My own GOG Affiliate link for Fallout 3 + all DLCs on GOG store: [ Ссылка ] Every purchase helps out the channel!
Full DLC longplay of Operation: Anchorage, the first Fallout 3 DLC to come out, in January 2009. Played on PC, in 2560x1440 resolution, ultra settings, recorded in 1440p60. Main quest only basically, completely nothing sidequest-y to do in this DLC, quick, short, and fully linear. A warm up before the first serious DLC to be honest.
Note - at the exact end of the longplay, there is a quarrel right in front the "reward" armory, which turns into a mutiny. I was too busy checking the stuff out to be able to hear it/make subtitles show up.
Base Fallout 3 longplay - [ Ссылка ]
My Fallout: New Vegas + DLCs playlist: [ Ссылка ]
My Fallout 3 + DLCs playlist: [ Ссылка ]
My complete walkthrough of TES IV: Oblivion (Main quest, all DLCs, all Factions): [ Ссылка ]
My complete walkthrough of TES III: Morrowind (Main Quest, All DLCs, all Side Quests from DLCs soon, all Factions): [ Ссылка ]
The Brotherhood of Steel Outcasts have set up in the remains of the VSS Facility, a pre-War compound of Virtual Strategic Solutions, and are trying to unseal the door of the VSS Armory which they think contains advanced combat gear and weapons. The only way to unseal this door appears to be by surviving a military virtual reality simulation of Operation: Anchorage and the only way to enter this simulation is via a computer interface device, like the Pip-Boy 3000.
So it comes down to the Lone Wanderer to go inside and complete a simulation of perhaps the greatest battle of the Fallout universe: the liberation of Anchorage, Alaska from occupying Red Chinese troops. The simulation is set during the Anchorage campaign, which occurred between June 2076, when the T-51b power armor was first introduced, and January 2077, when Chinese forces were completely driven out of Alaska. Evidence locatable in the Outcast outpost makes it clear that the simulation is not an accurate recreation of the battle in many important ways; however, these ways are never detailed but are blamed on General Chase, who was the military correspondent for the simulation program.
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