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By now you've seen our exclusive Fallout: New Vegas video, and while you're chewing that bloody episode over in your head, check out where we think Fallout should head after cashing out in New Vegas.
Fallout has existed in the wastelands of Southern California, the blasted remains of Washington, D.C., and now on the rebuilt scraps of Las Vegas, born again from the ashes in the bright lights and clinking slot machines of New Vegas. We've seen both coasts of North America, its Sin City playground, and even Pittsburgh and Anchorage, Alaska via DLC ... but what about the rest of the world?

Tokyo
The Land of the Rising Sun is a perfect place to take the vault-dwelling franchise. Especially because of its dense population and the obsession with gadgetry. Not to mention all the noodle stands, arcades, pachinko machines, and karaoke bars. Imagine a high-tech, secret Japanese vault drilled deep into the face of the planet, quietly waiting to be awoken when the time was right. Given China's involvement in the series of events that led to the devastation on the surface, Japan just feels right. Why wouldn't they be involved somehow?
Of course, with all the beeping, blooping lights, and the reliance on circuitry instead of human know-how, something goes wrong. That's where you get ejected from the vault, and have to navigate the choked streets of Shinjuku, looking for a desperate solution to save the rest of the populace from the ticking time-bomb that your vault has turned into. Plus, there has to be room for a Mutant or Mecha Godzilla in here somewhere. It is the apocalypse, after all, and this is the sort of atomic-age stuff the city lives for. After spending plenty of time being lost on these very streets, and perplexed by the labyrinthine layout of the city, Tokyo deserves to be on the Fallout map.

The Outback
Secretly, quietly, and out of the prying eyes of most of the public, a gigantic bio-dome was created smack dab in the middle of the Outback. As part of a hushed up, multi-national plan, Ayer's Rock was hollowed out and turned into an enormous bio-habitat meant to become the last vestiges of life as we know it. Every species of animal, breed of fish, and type of plant would be housed inside, meant to be a living vault for when the surface could be repopulated again. A select group of scientists, athletes, artists, celebrities, and wealthy people were sent inside before the door was sealed, unknowingly creating an automatic sort of "Apocalyptic Survivor" episode inside.
As the years pass, and personalities devolve, things get worse and worse on the inside. Of course, things aren't going much better on the outside, but no one knows that because they are completely cut off from outside influences. After twenty years have passed, the inside group divides into factions, with half of the group wanting to break out and abandon the experiment. Upon successfully breaching the enormous door, they stumble out blinking into ... a post-apocalyptic world in the Australian Outback. The hazy, overcast skies have played with the ecosphere of Oz, and what was once a sun-blasted wasteland is now a dense overgrowth of bizarre plants: a hybrid of the multiple samples in the dome that leaked beneath the surface. Can you survive in the mutant kangaroos?

London

The Amazon
Nearly every Fallout game has been set in a war-blasted zone where many of the standing structures have been reduced to ruin and rubble. Naturally, you wouldn't expect any of the biologic, chlorophyll-fueled life forms to survive, but that's where things flourished deep in the Amazon. You've been revived inside of Vault 76, buried under the city of Austin, Texas, and as you begin making your way through the rubble and exploring the city, you're quickly scooped up by a roving band of survivors who are making a trip down deep inside of what was once Brazil, looking for a mysterious, long-rumored vault that was built near the Amazon river.
No one knows exactly what this vault holds, only that there are several different groups set on finding it first. Bigger in scale than any Fallout game before, the game requires you to, first, gather the rest of your ragtag team, then get yourself down to the Amazon while staying alive; not an easy task. Once you're deep inside the rainforest, which has since been irradiated and turned into a botanist's ultimate nightmare, then the real trouble begins. If you thought Super Mutants were tough, wait until you come across a shambling, self-aware canopy tree. Remember all the hairspray you used to expend into the atmosphere without a care in the world? Well, payback is a real bitch. From the lush green foliage to the cavernous dried-up Amazon riverbed, experience Fallout like you've never seen it before.

