The Drunken Marksman

 

Fallout 5 Character Concept: The Drunken Marksman

Name

Calvin “Dead-Eye” Braddock

Role

A wandering sharpshooter, possible companion, recruitable settlement guard, and unreliable wasteland legend who genuinely believes alcohol improves his aim.

Calvin insists that sobriety makes him nervous, stiff, and overly cautious. According to him, every drink quiets the unnecessary thoughts in his head until only the target remains.

The strange part is that he is not entirely wrong.


Character Overview

Calvin Braddock was once a respected caravan scout and long-range hunter. He could identify movement across an open field, estimate wind direction from drifting ash, and strike small targets at distances most wastelanders considered impossible.

Then a disastrous escort mission destroyed his confidence.

Calvin survived, but several people under his protection did not. Afterward, his hands began trembling whenever he raised a rifle. Alcohol dulled the tremors and quieted his memories. Over time, he convinced himself that drinking was not merely a coping mechanism. It was the source of his talent.

Now Calvin carefully measures his combat readiness by intoxication level.

He claims there are six stages of marksmanship:

  1. Dry Barrel – Completely sober and supposedly useless.

  2. Oiled Action – Relaxed enough to shoot.

  3. Steady Glass – His preferred level of intoxication.

  4. Dead-Eye Drunk – Reckless but frighteningly accurate.

  5. Double Vision Specialist – Claims two targets mean twice the opportunity.

  6. Floor-Level Sniper – Barely conscious and shooting from wherever he fell.

Calvin carries a dented metal flask engraved with the words:

“One for the nerves. Two for the wind.”


Appearance

Calvin is a thin, weathered man in his late forties or early fifties. He wears:

  • A stained field coat with reinforced shooting patches

  • An old marksman’s cap tilted over one eye

  • Mismatched gloves with the trigger finger removed

  • Several empty bottles hanging from his belt as improvised noise alarms

  • A broken rangefinder worn around his neck

  • A faded caravan insignia he refuses to explain

  • A long rifle wrapped in strips of liquor-stained cloth

His eyes often appear unfocused during conversation, but the moment he sights down a rifle, his expression becomes disturbingly calm.


Signature Weapon: “Last Call”

Calvin’s personal rifle is a heavily modified bolt-action weapon called Last Call.

Visual Design

The rifle includes:

  • A polished wooden stock carved with tally marks

  • A scope made from mismatched military optics

  • A bottle-cap wind gauge

  • A flask-shaped cheek rest

  • A small spirit level filled with amber liquid

  • The phrase “Better After Three” scratched into the receiver

Unique Weapon Effect

Last Call

The weapon gains different bonuses depending on the user’s alcohol intoxication level.

  • Sober: Reduced accuracy and slower aim stabilization

  • Mildly intoxicated: Increased accuracy and critical-meter gain

  • Moderately intoxicated: Improved critical damage and reduced weapon sway

  • Heavily intoxicated: Major critical-hit bonus, but increased reload mistakes and occasional target misidentification

  • Extremely intoxicated: Enormous damage potential, severe movement penalties, blurred vision, and a chance to fire at the wrong silhouette

The weapon is powerful, but its full potential encourages dangerous behavior rather than offering a simple, consequence-free buff.


Companion Combat Style

Calvin prefers elevated positions, long sightlines, rooftops, ruined highway ramps, water towers, and damaged upper floors.

He avoids close combat whenever possible.

During battle, Calvin may:

  • Seek high ground without being directly commanded

  • Mark distant enemies for the player

  • Shoot grenades from enemy hands

  • Target weapon arms, legs, exposed equipment, or explosive containers

  • Fire warning shots to make weaker enemies retreat

  • Use bottles to distract enemies and redirect patrols

  • Lie flat on the ground when heavily intoxicated and continue firing

  • Mistake friendly robots, mannequins, or distant signs for threats when dangerously drunk

His competence changes dynamically with his intoxication.

At his ideal level, Calvin is one of the most effective long-range companions in the game. Beyond that point, his confidence continues rising while his actual judgment deteriorates.


