![]() It usually works pretty well with older windows apps. From there you just get the Windows version of Fallout 1 or 2 and run it with WINE. Scratch that, you can totally just install WINE into your already-present Mac OS. This should allow you to run the older games without having to emulate a whole other computer on your desktop. Another method that might work is installing a copy of Puppy Linux (It's tiny and totally safe to do) alongside your Mac OS, and getting WINE installed in that. There are also like, stripped down versions of Windows XP you can get. You might be able to get an older version like Windows 98 or something for pretty cheap. Of course, you do need a copy of windows for this one to work, but it most certainly will. Use Virtualbox and install the Windows Fallout 1 or 2 into a virtual machine with Windows on it. So if someone wants to, they're welcome to :P Metalspork 23:07, Ap(UTC) I'd delete this topic if I could but I'm either too stupid to find the button or only moderators can. Okay, update: I figured out that it works on Macbook Pros but not regular Macbooks because of the Intel processor, and there isn't a way to fix it yet. Has anyone here had any experience with that? (there's some reviews about it on Amazon too) I really want to play the earlier Fallout games but I don't want to get them if they're not going to work. But after doing some researching I also found out that newer updates of Mac laptops are messing up the games due to the color display changes or some crap. ![]() However, I just discovered that Fallout 1 and 2 is available for Mac (which I have). I'm assuming most of the people who have played Fallout 1 and 2 have PCs. ![]()
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