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Fallout 76 confirmed!?

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  • ShapiroKeatsDarkMageShapiroKeatsDarkMage Member Posts: 2,428
    O_Bruce said:

    I so hope this game flops.

    Oh go back to the depths of NMA and chill out. Just because you don't like something doesn't mean others aren't allowed to try it.
  • FinneousPJFinneousPJ Member Posts: 6,455

    O_Bruce said:

    I so hope this game flops.

    Oh go back to the depths of NMA and chill out. Just because you don't like something doesn't mean others aren't allowed to try it.
    That's not what he said.
  • ShapiroKeatsDarkMageShapiroKeatsDarkMage Member Posts: 2,428
    edited October 2018

    O_Bruce said:

    I so hope this game flops.

    Oh go back to the depths of NMA and chill out. Just because you don't like something doesn't mean others aren't allowed to try it.
    That's not what he said.
    He wants the game to flop so the series Can return being about isometric games for a small niche of gamers.

    I'm not a big fan of Bethesda Fallout as i do think nobody gets that series except for Tim Cain and Chris Avellone. But i'm not a fan of the clunky and overly difficult gameplay of the first 2.
  • O_BruceO_Bruce Member Posts: 2,790

    O_Bruce said:

    I so hope this game flops.

    Oh go back to the depths of NMA and chill out. Just because you don't like something doesn't mean others aren't allowed to try it.
    All you ever do is speaking about NMA, and hardly ever it is valid thing to say. These are practically stock phrases by now.

    You are allowed to like shitty games made by shitty companies. I am allowed to wish those companies to go banckrupt. It is that simple.
  • WarChiefZekeWarChiefZeke Member Posts: 2,651
    I refuse to buy online versions of good single player RPGs because it nearly always comes at the expense of the single player RPG series (looking at you, KOTOR). I also have very little patience for microtransactions. Think i'll just stick to 3/New Vegas.
  • jjstraka34jjstraka34 Member Posts: 9,850
    edited October 2018

    I refuse to buy online versions of good single player RPGs because it nearly always comes at the expense of the single player RPG series (looking at you, KOTOR). I also have very little patience for microtransactions. Think i'll just stick to 3/New Vegas.

    It depends on what the microtransactions do. For instance, I'm playing Assassin's Creed Odyssey right now, and alot of people are complaining alot about the microtransactions. But I really don't know why. For one thing, they ruin the game's progression if you are actually interested in playing it to it's full potential. But for another, it's a single-player game. If someone wants to buy an EXP or gold boost for with their money, more power to them, but it isn't effecting my enjoyment at all.

    Fallout 76 is another matter entirely because it's essentially turned the series into an MMO. And there are multiple MMOs I can play if I want to. I'm not sure why in the world I would need to play THIS particular game in single-player when there are hundreds of hours for me to sink my teeth into in Fallout 4 if I have an itch for this particular experience.

    The main problem is that single-player games are dying. Assassin's Creed can still cling to that model by offering a cash shop even though it isn't necessary, but hardly anything has that kind of cache anymore. Every game has a "Gold" or "Deluxe" Edition that comes with early game-breaking gear and some cosmetic skins for $50 extra dollars. I guess Tomb Raider is still out there if that is anyone's thing. Eventually we'll get Elder Scrolls 6 and Cyperpunk, but not anytime soon. And long before we ever see the next entry in either of Bethesda's two big series, all we are going to get is some shitty mobile game (Blades) and an online version of a series that has no business being online (76).

