Fallout New Vegas Start

2020. 1. 23. 06:36카테고리 없음

Fallout New Vegas Start

Energy Weapons are underpowered (unless they fixed that in the last patch)if you go guns (and you should if the above is still true) you'll find a silencer modded sniper rifle invaluablegame is much harder than the last and mobs dont scale with level so follow quest paths and dont go exploring quite so much early onyour first target armor should be 'Leather armor, reinforced' which is the highest DT light armor with no faction affiliation. You'll find a set on the 2nd floor of the Bison Steve hotel in Primm once you get theredon't, repeat DON'T, sell the Rebreather when you get it;)hit the fallout wiki if you need real help. Keep the Incinerator once you find it in Primm. It will save your life more than once!And don't go north. Horrible, horrible place at low level. Also the 9mm pistol, Service Rifle (which you will get at the Mojave outpost) and the Cowboy Rifle (which you can get at Novac or the Mojave Outpost) are your best friends, keep them with you!Grenades and Mines are useless to use (for me anyway) so if your crap with them like me, sell them for good money!Also, Say if you find some Metal Armour, and you have Good condition Leather Armour on, do not equip it till it is in decent condition, try and find more of the same types of armour to repair it, once it's repaired, replace your Leather Armour.:).

I'd almost recommend playing Fallout 3 first, because that game is so generous with skill points. If you have the GOTY editions, you should be maxed out on most of the skills by game end and have a better understanding of how they all work.I find Intelligence & Strength are the best S.P.E.C.I.A.L.s to focus on if you don't know what the hell you're doing. The more intelligence you get the more skill points you can spread around, while strength lets you carry more. I forget which one adds Action Points, but I can usually fire manually until I recharge, so I'm never that concerned with it.Perks, I've been hitting stuff like Comprehension (increases points given by books and magazines) and Intense Training (lets you add a point to your S.P.E.C.I.A.L.s).

Just separate those in the 'would be nice to have' and they 'I need that' piles and focus on the needs first. The Mysterious Stranger (or whatever its called in Vegas) is a pretty good one to have, since you get random insta-kills during V.A.T.S.

They would have been good in Fallout 3 when Grim Reaper's Sprint refilled all of your AP, in New Vegas, it doesn't, so max AP doesn't end up being a huge deal. You might get one extra shot at the very beginning of combat if you heavily use VATs. If you are willing to be capped at level 30, Logan's Loophole is actually really good. Fallout: New Vegas is a post apocalyptic role-playing video game developed by Obsidian Entertainment and published by Bethesda Softworks. Fallout New Vegas Won't work on Windows 10. I could run the game but when I start to 'Load' or 'Continue' it sets me into a loading screen which seems legit enough until the program crashes/stops responding. The save file was from my Windows 7 PC. Deleting the Fallout.ini and FalloutPrefs.ini may help. If you are using the 4GB fix, don.

Vegas

Just make sure you have the requirements for it if you're using it (Intense Training perk until you do).As for skills. Comes down to your playing style.

Fallout New Vegas Start

I tend to hit Science (hacking), Lockpicking, and Small Guns pretty hard. Speech is a pretty good one to shove a few points into since it helps open up new quests.

Although snag your magazines and get the Comprehension perk to temporarily boost those by 20. If you enjoy sneaking, then a Sneak/Melee or Sneak/Unarmed combo would work nicely. Just bear in mind that you'll need to grab lots of Stealth Boys (they're like a Predator cloak) because there's a lot of situations where you can't really sneak. It's really more of a fighting game.I don't find medicine to be that important. I throw a few points that way, but its cheaper to have a Doctor heal you up than using Stimpacks. There's also plenty of food and water in the game that heals you up, so eat & drink as much as possible when injured.But to start with, I'd make sure you get your Small Guns up to around 50 because they're extremely common at the start. If you enjoy using grenades or want to disarm mines, you'll need to put some points in Explosives.

Otherwise, just watch which skills show up in conversation trees and determine if that's something you want to pursue or not.As for caps, learn how to play Caravan. It's an easily winnable game and you can quickly amass several thousand caps before you hit The Strip. That'll open up more weapon and item choices and let you discover how you want to play the game more quickly. Speech is a surprisingly awesome skill to level up in this one, as it will give you access to new conversation options that can often save you a lot of trouble.

