2010 video game
Fallout: New Vegas | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Obsidian Entertainment |
Publisher(s) | Bethesda Softworks |
Director(s) | Josh Sawyer |
Producer(s) |
|
Designer(s) | Josh Sawyer |
Programmer(s) | Frank Kowalkowski |
Artist(s) | Joe Sanabria |
Writer(s) | John Gonzalez |
Composer(s) | Inon Zur |
Series | Fallout |
Engine | Gamebryo |
Platform(s) | |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Action role-playing |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Fallout: New Vegas is a 2010 action role-playing video game that was developed by Obsidian Entertainment and published by Bethesda Softworks. The game, which was released for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360, is set in the Mojave Desert of North America 204 years after a devastating nuclear war. The player controls a courier who wakes up after being shot in the head by an unknown assailant. While tracking the assailant, the courier becomes embroiled in a larger conflict between different governing factions that are vying for control of the region. Fallout: New Vegas features a freely explorable open world. Much of the gameplay revolves around combat, and the player can use a variety of weapons, such as melee weapons, conventional guns, and directed-energy weapons. There is an optional difficulty level called Hardcore Mode that adds survival mechanics, such as the need to regularly eat, drink, and sleep.
After the release of Fallout 3 in 2008, Bethesda contracted Obsidian to develop a spin-off game in the Fallout series. The developers chose Las Vegas, Nevada, and the surrounding Mojave Desert as the setting because they evoked the 1950s imagery the series was known for, as well as the post-apocalyptic setting of Mad Max. Project director Josh Sawyer wanted the story to focus on greed and excess, and used the history of Las Vegas as an inspiration. To design the game's map, Obsidian used data collected by the United States Geological Survey and reference photographs taken by Sawyer. Bethesda gave Obsidian 18 months to develop Fallout: New Vegas, which several journalists have noted is a very short time in which to develop a Triple-A game.
Fallout: New Vegas was a commercial success and is estimated to have sold 11.6 million copies worldwide. It received positive reviews upon its release; critics praised the writing and quests. Some critics questioned the lack of significant gameplay changes when compared to Fallout 3, and criticized the numerous glitches present at launch. Six downloadable content (DLC) add-ons for the game, including four story-based add-ons that added new areas for the player to explore, were released. Since its release, fans and journalists have re-evaluated Fallout: New Vegas and it is now regarded as one of the best games in the Fallout series and as one of the greatest video games of all time.
Gameplay
Fallout: New Vegas is an action role-playing game that can be played from either a first-person or a third-person perspective. It is set in the Mojave Desert of North America, 204 years after a nuclear war that decimated much of the United States. The player controls a courier who survived an attempted killing by an unknown assailant. The goal of the game is to complete a series of quests to find the assailant; the game eventually culminates in a war between governing factions that are vying for control of the Mojave Desert. In addition to the main quests, the player can participate in optional, unrelated side quests. Kristinie Stiemer of IGN estimates completing every quest in the game takes around 100 hours.
At the start of the game, the player can customize the courier's appearance by choosing their gender, age, and race. They can then allocate points into seven primary attributes: strength, perception, endurance, charisma, intelligence, agility, and luck. These attributes are known as S.P.E.C.I.A.L. stats. There are 13 secondary attributes whose point totals are affected by S.P.E.C.I.A.L. stats: barter, energy weapons, explosives, guns, lockpick, medicine, melee weapons, repair, science, sneak, speech, survival, and unarmed. If the player has a high intelligence stat, for example, they will be more proficient in the medicine, repair, and science skills at the beginning of the game. The player can add more points into skill stats whenever they earn enough experience points to level up. Experience points can be earned through several methods, such as killing an enemy or completing a quest. When the player reaches an even-numbered level, they can select a permanent, beneficial upgrade known as a perk. For example, the perk Rapid Reload increases the reload speed for guns by 25 percent.
