New details about Tales of the Shire: A The Lord of the Rings Game have been revealed.
03.04.2024 - 18:59 / videogameschronicle.com / Todd Howard / Bethesda Softworks / Walton Goggins / Jonathan Nolan / Aaron Moten / Tom Ivan
Amazon has released a new featurette for its upcoming Fallout TV series.
Viewable above, the video features interviews and behind the scenes footage, as cast and crew members discuss the process of bringing the popular game series to TV.
Starring Ella Purnell, Walton Goggins and Aaron Moten, the show is being produced by Kilter Films, the production company behind HBO’s Westworld.
“Based on one of the greatest video game series of all time, Fallout is the story of haves and have-nots in a world in which there’s almost nothing left to have,” reads an official description of the show.
“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.”
All episodes of the show will be made available on Amazon Prime Video on April 11.
Bethesda‘s Todd Howard shared details on Fallout 5 with the TV show’s creators to avoid them coming up with similar ideas, according to Jonathan Nolan, who’s a writer, director and executive producer on Amazon’s series.
New details about Tales of the Shire: A The Lord of the Rings Game have been revealed.
A new fan theory centered around Victor from Fallout: New Vegas makes an interesting connection between the character and Cooper Howard from the live-action series for Amazon Prime. Victor is one of the most unique characters featured in New Vegas, and this theory puts a fascinating spin on the game.
As expected following the glowing reception, Amazon has renewed the Fallout TV series for a second season.
Warning: The below story contains FULL SPOILERS for Fallout Season 1, which is now streaming on Prime Video.
Warning: Fallout season one spoilers ahead!
In a surprise to no one, Amazon's Fallout TV series has been officially renewed for a second season.
Sales of Fallout games have shot up across Europe, with Fallout 4 reclaiming the No.1 spot.
Amazon’s highly anticipated Fallout television series premiered on the Prime video streaming service on April 10. The entire first season dropped at once and the show has received exuberant reviews by many fans of the games. Fans have been catching references to the games left and right, and a new one has been highlighted.
Amazon's Fallout TV show has — a few minor controversies aside — been a hit with fans since arriving last week; but while the show has covered plenty of the video games' post-apocalyptic basics — from Pip-Boys and Power Armour to Vaults and Vault-Tec — not everything made the cut, and its creators have now explained they deliberately held back some «iconic» stuff, including Deathclaws, to better do them justice in a potential Season 2.
I sort of reject that the Fallout TV show has Easter eggs hidden in it because it, as a whole, is the equivalent of one of those fancy Hotel Chocolat ostrich-sized patisserie collection bastards that cost 40 quid. However. Eagle-eyed viewers of the Fallout show noted that episode 6 gives you a number for Valt-Tec that you can actually get in touch with - 213-25-VAULT (or, 213-258-2858). Charges apply, as well as international codes if you're outside the US, which makes it 001-213-258-2858.
Fallout: London, the Fallout 4 mod set in a post-apocalyptic English capital that’s large enough to effectively be its own game, has been hit by an indefinite delay just two weeks from its planned release date. The reason? Fallout 4’s long-in-the-works next-gen update is now due to drop just two days after London’s planned launch date, which its fan devs say will “simply break” the ambitious project.
Crawl out through the fallout, baby! I've watched two episodes of Amazon's recently released Fallout TV show, a series for and about Walton Goggins' rizz (a thing the kids say). I've been on the Goggins hype train for over a decade at this point, and it's great that - oh sorry, I'm being told that the Fallout TV show is in fact about Bethesda's post-nukepocalypse RPG series of video games, and as such has given a massive player bump to said video games on Steam.