When it comes to the world of Fallout, the fandom is one of the strongest out there. From the memorable storylines to the iconic characters and large open world gameplay, Fallout is definitely one of the most memorable franchises in the video game industry. A large part of that is none other than franchise’s legendary DLC’s.

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The downloadable content of any Fallout game is normally strong enough to be their own game itself. Yet in this post apocalyptic world, there are some DLC’s that are stronger than others, so today let us explore the ten best DLC’s in the franchise.

10 Wasteland Workshop (Fallout 4)

One of the reasons that Fallout 4 became one of the biggest hits of the franchise was its inclusion of a settlement system, which allowed the player to scrap and rebuild entire settlements throughout the wasteland. That’s why one of the most popular DLC’s in the game has to be Wasteland Workshop.

While the DLC added new decorations, materials and buildings, the main aspect of the DLC players fell in love with was the fact that they could now build arenas and stages to put up fights between humans and creatures as well, making this DLC a truly big hit.

9 Dead Money (Fallout: New Vegas)

A fan favorite game in the franchise has to be Fallout: New Vegas. Set apart from other titles in the franchise, the game takes place in the Mojave Desert and former Las Vegas of the post-apocalyptic game world, and featured some of the series best moments and characters. This includes its DLC, and one of those fan favorite DLC’s is Dead Money.

Set in the isolated casino and resort known as the Sierra Madre, the area is filled with poisonous gas and a vault filled with items from the Old World before the bombs fell, making the area dangerous.

8 Automatron (Fallout 4)

A major callback to the franchise has to be the Fallout 4 DLC, Automatron. The DLC featured a series of attacks on people from vicious robots that all came from the same source. Finding a survivor in a loyal robot named Ada, the player and Ada set out to find the source of all the attacks, following a trail of carnage in their wake.

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The source ends up being The Mechanist, who fans will remember from Fallout 3. Yet this Mechanist is new and failed to program the robots correctly. Having tried to be a hero, instead she failed badly.

7 Mothership Zeta (Fallout 3)

One thing that has been teased and featured a lot in the universe of Fallout has to be the inclusion of crashed UFO’s and aliens. Well in Fallout 3, they took the UFO thing to a whole new level by including the DLC, Mothership Zeta.

In this DLC, the player is abducted after finding a signal on their Pip-Boy radio. They discover they are on board of a UFO and must fight their way through the ship filled with aliens and mutants in order to return to Earth, freeing many captives from throughout time along the DLC’s main quest.

6 Honest Hearts (Fallout: New Vegas)

Another great DLC from the Fallout: New Vegas game has to be Honest Hearts. The game follows the player’s expedition to Zion National Park in Utah, where a war between two tribes is set to break out in the nearly untouched National Park.

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After the First Battle of Hoover Dam, the leader known as Caesar sent Ulysses to help the tribe known as the White Legs to crush New Canaan and the Burned Man, forcing them to the National Park. The Courier finds the tribes and must work to help one and defeat the other, digging into the Courier’s lore.

5 Point Lookout (Fallout 3)

Fallout 3 has some truly memorable DLC’s, including the ever-popular Point Lookout. Taking place in a fictional town that somehow managed to avoid the fallout of the bombs, but instead fell into disarray after the inhabitants abandoned the area. Years later, the player finds the swamp-filled town, and finds themselves in a battle between two foes from before the bombs fell.

The battle for supremacy between Desmond and the last of a prominent family named Professor Calvert takes the bulk of the DLC’s story, and yet the map is so large that there is way more to explore.

4 The Pitt (The Pitt)

One of the more expansive DLC’s in Fallout 3 has to be The Pitt. Taking place in the post-apocalyptic version of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the DLC follows the player as they go undercover essentially as a slave in the ruins of the city, where it is rumored that the boss of the slavers may have found a cure for mutations plaguing the area.

The grim, nightmarish landscape of the city does a great job of instilling that sense of dread and despair that comes with a post-apocalyptic game, and the DLC’s story and map make this a fan favorite.

3 Lonesome Road (Fallout: New Vegas)

The biggest DLC to come out of the Fallout: New Vegas world has to be Lonesome Road. Bringing the story of the Courier and his mythos to a full circle, the story showcases the Courier’s mission to find out who the first Courier Six was. Known as a man named Ulysses, a former associate of Caesar before he refused the job that the Courier took on in the main game.

Wanting to know why Ulysses didn’t deliver the platinum chip, the Courier travels to the area known as the Divide, a nightmarish landscape filled with constant earthquakes and chaotic storms.

2 Nuka-World (Fallout 4)

Fallout 4 dominates the top spots of the DLC list in the Fallout franchise (thus far). One of the best DLC’s the series has come out with has to be Nuka-World. The player travels to the fabled amusement park of the same name, which has come under the control of a collection of raider gangs.

The player must navigate the cutthroat world of the raiders and decide whether or not to destroy them or unite them in a plot to take over the Commonwealth, making this a DLC with a heavy emphasis on the game’s morality and choice systems.

1 Far Harbor (Fallout 4)

The best DLC that gamers have come to love and know in the Fallout series has to be Fallout 4’s Far Harbor. The game takes place in a large coastal town filled with a toxic and dangerous fog, where large and monstrous mutated creatures reside.

Brought there to find the location of a missing girl, the player discovers a plot involving runaway Synths, religious cults, and a dwindling population in the town that threatens to erupt into violence and possibly war, making the player’s decisions all the more important and of consequence. The large map and action are amazing.

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