Fallout, Season 2
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Fallout” Season 2 is back with eight new episodes following the blockbuster success of Season 1 in 2024. Why does Ella Purnell, who stars in the series as Lucy MacLean, look so familiar?
The show has always thrived on a simple concept: vintage jazz and other mid-century sounds carry an ironic zing when paired with images of gore and desolation.
Amazon Prime Video has moved up the premiere of “Fallout” season two, confirming the hit adaptation will continue Tuesday, Dec. 16 at 8 p.m. CT, one day earlier than originally scheduled.
Picking up right on the heels of Season 1, Season 2 sees Fallout's core three scattered across the wasteland. Lucy (Ella Purnell) and the Ghoul (Walton Goggins) are tracking Lucy's father, Hank (Kyle MacLachlan),
The first season of Fallout arrived at a turning point for Hollywood video game adaptations. Often far-removed from their source material, and often just a bit rubbish, they'd gained a reputation as low-quality cash grabs. Then The Last of Us came along.
Season 2 shifts locations, relocating the story to the iconic setting of New Vegas. It's a fun pivot. Aside from unleashing more aesthetic references to the games, the new environment brings new stakes to the mix.
The most impressive thing about Fallout’s first season was how well it nailed the tone. The games are a mix of grim and goofy, a postapocalyptic story in a bleak world that’s
Amazon and Bethesda return to the Wasteland with a second Fallout season that's all about New Vegas and not letting businessmen and fanatics run the world.
Reactivate those Pip-Boys and set your Spotify listening age to 87, as Prime Video's adaptation of post-apocalyptic game franchise Fallout is back with a second season. And of course, we're in for more Easter eggs, needle drops, and details from Bethesda's games that you might recognise from your travels through the Wasteland.
The sophomore season of Prime Video's smash-hit gaming adaptation doesn't fix what isn't broken, for better and occasionally worse.
As part of Fallout 76's latest expansion into the wild Wasteland of Ohio, Walton Goggins walked into the recording booth to reprise his role as the Ghoul—in other words, perhaps the oldest bounty hunter in the New West has joined the live service game.