Cain appreciated the performances and storytelling, but singled out how the show nailed the Fallout “vibe” as its biggest achievement. “I was just looking at all the props,” he said of one scene. “I realized after a few minutes went by that I had not followed the dialogue at all, because I was so engrossed by it visually.”

On a more sour note, Cain took time to address the way fans of the series can behave poorly online, particularly regarding any perceived rivalry between Fallout entries developed by Bethesda (3, 4, and 76), and those from Interplay, Black Isle, and Obsidian (1, 2, and New Vegas). Cain spoke positively of Todd Howard, and said that “Some of the stuff you [series fans] say online is so off.” See also: the debate about whether the show somehow overrode or ignored the events of those non-Bethesda games, which has since been denied by a senior developer at the studio.

  • ShaunaTheDead@fedia.io
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    I read a review that said the show was “too woke”. I haven’t seen anything that’s woke except that a non-binary character exists and is referred to as “them”, and the shopkeepers in Filly seem to be lesbians but it’s not explicitly stated. It’s annoying seeing the word “woke” but it’s also kind of nice that it’s easy to spot the dipshits. Anyone using the word “woke” probably sucks big time.

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      7 months ago

      It’s amazing to me that “lesbians? owning a shop? impossible!” is a thought that people have. There are lesbians on my street, at my job, and at my Sunday evening class.

      I myself am bisexual. It’s just like… we exist man. And if a bomb went off in my city, I am far enough away to survive the blast. So now you’ve got a bisexual guy in the nuclear winter. OoOo so woke.

    • preach224@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      i’m pretty sure the subtext of “woke” is “there are women and non-white people here”

      same with “dei,” i suppose - all goes back to not liking women and poc 🙃

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        7 months ago

        i’m pretty sure the subtext of “woke” is “there are women and non-white people here”

        Or that the women in it aren’t explicitly tailored to their tastes. There’s a post going around some places about someone trying to “correct” the image of one of the characters to make them less “woke” (they were wearing a baggy jumpsuit). The resulting character’s back-end looks like it’s been plastiform sealed.

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          7 months ago

          i had forgotten all about Alloy and…was it Lara Croft?…and people “correcting” their appearances, good point!

      • VoterFrog@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I’m guessing this is it. The setting is a 1950’s culture but without the racism and sexism that were rampant at the time. Women and POC holding significant positions in the corporate world, which never would’ve happened in the actual 1950s. It is a fictional world, of course. People seem to forget that.

        • beardown@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          Which doesn’t really make sense given how jingoistic and rabidly anticommunist the pre war 1950s United States is depicted as being.

          Why would such a country ever end racial segregation, let alone permit LGBT acceptance? That would require a massive cultural shift, that is worth at least an entire episode of its own. Without such an explanation it just doesn’t really make sense

          The show is fake and made up, and so are the games, obviously. But the racial and sexual acceptance depicted doesn’t really make sense. Obviously there’s no problem in depicted characters that aren’t cishet white men. But why would such characters ever be treated as equal in such a fascist depiction of the United States?

      • Iapar@feddit.de
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        7 months ago

        Sounds like “woke” is a compliment then. Better then to be asleep and have no clue about what’s going on.

    • Renacles@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Woke might as well be a compliment at this point, anything being called woke just tells me it might be good.

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      If you show even the existence of a non binary character, they will call you woke. It’s more of a label about them then it is about three thing they’re criticizing.

    • Saledovil@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      “Woke” used to mean “Aware of systemic social issues”, but has been co-opted by the right to mean “Anything we don’t like”. So, anybody who unironically uses it in the new context is not worth taking seriously. To tell them apart, try asking them how they define “woke”.

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      7 months ago

      I saw some people complaining about Cooper’s daughter being bi-racial lol.

      Did they even play the game?

    • slingstone@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I haven’t watched the show, but reading your comment about the shopkeepers, the “problem” appears to be that they MAY be lesbians and they exist. That existence and possibility might be a trigger is sad to me. The hateful folks say it’s about homosexuality being shoved in their face, but, really, it’s a total rejection at the heart of their beliefs. It’s why when activists talk about the dangers of this bigotry, we ought to listen, because the existence or mere possibility of gay people being a problem for some people is only a short step away from the solution for those people being elimination.

