Full gameFREE DOWNLOADLatest versionv1.10.138.0.1 + DLCTORRENTCODEX
Fallout 4 PC free download torrent
Fallout 4 — a game that shows life after the apocalypse that occurred as a result of an atomic explosion. The protagonist is the only one who survived in Vault 111, located in the vicinity of the city of Boston. By the will of circumstances, he has to leave his home and go on a full-perilous journey. On its difficult path will meet many enemies who crave the death of the protagonist, these are various mutants, mercenaries and so on. As you progress through the game, performing various tasks, you will raise the level of the character and even when the storyline is passed, you can play further, raising the level of the hero to infinity.Version of the game 1.10.138.0.1, uploaded 06/14/2019, completely identical to the activated licensed copy of the game in the Steam client. In the distribution there is a Fallout 4 - High Resolution Texture Pack (optionally copied to the game folder. To the Data folder)
Download update only:Unofficial Fallout 4 Patch v1.10.120.0 [ 9MB ]
Download:Fallout 4 Game of the Year Edition v1.10.89.0.1 + 8 DLC (High Resolution Texture Pack) [ 60.17 GB ]
A new, more refined part of the legendary game that will once again plunge you into a dangerous world that has experienced a real apocalypse. You will become one of the few survivors after a bitter military action. You managed to survive only because all this time you were in a protected bunker, and your number is 111. The fourth part of this game has brought together all the best from the previous parts, and also has become more refined both in terms of the graphic aspect and in terms of the main game process. The last part was based on the storyline, and in this part, you will have the opportunity to choose for yourself the tasks to perform. The developers have pleased fans of the project with a variety of interesting missions, where you will reveal a lot of secrets. Everything around was created for the purpose of a certain experiment, which you can learn about as a result of the passage.
About This Game
- Title: Fallout 4
- Genre:
- Developer:Bethesda Game Studios
- Publisher:Bethesda Softworks
- Release year:2015
- Steam link:http://store.steampowered.com/app/377160/Fallout_4/
- Release Name:Fallout 4 (Game of the Year Edition) v1.10.138.0.1 + DLC (CODEX)
- Game Version:v1.10.138.0.1 + DLC
- Game Releaser:CODEX
- Size: 23.69 GB
- Available Languages:RussianEnglish
Key Features
DLC in game:
- Fallout 4 — Automatron
- Fallout 4 — Wasteland Workshop
- Fallout 4 — Far Harbor
- Fallout 4 — Contraptions Workshop
- Fallout 4 — Vault-Tec Workshop
- Fallout 4 — DLC Nuka-World
- Fallout 4 — Creation Club
- Fallout 4 — High Resolution Texture Pack
- Fixed a bug of displaying textures associated with reflections.
- Some scripts have been redesigned to support new creations from the Creativity Club.
- The button «Complaints» is removed from the interface of the «Modifications» menu (now complaints about modifications should be submitted on the Bethesda.net site).
System Requirements
OS: Windows 7/8/10 (64-bit OS required)Processor: Intel Core i5-2300 2.8 GHz/AMD Phenom II X4 945 3.0 GHz or equivalent
Memory: 8 GB RAM
Graphics: NVIDIA GTX 550 Ti 2GB/AMD Radeon HD 7870 2GB or equivalent
Storage: 30 GB available space
Processor: Intel Core i7 4790 3.6 GHz/AMD FX-9590 4.7 GHz or equivalent
Memory: 8 GB RAM
Graphics: NVIDIA GTX 780 3GB/AMD Radeon R9 290X 4GB or equivalent
Storage: 30 GB available space
Screenshots
Instructions
Install #1 (Normal):- At the first stage, you need to download the installation files of the game.
- Copy the contents of the release to any place on your hard disk.
- From NoDVD copy the contents of the CODEX / 3DM / ALI213 folder (optional) to the game folder (with replacement).
- Copy the contents of the folder Fallout 4 — High Resolution Texture Pack in the game folder. To the Data folder (optional).
- Play!
Installation # 2 (For license holders):
Before installing in the Steam client, the game should already be registered on the account, and the Steam client itself is closed.
- Copy the contents of the release in the folder with your Steam-client (Steam Steam Appscommon Fallout 4).
- Copy the contents of the Steam folder to the folder with your client.
- Play!
Download Fallout 4 v1.10.138.0.1 + DLC - CODEX [ 23.69 GB ]
fallout-4-goty-v1_10_138_0_1-7-dlc.torrent (downloads: )
How to download this game ?- Fallout 4 (Game of the Year Edition) v1.10.130.0.1 → 1.10.138.0.1 [ 14.06.2019 ]
This game has been updated 14-06-2019, 15:29 to the latest version v1.10.138.0.1 + DLC.
