avclub-de584085097dbcc290d237ea48ccd97c--disqus
Bluemoon
avclub-de584085097dbcc290d237ea48ccd97c--disqus

I wish I knew, I wish I knew.

And yet The Apple Dumpling Gang has little issue with being hit repeatedly in the face with said smugness.

Dude, I convinced my 62 year old mother to see it, and she loved it. Granted, she'd rather blow her brains out with a revolver than watch Dancing with the Stars. Good luck!

To a point, but you still need some realism to ground it, otherwise it turns into a cartoon. And it hurts the believability of the world. What are the Brahmin and other grazers eating, then? Not to mention it means some neat gameplay styles from New Vegas might not return: Survival being a potential skill, and

That's a shame, because you robbed yourself the sense of progression. I love starting off using a 9mm, and then working my way up. You get to feel your character grow and change. Maybe give it another try before 4 comes out? Explore and build a lean mean fighting machine. Then once you've beaten the vanilla game, try

I just rewatched the trailer, and one thing that's bothering me is that all plant life looks dead again, and none look pickable. Life does grow back and can even thrive in post-nuclear areas given enough time.

If your frustration was coupled with the game breaking bugs, I empathize with you. It was not a fun game to play until the patches rolled out. Though, I did like how insanely hard certain areas used to be: Cellblocks over-brimming with Powder Gangers, and deathclaws taking a stroll through Goodsprings.

The one thing Bethesda seems really good at is building big maps to explore, but they tend to have shallow interaction. Fallout 3 was a blast the first time, but then it became so dull. Whereas New Vegas has enough interesting quests and interactions that I've played it in so many ways I've lost count.

He is a boss, and he's not impossible to defeat. Inject every drug you've got, have a strong weapon that deals AP bullets, and aim for the head. I kill him in seconds.

Really? I loved it. It mirrored the final showdown in Goodsprings: Two factions having a final row with each other. It felt more exciting and challenging than 3's, in which a giant robot does most of the work. And NV had a real boss you could talk it out with. Choices mattered, and the ending showed what each choice

Terrible writing in 3, and a McGuffin that truly stank. "We need to finish a giant machine to make water not radioactive!" Why not just filter water through sand? It also broke a lot of the Fallout lore, and rehashed antagonists from the first 2.

If it ends up being anything like Mad Max: Fury Road, I'm all for it. Fantastic but still grounded enough in reality.

Don't bother, they don't even fit!

It better have some really black pubes on it.

It's allowed, it just doesn't count.

At the very least this might hold us over until Fallout 4 gets released.

It's also a great reminder that you do not need half a billion dollars to make a good movie. And as of May the 25th it grossed $227,727,720
worldwide. It didn't bomb.

And then you won't be able to shut up about it.

More like Murder Claus.

Nope, but I kind of like that. Someone new picking up the mantle of the former.