Fallout: New Vegas features a freely explorable open world map. The player can explore locations ranging from small settlements and abandoned buildings to large locations like the Hoover Dam and the city of New Vegas, which was built from the remnants of Las Vegas. The player is equipped with the Pip-Boy 3000, a wearable computer that serves as a menu and allows them to access items they have acquired, view detailed character statistics and active quests, and look at the map. The player can use the Pip-Boy 3000 map to fast travel to previously discovered locations. The player can also use the Pip-Boy 3000 as a radio, and listen to songs from the 1940s to the early 1960s on makeshift radio broadcasts. While exploring, the player can recruit non-player characters (NPCs) as companions, who will accompany the player and assist them in combat. The weapons in the game include standard guns, energy-based guns, melee weapons, and explosives. While in combat, the player can use a gameplay mechanic known as V.A.T.S., which pauses the game and allows the player to target specific body parts of an enemy. V.A.T.S. is dictated by a statistic known as Action Points. Attacks made using V.A.T.S. cost Action Points; when the player runs out of Action Points, they must wait a short period before they can use V.A.T.S. again.
The player's reputation among the in-game factions, an important mechanic, is determined by previous actions. For example, if the player decides to help a faction, they may be given new armor or access to a secret base. If the player's actions are perceived as detrimental, a faction might send assassins to try and kill the player. Some factions dislike one another; if the player is helpful to one faction, they may be unable to complete quests for another faction. Reputation extends to companions; some companions will leave the player if a specific faction dislikes the player.
An optional difficulty level in Fallout: New Vegas is Hardcore Mode, which adds survival mechanics the player must keep track of. For example, the player must routinely eat, drink, and sleep to avoid dying from starvation, dehydration, or sleep deprivation. Healing items gradually heal wounds but crippled limbs can only be healed by a doctor or specific items. Ammunition has weight, which necessitates careful inventory management, and companions can permanently die. Hardcore Mode can be enabled or disabled at any point in the game. If the player completes the entire game with Hardcore Mode enabled, they unlock an achievement.
Plot
Setting
Fallout: New Vegas takes place in 2281, 204 years after a devastating nuclear war between the United States and China, known as the Great War. Three major entities seek control of the Mojave Desert, which is known in-game as the Mojave Wasteland: The New California Republic (NCR) is a democratic republic that attempts to maintain law; Caesar's Legion is a violent, tribal army that is inspired by the Roman legion; and Mr. House is a mysterious businessman from New Vegas who controls an army of robots called securitrons. As part of an eastward expansion from California, the NCR took control of the Hoover Dam, which provides electricity to the surrounding area. Both Caesar's Legion and Mr. House want to control the Hoover Dam for themselves and advance their own plans for the region. Minor factions include the Boomers, a heavily armed xenophobic tribe at Nellis Air Force Base; the Powder Gangers, escaped convicts from a correctional facility; the Great Khans, a tribe of drug dealers; and the Brotherhood of Steel, a militant organization that aims to secure old technology.
Story
While delivering a poker chip-shaped data storage device known as the Platinum Chip to New Vegas, the courier is ambushed by mobster and casino owner Benny, who steals the Platinum Chip and shoots the courier in the head. Left for dead, a Securiton named Victor digs out the courier from a shallow grave, and physician Doc Mitchell nurses them back to health. The courier departs to search for Benny and the Platinum Chip; they confront Benny in a casino on the New Vegas strip; the courier must either kill Benny and recover the Platinum Chip or let him escape.
The courier becomes embroiled in a conflict between the NCR, Caesar's Legion, and Mr. House for control of the region. It is revealed Mr. House survived the nuclear apocalypse in a life-support chamber. He created the Platinum Chip, which contains a program that is capable of upgrading his Securitron army; the device was initially meant to protect Las Vegas during the Great War, but the war began before the Chip could be delivered. After the Platinum Chip was located, the courier was tasked with delivering it to Mr. House. Benny stole the Platinum Chip as part of his plan to usurp Mr. House with the assistance of a reprogrammed Securitron called Yes Man.
Hoover Dam becomes the center of the conflict between the NCR and Caesar's Legion. The player can choose which faction to support, resulting in one of four endings. If the player supports the NCR, they successfully repel the Legion's attack at Hoover Dam and annex the Mojave Wasteland. If the player supports Caesar's Legion, they force the NCR to retreat, and conquer the Mojave Wasteland. Mr. House wants to have sole control of New Vegas; if the player supports him, the overwhelming Securitron army forces both factions to leave the area. Alternatively, if the player wishes the Mojave Wasteland to remain independent of leadership, they can take control of Mr. House's Securitron network with the help of Yes Man.
