Register Lost Password?  Cookie?
  The time now is 05:45 AM GMT -6.  
Banshee Network
 
Quick Links
 
 
GameBanshee Swag
Site Features
Submit News
News Archives
Join Our Staff
Forums
Community Blogs
Reviews
Previews
Interviews
Editorials
About GB
Advertise With Us!
Advertisement
 
Go Back   GameBanshee Forums > Forum Categories > News & Feedback > GameBanshee News

Reply
GameBanshee Forums  
LinkBack Thread Tools Rate Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 07-21-2008, 03:14 PM
GameBanshee News's Avatar
News ID
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 24,071
Post Fallout 3 Previews

Two hands-on previews new to the internet, one from E3 and one not. OMG RPG reviews from E3.
I've seen it argued that it's impossible that Bethesda could really understand or love the Fallout franchise, rightfully viewed by PC gamers as a special piece of history. Why abandon the isometric view for (choke, gag) a first-person perspective? Why use something similar to the (choke, gag) Oblivion engine? Why isn't Troika or Black Isle involved??

Well, judging from the reaction of my pal KouAidou, of many a comment section, these people are idiots. Kou went with me to the show to help out, eat good Korean food near our hotel, and also to serve as my Fallout Expert (by which I mean "person who has played Fallout before"). While I never got to play the originals, owing to my cheap parents, Kou cut her teeth as a PC gamer and has talked fondly about Fallout 2 for about as long as I've known her. If Bethesda got any part of the setting wrong, if anything wasn't note-perfect, I was pretty sure I'd hear about it. Meanwhile, I could judge how fun and accessible Fallout 3 was to the rank n00b.
CVG offers the full preview from PCZone's Will Porter. Like PC Gamer's Dan Stapleton, Will had 5 hours with the game and thus has a lot more impressions and details to share.
Those expecting a succession of run-of-the-mill 'go here, fight these men or monsters, kill this particular man or monster, bring something back' Oblivion-type missions may well be in for a pleasant surprise too.

Fallout 3's missions - perhaps with thought being given to the originals' over-arching quests like "find the water chip" - are more long-running and convoluted than in Bethesda's previous works.

One character in Megaton (the first hub town you're directed to, whose interior is like some multi-layered, nightmare vision of the Swiss Family Robinson's treehouse) wants you to find her family, and points you in the general direction of far distant Arefu.

Once there, before you know it, that same quest has morphed into a tale of a local populace beset by a group of Brahmin-killers called The Family, and the missing characters are revealed to be in any one of three locations, so you're off on a chain of subquests that could take hours to complete.

To add subtlety and texture, meanwhile, smaller quests aren't flagged up in your Pip-Boy. Leo Stahl, son of a local family who own one of the two Megaton bars has a drug problem and hangs around the water treatment plant at night snorting Jet - as you discover either through sharing an affinity with medicine with the local doctor, or by hacking into the Stahls' computer at night and reading their personal logs, while simultaneously opening up their safe and stealing all their worldly goods.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Forum Jump


 
      Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0
© 2000-2008 GameBanshee.com