Fallout 76 means there's at least new Fallout content being made that is actually very playable while Fallout 5 is on the backburner due to Starfield and ESVI being ahead of it. It's not ideal, but Bethesda does tend to listen to their fans when it comes to their releases, as Far Harbor was considered a decent step up from the main story and Fallout 76 has been improved. In 2 years, it's very possible 76 is in a far better position than it is today. That's the beauty of post-launch support now - we can get more Rainbow Six Siege, No Man's Sky, MCC etc style comebacks/growth cycles for games. Does it excuse the poor development processes that resulted in the mess in the first place? Not really, no. But that also doesn't discredit the turnaround, either. And Fallout 76 is fun, from what little I have played of it.