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Fallout 4 - Xbox One

  • Based on 3,367 reviews
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Availability: Only 8 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Thursday, Feb 13
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Platform For Display: Xbox One


Edition: Standard


Features

  • Next generation of open-world gaming
  • Developed by Bethesda Game Studios under the direction of Todd Howard
  • Fallout 4 is the follow up to the 2008 'Game of the Year' Fallout 3
  • First title from the world-renowned studio since the release of Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
  • Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) Content Description: Violence

Description

Bethesda Game Studios, the award-winning creators of Fallout 3 and Skyrim, welcomes you to the world of Fallout 4. Winner of more than 50 Game of the Year awards, including top honors at the 2016 D.I.C.E. Awards. Fallout 4 is the studio's most ambitious game ever and the next generation of open-world gaming. As the sole survivor of Vault 111, you enter a world destroyed by nuclear war. Only you can rebuild and determine the fate of the Wasteland. Welcome home.

Release date: November 10, 2015


Product Dimensions: 0.6 x 5.3 x 6.7 inches; 2.4 ounces


Type of item: Video Game


Rated: Mature


Item model number: 17042


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Item Weight: 2.4 ounces


Manufacturer: Bethesda


Date First Available: June 2, 2015


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, Feb 13

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Worth $60? Yes.
Platform For Display: Xbox One Edition: Standard
Let's start with the positives: -This game took everything that was good about Fallout 3 and kept the ball rolling. It's very familiar. You may recognize a few of the tunes on the radio, and many of the same weapons and enemy types are still there. -On a different note, they also changed some things, mostly for the better. For instance, there are a number of new tunes on the radio as well. Additionally, VATS no longer stops time. While it is very familiar in function and appearance, it is now a slowed-down-time system, so you can't plan your attacks for five minutes while an enemy charges you head on. It's tweaks like these that are subtle but appreciated. This isn't another Fallout: New Vegas (which was basically an expansion pack for Fallout 3). It's its own game. -The game keeps with Bethesda's tradition of deep side storylines, if you're willing to read and explore. This game can take as long as you want it to take, if you're enjoying it, and it's not all just killing monsters. You could explore each building in the ruins of Massachusetts, if you wanted to, along with the stories of the people who lived there in the past and live there now. -This game is gigantic. The "Commonwealth", as the Wasteland of Massachusetts is called, is big. There are more locations than I will ever discover, and more enemies than I care to kill or be killed by. And with the promise of downloadable content, even those who explore EVERYTHING will not be finished with the game until the DLC season is over. -There are also new things to do entirely, such as the settlements feature, and custom gun modding. Both of these are worth your time and are very rewarding. You can spend an entire evening looking for the parts to build a Quantum Nebulizer attachment for your Suppressed Extended Mag .50 cal Hardened Automatic 10mm Pistol (about half of those adjectives/nouns are actually in the game). And you'll love every minute of it, because any gun you mod is SO WORTH IT. You can also spend even MORE time customizing the look, feel, function, and defense of each and every settlement you set up. When they're attacked by Raiders you feel an obligation to protect them; they're YOUR people. It's these kinds of things that draw you in to Fallout 4 and keep you there. -Finally, if you have a smartphone that's at least sort of new, you can use the companion Pip-Boy app. This allows you to use your phone to do anything and everything you could do on the Pip-Boy in the game, with or without opening it up in the game. For instance, you can set down the controller, pick up your phone, and select a fast-travel destination. The game will respond instantly and begin loading that area. You can change the radio station, change your weapons, apply stimpaks, view quests, etc., all from your favorite tablet or smartphone. It looks and sounds just like the Pip-Boy in the game. It's a pretty cool feature, and as I'll mention in a bit, it saved the game for me. While the game is solid overall, nothing is perfect. The negatives: -Bugs. I will describe this below, but the number one issue in this game is the software bugs. -Secondly, the game doesn't look as pretty as, say, the new Battlefront or Call of Duty's campaign. But let's be real, if it did, this game would take up well over a terabyte on your hard drive. This game is massive, in both story and physical area. Plus, I don't mind the game not being photo-realistic. It's pretty dang close. -Finally, it is a LOT like Fallout 3. I mentioned it was different; and it is. But, I played a lot of Fallout 3 back in the day. I think I'm getting tired of Fallout 4 a little bit faster for that very reason. Don't get me wrong, I love this game, but maybe I loved Fallout 3 a bit too long, you know? This game really deserves five stars. What takes the last one away are the bugs. The game has a number of bugs. As of 12/15/15, they have not fixed the one that really stops me from playing the game to the fullest. My character, along with my equipment, weapons, and the Pip-Boy and its menu, has become permanently invisible after I used multiple Stealth Boys in a row. I can't select weapons, apply stimpacks, fast travel, or look at quest information in the game itself. I will note that I can see my HUD, i.e. I can see how much ammo I have, the name of the weapon I am using, north/south/east/west directions, my stealth status, etc. But alas, I cannot see myself. (Try fighting a Deathclaw when you can't see or switch your weapons, or apply stimpaks or buffs). The only solution for now is to use the accompanying app, but it's very inconvenient. From what I've read on the internet, I am the only one who has experienced this particular bug, so you likely won't see it. Other people have experienced similar things, but theirs were slightly different versions, and they have been able to solve them. It looks like I get to keep this bug all to myself. But that's the problem, isn't it? There are tiny bugs that will either never get fixed or take a long time to be fixed. Meanwhile I have to have my smartphone screen always on and set to Pip-Boy mode in order to play the game at all, and having the phone's screen constantly on drains the battery like nobody's business. So while I'd love to give this game five stars, I can't until they work out the kinks. In summary, it's everything you loved about Fallout 3, with a few (mostly better) additions. But it's such a large game, there are bound to be things they didn't test. Some small number of unfortunate gamers will discover these things, and have to either deal with them or quit playing the game. It's also VERY familiar, and while there's a lot you can do in this game, it can get stale faster than you'd hope if you've already played Fallout 3. Worth $60? Yes. EDIT 12/21/15: I turned on my game today and the bug is gone. I can see my character and Pip Boy again. I'm not sure if Bethesda fixed the bug, or if waiting long enough between plays fixed it, or if I did something else to get rid of it. But the bug is fixed. Revised rating to five stars. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2015 by T. B.

