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Key Takeaways
- The Fallout series reveals that Shady Sands was nuked after its fall in 2277, which many assumed meant New Vegas was no longer canon.
- Todd Howard has now confirmed that New Vegas and all other Fallout games are canon to the series.
- Shady Sands was nuked "just after" Obsidian's game, and 2277 was simply referring to the downfall of the NCR's first capital.
If you've been online at all since the Fallout show aired, you'll have seen a wave of angry New Vegas fans claiming the series contradicts the game and that Todd Howard and Bethesda are working to erase Obsidian's work in some machiavellian conspiracy. With the backlash mounting, Howard himself has come forward to clear the air.
Related
No, The Fallout Show Didn't Make New Vegas Non-Canon
The Fallout show captures New Vegas' heart and soul, and in that sense, the Obsidian game has never been more canon than it is now.
"There might be a little bit of confusion in some places," Howard told IGN. "But everything that happened in the previous games, including New Vegas, happened."
Why Do Fans Think The Show Contradicts New Vegas?
Spoilers for the show follow.
One of the big complaints is that, in Vault 4, you see a whiteboard with a timeline of the NCR's history. It lists the "Fall of Shady Sands" happening in 2277, with a big arrow pointing to a nuclear explosion. For context, Shady Sands is the first capital of the NCR and we know that in New Vegas, which takes place in 2281, it hadn't been nuked yet. However, 2277 is referring to the fall of Shady Sands, not its destruction - according to Howard, that comes "just after" the events of New Vegas.
In Obsidian's game itself, it's shown that the NCR is stretched too thin and reeling after the first Battle of Hoover Dam, hence why the Legion has been able to gain such a foothold in the Mojave Wasteland. So, not even the "Fall of Shady Sands" contradicts the games, as we saw firsthand in New Vegas that the NCR was on the brink of collapse. What state they're in now, we'll have to wait to find out.
The show even ends with a shot of New Vegas, but that has proven just as contentious as the nuking of Shady Sands because it looks to be in complete disrepair.
However, we know the series is set 15 years after the events of New Vegas, and a lot could have happened between whatever ending we chose and now.
It's possible the Tunnelers did invade the Mojave and lay siege to the city, or perhaps it's just falling apart as its new owner struggles to keep the lights on. Either way, its current state doesn't contradict the game either.
Fallout
Fallout is a franchise built around a series of RPGs set in a post-nuclear world, in which great vaults have been built to shelter parts of humankind. There are six main games, various spin-offs, tabletop games, and a TV series from Amazon Studios.