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===Plot===
===Plot===
[[Image:Fallout3 brokensteel.png|thumb|left|alt=A giant robot fires a laser from its eye|The robot ''Liberty Prime'' attacks an enemy base.]]
[[Image:Fallout3 brokensteel.png|thumb|left|alt=A giant robot fires a laser from its eye|The robot ''Liberty Prime'' attacks an enemy base.]]
''Broken Steel'' alters the ending of the original ''Fallout 3'' to allow continued play after the end of the main quest line. When the player reaches the final point of the quest "Take it Back!", new options are given to allow specific followers to enter the reactor, but the original options still remain viable. Regardless of what is chosen, however, the player will wake up two weeks later at the Citadel (unless they allow the Citadel to explode, which is an automatic game over), having been knocked unconscious by an unknown energy spike. Sarah Lyons will be in a coma. Meanwhile the Brotherhood of Steel have reactivated the U.S. Army robot known as ''Liberty Prime'', which was found dormant in ''The Citadel'' during the events of Fallout 3's main campaign.
''Broken Steel'' alters the ending of the original ''Fallout 3'' to allow continued play after the end of the main quest line. When the player reaches the final point of the quest "Take it Back!", new options are given to allow specific followers to enter the reactor, but the original options still remain viable. Regardless of what is chosen, however, the player will wake up two weeks later at the Citadel (unless they allow the Purifier to explode, which is an automatic game over), having been knocked unconscious by an unknown energy spike. Sarah Lyons will be in a coma.


In those two weeks, the Brotherhood has been using the now-reactivated Liberty Prime to root out the remaining Enclave presence in the Capital Wasteland. The player joins them, only to watch Liberty Prime be destroyed by a devastating orbital strike. Taking out this new threat becomes the top priority. A short side-mission is arranged to equip the player with the powerful Tesla Cannon, after which they move on the Enclave's massive Mobile Crawler base. After fighting through the base personnel, a control station at the top can be used to call an orbital strike on the base itself, destroying it. Alternatively, the Citadel can be destroyed, marking the player as a traitor to the Brotherhood of Steel.
In those two weeks, the Brotherhood has been using the now-reactivated Liberty Prime to root out the remaining Enclave presence in the Capital Wasteland. The player joins them, only to watch Liberty Prime be destroyed by a devastating orbital strike. Taking out this new threat becomes the top priority. A short side-mission is arranged to equip the player with the powerful Tesla Cannon, after which they move on the Enclave's massive Mobile Crawler base. After fighting through the base personnel, a control station at the top can be used to call an orbital strike on the base itself, destroying it. Alternatively, the Citadel can be destroyed, marking the player as a traitor to the Brotherhood of Steel.

Revision as of 05:40, 24 December 2009

Fallout 3 expansions
Developer(s)Bethesda Game Studios
Publisher(s)Bethesda Softworks
Designer(s)Emil Pagliarulo (lead designer)
Todd Howard (executive producer) Istvan Pely (lead artist)
Composer(s)Inon Zur
SeriesFallout
EngineGamebryo[1]
Platform(s)PC, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
ReleaseOperation: Ancorage
January 27, 2009 (Xbox Live)
October 1, 2009 (PSN)
The Pitt
March 25, 2009 (Xbox Live)
October 1, 2009 (PSN)
Broken Steel
May 5, 2009 (Xbox Live)
September 24, 2009 (PSN)
Point Lookout
June 23, 2009 (Xbox Live)
October 1, 2009 (PSN)
Mothership Zeta
August 3, 2009 (Xbox Live)
October 8, 2009 (PSN)

There are five expansion packs for the Bethesda action role-playing game Fallout 3. Each expansion adds new missions, new locales to visit, and new items for the player to make use of. Bethesda's Todd Howard first confirmed during E3 2008 that downloadable content would be prepared for the Xbox 360 and Windows versions of Fallout 3.[2][3] Of the five, Broken Steel has the largest effect on the game, altering the ending and allowing the player to continue playing past the end of the main quest line.[4] The Game of The Year edition of Fallout 3 includes the full game and all five expansions.[5]

