
It was released worldwide in October 2008 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360. The game marks a major shift in the series by using 3D graphics and real-time combat, replacing the 2D isometric graphics and turn-based combat of previous installments. The third major installment in the Fallout series, it is the first game to be developed by Bethesda after acquiring the rights to the franchise from Interplay Entertainment.


Therefore, saving the difference in features, and not counting all the things Valve have done for the gaming community, etc, requiring Steam to play a game is not different as requiring GfWL.Fallout 3 is a 2008 action role-playing game developed by Bethesda Game Studios and published by Bethesda Softworks. To play Steam games offline, even if we were to have ALL games on our HDDs, we would need Goldberg Emulator, which to me is nothing more than another crack to bypass the online features of Steam. There was a crack that allowed me to play without GfWL. When I had Fallout 3 on PC, on Windows back then, I didn't purchase the game. And if you bought a bunch of games with no plans to have enough storage to so much as download them, it's really on you I'm actually kind of in that boat, but I don't tell myself it's Valve's responsibility-the decision to not fully take ownership of those games by putting a copy on my own computer was mine, not Valve's. But if you purchased that many games you are not poor, so whatever. Sure, if you have massive numbers of games that would take ridiculous amounts of storage you might have to buy a big hard drive or something. If you own a Steam game and Valve goes under, unless it's amazingly sudden you can, like, download the game before they finish dying.

If you have a game that had GfWL integrated it wouldn't matter how much warning you had, there would be nothing you could do to make your game work once GfWL went away. No different to the fact that if Steam were to go bust all our games would not work either, not downloadable. But I know when it happened years ago, that most things that had any sort of community had Games for Windows removed. definitely made a large section of software unplayable.

Think of all those old games that had integrated this garbage, and the other one that died, Gamespy. Like back when that service was murdered. Quoting: Purple Library Guy Quoting: Arehandoro Quoting: slaapliedjeI thought this happened a long time ago (the removal of Games for Windows).