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    7 months ago

    I think anything associated with Amazon puts a lot of people on the defense right out the gate, myself included. I would’ve loved to see a different studio handling this adaption tbh

    • darthsid@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Rings of Power and Wheel of Time were crushing in their ability to deliver disappointment.

      • sxt@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Wheel of time was so close too. If they just didn’t fuck with the script so much

  • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Not just the props - everything thing from Sugar Bombs and Nuka Cola to the interiors of the vault, the abandoned houses and even a certain drive-in theatre - but even story presentation details like the part at the very start of the very first episode where our vault dweller character presents herself in a way that is lot like the choice of character traits in the game.

    Mind you, the story develops and goes deeper way faster than in the actual game (you end up discovering way more of the lore in Season 1 than from playing the games, IMHO) and it has of course a lot more depth in the human relationship between characters side, but all in all it feels like home if you played and enjoyed the games.

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    7 months ago

    Just wanted to chime in as well: Thought I’d watch one episode, watched all eight in the end. It was really good.

    • MissJinx@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I loved it too! As a fan of a series that was never adapted correctly (dark tower) this show gave me hope. Also loved the actors! How can someone hate on some of those amazing performances

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        7 months ago

        Soon as I saw Walton Goggins on the cast list, I knew it had to be good somewhere. He never disappoints.

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    7 months ago

    As a person on the internet, I hate how people on the internet are so hateful.

  • Annoyed_🦀 @monyet.cc
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    7 months ago

    People want the thing to fail because Amazon and Bethesda, the opinion has been this way since the first teaser. Glad Tim likes it and i can’t wait to watch it as well when i can, there’s nothing but hype with their trailer.

    Hope it won’t devolve or drag for seasons though.

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      7 months ago

      Why are people upset about Bethesda? You mean because of the Microsoft acquisition?

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Probably thr fact they’re still releasing things on the same dates engine with the same formulaic stories without any new innovation for decades.

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          I swear the problem is the Bethesda old guard, its pretty clear they want to make semi-linear or adventure games but are pigeonholing themselves into making making big open world games. Also I suspect they have a too many cooks situation going on, they need to break up their main studio into smaller teams who work on multiple smaller projects at once.

        • DarkMetatron@feddit.de
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          7 months ago

          It is not the same engine but a ever evolved one. Saying that it is the same engine would be like saying that UE5 is the same engine as UE1

      • Annoyed_🦀 @monyet.cc
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        7 months ago

        Fallout in their hand isn’t up to the standard of hard-core fans, and also due to FO4’s dialog system, and the technical issue with 76.

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        7 months ago

        …Bethesda is a terrible developer and producer with a few good games under its belt that make people really dedicated to it— and I don’t super blame those people. It would be like if half of Zelda games were buggy and unfun and amateur and kinda-ugly trash— and so were most of their other first-party was too— but those three or four great Zeldas and two or three good Marios made people huge fans of the company. Or it would be like, you know, CD Projekt Red making one— maybe two— games so great that people decided all their other games must be great by default even when they’re not (which, well, yeah).

  • flamingos-cant@feddit.uk
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    7 months ago

    I really enjoyed the show, it was good. I just wish it didn’t take place in California. I hate that Bethesda’s idea of Fallout is a wasteland in never-ending strife, one that can never move past the scrappy survivor stage of the post-apocalypse.

    • BigBananaDealer@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      thats not just bethesda’s idea, most at obsidian also wanted it to go back to being less of a stable wasteland, which is why tunnelers were even created

      • flamingos-cant@feddit.uk
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        7 months ago

        True. I need to go back and replay NV again, but I do remember Lonesome Road being one of DLCs I enjoyed the least.

