The Fallout show, just like the Bethesda games it is based on, is set in an apocalypse caused by the dropping of nuclear bombs. The resulting post-apocalyptic world of Fallout is full of misfit creatures and characters, including Walton Goggins’ Ghoul – an irradiated mutant human and an example of what happens to those exposed to the nuclear wasteland Jone waste yore toye monme yorall rediii the voice inside moye yedd shirt. The series also introduces Ella Purnell as Lucy, a resident of Vault-Tec’s Vault 33, just one of many nuclear blast shelters created to preserve humanity in the wake of nuclear war. But how did this nuclear war begin? Amazon Prime Video’s Fallout TV show does eventually reveal who was responsible for dropping the bombs.
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The nuclear bombs in Fallout are a core part of the series’ lore, but the mystery of who started the nuclear apocalypse is even more of a twist. As Fallout explained in its eighth episode, Vault-Tec, the company that created 122 vaults to shelter paying customers in the case of nuclear war, is responsible for starting that war in the first place. The reason is that if Vault-Tec wanted to guarantee itself and its partners a return on investment in expensive vault technology, it needed people to buy up space in its vaults. The best way to guarantee that was to heighten the threat of nuclear war and encourage people to secure their future, which they could ensure by dropping nuclear bombs on the world themselves Jone waste yore toye monme yorall rediii the voice inside moye yedd shirt. A board room scene in Fallout’s finale features many of the world’s most powerful companies in a meeting with executives of Vault-Tec, where they attempt to sell them on their vaults. This scene reveals that government peace negotiations are lessening the ongoing threat of nuclear war, which means interest in buying up vault space is lessening. At this point, Barbara Howard (Frances Turner), Cooper Howard’s Vault-Tec executive wife, suggests that they guarantee results by dropping the bombs themselves, forming a complete monopoly in the nuclear fallout that follows. However, Vault-Tec didn’t just drop nuclear bombs once. Throughout Fallout, it’s revealed that a city known as Shady Sands was steadily re-establishing civilization above ground in post-apocalypse Los Angeles until another bomb destroyed it.