WHETHER YOU’RE A GAMER OR not, you’ve likely seen or heard of the Fallout videogame series. For the record, it’s the one featuring that super smiley blond kid mascot in the blue and yellow jumpsuit waving at you at every videogame retailer.
The series has been around for three decades now, as the original game, created by Tim Cain, was released way back in 1997. His creation was a futuristic, post-apocalyptic RPG for personal computers. But by 2008, under new developers Bethesda Softworks and game director Todd Howard, the series evolved into an expansive, open-world, multi-platform experience in Fallout 3.
Featuring 3D graphics and first-person combat gameplay, the third chapter continued the mythology 200 years after the inciting nuclear conflict that wiped out a familiar, but kitschy, Cold War-era version of the United States. In this world, humans who could pay up survived by living in a protected underground Vault Network, with the intention to eventually repopulate the world. The unlucky suckers who couldn’t spent two centuries duking it out topside, battling starvation, dehydration, radiation and mutations… and eventually you, the player.
The Fallout universe features four main games and seven spin-off titles, which together have sold more than 55 million units. But strangely, it’s taken until now for a big-budget, live-action adaptation to see the light. The eight-episode TV series arrives via Prime Video and Kilter Films, with Howard and Bethesda’s blessing and involvement.
Series executive producer, and director of three episodes, Jonathan Nolan (), admits that he fell prey to not long after it was released. He was hooked and played it to completion. “Back in the day, I kind of felt like Todd Howard owed me something for that,” Nolan jokes about his time sink of choice in the late ’00s.