  • 2016 Fallout 4 Review In all of my years of playing video games that range from Fun Math Games to grotesquely
Platform For Display: Xbox One Edition: Standard
Elliot Anundi Mrs.Ferris English 2 March 21, 2016 Fallout 4 Review In all of my years of playing video games that range from Fun Math Games to grotesquely, gory, but amazing Gears of war and all the way to (saddens me that I admit this) Tom Clancy’s: Endwar. Yet when I started up all of these games none of them brought a (very very manly) tear to my eye like Fallout 4 did. It was the love child that was created from 1st person shooters and RPG’s. No matter how you feel about both RPG’s and 1st person shooters you will love Fallout 4. Now let me get this clear right now the Fallout games aren’t meant to be played on after another like some games. These pieces of art are fully capable of being independent and yet dependent games at the same time. They have refrences to each other like the Brotherhood of Steel in Fallout 4(which takes place in Boston) are the same people in Fallout 3(which takes place in Washington DC) , and which are a spread out clan of people that are also in Fallout New Vegas(do I really have to tell you where this takes place?). Fallout 4 has done what few games have done before. It has given us a way to kill, save, kill some, and not care about ever. There are 4 different ways to “end” the game, but that would only end the main story. After the main story ends you still have about 12 days left in game. Overall the story gets a 5/5 from me. If you put 100 people into a room that play Fallout 4 none of them would play fallout 4 the same way. You can make every choice that you want no matter what it is. Unlike for 1st person shooters when it says turn left you can turn right and heck even now you can just go up. It matters what you do to because if you kill a guard you could have an entire city trying to kill you and you just made it so that you can’t complete the main quest with those people. That is from killing one person. There are billions of ways to get the end of the game with all achievements, bobble heads, weapons, armor, companions, settlements to 100% happiness, and discover then clear all locations on the map. All in all you can never play the same way twice even if you tried, so the replay ability is a again 5/5. With each game come its own problems for RPG’s there's normally a duplication glitch or money glitch within the game and this is no exception but these were replaced very very fast. Unlike most games where it takes the developers at least a year to fix something as simple as that it only took about 4 months which is more impressive than it sounds. There are no major game flaws such as invisible walls, false walls/floors, and glitchy items/doors/quests. Sometimes the physics fail when you jump on a car, and WHEN YOUR BLOODY LASER RILF HAS RECOIL. Oops sorry lost my temper right there, it just doesn’t make sense to any gamer that looks at the really fine things in the game, but that’s what you have to do when you don’t have any other mistakes to look at. That just shows you how complete the game truly is but I still only give it a ⅘ for having still a duplication glitch. There are still two points that i need to stress make a great game and one of those are the AI’s/NPC’s. Honestly this could make or break a game, I have holes in walls just because a NPC wouldn’t move for a HOUR but that was in Fallout 3 and luckily we’ve moved passed that (sorta). The NPC’s in all games has their flaws no matter what and none of them are perfect and fallout 4 isn’t a exception. The NPC’s are always in the correct places and allows you to speak with them, which is always good and that’s all anyone can really ask for in a game no matter what you are playing. Thus this gets a 5/5. Okay. This is THEE most important thing in the entire game. Layout. You can’t be spending half your game hours trying to find the settings so you can change your sensitivity. I have holes from not being able to find stuff in the menu which really sucks because I'm running out of room on that wall now. Also when you have seen better graphics on minecraft you know you’ve picked the wrong game to play (unless it was designed that way). Fallout 4 isn’t that prettiest game graphic wise but it doesn’t look like minecraft, or burn your eyes thus I say that it should still get a ⅗. All in all this game was just a amazing piece of art that should be played for years even after Fallout 5 comes around and it isn’t a disappointment to the fallout fans. I know that i will be playing it even when my kids are playing video games and I know that that is forever away hopefully. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2016 by beth

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