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New Vegas review from NMA, too good to be true???

Joined
Apr 12, 2007
Messages
1,658
Location
Prussia
Patroling the Codex, almost makes me wish for a nuclear winter.
 

Jaedar

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Aug 5, 2009
Messages
10,145
Project: Eternity Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 Pathfinder: Kingmaker
RK47 said:
but definitely fast travel is a must. Especially when you're doing 'Return to Sender'
Personally, I tend to use "movetoqt" when I get bored of needless fedex. Teleports you straight to where you need to be.
 

Hoaxmetal

Arcane
Joined
Jul 19, 2009
Messages
9,173
Jaedar said:
RK47 said:
but definitely fast travel is a must. Especially when you're doing 'Return to Sender'
Personally, I tend to use "movetoqt" when I get bored of needless fedex. Teleports you straight to where you need to be.
Same here. Hardcore purists will yell popamole etc. but I'd rather save 10 minutes I'd have to spend simply running back to quest giver (BoS quests being good example).
 

Elwro

Arcane
Joined
Dec 29, 2002
Messages
11,751
Location
Krakow, Poland
Divinity: Original Sin Wasteland 2
I read all I could about it, but I cannot play Caravan. I have 9 clubs as the first card of my Caravan. I have 7 clubs in my hand and I can't play it on the 9 clubs. Why?

In fact, in my copy of the game it seems I can play no numbered cards on any other numbered cards. After beginning the caravan, I can only play face cards. Anyone knows why?

edit: heh, no one told me I have to press "down" arrow before playing a card, move along, nothing to see here
 

Mortmal

Arcane
Joined
Jun 15, 2009
Messages
9,498
Topher said:
Encounter Design and why games stopped being 2D in the first place.

With the advent of 3D gaming the designer needs to begin to design content while keeping three-dimensional spaces in mind. Why then do all the enemies in New Vegas appear at roughly the same elevation? Strangely enough I actually think that Fallout 3 handled encounter design in a 3D space much better the New Vegas has. In Fallout 3 it was very common to engage enemies that were positioned several floors above or below my character, this was particularly prevalent in the ruins of outdoor building and in the subway tunnels. Enemies would fire down at me from the window of a second story building as I worked my way up to them or would notice my character while patrolling the upper levels of an underground subway platform. Yet all of this has been conspicuously absent during my time with New Vegas and I’m left wondering why. There are still outdoor ruins but I have yet to see any enemies in the upper levels of these even though they are surrounding the building at ground level and there are still plenty indoor factories and vaults with a network of catwalks for enemies to take advantage of. So why then does it seem like the designers approached encounter design with a two-dimensional frame of mind? Perhaps it all stems from Obsidian’s lack of familiarity with fully 3D environments? After all New Vegas is the first time they have worked in a fully realized 3D space (at least to my knowledge) and because of this I am willing to chalk it is as understandable oversight. Of course there are times when New Vegas remembers to take advantage of its extra dimension but these instances are the exception rather than the rule and in the future I would beg developers to remember why games gravitated to 3D in the first place and to be sure to take full advantage of that extra dimension when working on any aspect of game design. Remember that not everybody out there thinks that every game has to be 3D but if you choose to design a 3D game be sure to take advantage of all the extra possibilities it offers, otherwise what was the point in the first place.


That one is easy, you just need to look at the companions behavior. They hardly succeed in following you, that was the same in oblivion and nehrim. I wont spoil it, but you will realize why encounters on different levels are a no go when you enter vault 34, your companions will just get stuck everywhere trying to chase enemies.
Even outside, they cant target very well enemies higher or lower than them sometimes emptying all of their ammo in a wall .
 

Admiral jimbob

gay as all hell
Joined
Sep 29, 2009
Messages
9,225
Location
truck stops and toilet stalls
Wasteland 2
Played up to Primm, in the process of fetching them a new sheriff.

So far, so Fallout 3. One thing that's improved is a far higher number of skill checks and alternate routes through quests, and they are of a pretty high quality - been a while since I saw speech checks that weren't just "I hate games, please let me skip this quest so I can rush through the game faster". Hope that much keeps up, I'm seeing a fair bit of replay value already, and the overall challenge is a bit higher, but that might just be because I'm playing on Hard. As for the rest... still pretty Fallout 3. But it's looking up.
 

Elwro

Arcane
Joined
Dec 29, 2002
Messages
11,751
Location
Krakow, Poland
Divinity: Original Sin Wasteland 2
It's nice you can use Science in Primm, at least twice.

