Fallout 3 Review

10 / 10 Banzai!s

The Game:

War never changes.

It is the year 2277, and the US has been left ravaged by a Sino-American nuclear war. Few managed to escape the catastrophe, living in underground shelters known as Vaults, safe from the horrors outside – super mutants, radioactive cockroaches, slavers, and robots gone berserk now rule the post-apocalyptic land.

Fallout 3 is a first-person action RPG, in which you play a dweller from Vault 101. You are born, raised by your father, until one day the unthinkable happens – your father leaves the Vault! Why? In search of answers, you go after him; and find yourself embarking on a great quest which glimmers with hope for a new future.

Like any RPG, your character goes up in level through XP with the opportunity to boost stats and statistics along the way. You can attack freely like a first-person shooter, or use an automatic targeting system called V.A.T.S. to destroy the enemy’s arm, leg or head. The setting is a mixture of post-apocalyptic, much like Cormac McCarthy’s The Road (which the game borrowed inspiration from) and a retro-future which resembles the sci-fi magazines of the 1940’s.

Though the game has a main quest, Fallout 3 is anything but linear. From the moment you leave Vault 101, you are free to wander the Capital Wasteland from one end of the map to the other, discover new locations and taking on side quests. Performing good deeds grants you positive karma, while the opposite will turn your character evil – and this has an affect on your interaction with other NPCs. From character creation to location, to game play, Fallout 3 provides you with the freedom to make your own destiny.

 

What I Liked:

Having given this game a solid 10 our of 10 banzai!s, this portion of the review could obviously be very long. Instead, I’ll just focus on the specifics.

What I enjoyed most was how I could play this game, regardless of my mood. If I felt like being really engaged, I could pick up a side-quest or main quest and entertain myself. None of these missions are straight forward, and many have a twist at the end which kept me interested in the story. Other times, after a long day at work and I just want to lie on the sofa with a bag of chips and play something light, I can just wander about and discover locations. I could play Fallout 3 as seriously as I wanted to, without the game making any demands on me.

And you just gotta love the save feature. I wish every game had this same saving method. I could be anywhere in the game – fighting a super mutant, inside an abandoned house, falling off a cliff, and all I have to do is hit save. No checkpoints. If you have only 15 minutes of gaming time before headout out somewhere, no problem! Just play as long as you want, save at any time, and there you go!

I must confess, I’m a bit biased with the genre. I love post-apocalyptic stories. I’d read Cormac McCarthy’s The Road twice, and gobbled up anything by John Wyndham – particularly The Day of the Triffids and The Chrysalids. I also have a fascination for anything from the 1930’s and ’40’s. I collect antique Coke-a-Cola bottles, tin signs advertising 5 cent hot dogs, and even wear a fedora from time to time. Yeah, my girlfriend thinks I’m weird, too. But having these two things I love – a post-apocalyptic genre and a ’40’s retro future – blended together into a single game grabbed my attention.

The story itself is fantastic. It begins with a mystery as you follow your father’s footsteps, trying to discover why he left the Vault in the first place, and eventually leads you to a climactic battle at the end. Each of the characters you encounter has their own unique personality, and are more colourful than any I’ve experienced in such a vast game as this.

There’s plenty to do in Fallout 3 – you can either speed through the main quest, or take your time and see what else the game has to offer. It’s all up to you!

 

What I Didn’t Like:

Hard to say, considering I gave it 10 banzai!s. But honestly, there’s nothing that comes to mind which I felt could have been improved on. Maybe the graphics weren’t as explosively beautiful as Final Fantasy XIII, but they were still far above satisfactory. Besides, graphics aren’t everything. Just play Final Fantasy XIII, and you’ll know what I mean.

 

Overall:

I’m not saying Fallout 3 is a perfect game, as there’s no such thing. For every person who loves this game, there’s someone out there who didn’t. Just like movies and books, games are a matter of taste. I’ve met people out there who thought Star Wars was stupid, or Harry Potter was dumb, or Lord of the Rings was boring, believe it or not. And that’s fine, each to their own.

But since this review is a reflection of my opinion and my tastes, I gave it a solid 10 because I loved it. I loved how there was so much to explore. I loved the story – and the side quests. I loved the characters, and the scenarios. I loved the saved feature. I loved everything about this game, and would place it in my personal Top Ten rank of best games ever played – and this is coming from someone who’s not a fan of the first-person genre!

If you’re a fan of action RPG, science-fiction, or just want to play something with a good story, I would highly recommend Fallout 3. It’ll keep you entertained for hours to come.