Unique Companion System: Liquid Confidence

Calvin has a personal intoxication meter separate from the player’s standard chem and alcohol systems.

Stage One: Sober

Calvin suffers from:

  • Hand tremors

  • Slower target acquisition

  • Frequent hesitation

  • Reduced accuracy

  • Defensive dialogue

  • Occasional refusal to take difficult shots

He may say:

“No. Too much wind.”

Even when there is no wind.

Stage Two: Relaxed

After one drink, Calvin becomes calmer.

Effects include:

  • Reduced weapon sway

  • Faster enemy marking

  • Improved perception

  • More confident dialogue

Stage Three: Sweet Spot

This is Calvin’s ideal combat condition.

Effects include:

  • High accuracy

  • Improved critical chance

  • Faster reloads

  • Better tactical positioning

  • Special precision-shot animations

  • Increased awareness of hidden enemies

Stage Four: Overconfident

Calvin begins taking unnecessary risks.

Effects include:

  • Greater damage

  • Reduced concern for cover

  • More trick shots

  • Increased chance of drawing enemy attention

  • Occasional friendly-fire near misses

Stage Five: Severely Intoxicated

Calvin may:

  • Stumble while relocating

  • Reload the wrong ammunition

  • Shoot environmental objects by mistake

  • Call out enemies that are not present

  • Fall asleep after combat

  • Continue arguing with enemies he already killed

Despite this, he may still land an impossible shot, reinforcing his belief that drunkenness is the source of his talent.


Recruitment Location: The Bent Scope

Calvin can be found in a ruined roadside tavern known as The Bent Scope.

The tavern sits beneath the remains of a collapsed elevated highway. Empty bottles hang from wires around the building, creating an improvised alarm system.

When the player arrives, Calvin is attempting to shoot bottle caps from a fence while several raiders approach from the distance.

He refuses to acknowledge the raiders.

Instead, he asks the player to watch his next shot.

The player can:

  • Warn him about the raiders

  • Help defend the tavern

  • Quietly eliminate the raiders before Calvin notices

  • Bet caps on whether he can hit the bottle cap

  • Steal his alcohol and watch his confidence collapse

  • Convince him that the approaching raiders are part of a shooting contest

If Calvin survives the attack, he becomes available for recruitment after the player completes his personal quest.


Personal Quest: “One for the Road”

Calvin learns that a surviving member of his old caravan may still be alive.

Years earlier, Calvin was responsible for scouting a safe route through hostile territory. He had been drinking and incorrectly reported that the road was clear. The caravan was ambushed.

Calvin has spent years claiming that the attackers used stealth technology, hidden tunnels, or military-grade camouflage. In reality, he missed obvious warning signs because he was intoxicated.

The quest forces Calvin to confront what happened.

Quest Stages

1. Reconstruct the Caravan Route

The player follows Calvin through several old locations:

  • A collapsed checkpoint

  • An abandoned trading post

  • A sniper’s ridge

  • The remains of burned caravan wagons

Calvin’s account changes at each location.

He initially portrays himself as the heroic survivor who saved everyone he could. Environmental evidence suggests otherwise.

2. Find the Survivor

The survivor, Mara Venn, now leads a small settlement built by former caravan workers.

She remembers Calvin as a gifted shooter whose drinking made him unreliable.

Mara does not hate him for drinking. She hates him for lying about what happened and turning the dead into part of his legend.

3. Face the Ambush Site

Calvin discovers his original scouting notebook. The pages reveal that he had noticed enemy tracks but dismissed them because he wanted to return to camp and drink.

The player can influence how Calvin responds.


Quest Outcomes

Outcome One: Sobriety

The player convinces Calvin to accept responsibility and stop drinking.

Calvin initially becomes less effective. His tremors return, and his confidence collapses.

Over time, however, he develops genuine discipline.

His final sober combat style provides:

  • Consistent accuracy

  • Improved enemy detection

  • No friendly-fire incidents

  • Better tactical commands

  • Reduced critical damage compared with his drunken peak

  • No dependency on alcohol supplies

He gains the perk:

Clear Sight

While Calvin is sober, the player gains improved ranged accuracy against marked enemies and increased detection range while standing still.