    In summary: I'm having more fun running around Ancient Greece in Assassin's Creed Odyssey than I have had in any game in quite some time. Despite it's optional microtransactions, it's still the current heir the The Witcher 3's open-world throne. It really is that good. On the other hand, there is almost no chance I will ever even consider purchasing Fallout 76.
  • ThacoBellThacoBell Member Posts: 12,235
    I have been retreating further and further into classic games with every year that passes. The death of single player games is only the start. Ubisoft and EA are trying to make games as a purely streaming service, to completly eleiminate ownership. The only hope for the future of gaming is small indie studios at this point.
  • megamike15megamike15 Member Posts: 2,666
    yeah i agree with thacobell. besides indie games i mostly been playing older stuff. it's clear the fallout series is not gonna be the same in the foreseeable future so i may as well just stick to the older games and new vegas if i want to play a fallout game.
  • ricoyungricoyung Member Posts: 83
    Here's a good vid on some unknown (until now) elements of the game....catching diseases, mining minerals and junk? also was found one traveling super-mutant NPC vendor with a brahman no less,lol.
    I personally also like the level requirements for gear/weaps, a better balance that way imo.
    I am actually liking this game the more I learn about it, and I am not a big fan of pvp unless......
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lf10pkkTT4I
  • jjstraka34jjstraka34 Member Posts: 9,850
    This game is getting absolutely crucified by consumers and critics at this point.
  • O_BruceO_Bruce Member Posts: 2,790
    This is more or less what I wanted. Well, maybe not reviews, because they don't matter for the end game (and regardless, games should never be review bombed because in the long run, it only harms the industry). What matters is the game performing terribly in sales. It matters because if there is one thing that could possibly make Bethesda rethink about their approach to the franchise, it is money. Simple as that. While I have absolutely no faith in their cognitive abilities, there is still a slight hope that things can get better from now on.

    Either that or Fallout franchise is getting put out of its misery.

    Also, one more thing. Given how my previous interaction in this topic looked like, I want to specify something, so that people won't make up inaccurate conclusions about what I want. So, I have no problem with Fallout being different gameplay-wise. I do have problem with bad writing, disrespecting and not understanding the lore, stripping off the features that makes Fallout what it is etc. All those Bathesda is guilty of.
  • FinneousPJFinneousPJ Member Posts: 6,455
    edited November 2018
    A YouTuber I respect Basically tl;dr'd the game as beautiful presentation, minimal substance. Worth maybe $20 if you're generous but certainly not full $60.

    EDIT: Not that the graphics are great but the map is beautifully constructed.
  • ShapiroKeatsDarkMageShapiroKeatsDarkMage Member Posts: 2,428

    This game is getting absolutely crucified by consumers and critics at this point.

    And so the fall of the Howard/Hines empire begins.

    The NMA and the Codex guys are preparing the champagne and appetizers.
  • TressetTresset Member, Moderator Posts: 8,264
    @ShapiroKeatsDarkMage There is no need for that. Personal attacks are against the rules here, even if you have different tastes in games from other users.
  • jjstraka34jjstraka34 Member Posts: 9,850
    edited November 2018
    The game is clearly unfinished, or maybe it was never meant to BE finished at all. It's a 3D Fallout world that is completely devoid of all the other elements that make the other 3 games interesting. And Bethesda is known for their bugs, but Fallout 76 is, based on all evidence, in another league. Barely playable framerates on PS4, massive drops even on warhorse PC rigs. They released it unfinished because they could. They figured hell, these saps will lap up anything with the Fallout logo. Except, they seem to have been wrong. I can excuse a Kickstarter project running out of money for releasing their game because they simply have no other choice. A behemoth like Bethesda has no such excuse. This was a half-assed attempt at best. And that is probably being generous.

    And it't not like reviewers have a hard-on for sticking it to Bethesda. Every open-world game they have released since Morrowind has been universally acclaimed until now. With this game tanking their reputation, and Blades likely to suffer backlash simply by the osmosis effect of the Diablo: Immortal announcement, all I can say is......support your indie developers.

    I don't understand who this game is for. The multiplayer part is just......there. It doesn't mean anything, it just exists. The single-player experience basically amounts to random MMO-like quests and collecting junk. There are no NPCs. It serves neither a multiplayer or single-player audience. If you want multiplayer, why not play any of a hundred games that do it better?? If you want a single-player experience, what point is there to playing this over Fallout 4 unless you happen to enjoy the map more??
  • deltagodeltago Member Posts: 7,811
    What I think killed it was not having dedicated servers for different play styles.

    A MMO like this would work amazingly for team vs team pvp as groups fight for the little scraps that the game offers.

    If that’s not your cup of tea, then a player bs environment server where you can join forces or not to explore the wasteland.

    If you are more into the rebuilding the world, have servers dedicated just for that. What gets placed in the world stays there (until someone else comes around and tears it down), opening player made ships and businesses as the world slowly gets tamed around you.

    Seperate the three and I think people would be more forgiving as their “niche” gets addressed properly.

    Bethesda mucked this up though and I hope it doesn’t kill the franchise outright.
  • scriverscriver Member Posts: 2,072
    edited November 2018
    It's already on sale on the Humble store

    40% off, to be precise.

