


Make sure to use your Perception and be careful in the area of the shelter. It is only $2 and features other cool items that look suitably fallout-esque like some mid-century televisions and furniture. Although I have only experienced a few places where radiation can climb to such levels, and most that I know of I only found while messing around via console commands. I think it is cool that in game, radiation levels are somewhat similar. I also enjoyed seeing some instructional materials from the shelter – including calling the “Overseer” the “Supervisor” – and a document called Radiation Permissible Activities. None of the shelters exist anymore, but I was so absolutely blown away with seeing this. This led me down an entirely new path of research, comparing a draft map of New Vegas to this list and to a list I found on the Nevada Bureau of Mines site, essentially determining the original inspiration for the New Vegas vaults, more or less. How incredible! Look at the locations! The title font! Everything! This has to be a mirage, it is too incredible! I found out that there used to be quite a few shelters – behold the list of all Clark County, Nevada shelters. The door to the shelter is locked tight, with most of the more interesting contents moved to the Clark County Historical Museum.

It was in almost the exact location of the NCR Ranger Safehouse – in the empty field off of Blue Diamond Road. # 87 – NCR Ranger safehouse – While I was looking for the railway-related locations, I found out about the city of Arden, swallowed up by neighboring town Enterprise and therefore becoming technically a neighborhood, but held something uniquely special of its own – the last fallout shelter of the county. * Rhetorical questions and nomenclature of exhibit items cannot be used as a basis for criminal prosecution. While their attractive coloring can be interpreted as a warning, for REPCONN, it’s an invitation to a future filled with nuclear power! We’ve all heard ‘stories’ that radiation is dangerous – fact or fiction?* A common sight in factories, military installations, and the basements of selected government-funded middle schools, these safety barrels* are just what the name implies – safe.