I always like boosting lockpick and science as well, since they let you access all of the locked containers and terminals in the world, which in turn means more loot. Medicine is a good one to focus on too, for obvious reasons.In terms of a weapons class, I'd probably go with Guns, as there are plenty of extras for repairs and ammo throughout the world. Though since you can get a laser pistol right at the beginning, energy weapons are also viable.Really, the most important thing is to pay attention to what characters tell you as far as staying on the beaten path goes. Enemies don't level with you in this one, and it's very easy to get the shit kicked out of you if you stray too far into the wilderness early on.And have fun!

It's a great game; hope you enjoy it:-). Snip-I can recommend Lockpick and Science enough.

New

Besides getting you valuable loot/ammo/caps, they can often be used to take shortcuts and avoid big numbers of enemies. And Barter has become a lot more involved in dialogue then it ever was in Fallout 3, but theres no need to rank any skill up past 90, if that, with the amount of magazines you find, coupled with some handy outfits means you can make more of your stats higher levels (I'll admit that statement could have been written better by a five year old).But anyway, I tend to focus on Lockpick, Guns and Science in the earlier levels, with Medicine and Speech not far behind. And theres no real need to get Science past 75 anyway, as there are very few Very Hard computer terminals.Oh, and watch out for who you shoot, even inadvertently. I've started many fights with factions I like just because of a simple misunderstanding/slight B and E/murder/killing a group of people, shooting off their limbs, placing all them in a bathtub and chucking a grenade in, people just don't seem to react well to that sort of behavior. Hey Escapist'sSo I just bought FNV today, I wasnt too good at the previous Fallout tbh, But I had to get this considering the immense deal they had a Gamestation (Collector's Edition for £25 brand new).I was hoping for some tips, things to upgrade in aka small arms etc, stats upgrading or whatever.If im talking shite its because I probably am, I aint got a clue how the leveling structure system works or anything.Help much appreciated!:DDon't put your intelligence higher than 7 (there's a skillgain cap), and don't take the Educated perk if you're at higher than 7. Luck is a worthwhile SPECIAL, but don't burn other SPECIALs too low just to increase it.

Even if you max out endurance at 10, you will only have 250 health, but I wouldn't lower it from 5 either, so 5 is a good spot for it to be at.New Vegas is heavily based on relationships and factions, so don't be afraid to increase Charisma or put more points into Speech or Barter! Still, once you find a gun you like, level that skill too. I highly recommend leveling up Guns early, since energy weapons will be rare at earlier levels, and explosives are sparse throughout. If you're in hardcore, Survival is worth taking, but if you are not in hardcore, I cannot recommend Medicine more: stimpacks are lifesavers.Hope this helps!

Ok, tips for NV:Don't head north/north-east from Goodsprings unless you want to die. Seriously, don't even think about it.Speech is a fairly crucial skill. A low speech score is do-able, but quests will be harder, take longer, give less rewards etc.If you're playing Hardcore Mode (do it, it makes the game much better in terms of feel and immersion!), Survival is also a crucial skill as it increases bonuses from food/water and allows better crafting options.Lastly, don't try to do everything on your first playthrough. NV is heavily faction based and by opening some quest lines you'll be closing others. Completing quests will make some factions like you whilst angering others, so multiple playthroughs are a necessity. Life will be a whole lot easier if you level up Speech, Barter, Science and Lockpick. I recommend choosing TWO of those and rolling with it.Will make your conversations with people go a lot smoother.

Fallout New Vegas Starting Items

You get more from quests, can loot the best stuff from safes etc (bearing in mind there's often a computer attached to a safe, so you can hack the computer instead of picking the lock).Yeah, this. Also might be a good idea and not do what I did which is plough a lot of points from the start into giving yourself 10 Luck. This tends to hamper you at the start although I do now seem to get an unreal number of crits. I also did as suggested above and put a lot into speech, barter and science which does seem to make things a hell of a lot easier quest wise. Start colecting blue star bottel caps rightaway you'll need them to complte the legned of the star quest there hard to find and you'll need fifty of them in order to complete the quest so the sooner you start collecting the better.

Check the fallout wiki for more details because if you play your cards right you can get a really good start eariley on. If your low on bottelcaps and don't have anything you want to sell winning games of carvan can really help you out (just be sure to save in case you lose) plus thers a guy who'll teach you how to play and will give you a deck of cards to play in one of the games first quest. Stay on the roads eariy on and don't wander of to explore untill your at a pretty decent level unless you want to be killied by cazadors and deathclaws. And last but not least try to recuirt as many Companions as possible the'll help you out againsit tougher ennemys ( and they won't steal your experince this time around) they'll give you special quests once they been with you awhile which will usually level them up and make them stronger plus completing one of them will net you some of the games best armoer. Plus once you reach new vegas you can bassically store them at the lucky 38 hotel so you don't have to go looking for them again at were you orginally found them. You can get your first one in primm eariy on once you repair him and he can alert you to any nearby enimes you might not be able to see preventing any sneak attacks againsit you. Plus companions will also give you special perks you can't get anywhere else.

