
Hit up the link to GOG to see pricing for your region. Want every single one? The lot will run you $44.16. The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind - Game of the Year Edition - $3.74.The Elder Scrolls Adventures: Redguard - $1.49.An Elder Scrolls Legend: Battlespire - $1.49.files on disk, so there are no permanent side effects. The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion - Game of the Year Edition Deluxe - $9.99 It does so without modifying the Fallout3.exe or the G.E.C.K.Fallout: New Vegas Ultimate Edition - $9.99.Fallout 3: Game of the Year Edition - $9.99.Here's a list of pricing for the three games added today, along with the others. This means the game will be more stable on newer systems without the need to run it in compatibility mode. Fallout 3 on Steam or GOG I've been jonesing for Fallout 3 recently after playing New Vegas again, and debated picking it up while it's cheap on the Steam winter. But, like most older games released through GOG, the game is now optimized to run on Windows 7, 8 and 10.

What's rather cool about this, is that Fallout 3 is not optimized for Windows 7 and later on Steam. To celebrate, all three are available for a 50% discount and Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout Tactics, The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind GOTY, An Elder Scrolls Legend: Battlespire and The Elder Scrolls Adventures: Redguard are all 75% off. jesus wept.Here's some good news: Fallout 3, Fallout: New Vegas and The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion are now available DRM-free through GOG.Īll three titles are the complete editions, which means each fully support modifications, and there are some great mods which have been created for these games. and he recommends the GOG version for a number of reasons, not because it changes 1 line in an ini file.

And go take a look at Gamerpoets youtube channel, he's doing a step by step ultimate Fallout 3 install series.

I was able to get Fallout 3 on Steam running on Windows 10 without much issue either following the guide linked above. That's not to say though that you won't have issues, it impossible to test all PC configurations. They are known to add community fixes, etc to get old games to run on modern OS.

So I don't think that guide is needed at all with that Generally GOG takes better care of older games. I played Fallout 3 on GOG for a few hours after release and it ran fine for me on Windows 10 with zero changes needed. GOG also includes the 4GB fix and other tweaks by default. The GOG copy disables the GFWL requirment. I picked the steam version because the guide section is helpful, and the forums are more active with user-support. You'll need to add a few patches to make it run properly. Whatever version you pick, you'll need this guide Originally posted by Tiago Rocha:The only thing that changes from GOG to Steam is a code line in one.
