Aaaaaand, Sajuukhar shows up, waving the Bethesda banner furiously. I don't understand why you take such issue with people criticizing Bethesda games, man.
At least FF12's desert settings only lasted through the first 1/4th of the game then you got much more rich locales.balladbird said:Can't really get mad at your opinion, OP. Taste in setting and atmosphere is a very personal thing. I adored NV far more than 3, but 3's atmosphere was more pleasing to me, as well. Part of the reason is just my personal dislike of deserts, though. I can't believe how many games I've loved emphatically but had my passion tempered by the desert setting. XD (well okay, just NV and FF12, but still)
Really, NV is the winner for me just because of the profound impact it has on its players. Unlike 3 (and all the former games featuring the enclave, really) there's a lot more subjectivity in the good versus evil aspects of the story. It's always fun reading a person's reasons for supporting Mr. House, NCR, or the Legion (what few supporters it has) in the end.
In Fallout 3 you finish Vault 101 and then you're off in the wastelandAbomination said:Er, I don't think you know what linear means.Mikeyfell said:The reason I like F3 better then FNV is that FNV is extremely linear. I played it once then tried to start again. When I realized I was in for about 18 hours of the same exact stuff I said fuck it.
F3 was far more linear tha NV.
Says the person who never took on the Cazador swarm with dynamite, or used a stealthboy to sneak past the Deathclaw quarry.Mikeyfell said:It takes a REALLY long time to open up the whole sandbox in NV
But are those items in enough abundance to feed the large settlements? And Even then for how long? We are to take it that many of those settlements have been there for years subsisting on hunting and scavenging alone. That might work if you kept moving to follow the food. But as it is they would exhaust local food supplies before long. And again they don't set this up in game we never hear of people going out to hunt and gather (as far as I can remember I haven't played it in like 2-3 years.) And even if they did tell us that would break the rule of 'show don't tell'. Almost all of that food you mentioned is irradiated in the game.SajuukKhar said:Ok....scorptatious said:Could you give an example please? I'm not saying you're wrong. I just haven't played 3 in a long time, and I just happened to really like what they did with New Vegas in that regard.
If you go up to a food seller, such as Jenny Stahl in Megaton, you will see her inventory consist of food items such as
-Squirrel on a stick, Squirrel stew, Crispy squirrel bits
-Iguana-on-a-stick, iguana bits
-Mirelurk Cakes
-Brahmin Steaks
-Both kinds of Mutfruit
-Punga(if Point Lookout is installed)
So we know they eat all of those animals, and those plants, and we can visibly see Brahmin in every settlement except Tenpenny tower, and Rivet City.
Across the Capital wasteland one will find various generic hunter NPCs, who carry and sell mirelurk meat, yao guai meat, and mole rat meat. Supporting what we see in the food sellers inventories, and dialog from various NPCs about eating molerats. Grandma Sparkle in Wilheims Warf also mentions her kids hunting mirelurks.
You will also find many unnamed scavengers across the wasteland. Collecting every other type of thing people could want.
These hunters and scavengers trade with cities, for shelter/"services", who then trade what they don't need to the caravan merchants, who trade items between cities where they are needed most. Cities also trade scrap metal to Rivet City, in exchange for the fresh food grown in their science lab, such as carrots, apples, etc. etc.
All the resource gathering/movement is there in-game, you just have to pay attention and look for it.
Then Fallout 3 should be set somewhere around Fallout 1 or earlier times. It's simple: my immersion in F3 was generally destroyed due to setting inconsistency. In F2 we were shown the civilization rebuilding itself - new states and new societies are forming, and humanity is starting to fight Wasteland instead of hiding away from it. In F3, which is set after F2, we see none of this progress. Even moreso, there are no signs of any population being able to exist at all! Those people have nothing to eat, lots of establishments had to be robbed completely hundreds of years ago, etc. It's impossible to immerse into such a flawed from logical standpoint universe.Saviordd1 said:AH GOD, RUN FOR COVER; IT'S A NEW VEGAS v. FALLOUT 3 THREAD!
Wait, no, stop; it's not!
...
Don't give me that look.
...
I PROMISE this isn't a New Vegas v. Fallout 3 thread.
...
Well be that way.
Dick.
ANYWAY
For a while now I've tried to figure out exactly why I like Fallout 3 better. I mean New Vegas has more guns, more in common with the original Fallouts, more characters, mostly better characters, etc. Yet Fallout 3 was my Fallout port of call, not New Vegas; why?
Blaming the bugs was to easy, especially since several hundred patches and user made patches has fixed most of the problems.
And "Fuck Obsidian" is a bad argument.
So what is it?
Well today while roaming the New York State Museum (Which is a nice place to go for anyone who lives around Albany BTW.) it hit me rather suddenly.
It's the atmosphere. I don't mean atmosphere as in the greenish lighting of 3 versus the organgish of New Vegas. I mean how the game really feels to wander in.
Fallout 3 makes you feel like you're truly treading through a destroyed civilization. Like the hundreds of dead civilizations before it this one died suddenly and left its remains behind. You walk amongst the ashes of a true super power whose history is quickly being lost to all but a bare few people.
Compare to New Vegas, who shows civilization on the rise. Empires are being built, lines drawn, old world comforts returning, etc.
Fallout 3 is post Sherman Atlanta and New Vegas is Reconstruction.
Fallout 3 is walking through a radioactive Pompeii and New Vegas is the wild west.
And obviously some people prefer the wild west, I can't begrudge them that; especially with better gameplay systems in New Vegas.
But for me, I can't help but like the utterly destroyed civilization feeling of 3.
But that's my opinion, what do you think?
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