Ranking The 7 Fallout Games
Added: 24.07.2015 16:00 | 9 views | 0 comments
We rank Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout 3, Fallout New Vegas, Fallout Tactics, Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel, and Fallout Shelter from worst to best.
From:
feeds.ign.com
| Fallout's Brotherhood of Steel and Operation Paperclip
Added: 17.07.2015 5:15 | 26 views | 0 comments
Derik Moore of Gaming Rebellion writes: "Imagine the future that science fiction promised us in the 1950s, with the small caveat that in 2077, the Cold War gets hot, very hot. Like multiple instances of thermofusion reactions in all the major cities across the globe hot. The main Fallout games usually take place centuries after the Great War so we get that wonderful post-apocalyptic feel that the fans adore so much. The wasteland that used to be the United States features many different factions with goals that range from reestablishing civilization, to just reestablishing the US, to just plain survival. One of these factions, and the one Im focusing on today, was created by survivors of the US Army who try and recover the advanced items of prewar technology that are still far more advanced than what most of the Wastelands inhabitants will ever possess. This faction is called the Brotherhood of Steel."
Tags: Green, Steve, States, United, United States, Arts, Live, Gaming, Code, Brotherhood, Moore
From:
n4g.com
| The Fallout 4 Story Hints Hidden In Previous Fallout Games
Added: 07.07.2015 17:00 | 13 views | 0 comments
With quest called "The Replicated Man". The quest begins when you encounter a character named Dr. Zimmer. He is employed by The Institute, and is searching the Capitol Wasteland for an android, Harkness, that has escaped from his employers. Part of The Institute's secrecy concerns the highly advanced technology it houses; technology advanced enough to create androids like Harkness which are almost indistinguishable from humans. These androids are used as slaves by The Institute, but some of them develop sentience of their own, and subsequently desire to escape their life of servitude. If they do escape, the androids are hunted down by a group of law enforcement personnel known as the Synth Retention Bureau. The whole quest is an homage to Blade Runner, in which "replicants"-- androids also virtually indistinguishable from humans--are hunted down and killed by a police force specifically trained to do so. As in Blade Runner, some of the members of The Institute's Synth Retention Bureau are androids themselves. In opposition to The Institute and the Synth Retention Bureau is an underground movement calling itself The Railroad. This is a group of people who assist androids in escaping slavery and in finding a new life--sometimes going so far as to give them a complete facial reconstruction and erasing their memory to adjust to their new lives. In The Replicated Man quest, you must decide to side with either The Railroad or the Synth Retention Bureau by determining whether Harkness remains free, or turning him over to Dr. Zimmer. It's highly likely that The Institute, The Railroad, and the conflict between androids and humans, will play a major part in Fallout 4's plot, given that we'll actually be exploring Boston. But how these factions' goals and objectives will play into those of the Brotherhood of Steel and Boston's other surviving groups remains to be seen.
From:
www.gamespot.com
| The Fallout 4 Story Hints Hidden In Previous Fallout Games
Added: 07.07.2015 17:00 | 9 views | 0 comments
With quest called "The Replicated Man". The quest begins when you encounter a character named Dr. Zimmer. He is employed by The Institute, and is searching the Capitol Wasteland for an android, Harkness, that has escaped from his employers. Part of The Institute's secrecy concerns the highly advanced technology it houses; technology advanced enough to create androids like Harkness which are almost indistinguishable from humans. These androids are used as slaves by The Institute, but some of them develop sentience of their own, and subsequently desire to escape their life of servitude. If they do escape, the androids are hunted down by a group of law enforcement personnel known as the Synth Retention Bureau. The whole quest is an homage to Blade Runner, in which "replicants"-- androids also virtually indistinguishable from humans--are hunted down and killed by a police force specifically trained to do so. As in Blade Runner, some of the members of The Institute's Synth Retention Bureau are androids themselves. In opposition to The Institute and the Synth Retention Bureau is an underground movement calling itself The Railroad. This is a group of people who assist androids in escaping slavery and in finding a new life--sometimes going so far as to give them a complete facial reconstruction and erasing their memory to adjust to their new lives. In The Replicated Man quest, you must decide to side with either The Railroad or the Synth Retention Bureau by determining whether Harkness remains free, or turning him over to Dr. Zimmer. It's highly likely that The Institute, The Railroad, and the conflict between androids and humans, will play a major part in Fallout 4's plot, given that we'll actually be exploring Boston. But how these factions' goals and objectives will play into those of the Brotherhood of Steel and Boston's other surviving groups remains to be seen.
From:
www.gamespot.com
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