
When she first meets Takahashi in Diamond City, she becomes excited that he speaks Japanese and introduces herself to him in that language, only to walk away disappointed after realizing he's broken - repeating one sentence in an endless loop.
Curie If her general enthusiasm For Science! didn't clue you in, her general reaction to being brought to the various historical sites in Boston is to have a moment of Squee! and wonder if they still do tours. You gotta feel bad for whoever's cleaning the floors, though. Nick Valentine: Hard and loud, huh? Well, gets the job done. Accidental Innuendo: Nick Valentine gets a particularly good one when you first meet him and clear the first three mooks afterward:. This led to a lot of controversy, both within their fanbase and outside (since they were the only French website giving a "low" score to the game), and they have been accused of underscoring AAA games in the past.
Overall, they say that the game is a good action-adventure game, but a poor role-playing game, and that it's more like a post-apocalyptic The Elder Scrolls game (specifically Skyrim) than a Fallout game. At the end of the review Gamekult states that the game isn't what it could be (a game with the wit of Fallout: New Vegas and the game play and scenery of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim) but what it ultimately presents itself to be, a buffer game made to give Bethesda fans something to gnaw on between Elder Scrolls games. They also felt that the writing is a serious step back compared to previous Fallout titles.
Gamekult, a French video game website, gave the game a 6 (out of 10), pointing out the numerous bugs, corrupt autosaves and performance issues of the game (on both PC and consoles), and outright saying that the gaming press, including themselves, turned a blind eye for too long on such issues for each new release of a Bethesda game. Controversy arose from Trope Namer Jeff Gerstmann giving the console versions 3 stars out of 5, attributed to performance issues.