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Operation: Anchorage is the first Fallout 3 downloadable content pack, and takes place as a virtual reality "military simulation" in the main game where the player character is stripped of their equipment and is forced to use the replacements provided. The content focuses on the titular event in Fallout ' s alternate history.
Fallout 3 is a 2008 action role-playing game developed by Bethesda Game Studios and published by Bethesda Softworks.The third major installment in the Fallout series, it is the first game to be developed by Bethesda after acquiring the rights to the franchise from Interplay Entertainment.
Note 6] According to GameRankings, the four top-rated video game RPGs, as of May 2010, are Mass Effect 2 with an average rating of 95.70% for the Xbox 360 version and 94.24% for the PC version; Fallout 3: Game of the Year Edition with an average rating of 95.40% for the PlayStation 3 version; Chrono Trigger with an average rating of 95.10%; and ...
Cheat Engine allows its users to share their addresses and code locations with other users of the community by making use of cheat tables. "Cheat Tables" is a file format used by Cheat Engine to store data such as cheat addresses, scripts including Lua scripts and code locations, usually carrying the file extension.ct. Using a Cheat Table is ...
TOOOL is responsible for hosting or co-hosting many of the lockpicking areas of popular hacker conferences around the world including DEF CON and HOPE. The Netherlands branch of TOOOL also hosts its own conference and competition—LockCon and the Dutch Open. The Dutch Open began in 2008 and is held during LockCon. [6] [7]
A lockpick is a tool used in lockpicking. Lockpick may also refer to: Earwig Lockpicker, a fictional character in the Kender fantasy race; Remo Lockpick, another fictional Kender character, uncle to Tasslehoff Burrfoot; Lockpick Pornography, a 2005 novella by Joey Comeau; LockPick Entertainment, developer/publisher of the video game Dreamlords
Vault-Tec is a pre-war defense megacorporation responsible for creating the vaults featured throughout the Fallout series. [2] Their purpose of conducting human experiments on its residents began as an idea by Fallout co-creator Tim Cain following the 1997 release of the first Fallout game.
King Louis XVI of France (1754–1793) was a keen designer, picker, and manipulator of locks, [2] and physicist Richard Feynman picked locks for fun in the 1940s while employed on the Manhattan Project. The tradition of student roof and tunnel hacking at MIT included lockpicking, [3] and their guide to this was made widely available in 1991. [4]