The Dark Side of the Moon
Fallout has always been terrestrially based, unless you count the all-too-brief Mothership Zeta DLC for Fallout 3. But that doesn't mean that there weren't secret government projects going on in the background that we knew nothing about. The staggeringly bizarre amount of experimental Vaults tells us that much. So why not a Moonbase Vault on the other side of the Moon? It would be extremely easy to hide an entire Vault-sized construction underneath the guise of "experimental space flights" and "moon rock gathering". The problem is that once you get revived in this vault, stepping outside really isn't an easy option. Or even a good idea.
Somehow you have to figure out how to organize your quickly dwindling supplies, and explore your own vault as you piece together a way to return to the surface. You'll have to keep an eye on oxygen levels, and find a way to get through the airlock and survive on the surface as you look for clues and answers. There are several different ways to leave the moon, and ultimately to link up with the capital wasteland, but they are not going to be easy to find. As the space madness begins to set in, you'll realize why being alone and far from the remains of the human race can drive someone to psychopathic means. Think Duncan Jones' Moon crossed with Sunshine and the best parts of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Oh, and Alien, for good measure. In space, no one can hear you scream. But in that vault they sure can, and you'll be doing it a lot.
And just in case you missed it, be sure to check out our exclusive walkthrough of the White Glove Society quest in Fallout: New Vegas.




Comments are Closed
Comments
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Blaze016
I would love to see New York, London, Berlin, Tokyo, and Moscow.
JBone0807
they should have china on here, since that is who the US was at war with, it would be cool to see it from the other point of view. Tokyo would never happen because of the atomic bomb being dropped in Japan and the fallout series is really about the US, i should remain in the country. Fallout 3 had both the city and wasteland, where as vegas will be more wasteland which is awesome, so for falllout 4 it should be in a city for most of it. Instead of just new York though, they should do NYC and Boston, the game would be huge then, with all the wasteland in between the areas, but the cities could be made huge too. Either way, a new Fallout would be awesome and id get it regardless, as long as its resembles fallout 3 with the gameplay, open worldness, and custom ability.
sion8
yes the moon does sound like the next BioShock game after infinity and it would be cool if it was set during the 19th century.
but FallOut IV out side of america would be a great idea possibly in Tokyo or maybe in Canada because of the annexation of it by the U.S.
caseys24
Dubuque Iowa
PicklestheGamer
Seattle would be perfect! Pike Street market, Chinatown, the Sci-Fi museum, the Space Needle(AWSM sniping!), ferries to secluded islands!
PicklestheGamer
Seattle would be perfect! Pike Street market, Chinatown, the Sci-Fi museum, the Space Needle(AWSM sniping!), ferries to secluded islands!
sloth_gooey
milwaukee wisconsin. that would be sweet
ThePsychoGamer
I loved that Fallout/Yakuza photoshop, gave me a good laugh, Hmm Fallout with Hostess Bars...
alaskanhybrid
That hardly even looked like Anchorage, and I live in Anchorage. Everything was all wrong.
that1nerfherder
The three that stood out to me were: Tokyo, London, and the Moon. Those would definitely make for an interesting Fallout game.
thegreenguy
they should go to taxes
BENonG4
New York is waaaaaaaaaay to over done, they should do something like Baltimore, and at one point you walk into my house and I kill you because I am a bigger bada$$ then you. And it would also work because Bethesda is a 30 minute drive from here. This is great, time to start writing some fan fiction...
NUKEMANN1995
i love the children of men reference, best movie
Velocity562
In no particular order: New York, London, Munich, Moscow, New Oreleans
TEXAS!
They should base a fallout game in Texas. lots of fun to be had there. from the mountains of el paso, the forests of east texas, the city of austin, houston, or dallas, the beaches of galveston, or the plains of northern texas. Perfect for any type of basis for a fallout game.
CLUNGEHUNTERPJ
Out of those suggestions, Tokyo and London sound great. Paris could be good. I can imagine the 50s-future-retro vibe working there, and the endless tunnels beneath the city lend themselves to dungeon gameplay pretty well.
To be honest I'd rather see a new Elder Scrolls game from Bethesda before a new Fallout. I still find that world more fun, if not quite as atmospheric. I got bored of F3 after I'd finished it, and when you're playing an RPG boredom isn't really allowed. I think it's to do with the art direction (GREY AND BROWN) and the fact that it's a wasteland, and wastelands are empty, that's why they're called wastelands.
imacrepe
FALLOUT HILL VALLEY
HausOfApollo
Something like an old Western movie in Montana. And there could be a nuclear factory and that could be the story. The nuclear factory could be like a huge shelter for civilians but alot of people want to make nuclear bombs and stuff. You could do alot of political stuff with it too. And a gang of bandits want to blow it up. So you can choose 3 ways to go with out you want it to be treated.
1) Keep it as a shelter for civilians
2) Use it to make nuclear bombs to attack foreign countries but all the civilians have to leave.
3) Go along with the bandits and blow the place up.
cardinalsfan1122
I'm thinking St. Louis battle for the arch!
But I think Fallout should go to a couple more cities in the U.S. before it goes all over the world and the moon.
Vandal13
I think a mid-west city would be cool. Try Chicago, Milwaukee or maybe even Detroit.
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