Selasa, 24 Juli 2018

Fallout 5: everything we know so far

Just when you thought you’d escaped the Wasteland, the Fallout series drifts back into your life like a radioactive thunder cloud. Fallout 4 was Bethesda Game Studios’ most successful launch ever, with irradiated Boston proving the perfect setting for the RPG series' spectacular open-world storytelling. With this success behind it, it's hard to imagine that Bethesda wouldn't return to the Fallout franchise.

We're sure Bethesda are busy with Fallout 76, which is out November this year, and we know their next projects in the pipeline: the single-player sci-fi RPG Starfield and Elder Scrolls 6, whatever their release dates might be. So it's likely we won't see a new Fallout before these games are out of the way.

But while details are thin on the ground, and we've yet to hear a confirmation from Bethesda itself, we can't help but theorise on where the series might go next. 

Cut to the chase

  • What is it? The inevitable sequel to the wasteland wandering RPG hit
  • What can I play it on? If the rest of the series is anything to go by, Sony and Microsoft consoles, plus PC, with a very remote hope of a Nintendo Switch version
  • When can I play it? Yet to be confirmed, but you can bet your bottom dollar it’s happening

Fallout 5 release date

Without a slither of confirmation around Fallout 5’s existence yet, this one’s a shot in the dark. But you can make some educated guesses based on the series' past. There were seven years between the mainline Fallout 3 (2008) and Fallout 4 (2015) entries into the series, divided by a console generation leap.

While Fallout: New Vegas bridged the gap between these two entries, it looks like Fallout 76 will be playing a similar role, and we can't imagine Fallout 5 will come too soon after the online spin-off – especially with Starfield and Elder Scrolls 6 already announced for the coming years. It's likely we don't see it until the next generation of Xbox and Playstation console, which analysts are expecting in 2020 or 2021.

Fallout 5 trailers

You’ll have to wait a bit longer for Fallout 5 trailers. With no official word on the sequel out there yet, it’ll be some time before we get a whiff of any gameplay footage, unless a major leak at Bethesda occurs.

Fallout 5 news and rumors

A new engine

While Fallout 4 went bigger in scale, it didn’t offer a major overhaul of the graphics and character models players had seen in its previous two games. Bethesda Game Studios Montreal currently has an open job listing for an ‘Engine / System Programmer’, leading some to believe an entirely new engine could be powering the next Fallout and Elder Scrolls instalments, much as the Creation Engine was developed for Fallout 4 and The Elder Scrolls: Skyrim. 

After a mixed reception for the clunky navigation system in 2015’s Fallout VR, the company could also feasibly be looking to optimise their next engine for native VR support.

Multiplayer or MMO

Depending on the success of this year's Fallout 76, we could well see Fallout further expand its foothold in the online space. Bethesda’s fantasy MMO The Elder Scrolls Online eventually managed to blossom into a thriving online community, and the same could happen here.

Bethesda have stressed they're still focusing on single-player RPG experiences, as evident by their announcement of both Elder Scrolls 6 and the brand-new Starfield IP. So we still think we'll see another traditional Fallout 5 entry down the line – even if it comes with some multiplayer modes packaged in.

Robot companion with list of dialogue options (Fallout 4)

An overhauled dialogue system

Given the length of time we usually see between Fallout’s mainline games, there’ll be plenty of time to work on some gameplay improvements. One of Fallout 4’s major changes to the IP’s formula was in a streamlined dialogue system, ditching the usual list of speech options for four simplified reactions mapped to specific buttons on the controller. A lot of players were unhappy with the change, and Fallout 4 lead Todd Howard has been open about wanting to respond to that criticism for future games.

A new setting...

There’s been nothing solid on the location of the next game, after a trademark for Fallout: New Orleans back in 2014 – registered without an owner name or ID – turned out to be something of a red herring. Given the history of the franchise, it seems unlikely we won’t be revisiting its irradiated American landscapes, although a move to the Deep South or perhaps the West Coast would offer something new to explore.

… or maybe an old one?

Ten years on from 2008’s acclaimed Fallout 3, a remastered edition could be just the thing to whet our Wasteland appetite while we wait for the next mainline instalment. It could also find a welcome home on the Nintendo Switch, which is piecing together an impressive list of 3rd-party shooters from Bethesda, who have already ported versions of Skyrim, Doom, and Wolfenstein to the handheld/home console hybrid.

A queue of people entering a vault, under the Fallout Shelter logo

And though we’re still only speculating at this stage, the tie-in mobile game Fallout Shelter (2015) was a runaway success on iOS and Android, and made the move to the Xbox One and Windows 10 last year. We’d love to see an expanded Switch version of the vault sim that made use of the console’s superior capabilities.

Keep checking back here for all the latest Fallout 5 news 

  • More interested in where Elder Scrolls is going? Here's everything we know about Elder Scrolls 6

July 24, 2018 at 09:07PM
Gerald Lynch,Henry St Leger

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