Squilliam said:
Personally it doesn't matter if the game has differences which don't effect the user experience. Resolution, texture detail, texture filtering don't change the user experience that much. Anti aliasing does to some extent, but those truely anal about it don't play on consoles. If you love AA how could you turn down 8xMSAA on a Radeon 4870 1gb or 16xCFAA with two of them? So really it boils down to framerates, pop in (textures and whole buildings), and glitches. Luckily point A wasn't a problem in the first place and B/C can be solved by an install with the NXE. In any case Fallout 3 is probably best played on the PC and best kept on a PC if you're a true fan of the series and want to play it multiple times.
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Couldn't agree more, although I'd still probably prefer playing on a console vs. playing on a dated or unstable PC at lower resolutions with reduced quality and/or effects, which is why I'm assuming there is still a market for PC games on console.
Since I'm not, it's a moot point anyway. I like processor intensive effects at higher resolutions and am willing to buy the necessary hardware to see them working.
So it's Fallout 3 on PC for me.