Far Harbor is a masterpiece. It builds upon everything Fallout 4 tried to do and does it even better.
The factions are a joy to interact with. My personal favourite is the Children of Atom, a returning religion/theme from Fallout 3 but fully fleshed out here; Not only does it fit in perfectly to the Fallout lore and universe but presents the question of religion in Fallout; How would some people deal with a post-apocalypse? They create a new religion and gain comfort in it.
The quests and levels gave me some serious OG Deus Vibes in its quest design; (Special shoutout the the Sub base!) there are numerous ways to handle the three factions and quests presented here. There's many moral quandries laid out too, all extending from Fallout 4. At point is a Synth sentient? Do they deserve freedom? Annihilation? That's entirely up to you.
Oh, and those puzzles in this DLC everyone complains about, by the way?
...My friend, I am a Shin Megami Tensei enjoyer. Those puzzles are nothing!
The factions are a joy to interact with. My personal favourite is the Children of Atom, a returning religion/theme from Fallout 3 but fully fleshed out here; Not only does it fit in perfectly to the Fallout lore and universe but presents the question of religion in Fallout; How would some people deal with a post-apocalypse? They create a new religion and gain comfort in it.
The quests and levels gave me some serious OG Deus Vibes in its quest design; (Special shoutout the the Sub base!) there are numerous ways to handle the three factions and quests presented here. There's many moral quandries laid out too, all extending from Fallout 4. At point is a Synth sentient? Do they deserve freedom? Annihilation? That's entirely up to you.
Oh, and those puzzles in this DLC everyone complains about, by the way?
...My friend, I am a Shin Megami Tensei enjoyer. Those puzzles are nothing!
o fato de que essa dlc é melhor que o jogo base é o milagre mais enfurecedor possível. por um lado eu fiquei feliz que os pontos fortes de fallout 4 foram usados como base para uma história paralela que acerta nas coisas que ele erra. far harbor é engajante, interessante e bom de se jogar. tem diálogos bons, decisões moralmente cinzas e as batalhas mais desafiadoras da franquia. quando eu cheguei no final eu me senti revigorada com fallout 4, por um breve momento.
então eu desinstalei o jogo.
me lembrei o jogo base me deixou entediada e as dlcs restantes são estúpidas.
uma pena que a bethesda não decidiu encomendar um spin-off da série feito por outro estúdio, porque eu adoraria jogar esse jogo hipotético. imagina um fallout feito pelo estúdio spiders? pela larian? por um terceiro estúdio que faz rpgs modernos que eu não consigo lembrar agora? já parou por um momento para sonhar? eu sonho todos os dias.
se um dia aquele mod que coloca new vegas dentro de fallout 4 lançar eu vou ficar muito feliz.
eu gosto de imaginar que minha personagem foi morar com a marinheira e fez companhia para ela até o fim de seus dias.
é isso. esse é o final da minha personagem.
então eu desinstalei o jogo.
me lembrei o jogo base me deixou entediada e as dlcs restantes são estúpidas.
uma pena que a bethesda não decidiu encomendar um spin-off da série feito por outro estúdio, porque eu adoraria jogar esse jogo hipotético. imagina um fallout feito pelo estúdio spiders? pela larian? por um terceiro estúdio que faz rpgs modernos que eu não consigo lembrar agora? já parou por um momento para sonhar? eu sonho todos os dias.
se um dia aquele mod que coloca new vegas dentro de fallout 4 lançar eu vou ficar muito feliz.
eu gosto de imaginar que minha personagem foi morar com a marinheira e fez companhia para ela até o fim de seus dias.
é isso. esse é o final da minha personagem.
Far Harbor was awful on release for PS4. I dunno if anyone else remembers it, but this thing dropped with absolutely HORRENDOUS framerates. 10fps, easily. Unplayable.
But as I have returned to FO4, and explored every inch of the island, and played it on a PC that could actually run it well, I must say that this DLC is the peak of all of FO4.
For one, the story actually involves player choice and consequence, something that the main game of FO4 pretty much entirely lacked. Also, the greyness in morality is such a welcome thing to have back in Bethesda Fallout...