 

written by Damon Finos

From Japan: So, You Want To Be A Ninja?

While people in Japan may role their eyes when hearing a Westerner mention the term “ninja,” these mysterious assassins have captured the imagination and been the inspiration behind numerous sources of pop-culture, from 1970’s martial art films, to James Bond movies, to video games like Ninja Gaiden and Shinobi, to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.  But the question is, were the ninja merely a product of this pop-culture, or did they actually exist?

Yes, they did.

While fact and fiction has been blurred, due to what little information has been uncovered (their whole profession was stealth, after all) many historians believe the ninja predominantly existed around the Sengoku era (around 1450 to 1600) when Japan lacked unification, resulting in military conflict and social upheaval.  While the Samurai were all about upholding rules on honor and combat (known as Bushido) the ninja fought “unfairly” by hiding in the shadows and pouncing on unsuspecting enemies.

Ninja GaidenAs their profession grew, Nina Clans began sprouting around Japan – particularly in Mie Prefecture – where they would train and graduate, before being hired as either a spy or mercenary, usually by the more desperate lower-class Shoguns.  Some well-known historical events involving the ninja was the Shimbara Rebellion (1637-1638) in which the Shogun Iemitsu Tokugawa hired ninjas to kill the Christian rebels stationed in Hara Castle in Nagasaki Prefecture.  And in the early 1700’s, Yoshimune Tokugawa started the Oniwaban, a kind of medieval CIA which employed ninjas for their secret intelligence, gathering on government officials and Daimyos.

Where can we see ninjas today?

If you head up to Nikko, you can visit the Edo Wonderland, which is mainly a studio set up to resemble an ancient village used for filming Japan’s historical dramas.  There, you can witness mock ninja battles as they fly through the trees on cables swinging their swords, or fighting in a play dubbed “Ninja Kabuki.”

Last month, a “Ninja Training Session” was held in Chiba Prefecture which ran a two-hour course for only 500 yen, teaching the ways of the ninja such as throwing shuriken (ninja stars) and climbing trees.  The catch?  You have to be a kid.

 

written by Damon Finos

Let The Games Begin! – Xbox One versus PS4

It’s an understatement to say that video games have come a long way since the days of the 8-bit consoles.  Beginning with the battles between Nintendo and Sega, gaming companies have fought for popularity – and of course, sales – while consumers based their choices on a number of factors.  Which generation console is coming out first?  Which one is cheaper?  Which one has better graphics?  Which one has a better library of titles?

It seems that these factors have become less important these days.  After huge failures like Atari’s Jaguar, Panasonic’s 3DO, and Nintendo’s N64, companies now learned it’s better not to unleash a console with specs so advanced that they alienate third-party developers.  Yes, it can be objectively argued that the PlayStation 3 is more powerful than the Xbox 360, but not by much.  This leads to a new style in business for third-party developers – being able to port the exact same game onto different systems.  Now, the question isn’t which system has better games, but which has better “exclusive” games.

We are entering the eighth generation of game consoles this year, and those factors mentioned earlier seem even less important.  Not only do we have the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One competing with a large percentage of their game titles being the same, but this will be the first time the battle will begin at the same time.  While neither Sony nor Microsoft have confirmed release dates, both have stated “this year,” and we can probably expect that to be before the Winter shopping season.

Why does this matter?  For one thing, having the two competing consoles released nearly (or maybe, at) the same time means competitive prices.  Sony and Microsoft won’t be able to release their systems at high prices, wait for the gaming nuts to buy them at launch, then lower the price.  This could mean, in fact, that both consoles may end up having the exact same price.

Furthermore, this means leveling the playing field.  If both the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One are released at nearly the same time, and nearly at the same price, and if over 75% of the games are the exact same, then what will make up the difference?  How will gamers decide which console to buy this Winter?Xbox One versus PS4

Aside from the personal bias of fanboys, I think it will all come down to what makes each system unique.  There will always be each console’s selection of “exclusive titles,” of course.  And based on the two recent press conferences from both Sony and Microsoft, it seems the PlayStation 4 is focusing more on the social connectability, while Xbox One is all about movies and entertainment.  Still, we won’t learn more about their “uniqueness” until E3 in a few weeks.  But it will be interesting to see, when the gates are open and these two consoles start making their way down the track, which system the players will bet their money on.  No one can claim that one unit sold more than the other simply because it was released earlier, or the price was cheaper.  It’s all fair game!

Personally, I’ll probably end up just buying both.

 

written by Damon Finos