Development
The origins of Fallout: New Vegas began with the cancellation of Van Buren, which was intended to be the third game in the mainline Fallout series. Van Buren was to be developed by Black Isle Studios; it was to be set in Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, and Utah, and would have included a mixture of real-time and turn-based combat. Black Isle Studios' publisher Interplay Entertainment was struggling financially, and in December 2003, Van Buren was cancelled. Prior to the project's cancellation, former Black Isle Studios and Interplay Entertainment employees cofounded Obsidian Entertainment. Over the next few years, Obsidian developed the role-playing games Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords, Neverwinter Nights 2, and Alpha Protocol, and had recently canceled development on an Alien role-playing game.
In 2007, Bethesda Softworks purchased the Fallout intellectual property. The following year, Bethesda released Fallout 3, which was well-received by critics and sold more than five million copies in 2008. Prior to the release of Fallout 3, Bethesda had already begun development on what would become The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. Bethesda wanted to support Fallout 3 with more content and decided to contract another developer to create a large expansion pack. Bethesda's creative director Todd Howard successfully lobbied for a full game instead of an expansion pack, and based on their experience with the Fallout series, he suggested Obsidian. In 2007, Obsidian had rejected an offer from Bethesda to develop a Star Trek game but agreed to develop a spin-off from the Fallout main series.
Bethesda wanted the game to take place on the West Coast of the United States, where the first two Fallout games are set, and Obsidian felt a similar setting would allow them to expand concepts, such as the NCR, that were introduced in Fallout 2. Story proposals included setting the game in a city based on Reno, Nevada, and allowing the player to play as either a human, a ghoul, or a super mutant. The latter idea was rejected due to the technical challenges posed by armor-wearing ghouls and super mutants. The developers chose to set the game in Las Vegas and the surrounding Mojave Desert because they evoked the 1950s imagery for which the series was known and the post-apocalyptic setting of Mad Max. At the behest of project director Josh Sawyer, Obsidian repurposed digital assets from the canceled Alien game for Fallout: New Vegas. According to Sawyer: " did not want to disrupt our pipelines at all. We basically want to use what's there – add to it, don't change it ... and make great content". Obsidian wanted Fallout: New Vegas to take place between the events of Fallout 2 and Fallout 3, although Bethesda mandated each game in the series should follow chronological order.
Sawyer wanted the story of Fallout: New Vegas to focus on greed and excess. The history of Las Vegas served as an inspiration due to that city's connection with organized crime. One of the working titles for the game was Fallout: Sin City. Sawyer used the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963 as a cut-off for any historical references. The motif of inter-factional conflict was inspired by requests from fans of the Fallout series. Sawyer felt the factions would realistically be most concerned about access to water in the desert setting and Hoover Dam became a focal point for worldbuilding. During a Game Developers Conference presentation, Sawyer noted Obsidian wanted to avoid what he described as "Jesus/Hitler" moments, in which factions like NCR and Caesar's Legion are presented as either good or bad. Instead, he wanted to instill a sense of moral ambiguity. According to Sawyer: "A player should feel like there's something good and bad about what they pick".
To capture the ambiance of the Mojave Desert, Obsidian used data collected by the United States Geological Survey (USGS). Sawyer traveled to Las Vegas and took reference photographs of the surrounding areas, including the nearby Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area. Obsidian used the Las Vegas Beltway as a point of reference while designing the map because they felt circling the map with a road network would help the player navigate. Bethesda requested the inclusion of large structures to serve as visual landmarks for the player. While Fallout 3 uses monuments in Washington, D.C., as visual landmarks, Fallout: New Vegas uses kitschy roadside attractions, such as a large dinosaur statue that is based on the Cabazon Dinosaurs in Cabazon, California. These attractions were part of a broader goal to differentiate Fallout: New Vegas from Fallout 3. The Mojave Desert is Fallout: New Vegas is spread out in comparison with the compact Washington, D.C., metro in Fallout 3. Other differences include a warmer color palette for the graphics, and the inclusion of local flora, such as Joshua trees and prickly pear cacti. Obsidian wanted New Vegas to closely resemble the Las Vegas Strip in the 1950s; this means each casino is adorned with large neon signs, and their architecture is modeled on the contemporary Googie movement.
