cnightwing
CNightwing
cnightwing

Oh, so if you use the 'Go' command on someone, they hang around there permanently? That's handy. The current settlers have a tendency to randomly go and hammer an empty building.

So far I've had two stand-out encounters. The first was coming across an abandoned sentry bot which you could find a command program for, boot up and send to fight raiders at a nearby location. It was bugged, of course, and the robot wouldn't move, but I hacked it with Robotics Expert, then re-commanded it and behold,

Well the best post-apocalyptic community is *obviously* the one I've spent the majority of my time building in Sanctuary Hills. Seriously, I'm obsessed with making livable and attractive housing for my residents and it's a great system except that the first piece you put down doesn't click to the building-base and oh

Have you visited the petting zoo? In the town hall? Don't feed the animals.

Well there's New Vegas, but that's the frontier of the NCR. It feels a lot more developed than Fallout 3 though.

That's how the dinosaurs died out!

Condoned.

Lara Croft only murders kittehs if I remember the original game.

PC built very recently to satisfy my gaming needs - my previous laptop was struggling with Fallout 3 so.. *justifies the spending*

I thought there was a distinction between a high-frequency monitor and actually being capable of 3D interpolation.

You can do that in a New Vegas mod. In fact, you can become a timelord, pilot the TARDIS, visit various alien homeworlds and basically everything whovian.

ITT: Paleontolonerds

In best Snake Jailbird voice: "Hey guys, check out my guns in this!"

I'm happy to hear that the community building seems to work well - that's by far the most exciting addition to the game I've been looking forward to. It also sounds like Bethesda have picked up some tricks from Obsidian - companions who actually reveal their backstory to you and have their own motivations, communities

Well if you try to run something on a 3D monitor..

This sort of reckless tomb raiding belongs in the 19th century. Shouldn't the native people of Kitezh, or their descendants, have the right to self-determination when it comes to artefacts that grant immortal life?

Well, what Mass Effect should have done was copy Fallout: New Vegas. We care about characters and places, not some generic summary of the fate of the entire galaxy. So, what happened to every NPC you ever encountered and made a decision about? Especially take the opportunity to remind you who you manage to get killed

I just knew Gerardi had Fallout 4 already, damn him. Looking forward to the review though.

Presumably there are periods of history when the Templars aren't in charge, but we just don't get to see them, because the Assassins have nothing to do. It's that or, more likely, any ruling class is labelled as Templar, so the Assassins can win the propaganda war. That falls apart in periods such as WW2 though,