This page contains a list of cheats, codes, Easter eggs, tips, and other secrets for Fallout: New Vegas -- Dead Money for Xbox 360. If you've discovered a cheat you'd like to add to the page, or have a correction, please. Don't Die from Falling Right before you hit the ground, save. Load that save and you will land lightly on the ground. Steal All 37 Gold Bars In 'Dead Money' (DLC) Note: You will need a few C4 and a Detonator for this exploit. In the final part of the game you will enter a vault with 37 gold bars weighing 35 pounds each.
Each gold bar is worth 10.539 caps. Clearly you can not take them all -- unless you use this exploit. Enter the vault and the door will seal behind you. Take everything in the room that you want to including the 36 gold bars on the table to your right and the 1 gold bar on the overseers desk. Deactivate the security system and activate the computer on the desk. IMPORTANT: Only read 'Vera', DO NOT access the file that shows up after you read it. Elijah will appear on the monitor, convince him to meet you in the vault.
When the conversation ends leave the room immediately (it unlocks), and walk to the far right stairway. A blue force field will appear blocking your path, lay your C4 at the bottom of those stairs and then press your body against the blue force field in the doorway. When Elijah finishes speaking, for some reason you and he switch places. (You'll see what I mean) Make sure he is on or very near your C4.
Jan 03, 2012 This tutorial is to show you how to activate your Youtube app on your Xbox 360 and link it with your Youtube account. Download the Youtube app if you. You can use Windows Media Center to stream music, pictures, and video to your Xbox 360 console from any computer on your home network. The following steps are for Windows Vista Ultimate or Home Premium versions. For help installing or setting up Windows Media Center on your computer, see Windows Media.
Detonate and leave the way you came. Congratulations you now have 37 Gold Bars worth a total of 389.943 Caps.
After months of, Microsoft finally released for its Xbox One controller, allowing it to pull double duty as wired controller for PC gaming. Unlike the Xbox 360 wireless controller, which required a separate dongle for PC use, all you need to use the Xbox One controller on PC is a standard Micro-USB cable. The wired connection provides the power, so you don’t even need batteries.
Unfortunately, you can’t use the Xbox One controller wirelessly on a PC at this time. Driver Installation To set up the controller, and download the drivers for either a 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) machine. (If you’re unsure which file to grab, open Control Panel, type About in the search bar and click System. Then, look under 'System Type.'
) Open the file you just downloaded. Amusingly enough, Windows will show an 'unknown publisher' warning, even though the drivers are coming from Microsoft. Click Run in the box that pops up. You don’t have to plug in the controller to install the drivers. Jared Newman Even though the drivers are from Microsoft, they will appear unsigned.
A setup wizard should appear. Read and accept the license agreement, wait for the installation to finish, then click Finish. Now, plug in your Xbox One controller. It may vibrate briefly, and you should see a 'driver software installed successfully' message on the System Tray. Jared Newman The System Tray popup will let you know that your Xbox One controller is ready to use.
At this point, you should be ready to play. Games that support Microsoft’s Xbox 360 controller should automatically recognize the Xbox One controller without any additional setup (with some exceptions described below). Potential issues The biggest problem is that several of the games I tested would not recognize the controller, including Dark Souls II, Transistor and Eldritch. The controller did recognize several other games, including Dishonored, Super Meat Boy and Trials Evolution. Uninstalling and reinstalling the drivers did not help, so hopefully this is just a temporary issue that Microsoft and game developers can resolve through updates.
Also, the first time I installed the driver, Windows 7 showed a 'Runtime Error' after plugging in the controller, followed by an 'XboxStat.exe has stopped working' error. The controller still worked, but the message was a nuisance. These messages went away after reinstalling the driver. Finally, keep in mind that plugging the controller into a PC will break its wireless connection to the Xbox One. You’ll have to plug the controller back into the console via USB to pair them again.