Calvin admits:

“The bottle didn’t make me shoot straight. It just made me stop caring where the bullet went.”


Outcome Two: Controlled Drinking

The player persuades Calvin to manage his drinking rather than completely stop.

Calvin limits himself to his “sweet spot” and becomes more reliable, though still dependent.

He gains the perk:

Steady Glass

Alcohol lasts longer, provides a small ranged-accuracy bonus, and carries reduced addiction risk while Calvin is traveling with the player.

Calvin remains humorous and eccentric but begins acknowledging the consequences of excess.


Outcome Three: Feed the Legend

The player reinforces Calvin’s belief that drunkenness makes him unstoppable.

Calvin embraces his reputation and becomes a dangerous wasteland folk hero.

He gains:

  • Increased critical damage

  • More trick-shot opportunities

  • Improved alcohol bonuses

  • Greater risk of reckless behavior

  • A chance to accidentally start fights in settlements

His companion perk becomes:

Drunk Luck

While under the influence of alcohol, the player has a chance to convert a missed ranged shot into a critical hit against a nearby target. The shot may not strike the intended target.

Calvin begins calling himself:

The Whiskey Wind


Outcome Four: Break Him

The player can expose Calvin publicly, mock his failures, destroy his reputation, or convince him that he was never talented.

Calvin abandons his rifle and disappears.

Later, the player may find him working as a quiet bartender, refusing to touch a firearm.

Alternatively, if treated cruelly enough, he may become a hostile wandering sniper who blames the player for destroying the only identity he had left.


Affinity

Calvin approves when the player:

  • Performs difficult long-range shots

  • Uses clever environmental kills

  • Protects caravan workers

  • Tells entertaining lies that do not harm innocent people

  • Drinks socially without becoming reckless

  • Gives frightened people a second chance

  • Admits personal mistakes

  • Uses patience instead of rushing into combat

Calvin dislikes when the player:

  • Endangers civilians through negligence

  • Abandons companions

  • Wastes ammunition

  • Forces recovering addicts to drink

  • Claims credit for another person’s work

  • Treats caravan workers as disposable

  • Shoots without identifying the target

He has complicated reactions to alcohol. Early in his storyline, he approves when the player drinks. After confronting his past, his reaction depends on the quest outcome.


Companion Commands

Calvin has several unique tactical commands.

Find a Nest

Orders Calvin to locate nearby high ground and establish a firing position.

Mark the Dangerous One

Calvin identifies the most tactically dangerous enemy rather than simply the strongest.

Shoot the Weapon

Calvin attempts to disarm an enemy.

Make Them Move

Calvin fires at cover, explosives, or nearby objects to force enemies from protected positions.

Last Call

Calvin consumes alcohol and attempts one extremely difficult precision shot.

The result depends on his weapon condition, intoxication level, line of sight, and emotional state.


Random Behaviors

At settlements, Calvin may:

  • Set bottles on fences and practice shooting them

  • Offer inaccurate shooting advice to settlers

  • Fall asleep in guard towers

  • Argue with automated turrets about who is the better marksman

  • Challenge the player to shooting contests

  • Hide alcohol throughout the settlement

  • Inspect rooftops and complain about poor sightlines

  • Teach settlers how to estimate distance

  • Accidentally create useful perimeter alarms with empty bottles

  • Name individual bullets before difficult missions

He sometimes speaks to Last Call as though the rifle were an old partner.


Sample Dialogue

First Meeting

“You see that cap on the fence? No, not the bottle. The cap. Wind’s coming west, sun’s dropping, hands are steady enough. Hand me that whiskey.”

When Sober

“My fingers remember every person I couldn’t save. Hard to keep them still when the dead keep pulling.”

After One Drink

“There we are. World’s stopped shaking.”

After Several Drinks

“I can hit anything now. Pick something. Not too close. Close targets are insulting.”

At Maximum Intoxication

“There are two of you. That means one of you is flanking us.”

After Missing

“Warning shot.”

After Accidentally Hitting Another Enemy

“That was the target. You were looking at the wrong one.”

