7 things Fallout TV show first-look images don’t tell you about the Prime Video series

War… war never changes

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

Finally, after months of waiting, we’ve been given a glimpse into the world ofPrime Video’sFalloutTV show.

That’s right,Amazon has released a bunch of first-look images from itsFalloutTV series– and, we don’t know about you, but we’re loving how faithful it’s being towards Bethesda’s iconic video game franchise of the same name.

Long-time fans of the post-apocalyptic action role-playing games have been poring over the stills to see what they can learn about theFalloutTV showsince they were released online. However, in some cases,Falloutdiehards are just as in the dark – over some elements, anyway – as those with little to no knowledge of the game series.

With that in mind, we’ve run a fine-tooth comb overAmazon’s first-look images, with a little help from aFalloutTV show press release andVanity Faircover story, to work out (or speculate on) what we know about the show. So, throw on your Vault jumpsuit, grab your Pip-boy, and let’s dive in.

A recognizable narrative

A recognizable narrative

Before we look at the images themselves, what’s theFalloutTV show actually about?

Per Amazon Studios' press release, its plot synopsis reads as follows: “Based on one of the greatest video game series of all time,Falloutis the story of haves and have-nots in a world in which there’s almost nothing left to have.

“200 years after the apocalypse, the gentle denizens of luxury fallout shelters are forced to return to the irradiated hellscape their ancestors left behind – and are shocked to discover an incredibly complex, gleefully weird, and highly violent universe waiting for them.”

Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.

Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.

Sign up to be the first to know about unmissable Black Friday deals on top tech, plus get all your favorite TechRadar content.

Diehard fans hoping for similar genre fare to the games, then, will be pleased to hear that the Prime Video show’s story will be comparable to those seen in the games onPlayStationandXboxconsoles, as well as PC.

That ‘new story’ angle was crucial in gaining Bethesda Game Studios' director Todd Howard’s approval to create the series, too. “I did not want to do an interpretation of an existing story we did,” he told Vanity Fair. “That was the other thing – a lot of pitches were ‘This is the movie ofFallout 3’ [and] I was like ‘Yeah, we told that story.’ I don’t have a lot of interest seeing those translated. I was interested in someone telling a uniqueFalloutstory.”

California dreamin'

Until recently, established fans and newcomers had no idea when and where Amazon’sFalloutTV show would be set.

However, after an image – posted onPrime Video’s official Instagram accountin August – revealed that its story will take place in Los Angeles, Vanity Fair’s article reconfed its location yesterday (November 28). Indeed, the image of Ella Purnell’s Lucy – more on her shortly – looking out onto a junkyard is located in an area known as ‘Philly’, which houses survivors who have nowhere else to live on the Wasteland, the name attributed to Earth’s post-nuclear environment in theFalloutseries.

As for the year the series takes place in, it’s set 219 years after 2077 – the year when nuclear war broke out in Bethesda’s fictional universe – meaning Amazon’s Fallout series will begin in 2296.

A colorful cast of characters

As mentioned, Purnell – viewers might recognize her fromNetflixprojects includingArmy of the DeadandArcane, plus hitParamount PlusshowYellowjackets– will play Lucy, the series' main protagonist. She’s described as “an optimistic Vault Dweller with an all-American can-do spirit. Her peaceful and idealistic nature is tested when people harm her loved ones”. Vanity Fair also confirms Lucy to be a “nice but naive” individual whose utopian values are questioned when she’s forced to leave the safety of Vault 33 and embark on a rescue mission.

ButArcaneseason 2voice actor Purnell isn’t the only big name attached to the series. Check out the so-far confirmed cast list below for more details on which other big stars are set to play prominent roles:

Gun for hire

Falloutfans will know all about the franchise’s iconic ghoul enemies. As mentioned, in the games, they’re humans who have been turned into zombie-like creatures by gamma radiation that polluted the world during the nuclear conflict, otherwise known as the Great War.

However, not all ghouls are vicious, brainless beings. There are intelligent (albeit hostile) versions of these mutated individuals in the games, which the TV series appears to be taking inspiration from for The Ghoul. In fact, Vanity Fair revealed that Amazon has positioned Goggins' character as the tritagonist – alongside Lucy and Maximus – inFallout, confirming he’ll have a big role to play throughout.

