![]() I enjoyed it as such, but not sure how I would have liked it as totally standalone. ![]() ![]() I'm not sure how it was received by those returning to the wilderness for the DLC but for me the total game carried this chapter a little because I still had places to explore while I was doing the action-heavy side of Broken Steel. The enemies are so levelled up to reflected this, but ultimately Fallout 3 was not a great shooter – it had decent enough FPS qualities to carry it but it was never going to compete with COD etc. You are exploring new areas of course, but by this point you are probably pretty powerful and have plenty of guns, ammo, armour and money so it shouldn't be that hard. ![]() What this means in terms of game play is that it is much more of a shooter than the main game. The story changes the original (terrible) ending and allows the player to continue to free-roam (if there are still areas to explore) but also step-up the fight against the Enclave. Broken Steel was the first I downloaded since it continued the story in the same world (the others seem to be in a different time or place) so it appealed to me most. The upside of me not getting this game for years is that all the DLC is ready for me when I am. Get to it I did and it quickly took a load of my time as I found myself constantly heading towards one place/story only to be distracted and led off for hours in a whole different direction, physically and narratively. ![]() I didn't know at the time that I was missing out on many great games and indeed I didn't even know about Fallout when it happened – it took me three years to get to it. When Fallout 3 came out I pretty much only playing Call of Duty games, what with them being the only reason I had picked gaming up after 5+ years. ![]()
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