Fallout New Vegas Nexus

Whew that was mouthfull hope this helps. Assuming you got the PC version, check out for many invaluable mods to help the little problems, like text size taking up more space than necessary, and my personal favorite as of now, Wasteland Settler.If you haven't played a Fallout game before, here's the best tip anyone can give: Caps are the main currency in the game.They are not trash.Also, repair your guns and armor with other guns and armor of the same general type (clothes repairs clothes, leather repairs leather, pistols repair pistols). Never explained if you don't like reading a lot.If you want to use energy weapons, wait until you actually arrive in Vegas before putting any points into the skill. The Van Graffs are the only reason they're a sensible option in this game, otherwise the weapons would just be so damn hard to find they'd be stupid (or just plain expensive) to use.If you're going to fight people in armor, either use a melee weapon or take out the armor piercing rounds.

Personally, a good sledgehammer is my cup of tea to fight the Legion. Depends on my character, really.If you'd rather avoid a fight where possible, investing in speech is not a bad idea. Especially once you get in a few levels and have points to spare.Medicine is also a good skill. Less stimpaks used, less money spent, more money for guns, armor, ammo, and gambling.For the love of god, if you see a Deathclaw, and you do NOT have ammo to spare, lots of stimpaks, and a powerful long-distance gun, get the fuck out of Dodge.

They will mess your shit up faster than a decapitation.Lastly, don't finish the main quests (Mr. House, Yes Man, NCR, or Legion) until you think you've explored the last bit and done all the quests you can in the Mojave Wasteland. The game doesn't allow afterplay, and it also makes the ending so much better. Seriously, save often. Make at least 3 back-up files. The new patch fixes MOST of the problems (I've only encounted one point where I needed to start up again, but it wasnt neccesary and only one full-up freeze and I've been playing for more than 18 hours) The comboy repeater, caravan shotgun, and 10mm pistol.

As for leveling, DONT take the perks which increases your level (Here and Now) or the Swift learner perk (Increases exp) youll have plenty in the wasteland you dont need that perk. And otherwise, just pick the skills you like, its how you play afterall. Take the perks which are useful to you (Educated is good though and bloody mess if you dont mind your enemies turning to unrealistic paste everything you kill something) Best early armor would be re-enforced leather, its pretty easy to find too.

North of Vegas is also a farm (Horowitz farm) a good shotgun is on the back of a truck. And vault 34 is a great latter place to find all the weapons you could need, carbines, rocket launchers all that shit in one room. Its pretty hard to get to though, whole place is irradated so make a few stops to the doc before you die of rad poising, bring plenty of radaway, get a companion or two to help fight the ghouls and lizards (Speaking of which Animal friend 1 is good, but the second leg is useless) Hope that helps a bit. If you play PC, run through with some console commands first, as this will give you a good idea of how to function in the non-cheating game, get to know some guns, factions etc etc.Don't annoy ANYONE. Don't shoot people who doesn't shoot you, don't talk evil to people, just avoid hostilities as much as you can. Trust me, the game gets a lot harder when NCR rangers are bounding over the hill every day D:Endgame (when you get there), get Boomers for god's sake, they make the end 40 gazillion times easier. Hey Escapist'sSo I just bought FNV today, I wasnt too good at the previous Fallout tbh, But I had to get this considering the immense deal they had a Gamestation (Collector's Edition for £25 brand new).I was hoping for some tips, things to upgrade in aka small arms etc, stats upgrading or whatever.If im talking shite its because I probably am, I aint got a clue how the leveling structure system works or anything.Help much appreciated!:Dwhen you start up in good springs,DON'T.

NORTH.it seems really tempting to make a beeline straight for new vegas, but put some trust into this and don't you dare head northward, past the cross marker further north is instant deadvilleScience would be a good move, additionally, sneak and lock pick go hand in hand.for beginner though, guns and speech can make the game really easy.additionally, you can pick up a laser pistol in the house of the doctor in good springs if you want to go the way of an energy weapon fighter.

PC ControlsAt the time of writing I cannot 100% confirm the accuracy of the PC controls as I don't own this version of the game.

Fallout New Vegas Start