When Given Cheap Alcohol

“This tastes like coolant and poor decisions. Pour it.”

When Given Rare Pre-War Whiskey

“Now this is ammunition.”

Entering a Bar

“Stay alert. Places like this are dangerous. People make emotional decisions around empty bottles.”

Near a Shooting Range

“Finally. A place where wasting ammunition is called recreation.”

Low Health

“I’m bleeding. Good. Means I’m not dead enough to stop shooting.”

Player Uses a Scoped Rifle

“Don’t fight the sway. Breathe with it. Or drink until you stop noticing.”


Potential Romance

Calvin’s romance path is less about curing him and more about whether he can allow someone to see him without the legend.

The player must challenge his dishonesty without treating him as worthless.

His romance scene takes place on a rooftop overlooking the wasteland. Calvin places his rifle beside him and admits that he cannot remember the last time he watched a horizon without searching for something to shoot.

He gives the player his flask.

Depending on the quest outcome, it may be:

  • Empty

  • Filled only to a marked limit

  • Completely full

  • Replaced with purified water


Settlement Role

When assigned as a settlement guard, Calvin provides a major defense bonus if given:

  • A guard tower

  • Ammunition

  • A long-range rifle

  • A clear view beyond the settlement walls

However, an uncontrolled Calvin also consumes alcohol from settlement storage.

He may improve settler accuracy by training them, but poorly managed intoxication can cause:

  • False alarms

  • Damaged property

  • Stray rounds

  • Arguments with other guards

  • Missing alcohol supplies

  • Shooting at harmless wildlife

A reformed Calvin becomes one of the best defensive trainers available.


Legendary Reputation System

Stories about Calvin spread across the wasteland.

Different NPCs describe him as:

  • A man who shot a raider through three walls

  • A drunk who accidentally saved a town

  • A fraud who invents every story

  • A supernatural gunslinger who cannot miss after midnight

  • A murderer who calls every mistake a trick shot

  • A broken veteran who still protects caravans from a distance

Some stories are true. Others were invented by Calvin. Several cannot be verified.

The player’s choices determine which version becomes his permanent reputation.


Why the Character Works

The Drunken Marksman begins as a humorous wasteland caricature, but his story develops into a character study about guilt, dependency, confidence, and self-deception.

His gameplay also reflects his personality.

Alcohol does not simply provide a universal accuracy buff. It temporarily suppresses Calvin’s anxiety while gradually damaging his judgment, coordination, and reliability. At the correct level, he may genuinely perform better. Beyond that point, confidence and ability separate.

This creates a companion who can be:

  • Hilarious

  • Dangerous

  • Sympathetic

  • Frustrating

  • Highly skilled

  • Mechanically unpredictable

Calvin is not simply “the drunk companion.” He is a talented marksman who turned alcohol into an explanation for both his greatest achievements and his worst failure.

His central question is not whether alcohol makes him a better shot.

It is whether Calvin can still recognize the difference between hitting a target and being a responsible marksman.

Fallout: New Vegas 2: Kingdoms of the Mojave

 

Fallout: New Vegas 2 - Core Vision

Fallout: New Vegas 2: Kingdoms of the Mojave

The main theme should be:

Who deserves to control civilization after the bombs: governments, corporations, tribes, machines, religion, crime families, or the people themselves?

That is what made New Vegas powerful. It was not just shooting mutants. It was about power, politics, identity, survival, ideology, and consequence.


1. The Setting: New Vegas, Mojave, Arizona, Utah, and New California

The map should be bigger than the original Mojave but still dense with meaning.

Not empty size for marketing. Real locations with layered history.

The playable regions could include:

New Vegas Rebuilt
Vegas is still standing, but it is divided. Some casinos are thriving, some are war zones, and some are controlled by new powers.

The Mojave Interior
Small towns, caravan routes, ruined military bases, old NCR camps, tribal lands, vaults, radiation zones, raider highways, and abandoned pre-war luxury sites.

Arizona Territory
The scars of Caesar’s Legion remain. Some want to rebuild the Legion. Some want to erase it. Some former Legion slaves now run their own societies.

