

I have wanted to try this mod for awhile now. I saw this one-click option and thought there hasn't been a better time. It installed and worked for me on the first time. I am only a short way into the game but I am impressed by the production value, the environment, and so far the story already has me intrigued.

The concept when compared to others that came after Settlers 2 is simple. Yet it is pleasant, well executed, and this is the best of the old designs that has been ported and made to run well on modern machines. I have beat this games many times. The only thing that would have kept me playing it even longer would have been if it could generate procedural maps. There may be an element of nostalgia for me as one as I consider Settlers 1 (The Settlers) to be one of my favorite games I experienced on my old Commodore Amiga. That one has not as lovingly been adapted to current machines. Settlers 2 also took most aspects of 1 and made it better. The ones that came after 2 may have been good as well 3 & 4 particularly but they do not play as nicely on modern machines. They were not given the remake quality that this one does. I am playing it currently at 4K which is a resolution that was unthinkable during the time any of these games were made.

I only played it briefly at this point. I am not a fan of games that are extremely linear and holding my hands. The glowing GO HERE type indicators everywhere are not really a style I like. It also has a console feel to it which while it works is not what I'd like with something like this. I will probably revisit it at a later date but my initial run is that it isn't quite my thing.

This game stands apart from any other game out there that I am aware of creating it's own approach to survival, management, civilization, and exploration. It uses a side view to convey this. There are other side view games but none that approach game play quite the way this game handles it. Well done!

Fallout 4 is a typical Bethesda Studios open world game engine at it's heart. It does many things and creates a unique world. Fallout 4 does this quite well. Fallout 4 isn't my favorite setting of the Bethesda games but it is still the game that has me reinstalling and playing yet again years later. Why? It does some things none of the other games do, and some things I know of no other game out there that does them. This aspect may not appeal to some people but to someone like me who likes to visibly see the world change due to my actions in more than just a pre-scripted change that everyone that plays it see. Outposts and the Supply Lines you can set up between them are the thing. You can tell someone about them and they still may not quite experience it. Once you have a level in the Local Leader PERK under the Charisma branch you can setup supply lines. These link any outposts you build together so they share resources. Okay, but it get's better. You actually have to tell an NPC in your settlements that is their job. You can outfit them (and the other settlers) with weapons and armor. They will then walk that path between the outposts. Depending upon what you do it creates a very noticeable I AM CHANGING THE WORLD feel to the game. They will be out fighting encounters on the road between. They will make more activity near the outposts as they engage things on the outskirts. They make the world come alive. Since where they go to, how they are outfitted, etc. is up to you it creates world changes that are different EVERY play through. I have many other games since Fallout 4 came out but I still will return to it just for this changing the world experience. I also recommend strongly installing the Sim Settlements 2, and Chapter 2, and 3 of that MOD from simsettlements2.com as it takes the entire Outpost thing to another level while adding very professionally crafted new quests, NPCs, fully voiced over dialog, etc.