I don’t like the Fallout games, but the show might have made me a convert

Before I get started, I’m going to have to ask you to put your guns down, because here’s the thing: I don’t really like the Fallout games. My first experience of actually playing them was with Fallout 4, which I do admit isn’t the best way to start things off for a franchise that has run as long as it has, but it is what it is. I managed to make it a few hours into Fallout 4, but to be honest I just didn’t vibe with it. The game did a pretty bad job at making me care about my baby, and I just felt a bit listless heading out into the wastelands. Not to mention the fact that I really didn’t care for the stiff, boring shooting that becomes all the more painful when you encounter a flying enemy, V.A.T.S. or not.

Past that point, I’ve seen a good bit of playthroughs of both 3 and New Vegas, yet I more found people goofing around in them fun rather than actually enjoying what the games were doing themselves. When it comes to the OG, CRPG titles, well, I’m not really big on the genre except for rare instances (like Disco Elysium and my beloved Kim Kitsuragi). My partner, however, loves Fallout 4 – or, I should say they love to build bases and hang out with certain characters, they couldn’t give a radroach’s ass about that baby either. But their previous hyperfixations with the game have led to several info-dumping sessions that mean I’m broadly familiar with Fallout’s post-apocalypse world.

And so, I felt well-enough prepared to watch Amazon’s live-action adaptation of the RPG series, even if I was expecting to come away from it a bit ambivalent. After all, what interest could I have in it when it just hasn’t worked out for me so far, right down to some of the games’ aesthetic choices? Surprisingly enough, though, I… actually really enjoyed the show. Shock horror, right? This series the appeal of which has long been lost on me suddenly drawing me in?

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