Summary
- Fallout fans want to bring Mr. House to the real Las Vegas by plastering his face on the sphere.
- The only trouble is that they need a staggering $480,000 to do it for just one day.
- Optimistically, someone set up a GoFundMe to raise money towards this goal, rallying the community behind this incredibly expensive joke.
168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Fallout: New Vegas reimagines the gambling capital with a retrofuturistic aesthetic in the aftermath of a nuclear apocalypse, run by a pre-war CEO clinging onto life by projecting himself through monitors as a talking head. It's easy to see why it's become one of the most iconic parts of the series.
These days, the real Las Vegas has an enormous sphere in the centre which advertisers use as a giant billboard, kind of like painting your logo onto the moon. With Fallout fever at an all-time high, fans want to 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:bring Mr. House into the real world by plastering his face onto this same sphere, making it so that--wherever you go--he's always watching.
The trouble is that getting your advert on this comically oversized ball costs a lot. Mortal Kombat 𓆉1 used it for a day and it s💫et them back $450,000. So, ambitiously, the community is hoping to scrounge up $487,710. Right now, they've made $3,745 across 312 donations.
Who Is Organising The Fallout Las Vegas Sphere GoFundMe?
"Let's get down to business," organiser Even Zarsaz writes in . "As the sole proprietor of the Las Vegas Strip, it's only right that Mr. Robert House of RobCo Industries makes his presence known in the crown jewel of the Mojave."
Zarsaz has even set up Twitter and Instagram accounts dedicated to promoting the GoFundMe page in the hopes of garnering more traction, but with the end goal being half a million dollars for one joke, maybe we shouldn't get our hopes up.
That being said, donations continue to pour in, with fans sending everything from a few bucks to $200. Unfortunately, however, they're still $483,965 shy of having enough to plaster Mr. House's big mug across the sphere.
If only Robert House was real. The big tower we find him in that looms over the Mojave--the Lucky 38--exists in real life. It's called the Strat Hotel, and it's worth $70 million. Sticking his face on the sphere would hardly make a dent. But alas, he isn't.

Fallout: New Vegas
- Released
- October 19, 2010
- ESRB
- M for Mature: Blood and Gore, Intens🦩e Violence, Sexual Content, Strong Language, Use of Drugs
- Developer(s)
- 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Obsidian Entertainment
- Publisher(s)
- Bethesda
- Engine
- Gamebryo
- Franchise
- Fallout
Welcome to Vegas. New Vegas.
It’s the kind of town where you dig your own grave prior to being shot in the head and left for dead…and that’s before things really get ugly. It’s a town of dreamers and desperados being torn apart by warring factions vying for complete control of this desert oasis. It’s a place where the right kind of person with the right kind of weaponry can really make a name for themselves, and make more than an enemy or two along the way.
As you battle your way across the heat-blasted Mojave Wasteland, the colossal Hoover Dam, and the neon drenched Vegas Strip, you’ll be introduced to a colorful cast of characters, power-hungry factions, special weapons, mutated creatures and much more. Choose sides in the upcoming war or declare “winner takes all” and crown yourself the King of New Vegas in this follow-up to the 2008 videogame of the year, Fallout 3.
Enjoy your stay.
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