

Sure unlimited lunchboxes are great, but a small $10 donation for a pretty stellar free, microtransaction-light game would go down rather well too I think.One of the most fun simulation time-management games you can play is Fallout Shelter. That’s probably because Bethesda have yet to update the game – which would certainly be welcome considering all the crashes I’ve had to endure.Īlthough, spare a thought here and there for Bethesda while playing. I’ve just tried to get the game in the same state, and it seems to be working for the meantime. You’ll still have to work for them, but having to level up a single dweller or collect a little bit of food is far easier than whipping out your credit card for a little in-game boost.

Keeping those two objectives will lock your game into a reward loop – letting you retake countless objectives that reward you with the overly generous boxes. You can only take on three at a time, but be sure to never complete (or dismiss) both “Equip 1 Dweller with an outfit” and “Sell 1 weapon or outfit”. From there, go through the short tutorial and keep an eye on your objectives. What you will need to do is start a new vault. Starting a new vault rewards you with many of these before the well starts running dry, but play your cards right and you could keep the good times rolling endlessly. The only one worth caring about at the moment involved a continuous stream of lunchbox rewarding objective – which far outweigh the importance of cap-based ones. Like any other game, Fallout Shelter isn’t immune to exploits. These are the lucky packets of the wasteland, and there’s a way you can ensure you never run out of them. I’ve been playing the adorable vault simulator ever since the show (crashes permitting), collecting caps, vault dwellers and, most importantly, lunchboxes.

Forget Fallout 4 – the mobile iOS exclusive (for now at least) game Fallout Shelter was the real winner at Bethesda’s conference.