“There is a chasm in time and distance between who this guy was and who he’s become,” co-developer, director, and executive producer Jonathan Nolan (Westworld,The Dark Knight) told the outlet. “For me [that] creates an enormous dramatic question: What happened to this guy? So we’ll walk backwards into that. He becomes our guide and our protagonist in that [older] world, even as we understand him to be the antagonist at the end of the world.”

Steel-ing the show

NoFalloutadaptation would be complete without the aforementioned Brotherhood of Steel, of which Maximus is a part. For those unfamiliar with the games, Nolan likens the group to a fusion of “the Marine Corps… [and] a little bit of the Knights Templar”, which should go some way to ahem reinforcing the idea of what they represent.

Long-time fans will know there’s a moral complexity to the Brotherhood, whose hard-line approach to delivering justice on the Wasteland can be viewed as heroic or immoral, depending on who you ask. As Nolan told Vanity Fair: “One of the things we’re trying to gently sidestep here is that kind of binary thinking, like, ‘They’re the good guys or the bad guys’. Whoever the good guys and the bad guys were, they destroyed the whole world. So now we’re in a much more gray area.”

Staying faithful to the games

Fallout’s TV adaptation will take some creative liberties with its source material – more on this in a second – but it appears to be sticking closely to the lore and world-building that’s already been established by Bethesda.

Indeed, a quick glance at the first-look images prove as much. From the true-to-life blue and yellow Vault jumpsuits (complete with Pip-Boy wrist devices) and the Brotherhood of Steel’s perfectly replicated Power Armor, to its retrofuturisic aesthetic and expansive but barren locations, the Prime Video series is going all-out to appease both Bethesda and the franchise’s devote fanbase.

Just as important, however, is the TV show’s canonicity within the widerFalloutuniverse. “We view what’s happening in the show ascanon,” Howard explained, so expect events in the TV series to be impacted by what’s occurred in the games – and, hopefully, influence events in futureFalloutgames.

Changing of the guard

Of course, this being a live-action adaptation, Amazon’s TV show will seemingly deviate from and/or tweak aspects ofFalloutlore.

One of the biggest sticking points appears to be the Brotherhood of Steel’s appearance. In the games, the Brotherhood don’t have a sizeable presence on the US West coast, especially in New California, which is where the show is set. The dominant group in New California – in the video game series, anyway – is the creatively titled New California Republic (NCR). However, given the Brotherhood’s presence in theFalloutTV show, many fans are worried that the NCR might not show up that much (if at all) in Amazon’s take on the source material.

Another supposedly big change is the name given to the Brotherhood’s airship. The group’s aerial base of operations is known as the Prydwen inFallout 4, but it seems to have been given a new title – the Caswennan – in the TV series. Of course, the Caswennan might just be a different vessel that the Brotherhood uses – after all, theFalloutTV show is set nine years after the events ofFallout 4, which took place in 2287. Even so, if the Caswennan ends up being a revised version of the Prydwen, fans might not take too kindly to the unnecessary change.

Curiously,Fallout’s Vault Boy – the franchise’s smiling, thumbs-up-toting mascot – is also getting an origin story of sorts in the TV show. Amazon and Bethesda aren’t spoiling that plot thread ahead of release, but Howard was able to tease this: “That was something that they [Nolan and wife/co-developer Lisa Joy] came up with that’s just really smart”. Color us intrigued.

Fallout debuts on Prime Video worldwide on April 12, 2024.

You might also like

As TechRadar’s senior entertainment reporter, Tom covers all of the latest movies, TV shows, and streaming service news that you need to know about. You’ll regularly find him writing about the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Star Wars, Netflix, Prime Video, Disney Plus, and many other topics of interest.

An NCTJ-accredited journalist, Tom also writes reviews, analytical articles, opinion pieces, and interview-led features on the biggest franchises, actors, directors and other industry leaders. You may see his quotes pop up in the odd official Marvel Studios video, too, such as thisMoon Knight TV spot.

Away from work, Tom can be found checking out the latest video games, immersing himself in his favorite sporting pastime of football, reading the many unread books on his shelf, staying fit at the gym, and petting every dog he comes across.

Got a scoop, interesting story, or an intriguing angle on the latest news in entertainment? Feel free to drop him a line.

4 spy shows on Prime Video with over 80% on Rotten Tomatoes

Prime Video’s smart new X-Ray feature is finally a good reason to add AI to streaming

How to watch Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light FREE online from anywhere