The gameplay of Fallout: New Vegas remained largely unchanged from that of Fallout 3. Obsidian instead focused on making minor adjustments, such as giving the player more tactical options while in combat. The player could now use iron sights on guns, and accuracy was greatly affected by player movement. Optional gameplay mechanics that would further evoke a sense of desert survival skills, such as item-crafting, and Hardcore Mode, were added. According to Sawyer: "We really approached it from that perspective, like, 'Hey, if you want a more challenging thing that makes you feel more like you're struggling in the desert, then here's this aspect for you". Obsidian was inspired by the Fallout 3 modding community, specifically the mods that sought to improve the game with quality of life changes. Bethesda provided Obsidian with the Gamebryo engine, which had been used for Fallout 3. No-one at Obsidian had worked with Gamebryo, and as a result, the company hired a modder who had worked with the engine while developing a mod for The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion.
Inon Zur composed the soundtrack if Fallout: New Vegas, which was intended to evoke the soundscape of the American Southwest. While working on the soundtrack, Zur received an email that included the descriptors: "Southwest in the Future. Open, Spacious, Raw, Lonesome, Cowboy, Rattlesnake, Desert, Wind, Heat, Rust, Steel, Dirt, Grit." Zur was inspired by the soundtrack for the film There Will Be Blood; he worked with audio director Scott Lawlor to compose music for a string quartet. Fallout: New Vegas has an adaptive music system, which means the soundtrack will change depending on what is happening to the player. While exploring, the music is quiet and ambient but becomes loud and powerful when the player enters combat. In addition to the original soundtrack, Fallout: New Vegas includes licensed music to which the player can listen via in-game radio stations. The licensed music includes songs from the 1950s and several music genres, including country and bluegrass. Over 65,000 lines of dialogue were recorded for Fallout: New Vegas, which set a Guinness World Record for the most lines of dialogue in a single-player role-playing game. The game also includes celebrity voice acting from Rene Auberjonois, Felicia Day, John Doman, Michael Dorn, Kris Kristofferson, Zachary Levi, Wayne Newton, Ron Perlman, Matthew Perry, and Danny Trejo.
Bethesda gave Obsidian 18 months to develop Fallout: New Vegas, which several journalists noted is a very short time in which to develop a Triple-A game. When asked about the hastened development, Sawyer said: "We were working somewhere between forty and fifty hours a week, which is not too crazy ... It was a really tight schedule, but I don't think we had a point where we all thought 'this is crazy we can't do it.'" The contracted development meant some areas of the game needed to be cut. For example, there were planned settlements east of the Colorado River, including three locations that would have been controlled by Caesar's Legion and would have provided more information about the faction. Sawyer also noted Obsidian's lack of experience with the Gamebryo engine hindered development. Programmers had to routinely run maintenance on the engine, and struggled to implement the Havok software, which was a requirement for console games. Sawyer recalled a specific moment when Obsidian received console development kits. They found the New Vegas Strip was not properly optimized, and had to split the area into sections that are separated by loading screens rather than being a single, continuous section.
Release and downloadable content
Promotional material for Fallout: New Vegas at PAX (left) and IgroMir (right)Fallout: New Vegas was announced in April 2009, and the first trailer was shown in February 2010. Four pre-order bonuses were available for players who pre-ordered the game from Amazon, Best Buy, GameStop, Steam, and Walmart. Each pre-order bonus included weapons and items the player could access at the beginning of the game. A collectors' edition, which included the game, seven poker chips, a replica of the Platinum Chip, a deck of cards with character illustrations, a prequel graphic novel, and a making-of documentary. Pre-order sales for Fallout: New Vegas were higher than those for Fallout 3 in North America and the United Kingdom.
Fallout: New Vegas was released in North America for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360 on October 19, 2010; October 21 in Australia; and October 22 in Europe. By November 8, the game had sold five million copies worldwide and garnered $300 million in revenue. The market-research firm Electronic Entertainment Design and Research estimated by 2015, the game had sold 11.6 million copies worldwide. Fallout: New Vegas suffered from numerous glitches upon release, including crashes, corrupted saved games, and frame rate issues. Fans and video-game journalists criticized the large number of glitches. Months after release, Bethesda published patches to fix the glitches.
