Bethesda Catching Heat Over Pay-To-Win Items in Fallout 76
Bethesda is catching heat for the inclusion of an item in a future patch that some players are calling pay-to-win, a damning accusation these days.
Bethesda is catching heat for the inclusion of an item in a future patch that some players are calling pay-to-win, a damning accusation these days.
After a bit of a delay, Fallout 76’s free Wild Appalachia update launched on Wednesday and added a couple of new features to the post-apocalyptic multiplayer game.
Fallout 76’s first major update, an extension of their 2019 roadmap, has been delayed by a single day. The devs need more time to “brew.”
The next update from Fallout 76 will be Whiskey stills, letting players whip up batches of delicious, rarely life-threatening beverages.
Bethesda Softworks, at long last, has revealed their roadmap for Fallout 76, and it details all of their free content updates for 2019. It starts with Wild Appalachia.
Bethesda Softworks has banned a Fallout 76 player who acquired too much in-game ammo after 900 hours of playtime. Here’s the message they sent.
New updates roll out, the game gets bugged, bugs get exploited, players get punished, new updates. This time around, Bethesda is taking a different approach. They have announced that the Fallout 76 Community Team will begin livestreaming for the fans.
Well, it’s been a good week and a half since we’ve heard of any Fallout 76 glitches or bug. In recent Bethesda history, that’s pretty good. Something new has come up though, and it is more interesting than problematic, I would say. That’s not to say that it does not create problems. Let’s get to it.
Fallout 76’s recent hotfix, which was designed to refix issues that Bethesda accidentally undid, has introduced another bug that’s causing plenty of frustration for players.
The latest step Bethesda is rolling down is the Fallout 76 jacket. It’s hard to root for you when you keep making these missteps, Bethesda.