Fallout: Difference between revisions

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- The rats are in case you need enough experience to level, so ignore them.
==Character Creation==


- Allies are extremely helpful in the early to mid-game.
* Agility is a key stat as it gives you more actions per round. Perception and Intelligence are important too. Some Strength and Endurance is good to have. 6 Luck is required for the powerful Better Criticals perk. Charisma is largely useless unless going for specific builds.


- Psycho (or two) is your best friend in the wasteland and he works best over quests with tons of enemies in tight spaces.
* '''Gifted''' is an extremely strong trait as attributes are much harder to increase than skills. This also applies to the sequel.


- Aim for Speech as it is very important at high percentages.
* Tagging '''Small Guns''' and '''Speech''' lets you deal with both combat and dialogue more easily throughout the game. Popular choices for the third tag include '''Lockpicking''' or '''Energy Weapons''' - there's no shortage of locks, and Energy Weapons make for the best endgame weapons.


- Tycho gets very angry when you kill people in his town.
==General Advice==


- Stick to small guns early on and then energy weapons when you have hundreds of ammo for it.
* As soon as you start the game and reach the world map, you can go back into the vault for some minor quests that will net you some early experience.


- A few more points in barter allows you to trade your stimpack for almost two of theirs.
* Allies are very helpful in the early to mid-game, but don't give them burst weapons if you value your health.


- Don't bother with using the keyword system unless you read about them on some other site.
* Stealing can net you some very nice stuff if you've put points into it, but make sure to save first as you don't want to anger towns. You can also use stealing to plant objects (like a ticking time bomb) on people.


- Tag small guns, tag speech. The last one is up to you, I like steal. Small guns will get you through 90% of the game, start putting points in energy weapons for the big finish. The other combat choices are viable, but extremely difficult for first time players.
* Always try to alternate methods of solving problems. Not only will talking people into things save your life early on, you'll often get more EXP for it than shooting them in the face would have earned you.


- Steal from everyone, everywhere, all the time.
* If you can pull off the shot, the best place to aim is usually the eyes.
 
- Save all the time, quicksave all the time, have layered saves. Reload if you're caught stealing - ripping off one kid for a rock will turn an entire town against you.
 
- As soon as you start the game, go back into the vault. There are some minor quests available in there that will net you some early xp.
 
- Always try to alternate methods of solving problems. Not only will talking people into things save your life early on, you'll often get more xp for it than shooting them in the face would have earned you.
 
- Try to keep your NPCs alive, but after a certain point their usefulness expires.
 
- Killing people in some towns could make recruitable NPC's angry. One will try to kill you after you recruit him and then harm some citizen.  Tycho  will attack you during every map change.
 
- Do NOT give NPCs burst-capable weapons. Ever. Friendly fire is in full effect and NPCs don't give a shit if you're in the line of fire
 
- Reading books on higher difficulty (lower stats) will give you better returns when you switch to lower difficulty (higher stats).
 
- Don't destroy the eggs in the Deathclaw lair in the original Fallout until you're sure that you're done grinding, or you hit level 50. You get tons of XP from Deathclaws, and if you don't smash the eggs, you can leave the area, go right back, and they'll have re-spawned.
 
- http://www.nma-fallout.com/forum/dload.php?action=category&cat_id=12
 
- Play a character you think will be fun to play and don't read any guides or anything. Fallout is designed to A) have multiple solutions to each quest and B) simulate, at least on some level, the feeling of desolation that comes with living in a post nuclear world. If you just follow the hints and wander around you'll have a much better time, I think.
 
- Agility is the best stat because it gives you more actions per round.
 
- Intelligence is important too for any kind of dialog focused character.
 
- Don't bother putting much into strength. See that guy on the title screen? He's wearing power armor. When you get it you get a +4 to strength.
 
- Small guns own in the beginning, energy weapons in the end but you can
make any combination work.
 
- Lockpicking is useful. Speech is super useful.
 
- If you can pull off the shot, the best place to aim is the eyes.
 
- If you enjoy Fallout 1, I heartily recommend Fallout 2. The story is a little poorer but there is so much more to do it's amazing. It's my favorite PC game.
 
== Mods ==
 
For the people asking about Fallout 1 mods, the basic ones you should get are:
 
1) [http://www.nma-fallout.com/forum/dload.php?action=file&file_id=1075 TeamX's 1.3 unofficial patch] (fixes a heap of bugs remaining in the game)
 
2) [http://www.moddb.com/games/fallout/downloads/fallout-1-child-patch The child patch] if you need it (the GOG version of fallout 1 is the UK version, which had the children models removed, leading to things like "ghost" voices and other such fun)
 
3) [http://www.nma-fallout.com/forum/dload.php?action=file&file_id=1135 The NPC mod] (makes the NPCs more like the fallout 2 versions where you can give them basic tactics to follow, change their armor and so on)
 
4) [http://sourceforge.net/projects/sfall/ Sfall], lets you use the mouse wheel to scroll through inventory, speed up the game, use your middle mouse button etc.
 
5) [http://www.nma-fallout.com/forum/dload.php?action=file&file_id=1273 High Res Patch], lets you boost the resolution above 640x480, and just updated this year with new stuff. Due to the way the fallout engine works, you probably won't want to play too much above 800x600 (the various interface graphics don't scale, so they'll be stuck at 640 width and whatever height, even on a higher resolution), but even at 800x600 the game looks much nicer.
 
Install them in that order.


[[Category:Games]]
[[Category:Games]]

Latest revision as of 15:48, 19 May 2024

Character Creation

  • Agility is a key stat as it gives you more actions per round. Perception and Intelligence are important too. Some Strength and Endurance is good to have. 6 Luck is required for the powerful Better Criticals perk. Charisma is largely useless unless going for specific builds.
  • Gifted is an extremely strong trait as attributes are much harder to increase than skills. This also applies to the sequel.
  • Tagging Small Guns and Speech lets you deal with both combat and dialogue more easily throughout the game. Popular choices for the third tag include Lockpicking or Energy Weapons - there's no shortage of locks, and Energy Weapons make for the best endgame weapons.

General Advice

  • As soon as you start the game and reach the world map, you can go back into the vault for some minor quests that will net you some early experience.
  • Allies are very helpful in the early to mid-game, but don't give them burst weapons if you value your health.
  • Stealing can net you some very nice stuff if you've put points into it, but make sure to save first as you don't want to anger towns. You can also use stealing to plant objects (like a ticking time bomb) on people.
  • Always try to alternate methods of solving problems. Not only will talking people into things save your life early on, you'll often get more EXP for it than shooting them in the face would have earned you.
  • If you can pull off the shot, the best place to aim is usually the eyes.