The game can be easy or hard, and that's without considering the difficulty slider. Level-scaling is there, but I think it's mostly done with major faction enemies (like the Legion) and is set whenever you start a DLC. Outside of that, enemy levels are set. If you want to challenge yourself, go off the main pathway when you're still early in the game. There you will meet enemies meant for high-level characters to kill (Deathclaw, Cazador swarms, Giant Radscorpion nests, Feral Ghoul Reavers).uhddh said:I've not played the DLCs for NV so I'll render that part irrelevant.
I found the Mojave to be much more interesting then the capital wasteland. I think it was the fact that different parts of the map looked completely different to each other. Meanwhile Fallout 3 was rather bland. Also, the Wild West sub-theme was way better than the 1950s sub-theme F3 had going on.
Oddly enough, my version of NV has never crashed. No bugs or anything.
I will admit Vegas was much too easy. Even without Boone playing the game while I just hid behind a rock pounding stimpacks into my eye every 2 minutes. Oh occasionally I talked to someone as well.
And you should really give the DLC chapters a try, especially if you're into the writing in New Vegas. Each chapter intertwines with each other in some way (big enough to enhance the experience, small enough that you won't feel like you're missing out if you haven't played the others) and also ties in to parts of the main game. They all each go for their own distinct style too.
If you're into exploration: Honest Hearts, Old World Blues
If you're into an oppressive atmosphere: Dead Money, Lonesome Road
If you love the off-beat humor of the game: Old World Blues
If you you're more into being skill-based rather than combat-based: Dead Money
If you're into Survivalism: Honest Hearts
If you want to know more about that "other courier": Lonesome Road (all of them mention him, but Lonesome Road is the main show there)