There are so many good games out this fall. So, so many. Thereās a type of video game for just about every type of video game player. But there is one thing missing: Thereās no vast, open-world role-playing game.
Bethesda, scions of the vast open-world RPG, have dedicated this year to the fantastic but decidedly not-open-world Dishonored. I had to go somewhere to get my fix of wandering, leveling, and exploring. And so I decided to return to Fallout: New Vegas
Over the past couple of years, Iāve heard a lot of people rave about the underratedness and overlookedness of Obsidianās take on Bethesdaās first-person reinvention of the Fallout universe. I actually played a big chunk of New Vegas when it first came out, but I never finished it. I just sort of ran out of steam not too long after Iād arrived on the strip.
Two years later, with a healthy gaming PC and a new appreciation for how much modding can improve these types of games, I thought Iād dig back in. After so, so many hours in Skyrim, Iām increasingly hungry to return to the darker and, frankly, more interesting Fallout universe. (Thatās a mouthful! But you get it, right? Obsidian made New Vegas, Bethesda just published it.) Iāve also heard nothing but good things about the New Vegas DLC, which is now so cheap that I couldnāt help but download all of it.
For the first post, I thought Iād write about how Iāve modded the game to get it looking as good as possible. I havenāt gone nearly as overboard with mods as I did with Skyrim; lots of New Vegas mods make the game unstable, and seeing as how itās already pretty crash-y, I wanted to stick with the biggest cosmetic upgrades and not much else.
So, hereās what Iāve got installed. These mods, coupled with my solid gaming PC (Iām running an i5 2.8GHz with 8GB of RAM and a GeForce 660Ti) certainly make New Vegas a better-looking, more tweakable, and more interesting game than it was when I played it on Xbox in 2010.
Iāve downloaded all of these mods from The Nexusmods Site for New Vegas, and most have been installed using the Nexus Mod Manager. Iāve made a note of the mods that require manual installation. Here goes:
Project Nevada
Project Nevada is the only overhaul-ish mod Iām using, but itās a heck of an overhaul. It adds all kinds of crap to the gameāhotkeys for grenades, a sprint button, bullet-time, stealth modes, cybernetic implants⦠honestly, it makes New Vegas feel like a much differentāand much betterāgame. I particularly like the cybernetic implantsāmy sneaky fast-talker now has a stealth mod installed in her chest, and with a press of the āXā button, I can activate a stealth field akin to a Stealth Boy. This is great, since I always hoarded stealth boys in the original game and never used them.
To get Project Nevada to work, youāll have to install the latest version of the New Vegas Script Extender, which is very easy to do. Just follow the directions at the site. Youāll also have to check the boxes for the four .esm files in the āPluginsā tab in the Nexus Mod Manager.
Centered Third Person Camera
This one does just what it sounds likeāit centers the third-person camera. Very nice, as the up-close third person camera is weird and claustrophobic. Itās especially good for those early hours when you need to run/jump away from radscorpions to get where youāre going. Itās much easier to see when one of the little biters is right on your heels.
Fellout NV
Fellout is a mod that, just like the previous version for Fallout 3, removes the orange tint that the game previously had. It, in combination with a couple of other mods, makes the game a much more welcoming-looking thing, and makes daytime in the desert a more arid, clear affair. I dig it.
NMCās Texture Pack
NMCās texture overhaul for New Vegas is definitely the biggest graphical boost you can give the game, though it can also be a bit persnickety. You canāt use the mod manager, and have to extract the archives straight into your New Vegas directory. Thatās no sweat, but after installing the large version of the pack, my game became hugely unstable. Youāll also want to install the 4GB New Vegas Mod, which allows the game to use 4GB of virtual memory. Unfortunately, even with that mod installed, the texture pack caused constant crashes.
I downgraded to the medium texture pack, and things are much, much more stable now. The game still looks great, and while it does crash every hour or two, Iām A) not certain the crashes are due to the textures and B) can live with it.
Nevada Skies
Nevada Skies adds a bunch of new weather effects and sky textures to the game, and makes everything that much prettier.
FNV Enhanced Shaders
This is another big oneāIāve actually installed the lite version of this mod, since the most recent one forces me to turn off AA and also slows my framerate down. The lite version still looks nice though, and adds a lot of good lighting effects. I generally turn it off when Iām in dungeons, however, as it just makes things too dark. Fortunately, you can turn it off with a simple keystroke at any time.
And thatās that. There are, of course, a ton of other mods I could install, but I donāt want to change the core experience too muchāIām interested in looking back at how the game feels a few years after it came out, and Project Nevada brings enough changes to keep me happy.
Iāve been playing the game sort of casually between other big fall releases, but Iāve already noticed a lot of things that are interesting, particularly after spending so much time playing Skyrim (and so much more time theorizing about Bethesdaās presumed Fallout follow-up). Iāll have some more articles throughout the week about New Vegas, and hey, if youāve got any free time between the alien-blasting and stealth-stabbing, download some mods and join in.