Fallout 3 Collector's Edition (PS3)

Release Date: 31/10/2008

(16)

New

In Stock

RRP £59.99

Save £10.00

£49.99

Add to Basket

SummaryProduct Details

BAFTA MaskShortlist game for the GAME Award of 2008
More about the BAFTA Video Games Awards

Please Note: The Fallout 3 PS3 Collector's Edition contains:

  • Fallout 3: A copy of the game.
  • Metal Lunchbox: Collectible packaging!
  • Pip-boy!: Limited Edition figurine with a novelty wobbly head.
  • Art book: See the artwork of Fallout 3.
  • CD Soundtrack: Featuring tracks from Fallout 3.

  • Developer: Bethesda
  • Publisher: Bethesda
ReviewsPreviewsInterviews

Game Reviews

Bethesda are back; and this time they mean business

As gamers we're always looking for the next big thing that makes us think 'how the hell can they top that!?' Not long ago that game was Bethesda's mighty Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. Well, now Bethesda are back to answer that question. The game in question is Fallout 3, and it's everything Oblivion was, and so much more.

Set in alternate future where the world has been decimated by Nuclear War, Fallout 3 takes place in the Capital Wasteland of a post-apocalyptic Washington DC. Your story begins at your birth within Vault 101; a huge underground chamber housing some of the war's survivors, and over the first hour encompasses your character development, shaping your basic stats for the first 19 in-game years.

Your rather contained life is then uprooted with the mysterious departure of your father. Craving adventure, you slip past Vault security and follow your departed Dad into Fallout 3 proper.

Careful, the first step is a big one!

Taking your first steps in the Capital Wasteland is humbling. Screenshots simply can't capture the vastness, or the sheer level of detail in Fallout 3. Stretching out before you is a barren, broken dystopia ripe for exploring. You can literally go anywhere, but one nearby outpost stands out. It's called Megaton; a shanty ramshackle of shacks and walkways erected from the carcasses of downed planes and scrap metals, built (somewhat stupidly) around a dormant nuclear bomb.

Walking around Megaton you talk to people, some of whom will provide missions. I decided to be helpful, fixing the town's leaky water pipes and helping the general store owner with some research. Not so much to be heroic, really – it just made me feel good.

In Fallout 3 there's enough joy or guilt at every decision to have you all-but abandon the main quest to simply help, hinder or utterly destroy the people

The most important choice you'll make here though is whether to disarm the bomb [why they haven't already is beyond me! – Ed] or blow it up. And that's a really good insight into the way Bethesda want you to play Fallout 3. Videogames have made me feel an emotional response before ("Miiiiike!", anyone?), but in Fallout 3 there's enough joy or guilt at every decision to have you all-but abandon the main quest to simply help, hinder or utterly destroy the people in its desolate landscape. Either way, you'll care about the consequences.

An RPG at heart, Fallout 3 features first-person and third-person views. I found exploring with third-person gave a grander sense of scale, but combat is much better through your character's eyes. This is no First-Person Shooter, however; Fallout 3's standard shooting isn't great, and you'll soon learn to use the VATS system, which lets you pause the action and queue up ranged attacks to the different body parts of Fallout 3's numerous giant bugs, monsters and hulking Super Mutants.

Pip-Pip

Pleasingly, the inventory system – called the Pip Boy – is intelligent, rather than limiting. Guns, ammo and health packs don't add anything to your maximum weight allowance, so you can carry as much ammo and firepower as you like, but armour, items and other bits that could prove handy will add weight that will slow you down. And if you don't want to spend hours wandering aimlessly, your Pip-Boy lets you fast-travel to a previously visited area. It's all delightfully, brilliantly balanced.

It's such a rich world to explore, too – and you feel like you've a real power to shape it.

So is the development of your character, where there's a bewildering number of things going on. Your S.P.E.C.I.A.L (Strength, Perception, Endurance, Chairsma, Intelligence, Agility and Luck) stats are defined in the first hour, and build as you earn experience. Next come your Skills, like Medicine (replenish more life with health packs), Speech (helping you coerce the locals) and proficiency with Big Guns. Perks are a third level of customisation. Unlocked as you level up, they further augment your existing stats with sizable bonuses. There's an enormous amount of depth to Fallout 3. No two people's experiences will be the same.

