by BobbyZamora » Sat Jun 28, 2014 1:33 am
You're spot on regarding Skyrim. It's one of the shallowest games I've ever played. I've heard it described as "big as an ocean with the depth of a puddle" before, which is pretty accurate.
I'd strongly suggest giving New Vegas another chance. While the game is made even better with mods, it does stand up on its own (I played through it at release, when there were almost no mods around anyways.) and is an enjoyable experience.
I love how it starts you out in Goodsprings. Immediately after character creation, the game lets you loose on the world and you can basically choose to do whatever you wish. It does have a tutorial section, but it is completely optional and you can shoot Sunny Smiles in the face if you so please. Your only goal is simply to go to New Vegas, it gives you little direction and there are multiple paths to take. It does have a bias towards going a particular way (the other ways are a lot harder) but you can choose not to, and if you are skilled enough the game will reward you.
It's very unlike FO3, where there's a town inexplicably built around a live nuclear weapon, despite the fact that there is no food source nearby. It gives you solid explanations for why the settlements exist in certain places and overall has a much more interesting world. In Fallout 3, nobody was even growing any food which was bizarre. Aside from maybe one or two Brahmin, I don't think I ever saw any food sources in FO3. New Vegas however, has people farming plants and animals regularly.
There are a variety of interesting factions for you to dabble with. Your choices in the game actually matter, there aren't just 3 endings to pick from, the ending you get is generated based on your choices in the game- just like how it is in Fallout 1 and 2. (as opposed to FO3, where there is basically 1 ending with slight variations. The choices in Fallout 3 also have negligible effect on the actual game itself, they mostly only effect the ending scenarios.)
The game never holds your hand or stops you from doing certain things. Basically every NPC in the game can be killed (except for children IIRC) which includes important characters like Caesar or Benny. If you equip a faction's armor, you will become disguised. Disguises even take in to consideration things like the weapon you're carrying- if you are wielding something that no member of X faction would obviously have, your disguise fails. Helping one faction will damage (or help) your reputation with other factions. You have actual choice in this game- which is very different from Fallout 3, which basically forced you to align yourself with the Brotherhood of Steel.
The game also just has better writing in general, with more fleshed out characters and quests.
It's by no means a perfect game but it succeeds in so many ways where Skyrim, Oblivion, and Fallout 3 fail. Honestly, the biggest disappointment in New Vegas (aside from the fact that it is on Gamebryo) was that the New Vegas Strip was a bit underwhelming. The combat is still lackluster and the engine weighs it down, but it
Some people say that Fallout 3 had a better "atmosphere", but I always hate those sort of claims since usually the people making them have typically never played Fallout 1 and 2. Fallout 3's atmosphere makes no sense- it's so barren, it feels like it had just been hit with nuclear weapons weeks ago which makes no sense since Fallout 3 takes place hundreds of years after the apocalypse.
This video goes over the two games in better detail, and touches on some of the things I mentioned. He gives a much better analysis than I could.
It's worth pointing out that while Skyrim does have farmlands, it still doesn't hold up well in comparison to New Vegas. Even if you are the head of every guild and have literally saved the world, guards will still treat you like a commoner. There is no way to disguise yourself as a member of another faction. For some reason, even if you are a werewolf you still get offered to become a vampire.. even though the game's lore states that vampires despise werewolves. There are no intricate speech trees like there are in Fallout NV. The game gives you only a small amount of choice regarding how the story pans out. Rather then a fully fleshed out and realized world that offers a fulfilling RPG experience, Skyrim is just an extremely mediocre action game with an immensely bland world.
B)