Equipment

Fallout 76 hits an all-time player count record on Steam following the Fallout TV series on Amazon, and the other games are spiking too-

People like the Fallout TV series on Amazon an awful lot—we called it “the best Fallout since New Vegas”—and that seems to be having quite the spillover effect for the Fallout videogames. All of the games in the long-running post-nuclear RPG series have seen a significant jump in players, and they’ve also muscled their way into Steam’s top-selling games chart.

SteamDB noted on Twitter (via Eurogamer) that “Fallout has more than doubled its concurrent players on Steam with the release of the Fallout TV series.”

Fallout 4 is the biggest beneficiary, spiking up to more than 83,000 concurrent players over the weekend, compared to a high of 24,000 the weekend before, a few days ahead of Amazon’s Fallout launch. Fallout 76 arguably set an even more impressive mark by surpassing 39,000 concurrent players on the weekend following the TV series release, a new all-time high on Steam for the four-year-old game. Fallout 3—my favorite of the Bethesda Fallouts, and I make no apologies for it—also saw a huge bounce, going from roughly 1,000 concurrents on April 7 to 6,700 a week later.

Some of that Fallout 76 surge is no doubt helped by the “free play event” that started last week and runs until April 18, but I wouldn’t credit that for all of it: It’s had free weeks in the past and never put up numbers like this. (It does, however, make this a very good time to give Fallout 76 a shot.)

The raw numbers aren’t quite so big, but even the original games have gone way up: Fallout broke 2,300 concurrent players immediately following the Amazon series, up from fewer than 300 the weekend before, while Fallout 2 surpassed 1,000, compared to a previous weekend high of 350.

Industry analyst Mat Piscatella shared some of Circana’s Fallout user numbers on Twitter, nicely illustrating the uptick:

There’s also a whole lotta Fallout among the top sellers on Steam right now: Fallout 76 is in third spot, Fallout 4 is in fourth, Fallout 4 Game of the Year Edition holds 10th place, and New Vegas is just one place out of the top 10. Fallout 3 and the Fallout Franchise bundle both made the top 20.

Hell, even Fallout Tactics managed to power its way into the top 100.

This is not unprecedented. In 2022, CD Projekt said the success of the Cyberpunk: Edgerunners anime on Netflix drove a Cyberpunk 2077 sales pop that helped deliver the company’s best financial third quarter in its “entire history.” Even so, it’s interesting to see the boost having such an impact across the whole of the Fallout series.

No doubt nostalgia is driving a lot of seasoned Fallout vets back to the glory of the old days, but suddenly grabbing top spots on Steam’s best-selling chart points to a lot of newcomers joining the party too.

Bethesda, naturally, took note:

Another good reason for jumping into Fallout 4, if not now then in the very near future, is the upcoming next-gen update, which more than a year after it was announced is finally set to arrive on April 25. That’ll bring the game to current-gen consoles with all the latest bells and whistles, and will also upgrade the PC version with support for widescreen and ultra-widescreen displays, new content, and various fixes and gameplay tweaks. 

Adjacent to that, there’s also the very big Fallout London mod on the way—it was set to drop April 23 but the development team decided to delay it until after the Fallout 4 next-gen update to ensure it didn’t break anything. Hopefully we’ll have a new release date on that one soon.

If you want to dig a little deeper into the Fallout vault, we can help. To learn more about the game that sparked the beef over whether Bethesda is retconning Fallout’s canon (it’s not), check out our guide to having the best Fallout: New Vegas experience today, and if the classics are what you’re after, this is what you need to get them up and running at full clip on modern hardware. As far as Fallout 3 goes, you might want to hold off on that one: A 2023 leak suggested that a remaster of that game is in the works, and at this point you might as well wait.

A couple more to consider, since we’re talking about it: If you dig the original Fallout style but find those games a little too past their best-before date for your tastes, Wasteland 2 and Wasteland 3—sequels to the game that inspired the very first Fallout game—are excellent.

Related Posts

MSI releases Intel BIOS with support for 256GB of RAM, just in case 192GB isn’t enough-

Your typical gaming rig doesn’t need anywhere near 256GB of RAM, but we do use our PCs for things other than gaming. Things like content creation or virtual machines come to mind. Either that or running Chrome with a hundred tabs open.

If you are one of the few that needs capacious amounts of system memory, you’re in luck. MSI has begun the process of rolling out Intel 600 and 700-series motherboard BIOSes that support up to 256GB of system RAM. These BIOSes are in addition to those it has already rolled out that add support for 256GB of RAM to its AM5 motherboard range.

When Intel’s 12th Gen family and 600-series motherboards launched, the maximum amount of VRAM you could install was 128GB. For most of us that was fine, but when you start factoring in RAM-hogging things like virtual machines, software development, multi-channel music production or any of a thousand other things, even 128GB can be limiting.

