Look, I'm not a big fan of fishing minigames for a whole bunch of reasons. But I am deeply fond of abysmal puns. So on that basis alone, Fallout 76's Gone Fission update gets a pass from me. But this exquisitely/terribly titled addition to Bethesda's multiplayer Fallout does more than let you yoink marine life out of its irradiated water bodies. It also brings a significant overhaul to the game's combat, and that has my attention.
Before all that, though, fishing fans can get their rod on by visiting a new location in the Mire. Imaginatively called Fisherman's rest, here you'll encounter a character known as The Fisherman (really stretching your vocabulary there, Bethesda). The Fisherman will give you the Casting Off questline, through which you'll acquire a fancy new fishing rod.
There are far too many changes to go into in any detail here, but I'll give you the broad strokes. Many weapons have had their base damage increased, including a wide array of rifles and SMGs, and more than 50 melee weapons. Alongside guns and bludgeoning implements, various perks and weapon mods have also been rebalanced, with the latter seeing a general shift toward making them more powerful.
One of the more specific changes the update makes is to limb damage and crippling. Now, instead of certain weapons and mods having a percentage chance to instantly cripple a limb, they will deal more consistent increases to damage that culminates in crippling. "We expect that these changes will make most enemies easier to cripple while making limb damage more consistent and predictable," Bethesda explains, though the changes will make the appendages of some enemies, like region bosses, harder to disable overall.
The Gone Fission update is available now. Fallout 76 has come a long way since its infamously empty launch in 2018. Jeremy Peel recently chatted with former Bethesda designer Jeff Gardiner about how the studio turned the game around. "It deserved all the criticism that it got, for sure," Gardiner conceded. "It taught [[link]] me a lot, as pain does."