    I hope noone of you bought it full price. If you did, I'm sorry.
  • jjstraka34jjstraka34 Member Posts: 9,850
    edited November 2018
    So......I picked this up today out of sheer masochistic curiosity, along with the fact that it is almost half-off for the moment because of Black Friday on the PC. I've already refunded one absolute disaster this week in regards to "Underworld: Ascendant", and I highly doubt this game will reach THAT level of ineptitude, but at this point after watching hours of videos on this I just have to see how this disaster is actually shaping up in real-time. Also, I have a uncontrollable urge to participate in online gaming holiday sales.

    That being said, my initial impressions are these:

    1.) This is the exact engine from Fallout 4. I know Bethesda has been using the Creation Engine since Morrowind itself, but this game looks EXACTLY like Fallout 4. That isn't a bad thing, since at least on PC, if you have a gaming rig, it seems to run ok in the FPS department. The PS4 and XBox One couldn't even handle that game at consistent 30 FPS, which is why they are struggling with this one.

    2.) In regards to the no NPCs, at least there is some context. It seems Vault 76 went in in anticipation of the nuclear war, well in advance. Thus, they were always intended to be the first ones out to rebuild. The situation in the Vault is a stark difference between 3 and 4, as the atmosphere seems almost idyllic and celebratory, and the Overseer herself a respected and revered figure rather than a murderous underground tyrant.

    3.) This is a survival game using the base gameplay of Fallout 4 as a template, with multiplayer thrown in, I'm assuming simply so a cash shop has an excuse to exist. I honestly don't know WHY this couldn't have just been a single-player survival game with the West Virginia open-world (which is legitimately beautiful). Because in the first hour I haven't ran into a single other soul. The world designers did just fine here. But the other aspects of the game are just tacked on repeatable MMO fetch and kill quests (which I personally have some tolerance for but I'm guessing alot of people don't) along with this vague idea of playing with other people, even though that aspect of the game seems totally pointless because you don't really see anyone AND you can opt out of most of the functions of it.

    Again, I just don't know why the multiplayer exists in this game. Whatever novelty it has is going to quickly run out, which will leave us with a wonderful in-game representation of Appalachia with some very basic survival game elements. Which is fine. At least on PC, the game isn't a technical disaster like it is on consoles. But there is just no purpose being served by the multiplayer aspect of this game. Since you can effectively ignore it, it isn't a deal-breaker if you are looking for a 4th open-world in this universe. If you have a high tolerance for the repetition of hunt and gather quests that populate MMOs, this game will probably scratch an itch. But there is really nothing here beyond the exploration. But then again, the exploration has been the best part of Bethesda games from the beginning. Don't pay full-price for this, but the world itself is definitely worth $30 to take in and traverse at least once.
    Post edited by jjstraka34 on
  • mlnevesemlnevese Member, Moderator Posts: 10,214
    The problem is that the big developers are convinced single player is dead and that only multiplayer sells. As far as I'm concerned I won't ever bother with multiplayer for multiple reasons. I won't derail this thread into a why I hate multiplayer games, though :)
  • jjstraka34jjstraka34 Member Posts: 9,850
    mlnevese said:

    The problem is that the big developers are convinced single player is dead and that only multiplayer sells. As far as I'm concerned I won't ever bother with multiplayer for multiple reasons. I won't derail this thread into a why I hate multiplayer games, though :)

    I guarantee if this was a single-player game it's review scores would be 20-30 points higher among both critics and users. It's a Bethesda game, of course there would be stuff that only modders would ever end up fixing if that was the case. But it's hard not to trust the Bethesda game modding community to do so, when the modern Elder Scrolls and Fallout titles are practically the epicenter of the PC modding community in general. I don't think anyone trusts Bethesda to fix the technical shortcomings in their own games, except in this case they are going to have to, because it's a service game.

    Again, I could handle a Bethesda open-world game once a year in the Elder Scrolls or Fallout universe simply because there is nothing quite like them in gaming, despite their problems. Just walking around and running into things is often compelling enough. What makes no sense is while this is going on, Destiny-like community PvE events pop up and reward instant loot upon completion.

    They have this fairly-well realized idea of what happened in West Virginia told in a new way, they have another wholly impressive open-world to tell it in. And what they have done instead is put all the major focus on the quest structure of MMOs and Destiny. Except, even in those cases, the concepts they are borrowing are cursory at best.