New California Borderlands
The NCR is weaker, more desperate, and more corrupt. It is no longer just a powerful republic. It is a wounded machine trying not to collapse.

The Divide Reborn
A terrifying high-level area where storms, buried weapons, old courier history, and faction secrets collide.


2. Main Story: The War After the War

The story should not ignore the original game, but it also should not lock every player into one “canon” ending.

A smart solution:

At the beginning, the player answers questions through dialogue, memory files, rumors, or a “wasteland history” setup. That determines what happened after the first New Vegas.

Examples:

The NCR ending means Vegas became overtaxed, bureaucratic, militarized, and politically unstable.

The Legion ending means Vegas became brutal, controlled, and divided by rebellion.

Mr. House ending means Vegas became technologically advanced but authoritarian.

Yes Man / Independent ending means Vegas became free, but messy, fractured, and vulnerable.

This lets the sequel respect everyone’s old playthrough.

The new conflict should be about a power source, weapon, or control system buried under the Mojave. Not just another “find your family” or “save the world” plot.

Call it:

The Atlas Grid

A pre-war infrastructure system capable of controlling water, power, security drones, old satellites, vault networks, railways, and defense systems across the Southwest.

Every faction wants it.

The player decides whether to destroy it, control it, share it, privatize it, weaponize it, or hide it.


3. Factions That Feel Like Real Societies

This is where New Vegas 2 has to shine.

The New Vegas Council

A political alliance of casino families, merchants, securitron engineers, entertainers, smugglers, and local bosses.

They want Vegas rich, independent, and untouchable.

Problem: they are corrupt, divided, and willing to sacrifice the poor districts.

NCR Remnants

The NCR should not be treated as purely good or evil. They should feel like a tired republic.

Some NCR soldiers still believe in democracy. Others are war profiteers. Some generals want martial law. Some citizens want reform.

The player should be able to:

negotiate reform, expose corruption, support NCR occupation, help NCR withdraw, or turn NCR into something better.

Sons of Caesar

Not just “Legion again.”

This should be a fractured post-Legion movement.

Some are old loyalists. Some are religious fanatics. Some are ex-slaves who use Legion discipline for survival. Some are young people who never saw Caesar but worship the myth.

That is more realistic than simply bringing Caesar’s Legion back unchanged.

The Free Tribes

Tribal nations, desert communities, escaped slaves, nomads, and independent settlements united against outside powers.

They should not be written as primitive. They should have law, diplomacy, traditions, warriors, healers, scouts, traders, and internal politics.

The Silver Circuit

A machine-intelligence faction made from old Mr. House systems, securitron fragments, casino AI, vault computers, and pre-war defense networks.

They do not see humans as evil. They see humans as inefficient.

Their pitch: let machines run civilization because humans keep destroying it.

The Water Barons

A corporate-style faction that controls clean water, irrigation, pumps, wells, and purification technology.

They do not need armies at first. They control survival itself.

This faction could be terrifying because they win through contracts, debt, poisoning, scarcity, and dependency.

The Dust Kings

A raider confederation, not random idiots.

They have ranks, supply lines, war chiefs, mechanics, scouts, drug chemists, slave traders, and former soldiers.

You can destroy them, unite them, infiltrate them, or turn them into a legitimate wasteland army.


4. A Real Reputation System

The old New Vegas reputation system was great, but the sequel should go deeper.

Each faction should track:

Fear — are they scared of you?
Respect — do they honor your strength or intelligence?
Trust — do they believe your word?
Ideology — do your actions match their worldview?
Debt — do they owe you?
Betrayal memory — have you crossed them before?

So instead of simple “liked” or “hated,” you could have situations like:

The NCR respects your results but does not trust you.

The Dust Kings fear you but secretly admire you.

The Free Tribes trust you but dislike your methods.

The Silver Circuit wants to study you because your choices are unpredictable.

That is real RPG depth.


5. Create-A-Origin

Instead of forcing one backstory, let the player choose an origin.

Examples:

Courier Legacy
You are connected to the old Courier story.

Vault Exile
You came from a vault with hidden ties to the Atlas Grid.

