Easton Dark said:
But, no, that's not objective. In making the combat more involved, I found it to be much more frustrating, and is a symptom of why New Vegas rail-roads you down south at the start, because of bullet-immune deathclaws. Not only that, but it hardcoded the 2 key to be ammo switch, and there's no way I found to change it. I WANT 2 FOR MY SECOND GUN CHOICE, BLEH.
The techncial aspects of combat ARE much better handled. ADS actually works on just about every gun, there are more options you can choose to use or not use, and balance is much better when it comes to the different combat skills.
Additionally, if you wanna talk about railroading, how about the literal railroading FO3 does? So much of DC is linear walkways. That's not getting into the fact that many of the areas in the game DO require some story-based path anyway, and it's also actually not at all impossible to get to New Vegas via the I-15 from the start. It's also worth noting that if you do this, the game doesn't break down or insist you go elsewhere first
Easton Dark said:
Look, I like obsolescence in my rpg's, and I like hard enemies. But when there's absolutely no way to hurt them until later, that's metroid-vania shit right there, which I hate. So subjective.
You can actually hurt them though, it's just that they're actually based on Fallout 1 and 2's lore, and not the jumbled mess that was 3. Deathclaws are actually DANGEROUS and don't die to papercuts.
Easton Dark said:
I could tell you that Fallout 3 is objectively better because there's more interesting interior locations to explore, but that's just my opinion. Maybe people like less to explore and love empty desert settings.
Except your points are subjective, that's why you can't say one is "objectively" better.
More "interesting" locations is subjective unless you have a metric by which to measure them.
Easton Dark said:
And Operation Anchorage chops Honest Hearts into little pieces. Honest Hearts is the worst of all the Fallout DLCs, followed very closely by Lonesome Road. Mothership Zeta is third worst though, I'll give you that.
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Didn't you just complain about railroading?
Also, Operation Anchorage is basically CoD done in Fallout. It added nothing to the overall narrative, and was filled with the most ridiculously predictable storyline I've ever seen from Bethedsa or Obsidian. I'm really not sure what your method of comparison is to even the worst of New Vegas DLC (which is either Honest Hearts or Dead Money, depending on who you ask)
00slash00 said:
If there was any connection at all to the first two games, I completely missed them.
What?
NCR is one of the main factions, and their growth and reason for occupying the Mojave are both part of the main storyline
Jacobstown is founded by Marcus and populated by super mutants and nightkin who didn't really know where else to go post-Master. They continue to try to fit in despite the NCR's displeasure at their proximity to Vegas
Cass is the daughter of a companion in Fallout 2, Jass Wilkins is the nephew of an NPC in the same game, multiple characters come from New Reno
The Brotherhood of Steel and Enclave exist, but in small, hidden bases as the former has never been a major faction in the same vein as the NV NCR and the latter was essentially destroyed in Fallout 2. Both groups reflect on the choices they made that led them to their current state
Also much of the game re-uses conceps from Van Buren, which was going to be Fallout 3 but never saw the light of day because lolinterplay
Toxinthegreat said:
Fallout 3 had the better Story and atmosphere
Look, I get if you like the aesthetic of Fallout 3, but how did it have a better story? It was a hacked together "greatest hits" list of Fallout 1 and 2 story features
"We need you to leave the vault" "We need you to purify the water with this not-water-chip" "Oh no! The should-be-dead Enclave are attacking!"
Not to mention the fact that, as has been mentioned in this thread, there's really no reason to retake Project Purity if the Enclave are going to go through all that effort to clean all of the water anyway.