Plus DiMA, the harbormen, and the children of Atom are all FANTASTIC factions, arguably more interesting than all the factions of the basegame with the exception of the BoS and Diamond City. And that murder-mystery quest too... awesome.
Far Harbor isn't without its issues though, as it still unfortunately exists within a game that has poor RPG mechanics. The story variability certainly is phenomenal, but the gameplay loop remains the exact same despite being in a new location. I dunno, other DLCs that released at around the same time as this one like Blood and Wine for TW3 introduced not only entirely new maps, but also gameplay conventions like all-new mutagen skills. If Far Harbor also brought in some sort of legendary-perk system a la FO76, we might have one of the very best Fallout DLCs of all time here.
But as it stands, Far Harbor is a phenomenal addition to Fo4 and features its best story available, with some incredible player choice options regarding the main plot to boot. Also, the whole island itself is such a joy to traverse through and explore, factions and all.
But as I have returned to FO4, and explored every inch of the island, and played it on a PC that could actually run it well, I must say that this DLC is the peak of all of FO4.
For one, the story actually involves player choice and consequence, something that the main game of FO4 pretty much entirely lacked. Also, the greyness in morality is such a welcome thing to have back in Bethesda Fallout...
Plus DiMA, the harbormen, and the children of Atom are all FANTASTIC factions, arguably more interesting than all the factions of the basegame with the exception of the BoS and Diamond City. And that murder-mystery quest too... awesome.
Far Harbor isn't without its issues though, as it still unfortunately exists within a game that has poor RPG mechanics. The story variability certainly is phenomenal, but the gameplay loop remains the exact same despite being in a new location. I dunno, other DLCs that released at around the same time as this one like Blood and Wine for TW3 introduced not only entirely new maps, but also gameplay conventions like all-new mutagen skills. If Far Harbor also brought in some sort of legendary-perk system a la FO76, we might have one of the very best Fallout DLCs of all time here.
But as it stands, Far Harbor is a phenomenal addition to Fo4 and features its best story available, with some incredible player choice options regarding the main plot to boot. Also, the whole island itself is such a joy to traverse through and explore, factions and all.
actually insane how good this is. my jaw dropped when i realized bethesda gave me a moral dilemma where i had to stop and think about what the best choice was. it wasn't a no brainer like the entirety of the base game, far harbor's narrative decisions are ones that test your personal concepts of right and wrong.
not only that, but it manages to completely flip a baffling narrative choice into a positive . dima asks the sole survivor if they're a synth, and since your character's origin has been prematurely decided by bethesda , it's an answer you genuinely don't have an answer to. the synth mystery here isn't immediately solved by shooting them and seeing if they have a component. you don't get clear answers and you have to use your best judgement to find the truth! it's amazing!
the mysteries of far harbor are intriguing, shocking, and only escalate from your arrival. definitely check this one out. only reason it isn't five stars is cause those dima puzzles suck ass and my game crashed on one, which meant i had to start all over.
not only that, but it manages to completely flip a baffling narrative choice into a positive . dima asks the sole survivor if they're a synth, and since your character's origin has been prematurely decided by bethesda , it's an answer you genuinely don't have an answer to. the synth mystery here isn't immediately solved by shooting them and seeing if they have a component. you don't get clear answers and you have to use your best judgement to find the truth! it's amazing!
the mysteries of far harbor are intriguing, shocking, and only escalate from your arrival. definitely check this one out. only reason it isn't five stars is cause those dima puzzles suck ass and my game crashed on one, which meant i had to start all over.
Now this is what I call DLC! It adds a whole new location, many hidden dangers, new monsters and lots of quests with endings that remind me of some of the old ethically blurred endings in the classic fallout games.
The main quest line is focused on my favourite character, Nick Valentine where you track down an associate's daughter.
More stuff to craft too and more settlements make this grand!
Steam Review:
Now THIS is worthy of being called DLC! It is mostly focused on a single character, one I quite like, Nick Valentine.
