T
Taxi Driver
Guest
Chris Taylor points out that the development team can't spare the effort to make a Mac version of FT. This is both completely reasonable and unproblematic.
All the Fallout games are playable in emulation, or else the Mac user can just get his hands on a PC.
And since the developers can't be bothered to develop a Mac version, there's no reason for a Mac user to bother paying for the game. After all, the added price tag of an emulator ($150) or a PC to play it on ($400 and up, or the extreme inconvenience of having to use someone else's computer) outweighs the cost of the game by at least several times. It's like making a tape of a favorite album rather than shell out a few hundred bucks because the album only comes on CD.
So fire up that CD burner!
All the Fallout games are playable in emulation, or else the Mac user can just get his hands on a PC.
And since the developers can't be bothered to develop a Mac version, there's no reason for a Mac user to bother paying for the game. After all, the added price tag of an emulator ($150) or a PC to play it on ($400 and up, or the extreme inconvenience of having to use someone else's computer) outweighs the cost of the game by at least several times. It's like making a tape of a favorite album rather than shell out a few hundred bucks because the album only comes on CD.
So fire up that CD burner!