Up until recently, Fallout New Vegas played just fine on my PC, However, I went to play it yesterday and the game loads as far as the Bethesda splash screen (before the main menu) and then freezes. The only way I can get out of this is to restart the PC.
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I have tried validating my Steam cache and I've also tried re-installing the game, to no avail.
I do not have any mods installed. My DxDiag can be found here - http://pastebin.com/gLvyewRw
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1 Answer
I eventually found someone else who had been having the same issue, and they reported that exiting Raptr before playing solved the issue. I just tested this and the game loaded fine.
To resolve this problem, exit Raptr (assuming you're using it - if not, I'm afraid I don't know)
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And then there are the bugs
Both Bethesda and Obsidian are somewhat infamous for releasing games that, while ambitious, feature a number of technical issues, and New Vegas is no different. In fact, it's a bit of a mess, though many of the problems are only superficial. Characters will say lines that were clearly meant for another part of the game, or they might walk into walls or through objects. Once, I witnessed a crucified slave hanging in mid-air, directly next to a cross.
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But the technical problems you'll really notice are the ones that affect how the game plays, not just how it looks and sounds. The biggest problem is that the game is prone to freezing. I experienced this at load screens where everything would simply go black, as well as during actual gameplay when the game would freeze up, forcing a restart. And though the game has an auto-save feature, it only saves when you enter buildings or certain rooms, so you can't rely on it. You'll need to save and save often, otherwise progress will be lost. And there's nothing more frustrating than that.
Well, maybe there is. On three separate occasions, while walking over rocks, I found myself stuck inside them, unable to escape. Like the freezing, this forces you to restart the game, going back to the last save. In addition to these problems, New Vegas also has some incredibly long load times. Sometimes entering a new area will only require a few seconds of loading, while other times it can take upwards of a minute. You never quite know just how long it will take to get into the next room.
What these technical problems do is change the way you approach the game. When a load screen takes longer than usual, you can't help but worry whether or not the game has frozen. And when the action freezes up for a brief second—which happens quite a bit—you get the same fear. When did I last save? How much will I have to replay? Likewise, the load times can make you question whether or not you really want to explore areas that aren't 100 percent necessary.
With the big iron on his hip
What makes these glaring technical faults all the more frustrating is that they hinder what is an otherwise excellent game. New Vegas isn't the revelation that Fallout 3 was, due to the fact that the games are so similar. But it's equally as detailed and expansive, if not more so. Though it's still dark and brown and grey and depressing, New Vegas is a surprisingly more lighthearted experience. Not by a lot, but by enough. You're rarely forced to venture through claustrophobic areas teeming with feral ghouls, and the mere existence of the New Vegas strip—no matter how hard it may be to actually get into—seems to give many characters a sense of hope that a better life is possible.
Even though it doesn't make an appearance until well into the game, and you spend a relatively small amount of time in it, the strip is enough to make this a game worth experiencing for anyone interested in the Fallout universe. It feels like it both does and doesn't belong, and the impact of this small area of flashing lights and loose morals is wide-ranging. Towns have settled in the outskirts, made up of the unfortunates who were either too poor or too unimportant to be allowed entrance, and trade routes are set up to catch visitors going in and out of the strip. It's an economic center in a disconnected world. It brings people together, but it does so by satisfying their vices: money, drugs, alcohol, and sex.
But really, for all of its grandeur and epic narrative, New Vegas is a game of small moments. Seeing a group of starving children chasing a giant rat and then eating it raw. Entering a town filled with charred corpses nailed to crosses. Or simply seeing the sunrise while listening to Johnny Cash and realizing you've been walking the entire night. These moments make the world feel real and are equally as satisfying as reaching a new experience level or surviving a close battle. If Fallout 3 left you thirsting for more wasteland exploration, New Vegas is just the thing. And since the story stands on its own quite well, it's also a great entry point for new players. However, it doesn't add enough new to entice players burnt out on the previous game.
Sadly though, the technical problems can't be ignored. When you're as scared of losing progress as you are of fighting a Super Mutant, that's a problem. And one that will frustrate even the most die-hard Fallout fan.
The good
- Epic storyline with great writing and acting
- Incredible wealth of customization options
- Las Vegas provides a unique and convincing new setting
- Huge and detailed world to explore
- So very many side quests
- Hardcore mode provides additional challenge
The bad
- Terribly long load times
- Freezing and game-ending bugs
- Few gameplay differences compared to previous game
- Quest directions aren't always clear
The ugly
Fallout New Vegas Loading Screen Freeze Fix
- Getting stuck inside a rock for the third time in one sitting