Former NCR Soldier
You know military politics and have old contacts.

Ex-Legion Slave
You have unique dialogue with Legion remnants and Free Tribes.

Wasteland Diplomat
You start with Speech, Barter, and faction knowledge.

Tech Scavenger
You understand robots, terminals, power armor, and pre-war systems.

Raider Defector
You know the underworld, ambush routes, chem gangs, and black markets.

Origins should affect dialogue, starting gear, faction reactions, companions, and endings.


6. Companions With Real Consequences

Companions should not just follow and shoot.

They should have:

personal ideologies, moral limits, faction loyalties, rivalries, betrayals, romance/friendship options, leadership endings, and the ability to leave permanently.

Companion ideas:

Mara Vale — NCR War Correspondent

She documents what the player does. Your actions can become propaganda, truth, or legend.

Brother Kade — Ex-Brotherhood Engineer

He wants technology preserved but hates what the Brotherhood became.

Sola — Former Legion-Born Strategist

Raised under Legion rule, but now questions everything. She understands discipline, fear, and empire.

Saint June — Ghoul Preacher

A ghoul who believes the wasteland needs mercy, not another empire.

Dice — Vegas Street Kid

A young thief, gambler, and information runner who knows the city’s lower districts.

Marshal Bragg — Old Desert Lawman

A half-mythic wasteland sheriff who believes law without justice is just another gang.

VERA-9 — Broken Casino AI

A strange, emotional AI built from old hotel entertainment software, security routines, and corrupted memories.

The best part: companions should challenge the player. A companion should be able to say, “I’m not following you anymore,” if your choices violate who they are.


7. Settlements Without Turning It Into Fallout 4.5

Settlement building should exist, but it should fit New Vegas.

Less “build random houses everywhere.”

More:

build towns, trade posts, forts, clinics, farms, casinos, caravan hubs, radio stations, water stations, repair garages, and faction outposts.

The player should be able to create:

a democratic town, a militarized fortress, a trade empire, a raider camp, a tribal sanctuary, a robot-run city, or a neutral caravan hub.

Settlements should affect the world:

Caravans travel because of your trade routes.

Refugees arrive if your town is safe.

Raiders attack if your settlement is rich.

Factions send diplomats or spies.

Water shortages can cause unrest.

Your settlement can appear in the ending slides.


8. Caravan, Casino, and Economy Systems

This is a must.

A New Vegas sequel needs a living economy.

The player should be able to:

own a caravan company, invest in casinos, fix water routes, control trade roads, hire guards, sabotage competitors, run black market deals, or create legal businesses.

Casinos should have deeper systems:

gambling, entertainment, boxing/MMA-style pit fights, lounge acts, crime families, VIP politics, cheating detection, debt collection, and faction influence.

Imagine winning control of a casino not by shooting everyone, but through contracts, blackmail, politics, gambling, or exposing corruption.

That is New Vegas.


9. Better Skill Checks

Skill checks should not be only dialogue.

They should appear everywhere.

Repair lets you fix a town generator instead of paying for power.

Medicine lets you save a dying faction leader.

Science lets you reprogram securitrons or expose fake AI prophecy.

Survival lets you cross deadly desert routes.

Explosives lets you disarm buried warheads in the Divide.

Barter lets you negotiate water rights.

Speech lets you prevent wars.

Sneak lets you steal evidence instead of fighting.

Guns, Energy Weapons, Melee, Unarmed should unlock intimidation, training, duels, and faction respect.

A real RPG should let a smart character, a smooth talker, a doctor, a thief, or a scientist solve quests differently.


10. The Hit Squad System

This would fit perfectly.

If you anger powerful people, they send different types of squads after you.

Not generic assassins.

Examples:

NCR sends military police or ranger hunters.

Dust Kings send ambush crews.

Water Barons send bounty contractors.

The Silver Circuit sends drones or synthetic agents.

Casino families send suited killers.

Free Tribes may send scouts first, not killers, depending on what you did.

You should also be able to hire squads for:

settlement defense, caravan protection, bounty work, faction war, assassination, scouting, and intimidation.

That gives the world teeth.


