


Vomiting drunks, voluptuous prostitutes and a selection of fully playable casinos (better max out your Luck rating first) make it every bit as vivid and memorable as the decaying US capital of the last game. The action this time takes place on the US west coast – the setting for the first two Fallout games – a decision which has granted Obsidian much greater scope for variety in landscaping and colour than the washed-out Washington DC of Fallout 3.īeing further away from the game's titular nuclear fallout, there's blue skies, singing birds and more signs of civilisation – a marked tonal shift from the unremittingly bleak scenery seen previously.Īside from the familiar burnt-out cities and trailer parks, the centrepiece of this new setting is the New Vegas strip – a wonderfully distorted and dark version of its real-life counterpart.

It's a tailor-made gaming experience where everything can be done at your own pace and in your own way – no wonder it resonates with so many people.įallout: New Vegas, the latest addition to the franchise, exemplifies all these great qualities in the series' best outing to date. Try and be as moral as possible – or kill and rob the first merchant you come across. Rigidly follow the main storyline – or wander off and ignore it entirely. Perhaps its greatest strength is the fact that everybody can play it differently. Is it the dark humour? The unparalleled sense of freedom? The decisions and consequences that give the your actions such a sense of significance? I've spent the last few days trying to put my finger on what it is exactly that makes the Fallout series so singularly captivating.