Fallout Texture Pack Minecraft Pc
While there may be no more official Fallout 4 DLC to come, Bethesda has gone and released an enormous update to the game all the same. Enormous in terms of file size, at the very least.
The new addition to the game is a 58 GB texture pack, one which adds more detail to the various textures found all throughout the game. If you’re wondering why the game didn’t launch with the upgraded textures in the first place, that file size might give you some clue.
It isn’t just that it takes up a lot of hard drive space, and players may have to figure out whether or not it’s worth it to install, but the requirements for running the pack effectively on PC are pretty steep. You’ll need, at minimum, a GTX-1080, Intel Core i7-5820K and 8GB RAM which will rule out a certain percentage of the population right off the bat.
So, is it worth it? That’s up for debate. The best example I’ve seen of screenshots that capture the new detail is this gallery from Treyman1115 on reddit/Imgur. You can definitely see the difference, but remember, this is just a texture upgrade, not a modeling upgrade, so it’s almost a little weird to see Bethesda’s already dated-looking character models with super detailed textures, but no structural improvements (which is obviously an entirely different sort of upgrade, and not possible except through elaborate modding or a new engine). It reminds me a bit of when I played Killzone: Shadow Fall as my very first PS4 game, where the textures looked gorgeous but the character models and their movements were weirdly archaic.
Still, if you’re a die-hard Fallout fan with a solid set-up that can run this, it’s probably worth a shot. I’m looking forward to seeing what screenshots players can produce with this new upgrade, at the very least.
It makes me a bit sad that there’s apparently going to be no more actual DLC for Fallout 4, ending things on the rather odd Nuka-World entry. With no more DLC on the horizon, and no New Vegas-style quasi-sequel in the works, most likely, there’s just not much more to do with the game. I suppose Bethesda is working hard on Elder Scrolls VI, so it’s understandable they want to move on at a certain point, but I still wish they’d worked a bit more on improving various aspects of Fallout 4 after launch, and producing more content (so, so much was workshop focused, which was a waste for players who didn’t care about that aspect of the game).
Textures are nice, but every time Fallout 4 comes up, I still don’t feel like I’m ready to let it go completely just yet. But it seems I may have to with no actual content forthcoming.
Follow me on Twitter and on Facebook. Pick up my sci-fi novels, The Last Exodus, The Exiled Earthborn and The Sons of Sora, which are now in print, online and on audiobook.
'>While there may be no more official Fallout 4 DLC to come, Bethesda has gone and released an enormous update to the game all the same. Emco ping monitor professional. Enormous in terms of file size, at the very least.
The new addition to the game is a 58 GB texture pack, one which adds more detail to the various textures found all throughout the game. If you’re wondering why the game didn’t launch with the upgraded textures in the first place, that file size might give you some clue.
It isn’t just that it takes up a lot of hard drive space, and players may have to figure out whether or not it’s worth it to install, but the requirements for running the pack effectively on PC are pretty steep. You’ll need, at minimum, a GTX-1080, Intel Core i7-5820K and 8GB RAM which will rule out a certain percentage of the population right off the bat.
So, is it worth it? That’s up for debate. The best example I’ve seen of screenshots that capture the new detail is this gallery from Treyman1115 on reddit/Imgur. You can definitely see the difference, but remember, this is just a texture upgrade, not a modeling upgrade, so it’s almost a little weird to see Bethesda’s already dated-looking character models with super detailed textures, but no structural improvements (which is obviously an entirely different sort of upgrade, and not possible except through elaborate modding or a new engine). It reminds me a bit of when I played Killzone: Shadow Fall as my very first PS4 game, where the textures looked gorgeous but the character models and their movements were weirdly archaic.
Still, if you’re a die-hard Fallout fan with a solid set-up that can run this, it’s probably worth a shot. I’m looking forward to seeing what screenshots players can produce with this new upgrade, at the very least.
It makes me a bit sad that there’s apparently going to be no more actual DLC for Fallout 4, ending things on the rather odd Nuka-World entry. With no more DLC on the horizon, and no New Vegas-style quasi-sequel in the works, most likely, there’s just not much more to do with the game. I suppose Bethesda is working hard on Elder Scrolls VI, so it’s understandable they want to move on at a certain point, but I still wish they’d worked a bit more on improving various aspects of Fallout 4 after launch, and producing more content (so, so much was workshop focused, which was a waste for players who didn’t care about that aspect of the game).
Textures are nice, but every time Fallout 4 comes up, I still don’t feel like I’m ready to let it go completely just yet. But it seems I may have to with no actual content forthcoming.
Follow me on Twitter and on Facebook. Pick up my sci-fi novels, The Last Exodus, The Exiled Earthborn and The Sons of Sora, which are now in print, online and on audiobook.