Anyway, once I got this thing running (I think), it's shaping up to be a great game!
 

SuicideBunny

(ノ ゜Д゜)ノ ︵ ┻━┻
Joined
May 1, 2007
Messages
8,943
Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Torment: Tides of Numenera
thrice, i think...
lower ed-e repair requirement, make cowboy bot realize it's been hacked and the gun is missing, make cowboy bot new sheriff
 

Elwro

Arcane
Joined
Dec 29, 2002
Messages
11,751
Location
Krakow, Poland
Divinity: Original Sin Wasteland 2
I missed the first one. You're not talking about the
elevator, which needs Repair, not Science
?

edit: nevermind, found it. Goddamn, high reqs. Will get back to this place later on.
 

Elwro

Arcane
Joined
Dec 29, 2002
Messages
11,751
Location
Krakow, Poland
Divinity: Original Sin Wasteland 2
Yeah, but I didn't feel like scavenging and I have tagged both Science and Repair. I went to the Mojave outpost, leveled up, went back and the skill was high enough to pass the req.
 
Joined
Sep 8, 2008
Messages
11,313
Location
SPAAAAAAAAAACE...
Project: Eternity
Moar Turd Vegas lulz:

JOHN ROMERO, er, I mean, SHADY LEGION DUDE IS GONNA MAKE YOU HIS BITCH!!
vulpesbitch.jpg


Result of an assassination: she was sitting in the chair and didn't fall off even after her head exploded.
magnum44assassination.jpg
 

Radisshu

Prophet
Joined
Jul 16, 2007
Messages
5,623
I haven't encountered any bugs yet, apart from a crash in the beginning of the game. The game is really cool, although the VATS combat is pretty stupid.
 

Topher

Cipher
Joined
Dec 5, 2007
Messages
1,860
Mortmal said:
Topher said:
Encounter Design and why games stopped being 2D in the first place.

With the advent of 3D gaming the designer needs to begin to design content while keeping three-dimensional spaces in mind. Why then do all the enemies in New Vegas appear at roughly the same elevation? Strangely enough I actually think that Fallout 3 handled encounter design in a 3D space much better the New Vegas has. In Fallout 3 it was very common to engage enemies that were positioned several floors above or below my character, this was particularly prevalent in the ruins of outdoor building and in the subway tunnels. Enemies would fire down at me from the window of a second story building as I worked my way up to them or would notice my character while patrolling the upper levels of an underground subway platform. Yet all of this has been conspicuously absent during my time with New Vegas and I’m left wondering why. There are still outdoor ruins but I have yet to see any enemies in the upper levels of these even though they are surrounding the building at ground level and there are still plenty indoor factories and vaults with a network of catwalks for enemies to take advantage of. So why then does it seem like the designers approached encounter design with a two-dimensional frame of mind? Perhaps it all stems from Obsidian’s lack of familiarity with fully 3D environments? After all New Vegas is the first time they have worked in a fully realized 3D space (at least to my knowledge) and because of this I am willing to chalk it is as understandable oversight. Of course there are times when New Vegas remembers to take advantage of its extra dimension but these instances are the exception rather than the rule and in the future I would beg developers to remember why games gravitated to 3D in the first place and to be sure to take full advantage of that extra dimension when working on any aspect of game design. Remember that not everybody out there thinks that every game has to be 3D but if you choose to design a 3D game be sure to take advantage of all the extra possibilities it offers, otherwise what was the point in the first place.


That one is easy, you just need to look at the companions behavior. They hardly succeed in following you, that was the same in oblivion and nehrim. I wont spoil it, but you will realize why encounters on different levels are a no go when you enter vault 34, your companions will just get stuck everywhere trying to chase enemies.
Even outside, they cant target very well enemies higher or lower than them sometimes emptying all of their ammo in a wall .

Yes, my companions acted pretty "wild and crazy and free" all through Vault 34 and come to think of it I don't remember companion behavior being so bad in Fallout 3. Boone in particular has a strong desire to get point blank range with enemies but I never noticed Charon(SP?) doing that; he always seemed good at keeping the distance.
 

1eyedking

Erudite
Joined
Dec 10, 2007
Messages
3,606
Location
Argentina
Fuck it, I'm hooked.

Though it feels like an offline MMORPG at times, quests don't go as deep as they should, skill checks and character progression are not as hardcore as I would've liked, and there's a lot of player skill overriding combat mechanics, what I say is whatever: it's got plenty of cool stuff to make a good, long look worth it.

It gets the 1eyedking Bronze Seal of Approval™.
 

