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Enjoy the Fallout Show? Check Out These 6 Games

By now, you’ve probably heard the buzz around Amazon’s Fallout live stream show. And it turns out to be a faithful and fun adaptation of the hilarious and grotesque post-apocalyptic role-playing game series. The live show offers a glimpse into the wild world of Fallout and all the bizarre hijinks just waiting to be discovered, and it probably makes you want to try some games that have a similar conceit.

But if you’ve already dove into the Fallout series or already have them on your list of games to check out, we have other games to recommend that scratch the same itch as games from Bethesda Game Studios. Along with similar games focused on choice and agency, our list also includes games that approach the post-apocalypse a little differently. So, with that, here are our recommended games if you can’t get enough of Fallout.

Wasteland 3

Credit: inXile Entertainment
Credit: inXile Entertainment

Before developer Interplay found runaway success with the original Fallout, the foundations of the post-apocalyptic RPG were first laid with Wasteland in 1988. As the first PC RPG set in the American post-apocalypse, Wasteland featured a really strange plot and tons of raiders to fight in tactical engagements. While the original Wasteland and its 2014 sequel remain excellent tactical RPGs, the recent Wasteland 3 is the pinnacle of the series and a great starting point for newcomers.

Wasteland 3 is focused on strategic decision-making with your team of Desert Rangers, offering a complex and emergent approach to exploring and surviving the many tricky encounters in the ruins of the American Rocky Mountains. As you build up a reliable crew of rangers, Wasteland 3 presents you with a series of bizarre encounters with marauders and other strange factions that showcase the absurdity of the post-apocalypse. One particular quest that stands out centers around a cult that worships a Ronald Reagan AI housed inside a mechanical statue that shoots deadly lasers. Wasteland 3 offers a solid tactical RPG experience that shows the absurd side of a dark post-apocalypse.

Exodus from the metro

Credit: 4A Games
Credit: 4A Games

The Metro series from developer 4A Games highlights what the post-nuclear apocalypse looks like outside of America and in more unforgiving scenarios. Based on the science fiction novels of Dmitry Glukhovsky, the Metro video game series focuses on surviving one harrowing encounter after another in what remains of post-nuclear war Russia and how the factions at war continue to fight for control. Metro Exodus is the culmination of a trilogy of solid narrative shooters, introducing the series to a more open-world inspired setting for exploring and surviving.

Starring a young survivor named Artyom, the Metro trilogy shows his evolution from a scavenger to a leader of a faction of rangers seeking to find safety in the ruins of the old world. While exploring and fighting through the different regions of Russia, the protagonist must rely heavily on crafting and careful resource management to survive encounters with bandits and mutants in the wild. While both original entries are solid shooters, Metro Exodus is a great starting point for the series for newcomers as it focuses on survival in large-scale environments while giving its characters a satisfying conclusion to their story of survival.

The outer worlds

Credit: Obsidian
Credit: Obsidian

Obsidian Entertainment features a ton of talent that worked on the original Fallout series, and following their work on Fallout: New Vegas, the developers then created an entirely new game that follows much of the absurd humor and Bloody Fallout action in the future. went wrong. The Outer Worlds is a different type of RPG that takes its dystopian and deeply bizarre setting to a galactic scale. Set in an alternate timeline where American business was never regulated in the early 1900s and space exploration led to a new era of capitalism, you lead a team of misfits traveling the galaxy and landing headfirst into conflicts with megacorporations running just about everything.

The Outer Worlds is essentially the sci-fi TV series Firefly mixed with Fallout, leaning heavily on the comedy and absurdity of its hyper-capitalist universe. Much like Fallout, you can make your protagonist a smooth-talking explorer who can talk his way out of trouble or a cunning thug who solves his problems with a well-placed blaster shot. With a lovable ensemble of companions, including the ever-reliable Parvati, The Outer Worlds really puts its characters and the wild setting center stage, and it’s a great choice for those looking for a more sci-fi take on a RPG.

Horizon: the forbidden west

Credit: Guerrilla Games, SIE
Credit: Guerrilla Games, SIE

What makes Guerrilla Games’ Horizon series such an intriguing take on the post-apocalypse is that it centers its story on the larger mystery of what happened before the end of the world – and it adds also roving and imposing machines to the mix. Horizon sees the remnants of humanity exploring a land in ruins following the robotic apocalypse, which has left communities scattered and without knowledge of what came before. Forbidden West follows up on the excellent Zero Dawn by featuring a greater level of detail for its world while giving protagonist Aloy more ways to engage with her various quests and characters. And not to mention there are many more machines to fight and master.

Forbidden West brings the story back to the ruins of the American West Coast, showing how the remains of San Francisco and Las Vegas evolved in the post-robot apocalypse. What makes the Horizon games so fun to explore is learning how the world changed after the end of the world and engaging in some of the most daring battles against advanced machines that require careful planning and coordination of skills to be defeated. The Horizon series really leans into the wonder and weirdness of the post-apocalypse, and the latest mainline entry, Forbidden West, showcases the series at its best.

STALKER: Shadow of Chernobyl

Credit: GSC Game World
Credit: GSC Game World

GSC Game World’s STALKER series makes you feel like an insignificant part of a vast and incredibly hostile world – and that delivers some truly terrifying and equally thrilling moments. With the sequel coming this year, the original STALKER: Shadow of Chernobyl remains a fantastic survival narrative experience about battling strange phenomena and hostile factions within the Myth Zone, the remains of irradiated Chernobyl that are still becoming more dangerous over time. .

The throughline of the STALKER series and what makes it unique is that it presents a very unforgiving atmospheric world that you have to contend with. In addition to managing your precious resources, you will also need to ensure that the protagonist remains in tip-top shape and safe from deadly radiation. All this while you escape rival factions who seek to eliminate everyone in the Zone, including the mutated monsters that lurk. You’ll often face an unexpected death in the Zone, but therein lies what makes STALKER: Shadow of Chernobyl such a classic game to accept: Surviving in the Zone and making do with what you have is simply a captivating experience. With the recent remasters of the game and its expansions, now is the perfect time to take a look at this no-compromise action RPG.

Cyberpunk 2077

Credit: CD Projekt Red
Credit: CD Projekt Red

Since the original 2020 release, CD Projekt Red has slowly rebuilt and expanded on the foundations of Cyberpunk 2077, and it’s now one of the best modern action RPGs on the market. Set in the virtually lawless expanse of Night City, the sci-fi urban setting is a fantastic change of pace from other dystopian shooters and role-playing games, and it still scratches that post-apocalyptic itch just how it is dark, strange and unforgiving. a future megacity turned out to be.

With an incredible cast of characters – played by A-list stars like Keanu Reeves and Idris Elba – Cyberpunk 2077 shines with its approach to role-playing and fast-paced combat, all building on how you want to build your futuristic mercenary . Where Cyberpunk 2077 really hits home is in how it places you in the middle of a hostile but still exciting city, filled with different encounters and quests to take on, all showing a level of agency that knocks RPG classics like Fallout and Deus Ex. The atmosphere of Night City is electric and immersing yourself in the expanse and its outer wastelands is a pleasure. If you haven’t tried Cyberpunk 2077 yet and want something that offers a rich and satisfying role-playing experience, then you can’t go wrong with CD Projekt RED’s modern classic.

Alessandro Fillari is a freelance writer for IGN.

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