Fallout 4's high resolution texture pack has been released, and it's free for the taking—though it requires a hefty chunk of hard drive space and the recommended specs are steep, calling for a GTX 1080 with 8 GB. I don't quite meet those requirements (I have a 980), but I still wanted to take a look at the new textures, see how they compared to the standard ones, and find out how much of a performance hit I'd take.
I actually had to download the 58 GB texture pack twice—the first time, it didn't seem to activate, and when I checked the Fallout 4 DLC tab in Steam, it said it wasn't installed even though I'd just spent an hour waiting for it to download. I checked the box, and it began downloading all over again. So, I waited another hour.
The second time I tried, I couldn't immediately tell if the high resolution textures were in place, but as I walked around in the game carefully peering at things, I gradually began to notice a difference. Sort of. Check out the images below, and slide the vertical bar back and forth to compare the images. The original textures are on the left, the high resolution textures are on the right. There are links to full-size images below each slider.
Full-size version here. I started in Diamond City. You can see the main difference in this shot is the texture on the canopy, which is a bit more detailed. Not much else is different, at least that I can see. Huh.
I headed to my settlement at the drive-in, because I wanted to see if the textures on my various suits of power armor had been upgraded.
Full-size version here. While I didn't see much of a change on the armor, or even on the armor crafting frames, I did notice the rusting steel beams along the ceiling in the background looked a bit different.
So, I walked over and stared at the ceiling.
Full-size version here. Not only is there greater detail in the rusting beams, you can clearly see the wood grain in the ceiling fan. If you're a fan of looking up at ceilings while you play Fallout 4, this should make you happy.
This next one had me scratching my head. There were clearly some changes, though I can't really say that one is better than the other.
Full-size version here. Hmm. The puddle is a little different? The dead grass looks like it has moved a bit? I don't know. Nothing I ever would have noticed unless I took two pictures from the same spot. For wet broken pavement and a pile of garbage, I think both versions look perfectly lovely.
I head off to Prydwn, the Brotherhood of Steel's airship, to squint at some steel.
Full-size version here. Again, I wind up focusing on the wrong thing. I assumed the wheelchair would look a bit different with the high-res textures, but the changes actually wind up being the wall behind it, and the floor, both of which show much greater detail.
How about Nick Valentine's office? Nick isn't there—I can't recall where I left him, probably on a farm or something—but I nose around his desk for a while.
Full-size version here. Nick's desk shows a bit more detail in the chipped paint, though nothing else looks like it's changed.
I could go on, but walking around staring at things, taking a picture, saving the game, quitting the game, then starting the game again to take another picture with slightly different textures is about as boring as it sounds. I think you get the idea—some things look a little more detailed, some things don't appear to have changed at all.
Also, the only way I can figure out how to disable the high res texture pack once I've installed it is by using Nexus Mod Manager. Bethesda, in its announcement post, said you can disable the texture pack using the game's launcher menu, but I don't see any way to do that.
Update: Bethesda responded to the above paragraph, suggesting that the DLC can be enabled and disabled via Steam. The easiest way (I found) to do that is by right-clicking Fallout 4 in your Steam library, choosing properties, navigating to the DLC tab, and checking/unchecking the 'install' box for the texture pack. I'd only point out that I did that after initially downloading the pack (as I said earlier) and when I rechecked the box it made me re-download the whole thing a second time. Honestly, I think it's easier to do with Nexus Mod Manager, especially if you're already using mods, since you can just check/uncheck the file there, but take your pick.
As for performance, I ran around for a while, specifically around the Medford Memorial Hospital area, because there are tons of ghouls on the streets nearby, and tons of mutants outside of the hospital, and at least three tons of mutants inside the hospital. With the texture pack enabled, I didn't notice much of a performance hit. Fallout 4 is capped at 60 FPS anyway, and with the original textures I rarely dip below that. With the high-res textures enabled, I played for a good fifteen minutes and rarely saw my FPS drop below 55.
My verdict? Well, I do like the increased detail, though it certainly doesn't look like all of the textures have higher resolution versions. I'm not sure it's something I'd really notice unless I was creeping around specifically to take pictures. And, losing a few frames every now and then isn't a huge deal. But!
My main issue is the 58 GB of space this texture pack takes up. Pnp neuro exam reviewer. The drive I keep my games on is 465 GB, and while that feels pretty roomy I still do have to delete games fairly often to make room for new ones. Throw in video captures and screenshots, and even with a drive double that size one could run out of space pretty quickly. It's worth it if you really like detailed metal surfaces, or you're trying to take fancy screenshots, but I'd rather use the space to keep another game installed.