    • orphiebaby@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      That’s kind of the trend for post-apocalyptic media. Nerdy adults trend towards the cynical, while hope and progress is “kids’ and family stuff”

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        7 months ago

        I wouldn’t say that. If you take Fallout 1, 2, and NV as a trilogy you can see the rebuilding of society in a post-post apocalyptic story. Things change, but I don’t think they get better, it’s just that the problems take different forms. It’s actualy pretty cynical. No matter how much rebuilding happens or how many iterations of different societies are created, people will always find a reason to be at each other’s throats. You might say: war never changes.

    • FenrirIII@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Are you kidding? Current society is held together by TV, mobile phones, bubblegum, and laziness.

  • Eggyhead@kbin.run
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    7 months ago

    If you want a show to be more like the game, play the game. If you want it to be more like the book, read the book. Let the show be a show and try to appreciate it as a show.

    • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      7 months ago

      I haven’t watched the show yet, but I read that it with the NCR

      spoiler

      it kind of kills them off, and that’s boring and disappointing.

      The show is canon, so it’s going to impact future games. So that’s annoying in a way that “just stick to the medium you enjoy” won’t solve.

      I thought New Vegas was the most interesting because it was focused on rebuilding, and what comes after.

      Also I don’t know how to do the highlight-spoiler instead of the dropdown spoiler :(

      • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        My only solace in the Halo TV series is that it’s its own universe. 343 is shitting up their own story just fine on their own.

        And before I get grouped in with “the haters”.

        Halo 4 introduces new villain, gets killed in a comic.

        Halo Spartan Ops introduces new villain, fleshed out in comic, killed off in a cut scene at the beginning of next game.

        Halo 5 introduces new villain, gets killed off screen.

        Halo Wars 2 introduces new villain, “killed” off screen. Returns post credits anyway.

        Halo 6(Infinite) Introduces TWO new villains, killed in back to back boss fights. Promises more to come though.

        Can you see why I’m not hyped anymore?

      • SSTF@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I just finished the final episode of the season. I liked it for the most part. The characters- both the actors and the writing kept me engaged. The show felt like it kept moving and didn’t ever plod. Some of the larger lore implications I’m either lukewarm or not thrilled about.

        That criticism is okay. It’s strange to see this and other threads full of people trashing fans who didn’t love the show. That kind of personal attack for a differing opinion is managing to completely twist Tim Cain’s comments, and in a way be the kind of person he is cautioning against.

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      7 months ago

      Yup, this is like the Cowboy Bebop live action. Fans wanted something, got something and then bitched that it wasn’t exactly like the anime.

      • thedirtyknapkin@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        hmmm idk, i disliked the live action because of the acting and writing on cowboy bebop. i also don’t think three was any reason to make that live action. it felt like a soulles cash grab.

        compare that to say the one piece live action, or the last of us series, or even twisted metal. those were all shows that adapted things well while also changing a lot. it’s fine to adapt things to a be medium and tell your own story, just don’t expect a free pass if that story you tell is worse than the material you were given. like the Witcher, for example. that shouldn’t have even been that hard. it wasn’t actually a video game adaptation. it was supposed to adapt the books. but then they just went and did their own story with the characters that just wasn’t very good… certainly not nearly as good as the source material.

        i think that’s what frustrates me sometimes. when an adaptation just doesn’t hold up to the source. the cowboy bebop lie action wasn’t that bad, but the anime was fucking incredible. in a few years everyone will forget they even did a live action of it. it just wasn’t really worth remembering.

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        7 months ago

        I really liked the live action show. Like with One Piece it actually piqued my interest in the anime.

        • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I loved the anime, but also really enjoyed the live action. I’ve never seen either of the one piece shows but hopefully the live action doesn’t suffer the same fate as the live action cowboy bebop.

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    I’m glad I haven’t been reading much about the show online. I just finished episode 4 last night and I’m really loving the show. They absolutely nailed the visuals and general vibe of the world. I’ll admit to be being skeptical about the show in Amazon’s hands. The Rings of Power and first season of Wheel of Time were just poorly written. Though, I did feel that the second season of WoT picked up a bit. So, maybe the folks at Amazon are learning. My only remaining concern for Fallout is how subsequent seasons go. They have hyped the involvement of Johnathan Nolan who was behind Westworld on HBO. Westworld season 1 was downright awesome. But, the rest of the show felt like they were so busy trying to re-capture that magic that they forgot to tell a good story. Fortunately, Nolan is directing and producing Fallout and not writing it. So maybe it won’t get written into a corner where there really isn’t any more story to tell and several more seasons ordered.

