Fallout: New Vegas interviews

Brother None

This ghoul has seen it all
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This is starting to break me, guys. Joystiq interviews J.E. Sawyer.<blockquote>Joystiq: What's your history with the Fallout franchise?

Josh Sawyer: I worked on what's called "Van Buren," which was the codename when Black Isle started to work on what would have been Fallout 3, and we had worked on it for maybe half a year, and then it was canceled because Interplay had a lot of financial problems.

Has it been a bizarre journey for you -- to have worked on the original iteration of Fallout 3 and now to be creating New Vegas, the sequel to the Fallout 3 you didn't work on -- or is it just "business as usual"?

I don't know if it's necessarily business as usual. You know, I've had a few high profile games be canceled, and so when I start working on a game at this point I'm kind of like, "I'm not confident that a game is going to ship until the manual is printed." Although, I have heard of examples where even then games have been canceled.

So, I mean, I'm really glad to be working on Fallout again. But like I said, until we get really close to the finish, I don't think I'm really going to have the same level of excitement that I had back in the early 2000s, because when I came to Black Isle, all I could think of was working on Fallout 3. So it has basically been 11 years coming to this, so I don't want to get ahead of myself until it's actually out the door.</blockquote>Shacknews has an interview with Sawyer, Feargus Urquhart and Pete Hines, the "Fallout: New Vegas Makers" (errrr).<blockquote> Josh Sawyer: We're trying to build on [the franchise's fictional history] a lot. One thing I do admit is kinda tricky is sometimes we take for granted [knowledge of past characters and events].

Pete Hines: That's all part of the Fallout canon, and going back there is just building on that canon but ultimately acknowledging that you are in part of the U.S. where other games did take place and there are places and things that, if you played those games, you should see and recognize. If you don't, if you don't what the NCR is, it doesn't take away from your enjoyment of the game. You still get what it's all about.

Josh Sawyer: When you go to Black Mountain, we wanted to include the chimes from the cathedral in Fallout 1. Sometimes [the references are] really overt, like, "Hey, look it's that character." Sometimes it can be as subtle as an instrument you heard in a theme that comes back. </blockquote>GamePro offers a video interview with Feargus, drawing comparisons to Fallout 1/2.

And the BethBlog has its Inside the Vault article with the man of the hour, with one of the geekiest-looking photos of Sawyer I've ever seen. C'mon dude, you drive a motorcycle, up the coolness please.<blockquote>What is the best part about your job? The worst part?
I really enjoy seeing people create great things. Few things make me happier than going around and showing people a cool new feature, critter, animation, icon, loading screen, or effect in the game. The worst part is definitely dealing with project cancellations.</blockquote>
 
Josh Sawyer: When you go to Black Mountain, we wanted to include the chimes from the cathedral in Fallout 1. Sometimes [the references are] really overt, like, "Hey, look it's that character." Sometimes it can be as subtle as an instrument you heard in a theme that comes back.

Now I want to hear sound examples.
 
That's pretty neat about the chimes, always loved that track. Small references like that are pretty fun I think.

I kinda wonder what characters we'll see again. Cameos make a bit more sense (I really hated the Harold cameo in Fallout 3) given the location of Vegas and the older games, but I hope they don't go over the top with it.
 
It's only 40 years or so after Fallout 2 right? Plenty of the younger folk could still be around, nevermind the obvious mutants and ghouls.

Or hell, maybe the son of the Chosen One, the boss of the Bishop family?

I want to see Talius again.
 
Brother None said:
Or hell, maybe the son of the Chosen One, the boss of the Bishop family?

That could be interesting.

Maybe some of the Chosen One's sperm have been used up in Vault City as well? Oooh, sounds like a fiercely thickening plot!
 
After the Harold-Fail, I want to see nobody at all. :>

Imagine, they re-include Marcus, because he's a fancy supermutant and age doesn't matter for him anyway. Then they use such a ugly super mutant model for him, which totally doesn't fit, because the old super mutants are looking 100% different than the 'new' ones. Bleh.
 
Brother None said:
AN ARMY OF CHOSEN ONE CLONES!!!!111ELEVENTY
As long they dont all scream GAAAARY directly in your face ...

I mean com on as "funny" that idea was eventualy (probably from a Bethesdian side ...) it makes no sense afterall.

I hope we wont see any clone stuff anymore for some time
 
Brother None said:
AN ARMY OF CHOSEN ONE CLONES!!!!111ELEVENTY

I was thinking more along the lines of hot incest lesbian intercourse. Maybe throw in that mutant with the gag ball from Broken Hills to spice things up.

What?
:look:
 
I fully expect the return of T-Ray, but now he'll have a giant Vault Boy tattood across his chest, and give you a special nuclear explosion metal egg, stating simple "yo dawg I herd you like easter eggs, so I put an easter egg in your egg bomb so you can joke while you yolk"
 
Brother None said:
I fully expect the return of T-Ray, but now he'll have a giant Vault Boy tattood across his chest, and give you a special nuclear explosion metal egg, stating simple "yo dawg I herd you like easter eggs, so I put an easter egg in your egg bomb so you can joke while you yolk"

Made me lol.
 
Josh Sawyer: When you go to Black Mountain, we wanted to include the chimes from the cathedral in Fallout 1. Sometimes [the references are] really overt, like, "Hey, look it's that character." Sometimes it can be as subtle as an instrument you heard in a theme that comes back.

Hell yeah, I've already used them in some of my fan-music tracks. :lol:
 
Ravager69 said:
BTW Hines has a terrible way of speaking. Reading his lines make my head hurt.
Whenever I try to read what he's saying it's like he uses a thesaurus on every third word.

And I like the thing about the Cathedral chimes at Black Mountain, sounds cool. :)
 
Hines is good at verbosely saying nothing in a very opaque manner so I can understand that from a PR standpoint but it's bad for actually communicating information. What I have a bigger problem with is listening to him speak as he has a bad voice for it and doesn't assemble sentences well (he tries to do the same crap but screws up a lot, making it even more confusing). He's not as bad as Howard, who umms and errs every third word and sounds like the nerd who was locked in his locker throughout highschool, but he's bad.
 
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