Originally, there was no downloadable content planned for the PlayStation 3 version of the game.[2] Although Bethesda had not offered an official explanation as to why the content was not released for PlayStation 3, Lazard Capital Markets analyst Colin Sebastian speculated that it may have been the result of a money deal with Bethesda by Sony's competitor, Microsoft.[3] When asked if the PlayStation 3 version would receive an update that would enable gameplay beyond the main quest's completion, Todd Howard responded, "Not at this time, no."[6] However, in May 2009, Bethesda announced that the existing DLC packs (Operation: Anchorage, The Pitt and Broken Steel) would be made available for the PlayStation 3; the later two (Point Lookout and Mothership Zeta) were released for all platforms.[7]

Operation: Anchorage

Operation: Anchorage is the first Fallout 3 downloadable content pack, and takes place as a virtual reality "military simulation" in the main game where the player character is stripped of their equipment and is forced to use the replacements provided. The content focuses on a titular event in the Fallout timeline before the Great War took place, in which the United States Army liberated Anchorage, Alaska, from its Chinese Communist invaders. The pack contains several new quests, new items, and adds four new achievements. Gameplay within the simulation is different than the main game; health and ammo are replenished by stations in certain areas of the simulation world, items functionally do not suffer from decay (the items actually do decay, but have a health so high that it is virtually impossible to affect performance), and enemy corpses disappear instead of allowing the player to loot them for supplies.

Operation: Anchorage was released in North America and Europe on January 27, 2009 on Xbox Live and Games for Windows Live.[8][9] Although the content was scheduled for release on the PlayStation 3 in June 2009, the final week of June's PlayStation Store updates did not include it. Bethesda released information suggesting that the delay was due to their desire to iron out all of the bugs before release as well as test compatibility between DLCs.[10] Operation: Anchorage, along with The Pitt, were released on October 1, 2009, for PS3.[11]

Plot

The Brotherhood of Steel Outcasts are trying to acquire a stash of pre-war technology in a bunker. However, the armory can only be unlocked with a code, and the code can only be obtained from a virtual reality simulation of one of the greatest battles of the Fallout universe: the liberation of Anchorage, Alaska from invading Red Chinese troops. The Outcasts cannot use the simulation because an external interface device, the player's Pip-Boy, is required. The player is thus recruited to complete the simulation in return for a share of the reward.

In the simulation, the player is tasked with fighting the Chinese in various scenarios, such as clearing out bunkers in a cliff, hitting strategic targets, and finally defeating the Chinese general in single combat. Once the simulation is complete, the player gains access to the armory and the advanced weapons it contains.

Reception

Both the PC and the Xbox 360 version of the Operation: Anchorage DLC have received mixed reviews from critics, averaging a 67[12] and a 69[13] respectively at Metacritic. Several reviewers criticized the price of Operation: Anchorage for being too expensive for the content provided.[14][15][16] Play.tm's Richard Bright and other reviewers were disappointed overall, with Bright stating "this episode was a little disappointing for me personally."[17] Game Over's Phil Soletsky was particularly critical of the expansion's story, saying "I had been hoping that the liberation of Alaska would be a massive affair involving battalions of soldiers hammering away at each other."[16] IGN's Erik Brudvig gave high praise to the new weapon, the gauss rifle, calling it "freakin' awesome".[14] Reviewers also criticized the shift to a focus on action gameplay (combat) instead of the more varied gameplay that Fallout 3 had.[15][18]

The Pitt

The Pitt is the second downloadable content pack, and allows the player to journey to the industrial raider town known as The Pitt, in the remains of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The pack features several new weapons, new armor and clothing items, four achievements and around four to five hours of gameplay. The Pitt was released on March 24, 2009 on Xbox Live and Games for Windows Live, but was quickly removed due to glitches in the gameplay which made the Xbox 360 version of the expansion unplayable. Further investigation was performed by Bethesda and Microsoft, and according to a Bethesda's official Twitter, as of 10:00am PST on March 25, 2009,[19] the expansion was again being uploaded to Xbox Live, and was again made available that afternoon. For those who downloaded it on March 24 in the morning, glitches were still apparent. A new version was available on Xbox Live on April 2, fixing freezing issues many players had encountered with the previous version.[20] A retail disk was released at the end of May 2009[21] containing this and the Operation: Anchorage expansion packs. It was released for Xbox 360 and Games for Windows. The expansion packs are copied to the hard drive and function as it would had it been downloaded. This pack was released for the Playstation 3 at the same time as Operation Anchorage on October 1, 2009.