Fallout: New Vegas was supported with six downloadable content (DLC) add-ons, whose development was led by the designer Chris Avellone. Avellone's goal was to expand the game's story and incorporate gameplay ideas that would not have worked in the base game. Avellone cited the survival horror elements of the DLC Dead Money as an example. Avellone said: "It would feel weird if you designed even maybe a big Fallout New Vegas level around that. But as a DLC, it felt like, 'Oh, cool. This is my trip to a horror realm.' " In Dead Money, the courier is captured and forced to stage a heist on Sierra Madre Casino, which is concealed by a cloud of deadly toxic vapor. The second DLC was Honest Hearts, which is set in Zion National Park and revolves around the courier's involvement in a conflict between several tribes. The third DLC, Old World Blues, features B movie humor and a plot about a group of mad scientists. The final story-driven DLC was Lonesome Road, in which the player tracks another courier named Ulysses, who rejected the job of delivering the Platinum Chip to Mr. House. Two additional, non-story-driven DLC add-ons were released: Courier's Stash granted access to items that were originally released as pre-order bonuses; and Gun Runners' Arsenal added new weapons, firearm modifications, and new types of ammunition.
Reception
Initial reception
Fallout: New VegasAggregator | Score |
---|---|
Metacritic | 84/100 (PC) 82/100 (PS3) 84/100 (X360) |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
1Up.com | B |
Edge | 6/10 |
Eurogamer | 9/10 |
G4 | 4/5 |
Game Informer | 8.5/10 |
GameSpot | 8.5/10 |
GameSpy | 4.5/5 |
IGN | 8.5/10 |
Official Xbox Magazine (UK) | 9/10 |
Official Xbox Magazine (US) | 9.5/10 |
PC Gamer (UK) | 84/100 |
Upon its release, Fallout: New Vegas received positive reviews from critics. Bethesda offered Obsidian a bonus payment if any version of the game received a rating of 85/100 or higher on the review aggregator website Metacritic. Fallout: New Vegas missed the threshold by one point; Metacritic assigned it a weighted-average critic score of 84/100 for the Windows and Xbox 360 versions, and an 82/100 for the PlayStation 3 version. When asked about narrowly missing the threshold, Obsidian CEO Feargus Urquhart said: "It was in the contract, it was what it said. We didn't put it in there and we signed it. I wasn't crying over it by any stretch of the imagination." Bethesda's decision to use Metacritic's rating as a determinant for bonus payment was criticized; journalists said Metacritic lacked the objectivity needed to measure the quality of a game.
Fallout: New Vegas's story and writing were well received, and were consistently highlighted in reviews. Craig Pearson of PC Gamer described the story as a significant improvement over that of Fallout 3, and appreciated the way factions adapt to the player's choices and previous actions. The British version of Official Xbox Magazine called the story "staggering in scope and consistent in quality", and particularly praised the final quest. Despite their enjoyment, some critics bemoaned the lack of memorable story moments when compared with Fallout 3. Game Informer's Andrew Reiner wrote: "Obsidian's writing is top notch (especially the dialogue), and I wanted to see more from most of the characters I met, but none of the scripted moments deliver the nuclear bang that Bethesda achieved".
The side quests received praise, and some reviewers said they are more interesting than the main story. Kevin VanOrd of GameSpot greatly appreciated the number of solutions each quest offers, such as a quest that allows the player to either fight robots in an abandoned museum or steal a keycard and avoid confrontation. Reiner offered similar commentary, and said: "In just the missions and story, New Vegas offers a nearly unprecedented level of depth ... it delivers a true sense of ownership over the experience and gives you thousands of reasons why you should come back and play it again and again". Kristine Steimer of IGN gave particular praise to the map, which she said acts as a catalyst to finding new side quests and unique locations.
Because Obsidian made only minor adjustments to the gameplay, some reviewers described Fallout: New Vegas as a large expansion of Fallout 3 rather than a separate game. Steimer wrote: "I often want to call it Fallout 3: New Vegas. Since the first game was so widely loved, that's certainly not a bad thing, but New Vegas does feel like a giant, awesome expansion." Pearson was disappointed there were few technological advancements in Fallout: New Vegas; he said: "New areas, characters and factions, but the same clunky inventory and character models. Two years to stay exactly where you were." Francesca Reyes of the American version of Official Xbox Magazine struggled to recommend the game to anyone who did not enjoy Fallout 3. The newly added gameplay mechanics, such as faction reputation and Hardcore Mode, were well received; reviewers said they add an additional layer of complexity over Fallout 3. Reviewers were divided in their opinions on the companions; Christopher Monfette of G4 said the companions provide a stronger emotional connection than any moment in the main quest, while Dan Whitehead of Eurogamer found the companions to be more trouble than they were worth due to their penchant for ignoring the commands he gave them.
