
Hardcore Droid - Fallout Shelter could not have come out at a more perfect time. With the massive hype surrounding the upcoming release of Fallout 4 and the announcement of its base building features, Fallout Shelter manages to give gamers a sample taste of what the next game in the series might offer months before it hits our desktops and consoles; taking in wanderers of the wasteland, assigning jobs and managing resources, all in the wonderful world of the Fallout universe. That’s not to say Shelter doesn’t hold its own. It’s a solid base-management game with a lovely art style and a great fit for the mobile platform.

Bethesda writes: "Save the date! Our annual #FalloutDay Broadcast will be streaming live on October 23 at 1pm ET, with the FalloutforHope post-show immediately following.
Tune in for the latest news about our existing Fallout games, community celebrations, and upcoming fan events!"
Gee can’t imagine what it will be…
“Fallout 76 this, Fallout 76 that, hey you played Fallout 76 yet”
I bet it's less about the games, and all about the show and the new merch, the "community" celebrations that only the loneliest of the hardcore could enjoy in some sort of sad life-long acomplishment sort of way, and the upcoming "fan" events....look dude, I love Fallout, I just can't with the current Big Bang theoryesque geek culture fandom growing arround it. The '76 Mod-job playroom sandbox shi7 has been done to death, and feels more like a cringe camp of Ready Player One characters all trying to main-character their way through Fallout. Ick. Fallout needs to get back to its roots, and I don't mean isometric.

When Fallout Shelter was originally released, a lot of people quickly fell in love with it. The game is addicting, as you expect any good mobile game to be. That said, it could definitely be improved with a sequel.

Let's take a step back into the good old days when Wi-Fi and data were nothing to worry about and look at the very Best Offline iPhone Games.