Last week, Bethesda revealed a premium subscription service for Fallout 76. Things started rough with glitches erasing player supplies and private servers that werenât all that private after all. Now thereâs another problem: growing tensions between regular and premium players splitting the community on economic lines, and creating a burgeoning class war in digital Appalachia.
Fallout 76âs premium service, called Fallout 1st, seems to have caused more problems than it solved. While the service offers a suite of special perksâ âprivate servers, a limitless scrapbox for crafting materials, unique armorâ âthe implementation has led Bethesda to acknowledge to Polygonthat the situation is ânot what players expected.â Underneath this is a debate between players over what is or is not âpay to win,â with an ongoing argument thatâs spilling into the game itself. Reports of players attacked for having premium status and hunkering down to defend themselves from normal players have captured attention on social media and Reddit, though these stories havenât beed corroborated. Regardless, itâs clear that Fallout 76âs community is split.
Much of this has to do with the benefits that Fallout 1st players gain with their subscription. Given how much scrap and junk players need to use for crafting and armor upgrades, a chest specifically for storing crafting materials was widely requested by the community. The game now has an unending scrapbox, but it is locked behind the Fallout 1st paywall. That has rubbed players the wrong way. This combines with another feature: a tent that can be propped up anywhere and instantly grant access to storage containers. Premium players can avoid the hassles of collecting too many items to move, making looting an easier process. Private servers have led to accusations of preferential treatment when it comes to gear farming. Itâs possible to tackle public events like junkyard defense in privacy, scooping up gear and crafting materials freely. Players on a private server can, in theory, launch a nuke on their server and kill the higher level enemies at their leisure to gain powerful items that they can then take into public servers. These features launched with their own issues: the scrapbox seemed to consume playersâ items, and private servers were readily accessible to anyone on the ownersâ friends list. But their usefulness has angered average players.
âThis isnât an insurmountable advantage,â a player noted on Reddit. âBut it is the first step on a slippery slope. If subscriptions donât sell well as is what stops the introduction of exclusive and superior weapons and armors?â
âEveryone is mad and afraid that your purchasing of the sub will be enough to make it profitable and push the goal posts of whatâs acceptable in gaming further,â another said. âStop killing video games.â
A viral tweetsent yesterday suggests that some wastelanders have vented their aggression by attacking Fallout 1st players in Fallout 76. The gameâs subreddit has posts about â1st Hunters,â griefing premium players. One player stated that the behavior should lead to bans. Another jokingly suggested a âcivil war.â Bans have been handed out for egregious behavior before including a lifetime ban for one player who planned to âeliminate all gays.â These attacks on 1st players have been difficult to verify, and Kotaku has reached out to players for specific accounts. No matter what, trouble is brewing.
Underneath the glitchy subscriptions, possible advantages, and griefing is a legitimate concern: Fallout 1stâs cost. The service costs $13 a month or $100 a year, and while thatâs not out of step with modern MMO subscription costsâ âFinal Fantasy XIVâs monthly subscription cost is also $13â âFallout 76 is a much more limited game. The result is a perception that premium players are spending money frivolously and, in doing so, encouraging further monetization. In a world of premium currencies, downloadable content, and loot boxes, itâs easy to see where player frustration comes from. Though itâs definitely not worth taking out on other players.