Planet earth is in bad shape right now; we are consuming natural recourses much faster than they can be replaced, deforestation for grazing cattle is causing rainforests (along with millions of species of plants and animals housed in them) to disappear, pollution and man-made chemicals are causing changes to our environment and bodies in ways we don't yet understand fully, and chemical waste dumping is acidifying our ocean to the point that species are dying off at an alarming rate. There are entire islands of garbage floating in our oceans at this very moment...just let that sink in.
Considering all of this, along with the fact that nuclear arms manufacturing and testing is still occurring today, it is not terribly difficult to imagine that the fate of our own real life world might one day mirror the fate that befell the world of Fallout, assuming that we continue down the path we're on at present. Perhaps it is a bit farfetched to imagine the real world overrun with irradiated mutant humans who resemble the Hulk, radscorpions, whatever the hell Deathclaws are, and ghouls, but Fallout: A Post-Nuclear Role Playing Game makes this kind of world a load of fun to be part of.
The game starts you out (after the awesome opening cut-scene with narration provided by Ron Pearlman) with a character selection screen; you can choose to play as one of three pre-made characters, but I strongly recommend building your own. Making your own character means that you get to control their stats, and by way of old-school RPG number management/distribution, you can create a character with totally unique abilities. Depending on how you choose to parcel out your "Skill Points", "Character Points" and "Tagged Skills", you can make a character that will have unique methods of playing through the game; will your character be skilled in sneaking by the dangers of the waste, a smooth-talking thief who talks his or her way out of confrontations, a gun-toting weapon expert who makes peace (or conversely, conflict) by neutralizing threats? These are just a few examples of the many ways that the game can be played, and it is to the developers' credit that they had enough talent to create a game that actually allows players to complete challenges in a variety of ways. Your character will almost certainly be skilled in a few things, mediocre in others, and pretty bad in yet other aspects, and this means that completely unique story and gameplay experiences are possible every time a new game is started. It is possible to be so charismatic and intelligent that you can talk your way through several major battles, and by contrast, you are also able to make a character that is so unintelligent that they won't be able to form sentences at all (I'm completely serious) which does make for some laugh out loud hilarious moments.
Fallout, along with it's sequel, are true, pure role playing games in the most literal sense imaginable, which is something that is absolutely lacking in a lot of modern games. Don't get me wrong, I do enjoy the new Fallout games to varying degrees, but I feel that the first two games have a few things that the newer ones lack. There's a special magic in Fallouts 1 and 2 that I am completely enamored by...or maybe I'm suffering from radiation sickness, who knows?
I hope we can find a way to alter the way we're draining our planet's recourses, stop killing/polluting literally all life on it, and avoid nuclear war; fighting irradiated beasts and humans is all well and good fun in Fallout, but being mauled to death by a Deathclaw in real life would probably suck.