Plot

Although Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, was not hit directly by atomic bombs during the Great War, the water from the nearby Allegheny, Monongahela, and Ohio rivers were highly irradiated, resulting in the decay of the region. The inhabitants suffer from extreme radiation poisoning and degenerate into mindless creatures. The entire population is either slaves or overseers.

Some 30 years before the events of Fallout 3, Owyn Lyons led the Brotherhood of Steel's expedition to Washington, D.C. through The Pitt. In one night, the Brotherhood swept through and destroyed the original raider force occupying the town and rid the surrounding area of other "scum", killing anything that put up a fight. This event is chronicled as "the Scourge". As they cut through the raiders, the Brotherhood also saved several young children, among them Paladin Kodiak, who had not yet been mutated to the extent of The Pitt's adult inhabitants. All the rescued children were brought into the Brotherhood of Steel as initiates. Paladin Kodiak is the only remaining survivor from that group of rescued children that is still stationed at the Citadel.

The player learns of the Pitt from a man named Wernher, who asks for the player's help in liberating the slaves there. The player has to enter the Pitt as a slave and work their way to freedom. This earns a meeting with the Pitt's leader, Lord Ashur, a former Brotherhood soldier left for dead during the Scourge. The player is given the choice of siding with either Wernher or Ashur. Unlike other decisions in Fallout 3, there is no karmic penalty or reward for choosing either side, as each side has both their good points and bad.

Reception

The Pitt has had a generally positive reception, averaging a score of 77[22] for the PC version and 79[23] for the Xbox 360 version. When initially released, the Xbox 360 version had a corrupt file which caused problems and rendered the DLC unplayable.[24] As of April 3, 2009, Bethesda Softworks reports that they have uploaded a new version of The Pitt which fixes these problems.[25] The PC version of The Pitt had the same problem, leading modders to create a patch called "The Pitt Crash Fix" which fixes the problems present in the wasteland but not interiors of The Pitt.[26]

Broken Steel

Broken Steel is the third and most significant downloadable content pack, altering the original ending of Fallout 3 and allowing the player to continue playing past the end of the main quest line.[27] If the player personally activated Project Purity, the player's subsequent death is retconned and they instead fall into a coma. Two weeks later, the player joins the ranks of the Brotherhood of Steel and helps rid the Capital Wasteland of the Enclave once and for all.[28] The pack also raises the game's level cap from 20 to 30. It includes 3 main quests and 3 side-quests.[29] Three Dog has new dialogue in this expansion, but no new songs are added. The new weapons in Broken Steel, including the Tesla Cannon, are some of the most powerful weapons in Fallout 3.[30]

Broken Steel was released on May 5, 2009 on Xbox Live and Games for Windows - Live (GFWL).[31] It was quickly removed from GFWL due to bugs which made the PC version of the expansion unplayable.[32][33] Bethesda has stated that the problem lay with GFWL and that Microsoft was fixing the issue. Broken Steel was re-released on May 7 on Games For Windows live.[32][33] Some Xbox 360 users have reported a bug that prevents them from activating Project Purity, resulting in the plot elements added by the DLC being inaccessible.[33] PC users report that changes caused by Broken Steel and the 1.5 patch adversely affect mods to the game.[34]

This pack was the first released for the PS3 version of the game due to it being the most requested DLC for the game. This is primarily due to the continuation of the story past the game's original ending, and for the raise in the level cap from level 20 to 30, as many complained that the cap could be reached far too quickly in playing the game's main campaign.[11] Bethesda announced on their official website that "The first DLC for PlayStation 3, Broken Steel, [was] made available on September 24 in English territories and will be followed by the release of Operation: Anchorage and The Pitt on October 1, and Point Lookout and Mothership Zeta on October 8." [35]

Plot

A giant robot fires a laser from its eye
The robot Liberty Prime attacks an enemy base.