11. Hardcore Survival That Actually Matters

Hardcore mode should include:

water quality, food spoilage, sleep, injuries, ammo weight, addiction, radiation storms, heat exhaustion, sandstorms, infections, broken limbs, weapon condition, and companion injuries.

But it should be optional.

The key is options.

Casual players can enjoy the story. Hardcore players can turn the wasteland into a real survival simulation.


12. Combat Improvements

Combat should feel more grounded.

Ideas:

better V.A.T.S. with partial cover, weak points, weapon jams, panic shots, ricochets, suppressive fire, and crippling consequences.

Armor should matter more. A cheap pistol should not easily punch through military armor.

Energy weapons should have heat, battery quality, overcharge risk, and unique effects.

Melee should have blocks, shoves, grabs, stamina, weapon reach, and brutal close-quarters animations.

Unarmed should return strong, with boxing, wrestling, dirty fighting, Legion techniques, ghoul brawling, and cybernetic upgrades.


13. Vaults With Moral Horror Again

Vaults should not be simple dungeons.

Each vault should tell a disturbing story.

Vault ideas:

Vault 71 — The Election Vault
Every year the vault votes one citizen into absolute power. The experiment became a political nightmare.

Vault 39 — The Perfect Child Program
A vault built around raising genetically “ideal” leaders.

Vault 12-B — The Mercy Vault
A medical vault where doctors had to decide who deserved treatment when supplies ran low.

Vault 88R — The Radio Vault
A vault that has been broadcasting fake news, fake prophecies, and manipulated faction messages for decades.

Vault X-21
A secret vault tied to the Atlas Grid and old AI civilization planning.

The best vaults should make players stop and think.


14. The Ending Should Be Massive

The ending should not be one cutscene.

It should track:

which factions survived, who controls Vegas, what happened to each town, what companions became, what happened to your settlements, whether water became free or privatized, whether machines gained power, whether NCR reformed or collapsed, whether Legion ideology died or evolved, whether raiders became a nation, whether your businesses helped or exploited people, and whether the wasteland became freer, safer, richer, or more controlled.

That is the New Vegas formula taken to the next level.


15. Postgame Must Continue

This is important.

Do not end the game and lock the player out.

After the ending, the world should continue.

If you put NCR in charge, you see NCR flags, patrols, taxes, protests, and new laws.

If you support independence, you see messy freedom, local conflicts, and self-rule.

If machines rule, you see order, surveillance, and robotic enforcement.

If raiders win, roads become dangerous but certain gangs become official powers.

Your ending should become the postgame world.


16. Modes and Options

The game should be single-player first.

Optional 2-player co-op could work only if it does not damage the main RPG design.

No MMO structure. No live-service nonsense. No forced online economy.

Options should include:

classic RPG mode, hardcore survival mode, cinematic mode, settlement management depth, faction war intensity, companion permadeath, economy complexity, and postgame world simulation.

Let players tailor the experience without watering down the RPG.


Best Big Feature

The biggest feature should be:

The Wasteland Power Map

A living map showing who controls:

water, roads, electricity, towns, casinos, vaults, military bases, farms, mines, radio towers, caravan routes, and robot networks.

Every major quest changes that map.

That would make the player feel like they are not just doing missions. They are reshaping the Southwest.


The Simple Pitch

Fallout: New Vegas 2 should be a deep political wasteland RPG where the player can become a savior, tyrant, kingmaker, businessman, revolutionary, warlord, diplomat, scientist, or ghost in the system.

It should respect the original by bringing back:

deep factions, skill checks, reputation, meaningful companions, brutal choices, dark humor, multiple endings, and true roleplaying.

But it should evolve with:

living settlements, faction war simulation, caravan economy, postgame consequences, smarter companions, better survival, deeper combat, and a world that remembers everything.

That is how New Vegas 2 becomes more than nostalgia. That is how it becomes the Fallout game fans have been waiting for.

The Drunken Marksman

  Fallout 5 Character Concept: The Drunken Marksman Name Calvin “Dead-Eye” Braddock Role A wandering sharpshooter, possible companion, recru...