Tale of Two Wastelands users, stay away. Purists, look away. But for everyone else? Press Numeric 1 and finally punch a Deathclaw to death with your bare fists. Have a working link or memory of using the 1704 trainer? Share your story in the comments below. War never changes, but trainers do.
Release Date: October 28, 2008 Developer: Bethesda Game Studios Platforms: PC (Primarily), Xbox 360, PS3 fallout 3 trainer 1704
The number "1704" has become a shibboleth among Fallout 3 veterans—a code that signals a time when trainers came in .exe files on rickety forums, and you could leap over the Washington Monument with a single keypress. For those who still roam the Capital Wasteland on legacy hardware, the 1704 trainer remains the undisputed king of cheats. Tale of Two Wastelands users, stay away
However, if you downloaded Fallout 3 from Steam last week, you are probably running a patched version that removed GFWL, which will not work with this trainer. In that case, you are better off using or the Cheat Terminal mod . Press Numeric 1 and finally punch a Deathclaw
For veterans of PC gaming, the term "trainer" evokes a specific nostalgia—a third-party executable that runs alongside your game, allowing you to activate cheats with a simple keystroke (F1, F2, F3, etc.). The designation refers to a specific version or build of a trainer, often associated with a particular release of the game (typically the v1.7 patch, commonly known as the "GOTY" or Games for Windows Live version).
If you own the original v1.7 disc version or the GOG offline backup, the is a pristine, lightweight piece of gaming history. It offers instantaneous, hotkey-driven power that no mod or console command can match for sheer responsiveness.