Photo: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video
One of the many challenges with an adaptation of a beloved property like Fallout is finding the balance between keeping fans happy and providing an interesting story for unfamiliar audiences. Season one of The Last of Us struck it well. While it was, narratively, essentially a beat-for-beat facsimile of the game, Craig Mazin and Neil Druckmann cannily fine-tuned the story by expanding on the most interesting plot beats and character arcs. The best example is episode three, âLong, Long Time,â which fleshed out the relationship of survivalist Bill (Nick Offerman) and his partner Frank (Murray Bartlett) into a deeply human, profoundly poignant love story. It was the seasonâs best.
But while Fallout tells a unique story â mostly; there are plot beats borrowed from the games â it is still statedly canon and exists in the Fallout universe as we know it. So, while itâs an adaptation, itâs also essentially a sequel, extending the story of the Fallout universe and building on its existing history. For all intents and purposes, itâs Fallout 5, just not interactive.
Such is why when the show was confirmed to return Fallout to the West Coast, fansâ ears pricked up, as itâs where one of the fan-favorite factions, the New California Republic, is based. Or âŠÂ was based. The last time we see it is in Fallout: New Vegas, where itâs depicted as a functioning, albeit stretched-thin, military democracy vying for control over the Hoover Dam in a bloody war with Caesarâs Legion, a barbaric faction from Arizona cosplaying a new Roman Empire. But we havenât been to the home territories or their capital of Shady Sands since Fallout 2.
Itâs been strangely absent from the series up to this point, though we knew from set leaks â and an NCR flag spotted in the seriesâ trailer â that itâd show up.
Well, now we know why itâs taken so long to arrive at the party. As it turns out, the NCR is ⊠pretty much gone. At least, as far as we know right now. As itâs revealed toward the end of the episode, at some point in the last few decades, Shady Sands was destroyed, ostensibly in a nuclear blast. Itâs a decision that will undoubtedly prompt vociferous debate online. Itâs also a pretty ballsy move that you have to respect, assuming it pays off.
We further learn that the childhood memory that has been haunting Maximus â a formative moment that led him to join the Brotherhood and aspire toward their projected heroism â was from Shady Sands. Itâs where he grew up. He saw it destroyed.
Lucy, for her part, is just devastated that surface dwellers have (well, had) been able to restart civilization before Vault 33 could enact Reclamation Day, which is its entire purpose and reason to live. (Maximus has just revealed to her that an entire townâs worth of people were blown to smithereens and she cares more about Vault-Tec propaganda? Fuckinâ vault dwellers.)
The reveal of Shady Sandsâ destruction is a mic-drop moment in what is, otherwise, the first episode of Fallout to feel distinctly filler. It begins with Maximus and Thaddeus cheersing their success over finding Wilzigâs head; theyâve become fast friends, to the point that Thaddeus wants Maximus â who he still thinks is Knight Titus â to brand him, to which Maximus happily obliges.
Of course, the whole âpretending to be Titusâ thing is going to be an issue for Maximus if he and Thaddeus are to return Wilzigâs head to Brotherhood HQ. So he decides to reveal the truth, and it goes disastrously wrong. Thaddeus is just freaked the fuck out over Knight Titusâs disappearance and, as is soon made apparent, Titusâs death. Maximus decides the only thing for it is to kill Thaddeus, but only makes it to crushing his foot before Thaddeus steals his T-60âs fusion core, leaving Maximus trapped inside the armor.
Lucy happens upon Maximusâs predicament the next morning. After some mutual assurances and with the promise of RadAway to cure her radiation poisoning, Lucy agrees to free Maximus from the T-60. Trust is manifestly hard to come by in the wastes, and theyâve both been burned enough times to know that other people seldom have your best interests at heart. Theyâre united by necessity â Lucy has the tracker in Wilzigâs head, and Maximus can offer the Brotherhoodâs gunmetal support in rescuing Hank â but also by their shared spirit of virtue. They both want to contribute to a better world. Theyâre kind of soul mates.
Trust is the main theme of this episode, both above the surface and below, as Norm continues his investigation into the mystery of the three vaults. Itâs really starting to look like weâve got a conspiracy on our hands. (An evil conspiracy and/or experiment, inside a vault? Groundbreaking.) A startling pattern emerges in Normâs search of the vault records: Every single Vault 33 overseer has come from Vault 31. Maybe thatâs hardly a surprise, with their higher education standards and allegedly better mashed potatoes.
The trend continues when Betty, another personnel transfer from Vault 31, is elected to be 33âs new overseer with a 98 percent majority. The first thing she announces in her new position is the repopulation of Vault 32, which has been miraculously repaired â and cleared of corpses â overnight. âThe raiders destroyed so much, but not our spirits,â says Betty, who is very clearly hiding something. Can you ever really trust that the people you grow up with, even in a subterranean bomb shelter where incest is a favored pastime? Apparently not.
Thereâs even an insidious slogan: âWhen things look glum, vote 31.â Itâs almost like the terrible events that befall the population of Vault 33 are manufactured to keep the populace in order. Itâs not like the raider attack is the first terrible thing to happen to them in an election year. Davey says he ran against Hank but lost when âthe weevil famine came.â Seems like these poor people do not have the real democratic franchise they think they do.
Lucy and Maximus find themselves in the middle of a trust exercise back on the surface. Walking for some time in the wastes, having a chat â Maximus reveals he thinks the bombs fell when he was a kid, which weâll flag as important to keep in mind â they come across a pair of surface dwellers on the other end of a bridge. Itâs a tense standoff, and Lucyâs solution is for both parties to cross with their hands up. Turns out the other guys are âfiends,â i.e., cannibals, and Maximus shoots them both, not before taking a bullet himself. Fortunately, itâs just a shoulder wound â it happens all the time, he says â and they keep on truckinâ.
Later, the wound takes a turn of the âno, actually, this doesnât happen all the time and you need to seek medical helpâ variety, so Lucy and Maximus seek the shelter of an intact office building, Hawthorne Medical Laboratories. They venture farther inside, but theyâre gassed, knocked out, and seemingly captured.
When they wake, Lucy is pleased as punch. Theyâre in another vault. Whether or not they can trust the intentions of this one, though, is yet to be seen.
âą Iâve said it before, but the supporting actors are really stepping up to the plate; the casting department has done a top-tier job. In this episode, MVP goes to Leer Leary, whose Davey awkwardly stammers his way through apologies for not voting for Woody or Reg. âI voted for Betty.â We know.
âą So, whatâs the deal with the NCR? Is it just Shady Sands that has fallen, or has the NCR ceased to exist in entirety? I imagine weâll find out as the series progresses, but thatâs one hell of a bold decision if the NCR are toast. What happened to them after New Vegas?
âą In the credits sequence, we see a Shady Sands library book, which was last stamped in 2276. Thatâs a year before Fallout 3 and five years before the events of Fallout: New Vegas.
âą Gotta say, Johnny Pemberton really knows how to scream.
âą Lucy offers an apt breakdown of the Brotherhood of Steelâs absurd mission statement: âYou guys use prewar technology to find and collect prewar technology, to make sure no one has prewar technology?â Well, when you put it like that âŠ
âą Calling the cannibalistic surface dwellers âfiendsâ seems like a little hat tip to Fallout: New Vegas, in which there are enemies who go by the same name. Theyâre drug-addled, sadistic raiders based out of a captured vault on the outskirts of Vegas.