Multi-headed Cow

Guest
Don't you normally go
y21.png
when people change their minds on games, 1eyedking?
 

1eyedking

Erudite
Joined
Dec 10, 2007
Messages
3,606
Location
Argentina
Multi-headed Cow said:
Don't you normally go
y21.png
when people change their minds on games, 1eyedking?
I never changed my mind upon F3:NV. I never said it was shit, I just said it was retarded. Also I never said it was great, nor am I saying it now.

It's an average to good game that gets seriously dragged down by many gameplay issues and dismal art direction. Say, a 6.5/10 experience; still doesn't beat Gothic 2.
 

DalekFlay

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
14,118
Location
New Vegas
I love that Boone and I just wiped out the Legion Camp at Cottonwood Cove with no discussion, no antics. We stood atop some rocks on a cliff and sniped them all until they were dead, failed quest notifications coming up twice over the course of it. Who cares? I will do them on my Legion playthrough someday, no worries. Go talk to Caesar? Fuck that, go KILL Caeser is more like it.

Oblivion and Fallout 3 were designed so the player could do every quest in the game in one playthrough, only the results of quests had any variation. I like that the fact I chose to play an NCR-loyal sniper who craves order and kills slavers, legionaries and murderers on sight has repercussions in the game world. More to the point I love that those repercussions feel good, not bad, because another playthrough will feel much more different than this one.

I sound like an advertisement for an RPG from 1999, which amuses me.
 

Admiral jimbob

gay as all hell
Joined
Sep 29, 2009
Messages
9,225
Location
truck stops and toilet stalls
Wasteland 2
DalekFlay said:
I love that Boone and I just wiped out the Legion Camp at Cottonwood Cove with no discussion, no antics. We stood atop some rocks on a cliff and sniped them all until they were dead, failed quest notifications coming up twice over the course of it. Who cares? I will do them on my Legion playthrough someday, no worries. Go talk to Caesar? Fuck that, go KILL Caeser is more like it.

Oblivion and Fallout 3 were designed so the player could do every quest in the game in one playthrough, only the results of quests had any variation. I like that the fact I chose to play an NCR-loyal sniper who craves order and kills slavers, legionaries and murderers on sight has repercussions in the game world. More to the point I love that those repercussions feel good, not bad, because another playthrough will feel much more different than this one.

I sound like an advertisement for an RPG from 1999, which amuses me.

Is it pretty safe to wipe out factions you don't like? I assumed some later-game quests would make use of them to some extent; I'm always kind of afraid to kill people in games like this in case I fuck something up spectacularly.

Also, game's definitely getting better. Huge improvement in enough areas to keep me interested, it's a solid 7/10 at the moment and apparently the best is certainly yet to come. I'll probably buy it when I have the money.
 

DalekFlay

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
14,118
Location
New Vegas
POOPOO MCBUMFACE said:
Is it pretty safe to wipe out factions you don't like? I assumed some later-game quests would make use of them to some extent; I'm always kind of afraid to kill people in games like this in case I fuck something up spectacularly.

The game actually encourages you to do it... when I wiped out the Powder Gangers at the prison a lot of NPCs commented on it. When I wipe out Legion Camps they comment on it. "Heard someone cleared out Cottonwood Cove... bout time!" Shit like that. I doubt it screws up the ending unless you piss everyone off, and even then you could do the Yes Man independent ending I would guess.

When you have Boone with you heading into Legion territory he says "I shoot every Legion member I see, so if that's a problem we part here." You can then tell him "that's not a problem, that's a solution." Fucking awesome.
 

Admiral jimbob

gay as all hell
Joined
Sep 29, 2009
Messages
9,225
Location
truck stops and toilet stalls
Wasteland 2
DalekFlay said:
POOPOO MCBUMFACE said:
Is it pretty safe to wipe out factions you don't like? I assumed some later-game quests would make use of them to some extent; I'm always kind of afraid to kill people in games like this in case I fuck something up spectacularly.

The game actually encourages you to do it... when I wiped out the Powder Gangers at the prison a lot of NPCs commented on it. When I wipe out Legion Camps they comment on it. "Heard someone cleared out Cottonwood Cove... bout time!" Shit like that. I doubt it screws up the ending unless you piss everyone off, and even then you could do the Yes Man independent ending I would guess.

When you have Boone with you heading into Legion territory he says "I shoot every Legion member I see, so if that's a problem we part here." You can then tell him "that's not a problem, that's a solution." Fucking awesome.

:thumbsup:
 

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