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Fallout: Nuka Break is a live-action fan-made web series made by Wayside Creations and set in the Fallout video game universe. Its direct setting is derived from both Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas. Nuka Break features three main characters, a "Vault dweller, his ghoul companion, and a slave they freed
Fallout: New Vegas features a wide variety of weapons that players can use in combat. Here, the player fights an enemy known as a deathclaw with a varmint rifle. Fallout: New Vegas is an action role-playing game that can be played from either a first-person or third-person perspective.
The Vault was founded by Paweł Dembowski [2] and launched on February 7, 2005, initially hosted by Fallout fansite Duck and Cover, [2] as a general source of information about the Fallout universe, initially focusing mostly on information about the Fallout world, as depicted in Fallout and Fallout 2.
Dogmeat is the name given to various dogs featured in the post-apocalyptic role-playing game series Fallout.Dogmeat was introduced as an optional companion to the player character in the original Fallout (1997), and made a cameo appearance in Fallout 2 (1998).
Chris Avellone is an American video game designer and comic book writer.He worked for Interplay and Obsidian Entertainment before becoming a freelance designer and writer. He is best known for his work on role-playing video games such as Planescape: Torment, Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords and the Fallout series.
[1] [9] Although the plot of Fallout 3 was completely unrelated to Van Buren, some story elements from the canceled game were used in the follow-up Fallout: New Vegas, such as the American Southwest setting and Caesar's Legion. [2] [5] Fallout: New Vegas was developed by Obsidian Entertainment, a company Avellone cofounded after he left Black ...
Fallout is a media franchise of post-apocalyptic role-playing video games created by Tim Cain and Leonard Boyarsky, [1] [2] at Interplay Entertainment.The series is set during the first half of the 3rd millennium, and its atompunk retrofuturistic setting and artwork are influenced by the post-war culture of the 1950s United States, with its combination of hope for the promises of technology ...
In the Fallout series of games, isolated brains are used to control robots called "Robobrains". [27] In the Old World Blues downloadable content for the video game Fallout: New Vegas a group of scientists, dubbed the "Think Tank", have a more advanced version of the technology.