Outer Worlds Impressions

I wrote a little bit about this on Friday during my send up of Fallout 76 and the Fallout First subscription. The Outer Worlds came out at some point on Thursday night through the epic games store and then on Friday seemingly through the various sundry Microsoft game stores. This has been a game I have been looking forward to for quite some time, but I have to say cautiously so. What I mean by that is that everything I had seen to date gave me hope, but quite honestly we are living in a time when my hopes are pretty often dashed against the rocks when it comes to new games. What Outer Worlds promised was not only a new game but a brand new IP that seemed like it would be drift compatible with Obsidian games work on the Fallout franchise.

The first and most important step is to see if I can create a proper “Belghast” in this game. After some quick fiddling I managed to dial in what tends to be fairly close to the traditional appearance of all of my characters. The game could have used for a few more beard options but I ultimately went with this nice full beard. As to ponytail options the only thing that was available was some sort of a bun nonsense and as a result I just went with long locks instead. In order to get the over the eye scar thing that I tend to put on all of my characters if it is available, I had to accept some other scaring and I finished things off with the little nose slash makeup. First step passed as I have a character that I am perfectly happy to be playing.

Next we have our setting. At the highest level The Outer Worlds is like you dumped Bioshock, Fallout New Vegas, Firefly, and Paranoia in a blender and mixed up a delicious dystopian slurry. Where Fallout is a game built upon rebuilding the world after a nuclear apocalypse brought on by war, Outer Worlds is a game about what happens if you allow capitalism and corporatism to run amok. You start your life as a colonist that has been stranded on board “The Hope” on the outskirts of the Halcyon system for roughly 70 years. It seems that something went wrong with your colony ship and rather than trying to fix it the corporations just cut their losses and left it out there floating in the void as a stranded hulk.

You begin your life in the cargo hold of one Doctor Phineas Vernon Welles, a fugitive scientist wanted by the Halcyon Holdings Corporate Board. He has figured out a chemical concoction that can be used to revive folks stuck in cryosleep on the Hope. You are unceremoniously deposited on the planet of Emerald Vale and told to meet up with a smuggler who is going to take you the rest of the way to your final destination. Your escape pod happens to land on top of said smuggler… Captain Alex Hawthorne… and which point you are asked to make your way to their ship. It turns out the ship has a blown power regulator which sets you down your primary decision path.

It seems that you can either get a power regulator by helping out the corporate townsfolk, or by helping out a band of separatists. Helping one group means almost certain death for the other group, so you are given a weighty choice almost immediately. The Outer Worlds is a game about choices more than anything. Do you accept the harsh bounty of corporatism, or do you strike out and try and help the little guy whenever you can often times knowing that innocents will suffer in the process? Corporatism is so invasive that it has literally become the religion of the land, and in spite of constant scientific achievement the reality of the world has gotten skewed by whatever is going to make the most profit.

The first colony you visit is Edgewater, is owned by the Spacer’s Choice corporation. Not just the land and the buildings but the people are all property. One of the early missions that drives home the starkness of your situation is that the town is concerned about having to deal with a suicide. This is considered to be damaging company property, and the rest of the townsfolk are going to ultimately have to pay back the Spacer’s Choice corporation because of this. There is another situation where you are trying to help out someone who managed to get sick, and they are unwilling to take any medication because the brand you happen to find while scavenging the world is produced by a rival corporation.

If you played a lot of the Fallout series, the game is going to feel immediately accessible to you. In many ways it feels like Fallout New Vegas, but set in space and swapping the radioactive threat for a corporate totalitarian one. The game is not at all subtle about the messages it portrays, and as a result it ends up being pretty dark, which is weirdly contrasted by how bright and vibrant the game world itself is. The game takes the Fallout format and evolves it a bit by adding better gun play and weaving in some of the companion mechanics from the Bioware games. The end result feels extremely good… that is so long as you didn’t lean heavily on VATS in Fallout games. I personally hated them and because of that the time dilation system feels good and useful, but the end result largely destroys any sort of tactical gameplay.

The writing is excellent as is the voice acting. I am not sure if I could be more happy with the end product and the total package that is The Outer Worlds. I am not terribly far into the game, but what I have played has been excellent. I played the game all of Friday night and for the most part all of Saturday until we recorded the podcast. I have roughly 10 hours of total play time at this point and am at what is I think the third destination? I’ve heard that the game itself is relatively short if you are the sort of person who cares about beating games and following the critical path. I have a feeling that for me personally this is going to be somewhere in the avenue of a 40-60 hour game based on the way I roam around aimlessly and slowly clean areas out of all of the tasty “bits”, aka the currency of the game.

I really don’t want to say too much more, because the game gets really interesting. After comparing notes with Kodra after the podcast we made different decisions and I managed to find a solution to a problem that he didn’t even know was possible. That tells me this is a game with deep replay capabilities, and also that maybe you shouldn’t just accept blindly when the game tries to give you an A or B solution path. There is often times a C and maybe event a D and an E. If you were like me and liked New Vegas way better than the other modern Fallout games then you should stop reading this and go buy Outer Worlds. If you like this style of game in general, you should probably still go buy the game. If you liked the setting and feel of the Bioshock games, then again you should probably buy the game. If nothing else you can try a month of Xbox Games Pass on PC and play the game through that if you are uncertain.

2 thoughts on “Outer Worlds Impressions”

  1. I wonder, did anyone else get the takeaway message from this that capitalism taken to extremes ends up in a place very functionally similar to how communism has played out?

    There is probably a whole post in here that someone better equipped to tackle it than I could manage — but I was struck by this thought a number of times, and then when it was mentioned (just in passing, really) that ‘The Hope’ was meant to have some of the brightest minds on it, and that its loss resulted in… others, perhaps less qualified having to step up was one such.

    Despite the polar opposites of Capitalism and Communist philosophies, here we were with people ill-equipped to manage the position they were in, yet deathly afraid to be seen to fail. (And rightly so it seems, after investigating the logs in the Geothermal plant). These people being basically owned by their government/corporation.

    Anyone else? Just me?

  2. I’ve also completed the first planet. In short, this game does a really solid job at showcasing how Fallout 4 was a step back from New Vegas. It gives the feeling that every single quest as a multi-branching set of options, and that larger quests have multiple outcomes.

    Dialogue has actual meaning here. And the writing is top notch.

    Plus, no bugs!

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