Review of Fallout Las Vegas for the PS4
By: Kyle D. Dobbs

Hello, everyone. Let's take a trip down memory lane to a game that many of you have played on your previous system: Fallout Las Vegas. Ahh, yes, the music is from the 50s and 60s, the location is out in the middle of Nevada, and you can see those sparkling lights as you walk down that strip where everyone is there to gamble something in Las Vegas. What separates this from Fallout 3 is the story, the regional animals, and the differences in power armor.
I had been playing Fallout 4 to the point I had done each of its endings and destroyed almost everyone to get a different conclusion; I had also opened up Fallout 76 and realized playing in groups of people just isn't the same vibe and so I dug in the vault and found that Play Station had ole Vegas available on the PS4.
It had been more than ten years since I played this version of the Fallout series on my PS3. Thinking of this game brought me flashbacks to the monsters and mutants I had destroyed and all of the awards I had achieved, so I downloaded it and opened up the game like it was a book to be reread. Low and behold, my realization of the graphic changes from the Play Station 3 to the 4 was a significance in how different the images are in Fallout Las Vegas versus Fallout 4. When you bring an old game from the previous system to the current one, you realize what a difference the systems have in their clarity and you can immediately make comparisons in the graphics.
I played the opening of Fallout Las Vegas and felt the vibes travel through my fingertips as I pressed the keys in getting my character out of the doctor's office and out into the wild blue yonder where the action is to take place. As I encountered my first villains, I noticed a significant difference in their blockiness, as their skin has more square pixels versus what I had been seeing in the Fallout 4 and Fallout 76 gamesa lot like those in the original Resident Evil game. The game's story is a great one in which you are recovering from an incident in which you are to uncover who you are and just what exactly brings you to your current situationas all of you who have played this well know. As I was wandering in the Nevada desert, I noticed not just the blockiness having a significant difference, I also noticed the quality of coloring is nothing in comparison to that of Fallout 76's. As I was wandering, the area surrounding me in this desert felt a little dead from the lack of coloring found in the later games. None the less, despite this difference of clarity, I must move forward in order to enjoy this game I so loved those years ago.
As I am entering into this game, the plot of the story is unfolding. To be honest, it has been so long since I played it, I have actually forgotten the full story of this character. As we all know, I can go to YouTube, but what's the fun in that?
My friends, I hope you have enjoyed this introduction because I must play more to recall all there is to this game that I have achieved on my system of the past. Maybe I'll rediscover why I was hooked on this game like I was on Fallout 3. Have a good future and I'll fill you in on how I am doing in the next article.

