Here’s a deep, reflective blog-style post inspired by the Fallout: New Vegas complete DLC pack, specifically the SiMON 2xDVD5 release and the FitGirl repack—looking at both the game’s themes and the curious preservation culture around it. There’s a strange, dusty poetry in reinstalling Fallout: New Vegas in 2026.
She strips out multilanguage videos you’ll never watch, repacks audio with lossless compression, and delivers a .exe that installs faster than Steam can verify its own files. It’s a ritual. Click. Next. Uncheck “DirectX” (you already have it). Wait 9 minutes. Boom: The Strip, fully formed, glitching only in ways you remember. Because New Vegas is a game about broken systems, and its own brokenness is part of the sermon. Fallout.New.Vegas.All.DLC-SiMON -2xDVD5- fitgirl repack
Not the Steam version with its clunky launcher and broken GFWL remnants. No—the ghostly, perfect, scene-approved SiMON 2xDVD5 release, shrunken down to a whisper by FitGirl’s black magic repack. 6.7GB instead of 14GB. All DLCs intact: Dead Money , Honest Hearts , Old World Blues , Lonesome Road . No cracktro, no junk. Just pure, unstable, glorious Mojave. Here’s a deep, reflective blog-style post inspired by
For the uninitiated: SiMON was a legend in the 0day scene—clean rips, proper flags. Their -2xDVD5- meant two dual-layer DVDs, the kind you’d burn in 2011 if you wanted to hold digital immortality in your hands. And FitGirl? She’s the archivist of our fractured age, compressing the already compressed, making sure that even on a $200 laptop with 4GB of RAM, the Divide still crumbles and Vegas still glitters. It’s a ritual
The official version of New Vegas on digital stores is a corpse propped up by community patches. You need 4GB patches, anti-crash mods, tick fixes. But the SiMON DVD5 images? They freeze a moment in time: December 2011, after Lonesome Road shipped but before the final patch that broke as much as it fixed. FitGirl’s repack just makes that freeze portable.