

Then there were a lot of conversations about things that were downloaded and not installed and how you even tell if something exists anyway and maybe you would like to hurl the whole thing out of the window and which were the exact button presses needed for opening up the command interface in Windows 7 as an admin and why is it so hard to cope with having a Steam directory on a different drive and I REALLY MEAN IT ABOUT THE WINDOW.Įventually I was blinking in the desert light as the WHHHHHHNNN WHHHHHHHN WHHHHHHN of a TARDIS made itself heard. Then I needed to get whatever the script extender needed. Then I had to download Nexus Mod Manager because my version was out of date. So I shelved my fear of modding things and downloaded New Vegas. Interact with Daleks, Cybermen, Autons, Time raiders, as you traverse from location to location, fending off attacking vessels or outrunning other-worldly anomalies." "Maintain and upgrade the TARDIS as you see fit, monitoring power, fuel, shield and hull levels as you travel. That was a lot more promising, as was this: Then I found a tech demo video of the exact corridors I am trapped in but with Weeping Angels spawning and pursuing you whenever you turned your back.

The trailer itself seemed to just be a collection of things from Doctor Who rendered in Fallout: New Vegas' engine and offered no real sense of the experience. I installed the Doctor Who-inspired mod after Graham forwarded some information sent in by a reader.

In short: the Fallout Who Vegas mod has exposed me as the world's worst timelord. Having finally located it in a junk yard in Fallout: New Vegas's Mojave Desert I appear doomed to wander its innards, experiencing all the glory of time and space that can be offered by grey corridors which don't quite correspond to anything I can draw in two dimensions. I have been lost in my own TARDIS for fifteen minutes.
