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Fallout Free on Gametap

Gamervision writes:
"You know what's better than getting good games? Getting good games for free. Gametap is making that easy right now, with Fallout being the current free game of the week. If that's not good enough for you, there are a few other free titles, among them the 2005 classic Psychonauts. If you haven't played the Tim Schafer gem yet, you now have no excuse."

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STONEY46150d ago (Edited 6150d ago )

Wtf, I remember playing it free on gametap last year when I couldn't find my Fallout disc. Luckily I eventually found the disc, since Gametap doesn't let you add mods, patch the game, and you gotta go through some stupid advertisement video each time you launch the game. And trust me, you'll want the patch, it fixes some major bugs and take out an annoying time limit that doesn't give you time to do all the stuff in the game.

Charlie_Shene6150d ago

Do you know were to get a patchable free version?

STONEY46150d ago (Edited 6150d ago )

Not legally... you can torrent it though. I do it with some of the older, hard to find PC games that I don't have.

kaveti66166150d ago

I played Fallout on Gametap. In fact, it was the only reason I downloaded Gametap. Big mistake. I played this after getting Fallout 3 and I cannot understand the game mechanics of Fallout.

zagibu6149d ago

Yeah, the original Fallout games might be a bit dated for 2009. But now that you have gametap installed, be sure to check out Psychonauts, it's one of the best games ever made.

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Get An Exclusive Fallout Bottlecap At Fallout Exhibit Event In Las Vegas

The Fallout Exhibit in Las Vegas is offering fans a limited Edition Bottlecap during a special event.

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World Of Fallout Exhibit Announced

A new Fallout exhibition has been revealed for fans.

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Tim Cain acknowledges Bethesda made the franchise bigger, but he would have done things differently

Creating any work of art in a corporate system is an odd business. Often, developers don't actually own the intellectual property rights of what they make, and sequels get produced at different companies. Fallout co-creator Tim Cain saw the series go from a humble isometric CRPG to one of the biggest gaming franchises ever, and he has mixed feelings about it.

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