For me New Vegas is the game Fallout 3 should have been.
Why?
And also don't let us forget:
[ul][li] Much better characters, which actually added a lot to the games atmosphere[/li]
[li] Much tighter story integration - think about it: almost every site in New Vegas had some story tied to a quest. I did not see this in F3. There, a lot of the actual sites were just recycled explorable dungeons. They were just there for the loot. Nothing more.[/li]
[li] What you are doing during the story feels as it actually matters: from changing the desolate state of the NCR, over calming down freeside and finding a sheriff from Primm directly up to the final battle. Granted, it could have been much better, but it was still leagues ahead of F3.[/li]
[li]The DLCs were really good - despite being DLCs. Granted, I did not play the DLCs of F3 but from everything I've heard they can't possibly compare to the humour of Old World Blues or the atmosphere of Dead Money and Lonesome Road. Besides, the simple fact that all three have an overarching storyline connecting all of them is worth even more praise.[/li][/ul]
Why?
Well, first of all, this.j-e-f-f-e-r-s said:Fallout 3 never offered me anything like that to ponder.
And also don't let us forget:
[ul][li] Much better characters, which actually added a lot to the games atmosphere[/li]
[li] Much tighter story integration - think about it: almost every site in New Vegas had some story tied to a quest. I did not see this in F3. There, a lot of the actual sites were just recycled explorable dungeons. They were just there for the loot. Nothing more.[/li]
[li] What you are doing during the story feels as it actually matters: from changing the desolate state of the NCR, over calming down freeside and finding a sheriff from Primm directly up to the final battle. Granted, it could have been much better, but it was still leagues ahead of F3.[/li]
[li]The DLCs were really good - despite being DLCs. Granted, I did not play the DLCs of F3 but from everything I've heard they can't possibly compare to the humour of Old World Blues or the atmosphere of Dead Money and Lonesome Road. Besides, the simple fact that all three have an overarching storyline connecting all of them is worth even more praise.[/li][/ul]