10 Hidden Video Game Details You Can Only Find Once A Year
3. People Still Love The Holidays After A Nuclear War - Fallout 4
Though Bethesda have come under some pretty heavy criticism for the rollout of the highly anticipated Fallout 76, and deservedly so, it is important to remember just how groundbreaking some of the advancements the company made with their efforts bringing the classic series into three dimensions on home consoles.
Their first main-series Fallout title, Fallout 3, captured the grittiness and hopelessness of an apocalyptic wasteland in a way few games have ever come close to matching.
In the pockets where civilisation had managed to survive, the struggle of day-to-day life in a world populated by irradiated monsters was never lost on the player as the explored.
Fallout 4, took a slightly different approach, depicting several burgeoning societies doing their best to live out a (relatively) normal existence amidst the chaos on an often anarchic nation.
One of the best examples comes in Diamond City, a settlement built of the ruins of Fenway Park.
If the player enters the city while the in-game calendar is either on October 31 or December 25, the inside of the stadium-turned-settlement will be docked out for Halloween and Christmas respectively.