Article 52M3S Fallout 76’s “Wastelanders” expansion makes West Virginia feel like home

Fallout 76’s “Wastelanders” expansion makes West Virginia feel like home

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    A human being? In my Fallout 76? It's more likely than you think.

When Fallout 76launched in late 2018, it wasn't exactly a flawless experience, as publisher Bethesda would be the first to admit. It was buggy and glitchy, the online experience was inconsistent and subpar, and worst of all, the wasteland felt empty without the series' classic NPC personalities and meaningful dialogue options.

A lot can change in a year and a half. Since its haphazard launch, Fallout 76has received a number of quality-of-life updates and even got its own battle royale mode. But the always-online post-apocalyptic RPG's actual saving grace might just be Wastelanders, a free, massive expansion that went live last week. Wastelandersbrings living, breathing characters back to the Appalachian wastes, and suddenly West Virginia is a lot less lonely.

People who need non-player people

Of course, this expansion does a lot more than simply sprinkle a fresh helping of NPCs throughout the enormous map. Wastelandersalso comes with new quests, including a core storyline that drives the narrative forward. Canonically, it takes place one year after Vault 76 reopened, and people are just starting to return to Appalachia. There are NPCs to befriend, factions to join, and dialogue trees to navigate, complete with the series' trademark skill-check chat options.

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