Broken Steel alters the ending of the original Fallout 3 to allow continued play after the end of the main quest line. When the player reaches the final point of the quest "Take it Back!", new options are given to allow specific followers to enter the reactor, but the original options still remain viable. Regardless of what is chosen, however, the player will wake up two weeks later at the Citadel (unless they allow the Purifier to explode, which is an automatic game over), having been knocked unconscious by an unknown energy spike. Sarah Lyons will be in a coma.

In those two weeks, the Brotherhood has been using the now-reactivated Liberty Prime to root out the remaining Enclave presence in the Capital Wasteland. The player joins them, only to watch Liberty Prime be destroyed by a devastating orbital strike. Taking out this new threat becomes the top priority. A short side-mission is arranged to equip the player with the powerful Tesla Cannon, after which they move on the Enclave's massive Mobile Crawler base. After fighting through the base personnel, a control station at the top can be used to call an orbital strike on the base itself, destroying it. Alternatively, the Citadel can be destroyed, marking the player as a traitor to the Brotherhood of Steel.

Reception

Broken Steel has had a generally positive reception, averaging an 81[36] for the PC and an 82[37] for the Xbox 360. The Sacramento Bee wrote "The previous two downloadable expansions are good, but this one's pretty much essential for a Fallout 3 fan".[38][39] IGN mirrored this view by stating "Lifting the level cap breathes new life into a great game, but shouldn't totally overshadow a new series of quests that is a lot of fun." Edge on the other hand, while commenting that "it's the most you're going to get out of Fallout's current batch of DLC", it felt "it lacks the scope or density of Oblivion's The Shivering Isles."[40] The A.V. Club commented that "After deflating the finality of the original ending, Broken Steel is unsure what to do next, beyond sending you on a few entertaining but hollow missions to snuff out the remnants of the para-military Enclave. Thankfully, the expansion’s B-story is more thoughtful, as it plunges into the chaos and profiteering that result when a limited supply of clean water starts flowing into the Wasteland."[41]

Point Lookout

Point Lookout is the fourth downloadable content pack, and takes place in Point Lookout State Park in Maryland. Unlike other areas in Fallout, no bombs were dropped on Point Lookout, but has nonetheless degenerated into a place just as unforgiving as the Capital Wasteland. Humanity has left it behind and it is now described as a large swamp wasteland.[42] This pack has new enemies called swampfolk, who are inbred hillbillies that openly attack with weapons such as axes, shovels and double-barreled shotguns. Unlike the previous content packs, which simply added additional landmarks to the main map (Broken Steel also added two very limited maps), Point Lookout has a fully explorable wasteland. Point Lookout was released on June 23, 2009 for the Xbox 360 and the PC and on October 8, 2009 for the PlayStation 3[42]

Plot

Point Lookout, unlike the other expansion packs, does not have a specific goal. Rather, it adds a large area for the player to explore, with new enemies and items to find. The main quest line focuses on the rivalry between Desmond and Professor Calvert, two scientists who have been feuding since before the Great War. Desmond has survived as a ghoul, while Calvert has literally become a living brain in a jar. The feud can be ended by the player in either Desmond's or Calvert's favor. Other quests include following the trail of a long-dead Chinese spy and discovering the mystery of the Lovecraftian tome known as the Krivbeknih.

Reception

Point Lookout has had a generally positive reception, averaging a 79[43] for the PC and an 83[44] for the Xbox 360. Eurogamer stated "Like a compacted version of its parent game, this is the first DLC that has felt like a genuine expansion, as opposed to a just a few inconsequential missions thrown together."[45] IGN noted that "[t]he stories and characters here are filled with that trademark Fallout dark humor, elevating these quests to a level that rivals the main game" and that "[t]he major draw to Point Lookout... is its emphasis on exploration."[46] Edge calls it "the best expansion so far and the game at its worst," stating "if you want a microcosm of Fallout 3, equal parts adventuring, grinding, questing and scavenging, you might just think it the best expansion so far." Edge goes on to criticize Point Lookout for using "a lot of what you might call ‘economy content’ in Point Lookout: recycled enemies, text journals, variant weapons, and bogus forks in the storyline."[47]

Mothership Zeta

Mothership Zeta is the fifth and final downloadable content pack, and follows the main character after being abducted by aliens when going to explore a mysterious radio transmission from the Alien Crash Site. It takes place entirely on an alien spacecraft, is a similar size to Operation: Anchorage, and has a similar emphasis on combat as that DLC had.[48] It was released on August 3, 2009 for the Xbox and PC and October 8th, 2009 for the Playstation 3 with Point Lookout[42]

Plot

A small alien spacecraft is crashed in the wastelands.
The crash site of an alien spacecraft.

