Fallout 4: Anniversary Edition Upgrade
The definitive content dump for base-game owners: all six Fallout 4 expansions plus 150+ Creation Club items in one upgrade, with a critical caveat about what you already own.
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About Fallout 4: Anniversary Edition Upgrade
Let's get the housekeeping out of the way first, because this one is legitimately confusing. The Fallout 4: Anniversary Edition Upgrade is not a remaster, not a new game, and not a graphical overhaul of Boston's irradiated skyline. It is a paid add-on designed specifically for players who own the base game of Fallout 4 but do not own the DLC. What it delivers is the six official expansions, including the story-heavy Far Harbor and Nuka-World, the robot-crafting romp Automatron, and the three workshop DLCs (Wasteland Workshop, Contraptions Workshop, and Vault-Tec Workshop), bundled together with over 150 pieces of Creation Club content. If you already own the Game of the Year Edition, which includes all the DLC, this Upgrade is the wrong purchase for you. Buy the Creations Bundle instead and save yourself from paying for expansions you already have. Bethesda's upgrade tiering here is genuinely opaque, and a careless click will cost you. For the player this actually targets, someone sitting on a base copy of Fallout 4 with no DLC, the value case is cleaner. Far Harbor alone is one of Bethesda's strongest narrative expansions across any of their recent catalogue, offering a fog-shrouded island, a morally murky faction war, and choices that actually feel like they carry weight. Nuka-World rounds out the major content with a raider-faction storyline that briefly lets you be the villain, which the Commonwealth's usual good-Sole-Survivor arc sorely needed. The workshop DLCs are a mixed bag, honestly: Vault-Tec Workshop is a fun sandbox for vault architects, but Contraptions and Wasteland Workshop are thin on hooks and exist mainly as settlement-builder fuel. Your mileage will depend entirely on how many hours you want to spend decorating a post-apocalyptic suburb. The Creation Club content is the genuinely new angle. The Anniversary Edition introduced a revamped in-game Creations interface alongside new items authored for the release, including the Institute Plasma Weapons pack with unique legendary variants, the Ion Gun (a high-damage plasma beam sidearm developed by Poseidon Energy), new settlement building modules with multiple architectural styles, a Cyber Dog companion, a Sea Scavengers quest with a new 12.7mm submachine gun, and the broader pool of 150-plus previously released Creation Club packs covering paint jobs, armor sets, power armor skins, companions, short quests, and player homes. These are incremental additions to an existing game rather than sweeping new content. None of it reshapes Fallout 4's world the way a proper expansion would, and the Creations Club quests in particular tend to be short, narrow, and reward-focused rather than narratively satisfying. Do not come here expecting Shivering Isles. Launch was rocky on the technical side. Reports at release flagged issues with the Creations Bundle showing as uninstalled despite being marked as owned, frequent crashes in the Creation Club menu, and mod behavior problems. Whether Bethesda has addressed these fully will depend on when you're reading this, so check community forums before diving in. The Xbox Play Anywhere addition, which arrived simultaneously and lets you share progress between Xbox and PC via the Microsoft Store, is a genuinely welcome quality-of-life addition for cross-device players, though it only applies to new saves. Bottom line: if you own base Fallout 4 and nothing else, this Upgrade is the sensible way to access the full game's worth of content, flawed filler quests and all. If you already have the expansions, you are buying duplicates. Check your library before you checkout. Monika, Scout Team
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- Developer
- Unknown
- Publisher
- Unknown
- Release Date
- Nov 11, 2025