Thumbs up
In the most unsurprising news you might read today: Amazon are going to make a second season to their very popularFalloutTV show. That means one more season until weget Liam Neeson, right?
The live-action Fallout series dropped a week ago, and quickly blew up into one of the biggest and best video game adaptations to date. From my own travels around the internet, it seemed to leavepretty much everyone pleased: people who’d never heard of Fallout before and seemed to appreciate it as enjoyable prestige television, Fallout fans who felt it was a faithful vision of the series’ gruelling post-apocalypse and critical political commentary (even if it’s perhaps a little lighter on that side than the post-Fallout 2wasteland hijinks), and Todd Howard, who can now presumably build his own massive underground vault and fill it full of the cash made fromeveryone wanting to play Fallout again.
We pretty much knew a Fallout: Season 2 was happening already thanks toits creators being handed a bunch of tax credits by the state of Californiato go and film there. Perhaps that means we’ll see a bit more backstory on the series’ New California Republic, which is mentioned in the first season but is largely relegated to people talking about its history given that(Season 1 spoilers!)the NCR was largely wiped out by the destruction of Shady Sands before the start of the show.
A post shared by FALLOUT ⚡️ (@falloutonprime)
We can also infer from the end of season one that we’re headed toNew Vegas, and co-showrunner Graham Wagner has promised - before a second season was officially announced, mind - thatsome “iconic elements” from the video games have been saved for whatever comes next. That may well include deathclaws, which are yet to be seenbeyond a skull in the last episode- but the show’s creators seem to at least be sparing in their approach to playing Fallout Series Bingo on screen. (They’ve also found space toadd their own contributions to wider Fallout series lore, too.)
“We didn’t want to see the show to seem like it was written by people who just, like, spent 10 seconds reading the Wikipedia page for Fallout and didn’t bother to, like, bring in some deeper cuts,” co-showrunner Geneve Robertson-Dworet said. “Hopefully that won’t piss off fans because we didn’t get to every last thing, but hopefully they will bear with us and pray with us that we get a second season to bring these things to the screen.”