At a glance
Expert’s Rating
Our Verdict
Fallout’s second season retains the charm, action and pacing of its first season, deepening the lore of the games and introducing us to new locations and characters. Even if it is slightly overstuffed, it’s a fun time in the wasteland.
Fallout proved a sensation for Amazon when it first released in 2024. With the game series delighting fans since 1997, across several console generations, there were (of course) nerves about whether the franchise could make a smooth transition to the small screen.
Showrunners Graham Wagner & Geneva Robertson-Dworet proved doubters wrong, delivering one of the finest video game adaptations of all time. It honoured the legacy of the games with plenty of references for eagle-eyed fans, while expanding the post-apocalyptic world and introducing us to a string of new, well-rounded characters, including Ella Purnell’s Lucy Maclean and Walton Goggins’ scene-stealing Ghoul, who had been the screen star Cooper Howard in another life.
With such a huge success for the first season, the question is now whether the show’s sophomore season could live up to the hype, particularly drawing from New Vegas, one of the most loved entries in the game series. Read on for my spoiler-free thoughts on the season.
It makes for a gripping, tense watch that never skimps on its bloody violence

Ella Purnell, Walton Goggins
Welcome to New Vegas
One of the main differences between this season and the first is the introduction of New Vegas, one of the most iconic locales in the game series. It certainly adds an extra dynamic and introduces further mysteries. The aesthetic offers a welcome change from the remnants New California Republic of the first season. On Lucy and The Ghouls’ journey in pursuit of her father Hank (Kyle MacLachlan), we encounter plenty of memorable characters and organisations that are constantly surprising and dangerous in equal measure. The wasteland has certainly not become any safer between seasons.
While we found out the answers to some of the lingering questions across the first season, there are plenty of further puzzles teased here around Vault Tech’s origins and how Cooper Howard became The Ghoul in the main timeline. There are numerous flashbacks once again to his life before the titular fallout. Alongside Lucy’s journey we also keep up with Vault 33, including her brother Norm. The Brotherhood of Steel are also never too far from focus, given more prominence here than in the first season, with Maximus (Aaron Moten) getting the spotlight.
Admittedly, there are a lot of ongoing storylines – perhaps dialling back a few would have made this season even stronger.

Aaron Moten
Tensions start to escalate
While the first season did a brilliant job introducing us to this world on the small screen, with much of the world-building and groundwork in place, the second season takes things up a notch. There is constant action across the multiple storylines and locations as tensions begin to rise and several factions prepare for conflict. It makes for a gripping, tense watch that never skimps on its bloody violence.
Even though the show is dark in tone and the wilderness deadly, there is plenty of humour to cut through the bleakest moments and give it a quirky sense of charm. Lucy in particular remains a lovable hero, delivering some almost Coen-Brother level quips that really help the show to be more than just a bloodbath.
There is once again a delightful blend of 50s and 60s needle drops from Sam Cooke to Roy Orbison and Bill Haley and The Comets, offering both well-known favourites and deeper cuts.
Winning additions to the ensemble
The cast once again do some heavy lifting – Purnell and Goggins are a delight together, sharing electrifying chemistry. Meanwhile, MacLachlan gets given more material than ever before. In addition to characters introduced in the first season we are treated to several brilliant guest stars, especially Kumail Nanjani as a member of The Commonwealth and Macaulay Culkin in a different kind of role for him.
Ella Purnell shines once again as Lucy, altered by her new found knowledge at the end of the first season, full of dogged determination to do the right thing and catch her father. Goggins again has to shift gears between playing Cooper, a suave Hollywood star and the unpredictable Ghoul. He effortlessly slips between the two, sometimes within the same scene.
The new additions in both guest stars and the supporting cast help to keep the show fresh and expand the universe, deepening the lore of the show and games.
Purnell and Goggins are a delight together, sharing electrifying chemistry

Walton Goggins, Frances Turner
Should you watch Fallout season 2?
Fallout’s second season deepens the world introduced in the first and, as with the best adaptations, feels accessible to both newcomers and those familiar with the source material.
It may be a tad overstuffed in terms of the number of ongoing plots but there is so much to admire from a visual standpoint and in terms of world-building that it is hard not to be swept up in the scale of it. The performances continue to deliver and lend it plenty of charm and humour, amidst the chaos.
Given the success of the games and the first season, there are plenty more stories to tell in this universe about Lucy, Hank, Cooper and more and no doubt the show will continue to run and go to more beloved areas of the gaming universe, introducing it to a new legion of fans.
Fallout season 2 drops on Amazon Prime Video globally on 16 December 2025 at 6pm PST, which is 17 December 2025 at 2am GMT. New episodes will release weekly after that on Wednesdays.
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