Many reviewers derided the glitches, which were seen as substantive and disruptive to gameplay. Among the more common glitches noted in reviews were poor companion and enemy pathfinding, framerate issues, and crashes. Mike Nelson of 1Up.com stated that Fallout: New Vegas had some of the most frustrating glitches he had ever seen, and he would have given the game a higher score had it not been for them. A reviewer for Edge wrote, "Creatively, New Vegas gets almost everything right. Mechanically and technically, it's a tragedy." Some reviewers noted that they still enjoyed the game despite the glitches. Giant Bomb's Jeff Gerstmann wrote, "When I reflect on the experience, I'll probably think about the times the game locked up on me or broke in a dozen other crazy ways first, before thinking about the great world and the objectives that fill it. If you were able to look past the issues that plagued Fallout 3 and before it, New Vegas will eventually show you a real good time."
Fallout: New Vegas won the 2011 Golden Joystick Award for Role-Playing Game of the Year, and the 2010 IGN award for Most Bang for Your Buck. The game was also nominated for the Role-Playing/Massively Multiplayer Game of the Year award during the 14th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards but the award went to Mass Effect 2.
Re-evaluation and legacy
Since its release, fans and journalists have re-evaluated Fallout: New Vegas, and the game's reception has become significantly more positive. Cass Marshall of Polygon wrote: "Fallout: New Vegas has endured in the cultural zeitgeist in a way that few other games have". Some critics have referred to Fallout: New Vegas as the best game in the Fallout series and as one of the greatest video games of all time. In a retrospective article about the Fallout series, Ian Dransfield of Retro Gamer stated: "New Vegas served as the balance between Bethesda's new 3D approach, and Black Isle/Interplays focus on traditional mechanics". Eurogamer's Emma Kent wrote: "it felt like even the smallest story was carefully crafted to maintain interest and deliver a rewarding kicker ... on the macro scale, New Vegas took a more serious tone by weaving a complex power struggle that mirrors many current real-world conflicts".
Part of the game's re-evaluation comes from patches that fixed many of its glitches. Kat Bailey of VG247 noted once the discourse regarding the technical aspects subsided, players grew to appreciate the game for what it is. The subsequent DLC add-ons and the active modding community also contributed to the game's long-lasting appeal. PC Gamer's Dominic Tarason wrote: "Years of dedicated community efforts have culminated in New Vegas being a better game than ever". Notable mods for the game include Tale Of Two Wastelands, which combines the maps of Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas; and Fallout: New California, which serves as a prequel and expands on the courier's story. Fallout: The Frontier, a mod that added a new map to the game, was the subject of media attention due to its large size and controversial content.
Some fans have negatively compared Fallout 3 and Fallout 4 with Fallout: New Vegas. When compared with Fallout: New Vegas, fans commonly criticize Fallout 3 and Fallout 4 for uninteresting storylines, downgraded role-playing mechanics, and limited options for player expression. Patricia Hernandez of Kotaku commented:
It sometimes seems as though you can't talk about Fallout 4 without having someone start talking about how good New Vegas is, how much they wish Obsidian, rather than Bethesda, handled modern Fallout games. It's in every comments section for the Fallout 4 articles we post, I see it on Reddit a whole lot, and I've been emailed petitions about Obsidian and future Fallout games many, many times.
When the television series Fallout was released, the episode "The Trap" seemingly contradicts the plot of Fallout: New Vegas, which led some fans to believe Bethesda was trying to retcon the game due to their perceived disdain of its reception. When Bethesda director Todd Howard clarified the issue, PC Gamer published an article with the headline "'New Vegas is a very, very important game to us,' says mildly exasperated Todd Howard, who will never stop getting grilled about New Vegas". Since 2022, a yearly Fallout: New Vegas-themed fan event has been held in Goodsprings, Nevada, the player's in-game starting location.
Notes
- Attributed to multiple references:
- Attributed to multiple references:
References
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