November 10th was launch day. It's January 7th. Now you can argue that "we're 3 days away from 2 months!!!!" but that's as near as to 2 months as anything else.
And there has been 1 patch. The other was a day of launch hot fix. Claiming "two patches" is a disservice and one I'm not fond of as it allows developers to release a series of teeny tiny hotfixes and then claim "hey, we've done 6 patches!!!"
Even the first true patch was small and contained barely anything of note and meat, and I'm a really relaxed and easy going person in that regard. I have no agenda, and I don't care what they fix or in what order, but I can recognize a hotfix and a small first patch when I see one.
Bethesda also said they'd release smaller, more frequent patches.
I am unclear at this point what "more frequent" means, but it is currently shaping up to be "quarterly." That's not "frequent" in my books.
As a complete aside, but a semi related story, I'm the account director for a software company. Prior to Christmas we launched a multi-million dollar software application; smaller and less compex than Fallout 4, smaller team too, of course. I claim no comparisons. *BUT* the difference in after-launch bug resolutions is STARK. We've been releasing fixes and doing status updates DAILY - including over christmas. If part of our team was out, another was still working on it. Everyday we let our customers know what's known to us (our error log), what we're working on, and what has been fixed.
In the same period of time there has been nothing from Bethesda; no fixes, no acknowledge of errors, and no communication.
I'm not saying that's "bad," because I frankly don't care, but it is a fact.