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      You’re right about the writing, and the moment that sold me that the writing in this show is actually good was when Maximus and The Ghoul are fighting in Filly and instead of showing the entire fight, they cut to the people inside talking. Realizing that the fight adds nothing of substance but showy graphics is usually the indicator to me that the writers are in control of the vision of the show which pretty much always bodes well.

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    There are no haters like fans.

    “They changed it too much! This sucks! It’s nothing like the (books, characters, game, storyline) we love!”

    “This sucks. It’s just a retread. They didn’t do anything new, or was all fan service.”

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      7 months ago

      I love how accurate this is.

      Reinvent!

      No you reinvented too much!

      No we liked what you did before but now you retracted it, and it has an off vibe now!

      Boycott!

      The series is failing.

      The studios are going bankrupt because they ignored what we want!

      Why haven’t anyone else adopted a game/book we love?

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      7 months ago

      I don’t see many people saying that. I see more people expressing disappointment in the apparently underwhelming and abrupt demise of the NCR, which for all practical purposes resets the west coast to a lawless Fallout 1 type state.

      I’m not sure where I stand on that, because I could see the unraveling of the NCR as being interesting if expanded upon, but the point is that it is a reasonable opinion to hold. This Tim Cain video isn’t saying people shouldn’t criticize things or that they are unreasonable for not enjoying things. He’s saying that regardless of the merits of a production, you shouldn’t level personal attacks and moral judgements on creators just because you don’t personally like what they made.

      • That is a fair point and one I share; though I admit my bias. The NCR was always my favorite of the factions (excluding myself through Yes Man in NV) and it just seemed kinda fucked up with what they did to them. Not so much that they basically deleted them, but that they did it off-screen. I hope that future seasons explore that instead of using it as an excuse to not feature the NCR ever again.

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    7 months ago

    I have to admit I was also only looking at the props, because I very much like the visual style. I feel the creators overdid themselves a little, packing (probably too) many references directly in the first episode. Was a little overwhelmed visually and did not follow the story. Will have to rewatch, especially as the start of the episode is not like the games, where you primarily follow one (your) character, and rather not many in parallel.

  • SSTF@lemmy.world
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    I think people are taking the wrong takeaway from this. It is okay to dislike the show, it’s okay to criticize it. There is a difference between not liking a final production and declaring that the people who made it are terrible.

    This might seem like an obvious distinction, but I’ve ridden this ride before. Different factions of fans declaring themselves more “loyal” or “correct”- some of them hating everything new and getting nasty about the new creators, and other factions blindly loving all the new things. Each faction declaring the other as fake fans and trying to banish them. It is perfectly fine to not like some things, to express it, and to discuss it back and forth. The smug dismissal that fans have of other fans who have a polar opinion of specific productions in a franchise is exhausting.

    Tim Cain seems from his channel and his many talks like somebody who tries to think in this multifaceted way. Unfortunately many people clip his words and run off on tangents against his bigger ideas.

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    7 months ago

    I like the show, the only problem is that it reduces the universe for the purpose of its medium, and factions essentially become people. Otherwise, the show is what I would expect from a Fallout game, a slowly developing main quest where a lot of the experience is in the random encounters and side quests. I’m looking forward to the possibility of them talking about THE courier and their legend, and perhaps even bring out the lore of the random stranger. Worst criticism I have is that its removing a lot of the mystery surrounding Vault-Tec lore by serving it out on a silver platter, it was basically the one mystery that stretched out and was never fully revealed throughout the games, where you actually had to dig into to know more, now being served to any person who watched the show whether they want it or not. It’s sort of like my problem with Starfield, it brings you too close to all the major players in that universe way too quickly, making the world smaller and eliminating mystery, anticipation, and depth before it has had time to ripen.