The player receives an unintelligible radio transmission which leads them to the alien crash site. On approaching the wreckage, they are beamed into an alien mothership, Mothership Zeta, where they will meet other prisoners who have also been abducted over the centuries. After being beamed aboard, they are relieved of their equipment and locked in a cell with another abductee named Somah. With the help of Somah, a little girl named Sally, and a few unlikely allies from several different time periods, the player must fight their way to the bridge of the ship and defeat the alien captain.

Once the captain is defeated, the abductees take control of the mothership to battle another hostile alien vessel. The player controls the death ray for this battle. Once the enemy ship defeated, the player becomes the de facto captain of the ship and can return at will, though most of the ship is locked down after the battle.

Reception

Mothership Zeta has received mixed reactions from critics, averaging a 70[49] for the PC and a 65[50] for the XBox 360. Edge comments that "Mothership Zeta’s greatest asset is its looks" and that "[w]hoever designed such beauty should be pretty peeved at the game around it." Edge also noted that they "encountered a script bug so catastrophic that we couldn’t finish the game - we actually had to clip through a doorway and use console commands to bring everything back on track" and criticize the DLC for locking off most of the ship after completion.[51] Eurogamer states that "the most disappointing factor about Mothership Zeta is how little subtlety is afforded to the details" and sums up the DLC as "repetitive, largely uninspired corridor combat, and boring, linear and samey mission design."[52] Gamedaily praises Zeta for "keep[ing] Fallout's trademark humor intact," its improved graphics, and the new enemies and weapons introduced.[53]

