Vault Boy from Fallout
Image via Bethesda

Original Fallout lead designer Tim Cain says he loved the TV show

Straight from the creator's mouth.

Tim Cain, the project lead on the original Fallout, just dropped his review of Amazonā€™s new show, but you don’t need to watch all of it.

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In his review, Cain emphasized how the show nails the feeling of the Fallout universe. He said that the show managed to get everything from the visual aesthetics to the dialogue and storyline to fit right into a universe thatā€™s often hard to capture because it’s so different from other versions of post-apocalyptic worlds.Ā 

“For people who don’t want rambling, you can just stop, leave. ‘Tim said he liked the show.’ There you go,” said Cain.

As a creator and a fan, Cain said that he was thrilled by the amount of Fallout lore that gets packed into every episode of the series. ā€œWhat I especially love about it,ā€ Cain said, ā€œis that thereā€™s no exposition.ā€ The show just drops viewers into the heart of the Fallout universe, which Cain admits might be a little off-putting for viewers whoā€™ve never picked up any of the games. 

Cain also addressed his feelings on some of the biggest lore changes that the show introduced to the Fallout canon. When it comes to the big reveal that Vault-Tec planned to drop the first nukes, Cain said that he believes the company never got the chance. He thinks that the moment the bombs fell actually caught Vault-Tec off guard, and as proof he points to the fact that Barbaraā€™s daughter is with Cooper at a birthday party when everything goes down, rather than safely tucked away in a vault.Ā 

When it comes to the heated debate that fans have been having about the showā€™s relationship to the lore of Fallout: New Vegas, Cain said that heā€™s really not concerned about it. ā€œLet me just remind you that lore drift is inevitable in big IPs,ā€ he said, after spit-balling a number of different ways that the show could explain what happened to Shady Sands and where that event falls on the overarching Fallout timeline. Echoing a sentiment from a video he released two days after the show premiered, Cain asked fans to engage with the series in a fun and friendly way, rather than making personal attacks against the people who may or may not have made adjustments to the timeline.

Overall, Cain seemed joyous that the world he helped create nearly 30 years ago is continuing to thrive and bring he new fans. He said he was hoping for a season two, so heā€™s probably thrilled that Amazon has just confirmed it.Ā 


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Author
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Gabran Gray
Contributing Writer - Gabran has been an avid gamer since he was old enough to manipulate a keyboard and mouse. He's been writing professionally and covering all things video games since 2021.