    I just don't get it. No one could have possibly expected they'd have another full Fallout world ready so soon after 4. Everyone would have rallied around this game if it wasn't a.) suffering crippling technical issues and b.) designed around a multiplayer concept almost no one who enjoys the series is interested in. Even saying all that, the piling on has at this point taken on a life of it's own. This is not by any stretch of the imagination one of the "worst games of all-time", though it's apparent failure is going to make it seem like it is.
  • jjstraka34jjstraka34 Member Posts: 9,850
    Another small update, as I have only really had time to dabble and explore a bit more. One thing I will say for the multiplayer in this game is that, at the very least, PvP is almost non-existent. On the one hand, this doesn't surprise me, as the people interested in playing Fallout for it's world-building and exploration aspects don't give a crap about that sort of gameplay. Games like Rust (which Fallout 76 is clearly cribbing from in some respects, again, this is EXPLICITLY a survival game, but it's survival-lite) may do what this game is trying to do better, but they also by all accounts have an active player-base that can almost be described as sociopathic. In some ways, the minor cottage industry of Youtube reviews slamming this game has served the purpose of keeping those type of people away from the game entirely, so what you are left with is simply people who want to explore the world (and it's a massive, massive map) without engaging in the kind of PvP actions that ruin the gameplay sessions of other people.
  • FinneousPJFinneousPJ Member Posts: 6,455
    https://youtu.be/7L1UAglcaa0

    This video was good. Strong critique without being salty
  • megamike15megamike15 Member Posts: 2,666
    and in recent events Bethesda refused to give someone a refund so they are getting sued.
  • WarChiefZekeWarChiefZeke Member Posts: 2,651
    The "lore" of Fallout 76 hurts to read.

    And Skyrim dragons? That's just lazy and uninspired.
  • deltagodeltago Member Posts: 7,811

    and in recent events Bethesda refused to give someone a refund so they are getting sued.

    You mean this:
    https://gamerant.com/fallout-4-lawsuit-addiction/

    Or are you talking about this (which hasn't been filed yet):
    https://twinfinite.net/2018/11/fallout-76-bethesda-lawsuit/

    Serves Bethesda right for attempting to cut out the middle man in Steam/GoG. It'll be interesting if this lawsuit extends to console purchases as well. I wouldn't put it past the Firm to do that. The more people they get on board, the more money they receive in the end.
  • SorcererV1ct0rSorcererV1ct0r Member Posts: 2,176
    Fallout 4 is a dumbed down version of fallout 3
    Fallout 76 is a dumbed down version of fallout 4

    And unlile skyrim where you can fix some stupis decisions eg sun damage from vampires, deadly dragons, etc, 76 can not be fixed with mods.

    There are tons of better surviving games.
  • jjstraka34jjstraka34 Member Posts: 9,850
    I mean, I've seen one Scorch Beast in the sky in about 6 hours. It is not in question that some aspects of this game are just flat-out out recycled from Fallout 4 and Skyrim. I don't know what Fallout 76 means from a lore perspective, but as individual story vignettes they aren't that offensive.

    Again, I'll defend the West Virginia open-world (especially the use of regional folklore), mildly go to bat for the basic survial elements, and rip it to high heaven for it's current technical issues and the multiplayer in general. If they would just let me exist on my own server and provided some technical and bug fix support for this game, it would be good. One day when this dies down, I imagine modders will have a shot at manipulating this base into a single-player game.
  • megamike15megamike15 Member Posts: 2,666
    deltago said:

    and in recent events Bethesda refused to give someone a refund so they are getting sued.

    You mean this:
    https://gamerant.com/fallout-4-lawsuit-addiction/

    Or are you talking about this (which hasn't been filed yet):
    https://twinfinite.net/2018/11/fallout-76-bethesda-lawsuit/

    Serves Bethesda right for attempting to cut out the middle man in Steam/GoG. It'll be interesting if this lawsuit extends to console purchases as well. I wouldn't put it past the Firm to do that. The more people they get on board, the more money they receive in the end.
    this one

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jYTbekWTpMw
  • deltagodeltago Member Posts: 7,811
    Ya so it's the second one.

    One thing to keep in mind: even in a brick and mortar store, you are not guaranteed a refund. Every business sets their own refund policy and Bethesda's seems to be "if you downloaded the game, it is final sale."

    This law firm is looking for a quick settlement, which I doubt they'd get.
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