
The most essential stories feel anything but. They remember nuking Megaton and turning into a werewolf while sculpting lovers out of cheese wheels. They remember joining the Dark Brotherhood or the Thieves Guild. At least as far back as Oblivion and Skyrim, people don’t talk about their central plots. That’s where the meat of these games resides anyway. Just a little slurpy loot goblin licking cakes off ancient tomb walls while scavenging bullets.

I prefer to pick a direction and explore, eating any floor trash I find along the way. Like most people I almost never bother beating Bethesda games. It’s only the second Bethesda Game Studios title I’ve ever “finished,” the other coincidentally being Fallout 3 back in 2008. Specifically I finished Fallout 4 - the studio’s last single-player stab at the sci-fi series from 2015. I beat the main story quest in a Bethesda game. Fallout 4 can be quite the rabbit hole, and it only becomes more exciting the more players explore.This weekend I did the unthinkable. While all players want to find the best stuff, only the best of the best have found themselves exploring all of these great hidden locations. Some of them can only be found by the most daring, dedicated Fallout explorers. With a world so large, not every cool place ends up markable on the map. However, some fans miss many of the coolest places in Fallout 4.

This adventure takes the player across the map as they run into quite a few familiar faces, historical and pop-culture references, and big baddies. RELATED: The 10 Best Fallout 4 Immersion Mods To Dateīethesda's most recent Fallout hit was Fallout 4, which was their largest game to date (ignoring Fallout 76, a critical flop). In Fallout 4, fans play as the Sole Survivor, a pre-war human who ends up searching for their son in a wasteland version of Boston. After all, who doesn't love finding a visual representation of Poe's ending to A Casque of Amontillado hidden in the walls of The Castle? These kinds of details are well done, clever, and keep fans wanting more. Not only are Bethesda's games chock full of exciting missions that are both light-hearted and serious, but they also have endless clever and impressive details.


Between its Fallout and Elder Scrollsfranchises, Bethesda has become a gamer favorite for expansive, open worlds that feel filled to the brim.