This opens a new place known as Far Harbour and there are many interesting stories and missions going on including a hidden vault on the island for the wealthy who lived in pre-war times! There are also many mysteries to the island revolving around the toxic radioactive fog that appears to fluctuate between being in small concentrated areas or spreading out far and covering most of the island.
Then you have the machine in the trailer...I won't spoil it, but he is a VERY interesting character and has a close connection to Nick too. This DLC is well worth the price, unlike various other ones.
The main quest line is focused on my favourite character, Nick Valentine where you track down an associate's daughter.
More stuff to craft too and more settlements make this grand!
Steam Review:
Now THIS is worthy of being called DLC! It is mostly focused on a single character, one I quite like, Nick Valentine.
This opens a new place known as Far Harbour and there are many interesting stories and missions going on including a hidden vault on the island for the wealthy who lived in pre-war times! There are also many mysteries to the island revolving around the toxic radioactive fog that appears to fluctuate between being in small concentrated areas or spreading out far and covering most of the island.
Then you have the machine in the trailer...I won't spoil it, but he is a VERY interesting character and has a close connection to Nick too. This DLC is well worth the price, unlike various other ones.
Far Harbor was the one DLC for Fallout 4 that I bothered playing. If you read my Fallout 4 review, you might know why.
I'll be short and quick with this one, because Far Harbor's only discussable quirks unique from the base game are its writing and - sort of - gameplay aspects.
Let's get this out of the way: The writing is far more bearable in this DLC. You get your usual factions who all have their reasons to conquer the land of lots-o'-fog. For once, however, you get CHOICES where YOU can INFLUENCE factions on how this situation should be DEALT WITH. Crazy, I know! The story didn't feel like a slog and I guess I didn't hate its characters. Whew.
Gameplay-wise, we have a few novelties. First is the elephant in the room, the "workshop" mini-game. If you know, you know. It was such a breath of fresh air, but it all came crashing down with a very unintuitive system. It was awesome, until it wasn't. Damn shame. I was ready to quit after round 3.
There are some new weapons, but I didn't bother with them. I didn't bother with them because I knew they wouldn't do nearly as much damage as my current non-legendary weaponry. It's nice to give more shooty things, but it would have been nicer to have these shooty things do something new to freshen up the room.
In the end, this was just fine. I'm glad they didn't fuck something up, at least.
I'll be short and quick with this one, because Far Harbor's only discussable quirks unique from the base game are its writing and - sort of - gameplay aspects.
Let's get this out of the way: The writing is far more bearable in this DLC. You get your usual factions who all have their reasons to conquer the land of lots-o'-fog. For once, however, you get CHOICES where YOU can INFLUENCE factions on how this situation should be DEALT WITH. Crazy, I know! The story didn't feel like a slog and I guess I didn't hate its characters. Whew.
Gameplay-wise, we have a few novelties. First is the elephant in the room, the "workshop" mini-game. If you know, you know. It was such a breath of fresh air, but it all came crashing down with a very unintuitive system. It was awesome, until it wasn't. Damn shame. I was ready to quit after round 3.
There are some new weapons, but I didn't bother with them. I didn't bother with them because I knew they wouldn't do nearly as much damage as my current non-legendary weaponry. It's nice to give more shooty things, but it would have been nicer to have these shooty things do something new to freshen up the room.
In the end, this was just fine. I'm glad they didn't fuck something up, at least.
far harbor, just like base game fallout 4 and nuka world, is a fun time that leaves little to no impact. none of the characters in this dlc stick out in my mind except for dima, he's the best part of this expansion probably, but this doesn't bother me. i'm sure some people dislike that nick valentine is so tied to this dlc, but i can't care. he's the best companion in 4 (and you can't even have sex with him!). far harbor is just a smaller island than base game 4 to run around shoot and loot on, and that's fine with me.
This dlc sets out to introduce a new area, new weapons, new enemies, and a well crafted story that is far greater than the base game. Each faction is well designed and interesting enough to side with on repeat playthroughs along with good rewards. The new weapons really spice up what base fallout 4 lacked. And the new wildlife is some of the most intimidating and interesting yet. The only thing dragging it down is a dreadful hour long minigame sequence that feels very out of place.