Brother None said:
So not everyone loves Fallout 3. Is that really worth getting worked up about? Does it infringe on your perfect world order?
Psychologically speaking, the problem there COULD start with the love for Fallout 3 itself. Because there is no reason to love a game.
Or at least there is no objective reason to love a game.
Or... well... At least there is no objective reason to love Fallout 3, no reason you can expose and argue about, and that's where the problem starts: when people start arguing
objectively why they don't love Fallout 3, those who love it just because get infuriated, because they hold their love as a legitimate logical feeling, and not as something personal that's just about themselves.
The worldwide media hype orgies around Bethesda's games are so overwhelmingly influential on peoples opinions about the game that, even though they don't change the actual nature of their love for Fallout 3, they actually make them react differently to rationalizations of the object.
Because, after all, everybody loves Fallout 3.
Which isn't true. At all. Most people actually don't like Fallout 3.
Maybe most people who played it found it fun, at least for a while, but that doesn't mean everybody likes it.
There are plenty of people complaining about objective simple things like the combat system or the world or other things. And while Fallout 3 lovers don't agree with them, at least they can understand their reasoning.
Which possibly doesn't apply when we talk about deeper issues.