this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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Fallout
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That "time frozen in '50s American retrofuturistic utopian design" is a fundamental part of Fallout's lore and visual identity. They could totally go outside that, but it'd be considered a ballsy departure and it'd be a huge chance to get it wrong compared to the safety of the known design.
I'd like to see them do it, but I think there's too much for them to do within the framework still before trying something like that. A bit similar to how GTA is trapped in America due to how core to its identity American culture is.
But fallout doesn't need to live from "MURICA FUCK YEAH" it would work great everywhere. And the 50s retro futuristic world building doesn't need to change at all.
GTA is little different, they just give you a island map and call shit similar to real world stuff, the muricaland part is basically just the Guns, and political statements during the story lines. Theoretically it would work without mentioning USA once, just take out the flags and you could say the game plays everywhere, organized crime is a thing in every country and you can get guns everywhere, especially if you are organized crime...
There is no point besides wanting to appeal to the usa centric consumers that think Europe doesn't have roads or that internet was invented in "murica"
I'm not saying it wouldnt possibly work great. It's that the specific people doing all the work, what they have to reference and call back on, all of the experience and the history that makes doing art and design for a new game smoother and more like the assembly line that a sequel tries to be is restricted to that specific vision.
It'd be an investment and a risk to go beyond that. Ideally, it'd be awesome and has potential payoff, but it's scary as a business venture.
Your absolutely correct to say it's a work scope issue with production. But I feel like it doesn't have to be, be it AI automation or even getting a 2nd location company involved I think it would pay off in the end both critically and financially. It's just getting to the point where the companys will do it. That's the real challenge right now. I think at least.