It's such a rich world to explore, too – and you feel like you've a real power to shape it. Tuning into one of the broadcast radio stations, I listened to 'Three Dog' saying that someone from Vault 101 had disarmed the bomb in Megaton. News clearly travels throughout the Wasteland! Indeed, the production on the whole is stunning; the music is often eerie and dramatic, adding to the feel of solitude as you wander through the wastes. Visually, meanwhile, it's not as detailed as it is large (and the art direction is understandably grey), but the scope of Fallout 3 is never less than staggering.

The Apocolypse never looked so good

Boasting a world that makes you think, feel and appreciate, Fallout 3 is a true triumph. It's immersive, epic and yet the pace is entirely dictated by you. It gives you the freedom to do what you want, the choice to help or to neglect, but it will always respond accordingly. Fallout 3 is, simply put, the new standard for RPGs; an experience not to be rushed through, but to be savoured.

GAME's Verdict
plus points
  • A game of truly jaw-dropping scope.
  • Plenty of side missions to keep you playing.
  • The VATS system works so well.
minus points
  • Some online functionality (an option to trade items, for instance) would have been good.
  • It will suck away your social life.
  • Being surrounded by Fire Ants. AAGH!

PS: If you do pick up Fallout 3, do yourself a favour; watch the horizon as the searing orange sunrise hits the brown, barren landscape. It's really something to behold.

Review by: Tom 'Three-Dog' Daly
Version Tested: Xbox 360
Review Published: 30.10.08

User Reviews

Joseph Mason posted on 29 Aug 2009
The 1st time I played this game I hated it and traded it in within a week. But after buying it again and playing it from a different perspective, I love it. You need to understand that this isn't a tactical shooter, a head shot won't instantly kill your enemies (unless your in stealth mode) As stated before, screen shots and trailers don't do the game justice. Bethesda are remarkable world builders, you WILL lose hours just exploring the game world. There are tons of extra secrets and side quests to keep this game going for months, and you have to play it at least twice so that you can nuke megaton city!
Finlay Milligan posted on 28 Jul 2009
There are very few games that suck me into to it's gaming world and make me feel like I'm standing along side the games protagonist. Fallout 3 does all of this and more. Set in a post-apocalyptic future, the year is 2277; you are the Lone Wanderer and you have just done the unthinkable - you have stepped outside the vault. Leaving the secure environment of underground refuge (where you were born and lived the first nineteen years of your life), your character goes on a quest to look for his father, which leads him to discover many marvellous and frightening things. Meeting many friendly (and not so friendly) characters, you travel across the Wasteland battling a host of fearsome and wonderful beasts. To accompany this, the graphics are superb which really help you become immersed in the world. With a magical soundtrack and a variety of interesting and useful gameplay mechanics (the V.A.T.S targeting system is extremely fun and useful, but by no means makes the game any easier), F
Tor-Sverre Engen Nordheim posted on 28 Feb 2009
This game is just awsome i coulden`t find a single thing wrong with it, loved it. This is a must buy game 5/5
David Ebberley posted on 02 Jan 2009
Excellent game, the best ever free roaming RPG, no trailer or review can show the true greatness of this game, truly captivating and addictive, collectors edition is certainly worth buying 10/10
Oliver Banks posted on 22 Dec 2008
This can actually be described as the best game ever! gameplay is amazing, Graphics are amazing. One fault is its lack of online, i mean even an online trading element would have worked well. The storyline is amazing with a really disappointing ending. besides those two faults, and the fact that it is so addictive, this game is perfect in everyway. It has its faults but it still gets a 10/10. the game is that good!
1 - 5 of 12 Reviews

Rate & Review

Login

Don't have a GAME Account? Not to worry, you can sign up here: Account Registrations

Any review containing libellous, defamatory, racist, profane or otherwise incendiary content will not be published. Do not include personal details, advertisements or links to other websites. GAME.co.uk reserves the right to refuse publication of any content deemed unsuitable – no discussion will be entered into.


Shopping basket

Your Shopping Basket is empty.


GAMERewards

Welcome Guest,

use your Reward Card to save even more!
Close

Reward card help

Earn Points every time you shop with a Game Reward Card. You can save money off your future orders!
Find out more


Find out more

This product is worth upto 500 points