Confused by Fallout? Welcome to our complete Fallout FAQ! Here we're filling in the blanks of Fallout lore and answering everyone's most burning questions.
Across eight episodes of unmissable dystopian drama, Fallout introduces us to a world with mysteries around every corner.
Along with numerous atomic bombs, it also drops some major revelations regarding the unenviable lives of ghouls, life inside several different vaults, and what went down at Shady Sands.
Let’s dive into the (very SPOILER-FILLED) answers below. Also make sure to check out all Fallout season 1 episodes recapped.
The first question a lot of people want to know is whether or not Fallout is canon. In other words, does it relate to events from the show? The answer, emphatically, is yes. In December, Fallout producer Graham Wagner told IGN, “We kind of told ourselves, this is Fallout 5, this is just another installation, and we're starting with fresh snow."
Fallout is mostly set in the aftermath of a nuclear war. But how did it start, and who dropped the bombs? In episode eight, we have our answer: Vault-Tec. During a flashback, Walton Goggins’ Cooper eavesdrops on a meeting in which Vault-Tec bigwigs discuss nuking the world in order to sell places in their vaults.
There’s both a practical and a philosophical answer to the question ‘what are ghouls?’ Practically, ghouls are humans who’ve been exposed to huge levels of radiation, and become feral if not dosed with drugs. Philosophically, there’s a human still in there, desperately trying to fend off their cannibalistic urges.
Shady Sands is a town in The New California Republic, set up after the initial waves of bombs dropped. Once home to 34,000 people, it was wiped up by another wave of bombing. Lucy discovers a homage to the vast enclave in episode five, and starts to question her identity as a Vault Dweller tasked with repopulating a supposedly barren world.
Vault 31 and Vault 32 form a mutually beneficial society with Vault 33. However, in episode eight, Norm discovers thousands of Vault-Tec executives frozen deep within Vault 31. They’re loyal Vault-Tec employees who are soon going to thaw out and take over the vaults.
In Fallout, every vault is different. They’re not so much shelters for humanity to survive in but testing grounds in which Vault-Tec conduct ghastly science experiments. The overseer of Vault 4 warns Lucy not to visit level 12, but she ignores him and discovers humans are being bred with irradiated animals.
Dr. Wilzig injects himself with a weird, glowing microchip in episode two. Apparently, it’s vitally important, because he asks Lucy to sever his head and deliver it to Moldaver. In episode eight, we finally learn what that microchip is: a cold fusion device able to power up the entire state.
In episode one, Brotherhood of Steel member Dane suffers a debilitating injury when she puts her foot in a shoe rigged with a spring-loaded knife. Fingers point to Maximus, who initially looks guilty. However, it’s revealed Dane inflicted the injury on herself to avoid getting sent on a mission.
In the eighth and final episode of Fallout, Lucy finally finds her father, Hank, who’s revealed to have dropped the bomb on Shady Sands and turned his wife - Lucy’s mother - into a ghoul. Moldaver gets the chip from Dr. Wilzig’s neck and restores power, while Hank flees to New Vegas in a suit of power armor. The Ghoul and Lucy give chase.
Prime Video will almost certainly follow-up Fallout with a second season, given its critical success (94% on Rotten Tomatoes). Also, a Fallout season 2 potential filming location was revealed when news broke it was offered a $25 million tax credit to film in California.
Finally, as Wagner tells SFX, "There’s piles and piles of stuff we want to do. We wanted to slow our roll and not do it all in eight episodes, because we’re talking about thousands of hours of gameplay."
The Fallout cast did an incredible job reimagining the video game in a live-action setting. Here’s the entire Fallout acting ensemble.
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