Latest in Popular Video Game Series to Be Set in West Virginia

West Virginia will be the setting for the latest in a video game series with an international following. The game will feature landscapes, folklore and well-known locations from around the state in a post-apocalyptic time period.

Over the weekend, American-based Bethesda Game Studios revealed a new trailer and exclusive gameplay for its biggest video game to-date titled, Fallout 76.

Bethesda Director and Executive Producer Todd Howard revealed details for the upcoming game at the 2018 Electronic Entertainment Expo, or E3, held at the Los Angeles Convention Center.

“Set in the hills of West Virginia,” he said, “you are one of the first to emerge into an untamed and very different wasteland.”

Howard says Fallout 76 is a prequel to the family of Fallout video games that started in the late 90s and set in post-apocalyptic times with cyberpunk and retro futuristic art and style.

Some well-known locations are seen in the latest game trailer, like the State Capitol, the Greenbrier Resort, and West Virginia University’s Woodburn Hall. Some of West Virginia’s own local monsters, like the Beast of Grafton and the Mothman, also make an appearance.

“Now most people don’t know West Virginia that well,” Howard said. “It is an incredible array of natural wonders, towns, and government secrets, and the quest will take you through six distinct regions; each with their own style, risks, and rewards.”

Howard says Fallout 76 will be the first Fallout game to be played entirely online and uses new technology to enhance gameplay and visual landscape.

Both the teaser and the latest trailer feature John Denver’s song “Take Me Home, Country Roads.”

December 29, 1970: "Take Me Home, Country Roads" Is Complete

On December 29, 1970, songwriters Bill Danoff, Taffy Nivert, and John Denver finished writing what would become one of the most popular tunes in history and one of West Virginia’s official state songs. “Take Me Home, Country Roads” also branded the Mountain State with its most recognizable slogan: “almost heaven.”

The song hit number two on the charts, went gold, and spread internationally. In places as far away as China, many people know about West Virginia solely from the song “Country Roads.” At home, some have criticized the lyrics, which seem at times to confuse West Virginia and Virginia. For instance, the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah River exist for only a few miles in West Virginia and are more closely associated with Virginia. Still, the song has become a great source of pride for West Virginians. It’s a staple of the West Virginia University Marching Band, not to mention a favorite sing-along at taverns across the state.

John Denver performed ‘‘Country Roads’’ for the debut of the new Mountaineer Stadium in Morgantown in 1980 and on a telethon to benefit the victims of the disastrous 1985 floods.

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