


I just guess that a revenge story in a multi-faction world is more engaging to me than saving some fictional tribe or looking for fictional family members. Overall I would say that Lonesome Road is probably the only “Must Have” but the other DLC is interesting in their own unique ways.Īnd everyone claiming that the New Vegas main story was dry, I don’t know what you’ve been smoking :) It didn’t really grab me but I think it might be worth coming back to some day.ĭead Money is a stealth focused indoor plot driven experience and while it is unique, it is not at all what I’m looking for in Fallout so I didn’t play much of it. Who) and I don’t think I talked to any NPC’s (story was mostly audio logs as far as I remember) but I shot some robots. Old World Blues is also a separate open world but the setting is based on wacky humorous sci-fi (more Mars Attacks than Dr. I was kind of sick of the open world formula by the time I got to it but I powered through it because I liked the setting (Utah/Arizona canyons). Honest Hearts has a separate distinct open world with it’s own separate story that is more about religion and social dynamics than nukes and sci-fi. Lonesome Road is mostly a linear power fantasy and I liked the narrative so the corridor-like outdoor levels didn’t bother me much. Between December 2010 and September 2011, four major story add-ons were published for Fallout: New Vegas: Dead Money, Honest Hearts, Old World Blues and Lonesome Road. I only completed Lonesome Road and Honest Hearts so don’t take my opinion too seriously.
