both on 360 but never finished New Vegas before (my second) 360 shit the bed and died. Wouldn't mind a reply of both but only if they play ok on PS3.
Can someone give a detailed explanation of what made NV better than 3?
I'm going to rebuy NV for PC... was bug ridden on launch so I ignored it and didn't think PS3 handled it well.
But I never got into it after that, despite loving and finishing FO3.
I need to play NV before 3, so I'm pretty excited to hear it's better. I recall some differences, but I assume there are more critical nuances that fans love about NV
Skipping to end of thread so sorry if it's already been asked but are the PS3 versions of the last two games any good?
I had them both on 360 but never finished New Vegas before (my second) 360 shit the bed and died. Wouldn't mind a reply of both but only if they play ok on PS3.
I'm not going to go into extraordinary detail, but the writing is a lot better. The games played pretty much the same, to my memory. Certain skills and abilities are of more consequence as well - so there's some mechanics rebalancing that was well-received. I liked the setting better and the more ad hoc related "quests", but ymmv on those.Can someone give a detailed explanation of what made NV better than 3?
I'm going to rebuy NV for PC... was bug ridden on launch so I ignored it and didn't think PS3 handled it well.
But I never got into it after that, despite loving and finishing FO3.
I need to play NV before 3, so I'm pretty excited to hear it's better. I recall some differences, but I assume there are more critical nuances that fans love about NV
Can someone give a detailed explanation of what made NV better than 3?
I'm going to rebuy NV for PC... was bug ridden on launch so I ignored it and didn't think PS3 handled it well.
But I never got into it after that, despite loving and finishing FO3.
I need to play NV before 3, so I'm pretty excited to hear it's better. I recall some differences, but I assume there are more critical nuances that fans love about NV
Mmmm would playing NV skipping F3 altogether be a good idea, story wise? Don't you lose references or something like that?
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Especially FO3 GOTY but both of them suffer from the huge bugs that Skyrim had, only they never got patched for them. So, the longer you play, the more often the game freezes, crashes, and just plain doesn't work.
Not really. They look worse and perform worse as far as I remember.
Can someone give a detailed explanation of what made NV better than 3?
Can someone give a detailed explanation of what made NV better than 3?
I'm going to rebuy NV for PC... was bug ridden on launch so I ignored it and didn't think PS3 handled it well.
But I never got into it after that, despite loving and finishing FO3.
I need to play NV before 3, so I'm pretty excited to hear it's better. I recall some differences, but I assume there are more critical nuances that fans love about NV
Skipping to end of thread so sorry if it's already been asked but are the PS3 versions of the last two games any good?
I had them both on 360 but never finished New Vegas before (my second) 360 shit the bed and died. Wouldn't mind a reply of both but only if they play ok on PS3.
IThe order shouldn't matter in that regard, unless you believe OP is too stupid/ignorant to understand what developer worked on which game and is incapable of managing their expectations.
Can you play fallout with out ever playing any of the previous games? Or are they all sequels of each other?
Can you play fallout with out ever playing any of the previous games? Or are they all sequels of each other?
For the record, I am fully aware of the style changes between FO1/2 and FO3/NV.
I'm no stranger to the top-down style RPG's, nor the 3rd person style RPG's. Both have their merits, and I wouldn't have any problems managing my expectations for either.
Skipping to end of thread so sorry if it's already been asked but are the PS3 versions of the last two games any good?
I had them both on 360 but never finished New Vegas before (my second) 360 shit the bed and died. Wouldn't mind a reply of both but only if they play ok on PS3.
But 3's peaks are very high, so it might be worth playing it for a bit. The open-world aspect is pretty mind blowing at first. Until you feel there is something wrong with it (hard to describe, but it feels you can go everywhere, but that you are stepping outside of the boat in the pirates of the Caribbean ride: everything becomes fake and you're not supposed to be there. Nothing was designed with the level of precision, consistency, and world-building an open world like this requires). Then it becomes quite a bit of a bore IMHO.
That's good. Hopefully you get into it better than I. FYI though, I think you quoted the bit of me and Caereth debating about Fallout 3 and Vegas, and not classic FO vs shooter FO![]()
No direct sequels, they start all over the place in the timeline. Fallout 2 was 80 years after Fallout, Fallout 3 was some time after that. New Vegas took place on the opposite side of the country from 3 with completely different characters. There are references all over the place to previous games, but nothing really relies on knowledge from earlier games to understand.
There's some references, but more or less they are rather independent of one another. Fallout 1 and 2 are the closest to not being the case, but even then that's mostly in the premise iirc.
That's good. Hopefully you get into it better than I. FYI though, I think you quoted the bit of me and Caereth debating about Fallout 3 and Vegas, and not classic FO vs shooter FO![]()
Can you play fallout with out ever playing any of the previous games? Or are they all sequels of each other?
Ha! So I wasn't the only one slightly disappointed with Fallout 3. It's a great game, don't get me wrong, but compared to Fallout 2 it certainly doesn't hold up well.
Btw: Is the 360 GOTY Version of NV alright?
Yep
I have both 1&2 at GOG but I'm just going to jump into 2. While it's downloading, I'm reading the manual and it has a good bit of history about what happened. Is this essentially the story of 1? I played 1 briefly many years back but when I last tried it, I just couldn't get into it again.
I'm seeing a lot of suggestions to play 2 in here which leads me to believe it still holds up well.