References

  1. ^ "Bethesda Speaks On Gamebryo Engine, Final Fallout 3 DLC". Slashdot. 2009-07-09. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  2. ^ a b DeVries, Jack (2008-07-14). "E3 2008: Fallout 3 to Have Console Exclusive Downloadable Content". IGN. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  3. ^ a b Graft, Kris (2008-07-21). "Bethesda Mum on Fallout 3 DLC Exclusivity Deal". Edge Online. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  4. ^ Frushtick, Russ (2008-12-11). "EXCLUSIVE: Fallout 3's "Broken Steel" to Change the End of the Game: Games: UGO". UGO. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  5. ^ Fletcher, JC (2009-09-17). "Fallout 3 GOTY edition, PS3 DLC dated". Joystiq. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  6. ^ Klepek, Patrick (2009-01-23). "Bethesda Won't Commit To PS3 'Fallout 3′ Getting Ability To Play Post-Ending » MTV Multiplayer". MTV. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  7. ^ Purchese, Robert (2009-05-19). "Bethesda doing more Fallout 3 DLC News". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  8. ^ "IGN - Fallout 3: Operation Anchorage Unveiled". IGN. 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2009-10-10. {{cite web}}: |first= missing |last= (help); Unknown parameter |lst= ignored (help)
  9. ^ Crecente, Brian (2009-01-13). "Kotaku - Fallout 3 Bug Fix Update Hits PC, PS3 and Xbox 360 Today". Kotaku. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  10. ^ Watts, Steve (2009-06-25). "Bethesda Putting "Finishing Touches" on PS3 Fallout 3 DLC". Daily Radar. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  11. ^ a b Faylor, Chris (2009-07-13). "Fallout 3 DLC Due on PS3 Before 'End of September'". Shacknews. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  12. ^ "Fallout 3: Operation Anchorage PC reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  13. ^ "Fallout 3: Operation Anchorage for Xbox 360 reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  14. ^ a b Brudvig, Erik (2009-01-29). "Fallout 3: Operation: Anchorage Review". IGN. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
  15. ^ a b Porter, Will (2009-01-27). "Fallout 3 Operation: Anchorage Review". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
  16. ^ a b Soletsky, Phil (2009-02-19). "Fallout 3 Operation: Anchorage". GameOver. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
  17. ^ Bright, Richard (2009-02-03). "Fallout 3: Operation Anchorage". play.tm. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
  18. ^ Meunier, Nathan. "Fallout 3: Operation Anchorage Review". Cheat Code Central. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
  19. ^ "Twitter / Bethesda Blog: English version of The Pit ..." Twitter. 2009-03-25. Retrieved 2009-10-10. English version of The Pitt is back up on Xbox LIVE, check out Bethblog for more details.
  20. ^ Haas, Pete (2009-03-25). "Fallout 3: The Pitt Back On Xbox Live". Cinema Blend. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  21. ^ "Fallout 3: The Pitt & Operation Anchorage (Expansion Pack)". play.com. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  22. ^ "Fallout 3: The Pitt for PC reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  23. ^ "Fallout 3: The Pitt for Xbox 360 reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  24. ^ Grandstaff, Matt (2009-03-24). "The Pitt is back up on Xbox LIVE". Bethesda. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
  25. ^ Grandstaff, Matt (2009-04-02). "Update on The Pitt". Bethesda. Retrieved 2009-04-05.
  26. ^ Quarn (2009-03-26). "The Pitt Crash Fix". Fallout 3 Nexus. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  27. ^ News: Fallout 3 'Broken Steel' DLC Will Alter Game Ending - Kombo.com
  28. ^ Remo, Chris (2009-04-24). "Exploring A Devastated World: Emil Pagliarulo And Fallout 3". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
  29. ^ "Broken Steel Overview". Bethesda. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
  30. ^ Gamephoton 19 May 2009. Retrieved on 2009-19-05
  31. ^ Grandstaff, Matt (2009-04-22). "Broken Steel gameplay on X-Play". Bethesda. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
  32. ^ a b Bramwell, Tom (2009-05-05). "Fallout 3: Broken Steel DLC PC problems". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  33. ^ a b c Fahey, Mike (2009-05-05). "PC Broken Steel Error Is A Games For Windows Live Problem". Kotaku. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  34. ^ "Major bugs caused by v1.5! - Bethesda Game Studios Forums". 2009-05-02. Retrieved 2009-10-10. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |Publisher= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help)
  35. ^ "Bethesda Softworks". Bethesda. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  36. ^ "Fallout 3: Broken Steel for PC reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  37. ^ "Fallout 3: Broken Steel for Xbox 360 reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  38. ^ Hoeger, Justin (May 29, 2009). "Game Day: He's 'Rad,' or not quite". Sacramento Bee.
  39. ^ Hoeger, Justin (June 04, 2009). "Game Daze: 'Klonoa,' -- 'Avalon Code' -- 'Fallout 3: Broken Steel'". {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  40. ^ Staff, Edge (2009-05-08). "Review: Fallout 3 - Broken Steel". Edge. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  41. ^ Teti, John (May 18, 2009). "Fallout 3: Broken Steel". The Onion (AV Club).
  42. ^ a b c Brudvig, Erik (2009-05-19). "Aliens Invade Fallout 3". IGN. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  43. ^ "Fallout 3: Point Lookout for PC reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  44. ^ "Fallout 3: Point Lookout for Xbox 360 reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  45. ^ "Falout 3 Point Lookout review". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
  46. ^ Brudvig, Erik (2009-06-24). "Fallout 3: Point Lookout Review". IGN. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  47. ^ Staff, Edge (2009-06-24). "Review: Fallout 3 - Point Lookout". Edge. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  48. ^ "Fallout 3 Mothership Zeta: Similar In Size To Operation Anchorage". Gaming Union. 2009-06-16. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  49. ^ "Fallout 3: Mothership Zeta for PC reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
  50. ^ "Fallout 3: Mothership Zeta for Xbox 360 reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
  51. ^ Staff, Edge (2009-08-04). "Review: Fallout 3 - Mothership Zeta". Edge. Retrieved 2009-08-04.
  52. ^ Reed, Kristan (2009-08-04). "Fallout 3 Mothership Zeta Review". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2009-08-04.
  53. ^ Mullen, Micheal (2009-08-04). "Fallout 3: Mothership Zeta (DLC) Review (XB360)". Gamedaily. Retrieved 2009-08-04.

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