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According to Eurogamer , Paul Watson contacted Bethesda when he realised one of his four-disc Fallout 3 vinyl special edition soundtrack records arrived warped.After providing Bethesda with photographic evidence of the issue, he then received a $25 credit to his account. When enquiring if he could receive a full refund, Bethesda informed him that to qualify for the full credit, he would have to destroy the unwarped items, too."You only showed that one of the records was damaged so we refunded you for that damaged record," stated a Bethesda representative in an email. "If the other records are similarly affected, please provide photos. However if they are not affected and you still would like a full refund for the product, please follow the instructions below for this limited edition item: Destroy the other records, and provide photos of the damaged records."Once I get those photos I will happily refund you for your order. Thank you and have a wonderful day!"As Watson was unable to replace a single disc, he was left with no option but to smash the remaining records to secure the full refund to purchase a replacement edition.After sending Bethesda the image above, Watson was refunded in full. Fallout 4's latest update is currently in beta on Steam , pledging to fix a whole bunch of bugs. The beta, Bethesda stresses, "is a work in progress," so before opting in for testing, players should back up their games.

Vikki Blake is a very jumpy survival horror survivalist. You can find her twittering over at @_vixx and twitching at twitch.tv/vixxiie