Then came non-binary memory, which meant you could buy mod…

Cheaper, power-savvy versions of Intel’s excellent Raptor Lake CPUs are here-

It may come as no surprise that Intel is releasing new lower-power versions of its 13th Gen chips. These new 65W versions of its Raptor Lake processors promise to deliver much the same spec as their more power-hungry counterparts, albeit with more moderate clock speeds to help keep demands low on the system. That should mean it’s these chips that end up in cheaper 13th Gen prebuilt gaming PCs from here on out.

In terms of the differences you can expect, we have the Core i9 13900 for example. This chip contains the same eight Performance-cores and 16 Efficient-cores as the K-series Core i9 13900K. However, the Core i9 13900 is rated to a 5.6GHz boost clock—200MHz slower than the full-fat Core i9 13900K and the same as the mobile Core i9 13980HX. 

Otherwise there are all the benefits of Raptor Lake architecture here in full, so I’d argue it’s a pretty sweet deal. Or at least not something I’d worry about if I were buying a prebuilt PC today—this chip seems…

Final Fantasy 14’s live-action TV series is ‘dead’ due to a scale that ‘proved too much’, with Covid-19 twisting the knife-

Back in 2019, a live-action version of Final Fantasy 14—the critically-acclaimed MMORPG with an expanded free trial, you know the one—was in the works. Announced as a collaboration between Sony Pictures Television and Hivemind (responsible for Netflix’s The Witcher series), it seemed like a natural pairing.

Unfortunately, it looks like that particular project is dead in the water according to Hivemind’s co-founder Dinesh Shamdasani on Twitter. When asked for an update on the project, he responds that it’s “Dead.” He continues to write: 

“We took around a fantastic pilot script by Ben Lustig & [Jake Thornton] along with a multi-season plan they built with our show runners but got rejected across the board. The size and scale needed to do it right proved too much for anyone to want to risk. Amazon came closest.”

Jake Thornton, a scriptwriter on the project, also noted that the project’s failure “was a real result of Covid unfortunately. We took i…

Stardew Valley maker Eric Barone says he’s ‘trying to’ score a Fortnite collab and knows just who he wants in the game- Pelican Town’s smoky, middle-aged bus driver Pam-

In what scientists will someday call “a marketing collabo of supernatural potency,” Stardew Valley creator Eric Barone has revealed that he wants to get some kind of crossover going with Fortnite. Specifically, he’d like to transplant a few of the citizens of his sedate farming sim into Epic’s Omniverse, handing them a combat shotgun and letting them go ham on other people’s licenced trademarks.

Barone was asked about his willingness to do a Stardew/Fortnite crossover by YouTuber Panedwards (via IGN). “I’ve been trying to,” came Barone’s reply, who particularly wants “Pam in Fortnite” but is “open to doing a collab” in general.

If you’re not up to date with the latest edition of the Stardew Yellow Pages, Pam is the character who’s a crusty, jaded old diner waitress in everything but, ah, her actual career. She’s the Pelican Town bus driver and Penny’s mother, a salt-of-the-earth working class kind of person who’s seen it all and knows what it’s like when times get tough.…

SteamOS 3.5 brings more warmth, vibrancy to the Deck’s colors-

Valve’s let slip a preview for SteamOS 3.5, the system that runs the Steam Deck, among a few other things, and you can now opt-in to an updated build rich with visual improvements and tweaks—among a few other fixes. 

The biggest single change is that Valve has rebalanced the Steam Deck’s default colors. It’s now using the sRGB primary colors, meaning it has a slightly warmer and more vibrant set of colors by default. By going to Settings -> Adjust Display Colors you can tune Color Vibrancy and Color Temperature, either with a test image or whatever game you’re running. You can also swap back to the previous color set or to a boosted color range that’s more vibrant but will possibly introduce some gradient clipping.

The big new feature is that a Steam Deck can now support High Dynamic Range (HDR) and Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) on external monitors, the trick being of course that the display and your USB-C adapter have to support it. Still, good news for tho…

TF2 is getting an ‘update-sized update’ this summer, but the community has to make it themselves-

Valve has put out a blog post revealing that Team Fortress 2 will be getting a “major update” this summer⁠, which is to say that it won’t just be getting the usual injection of new cosmetic items, but a whole smorgasbord of “items, maps, taunts, unusual effects, war paints and who knows what else?”

The only catch is that it will all have to be provided by the community: Valve has put out a call for Steam Workshop submissions to be made by May 1 for this “as-yet unnamed, un-themed, but still very exciting summer-situated (but not summer-themed) (unless you want to develop summer-themed stuff) update.”

To put things in perspective, Team Fortress 2’s last major update came just last October with “Scream Fortress 14.” If that doesn’t sound too bad, I would like to note that TF2’s last non-Scream Fortress major update was all the way back in 2017 with Jungle Inferno. This additionally seems to have been the last time TF2 received new content made in-house by Valve with …