Fallout S2 Episode 2 Has the Greatest Easter Egg the Show Could Possibly Conceive
Minor Spoilers for Fallout S2E2 Ahead
Fallout Season 2 has already gotten its flowers, with the show’s reception (via critics and fans) breaking a record on Rotten Tomatoes, earning a score higher than any other second season of a live-action video game adaptation. It remains to be seen if this strong debut continues through the conclusion, but Episode 2 is as strong as Episode 1. Putting a premium on Maximus and the Brotherhood of Steel, it’s dealing more directly with the …fallout of Season 1 than Episode 1 did.
So far, Fallout has been filled with Easter eggs, if not outright homages, paid to the New Vegas setting. Fallout: New Vegas players no doubt recognized the T-Rex statue in Episode 1, and there will no doubt be more in the following episodes. However, it’s hard to imagine anything topping the wider franchise Easter egg in Episode 2. It’s not exactly a “blink and you’ll miss it moment,” it’s more of a pause-the-TV-and-scream moment. Without going further into spoiler territory than I have to, fans should keep an eye out for something extraterrestrial.
Fallout Season 2’s Vault 24 Explained
Fallout Season 2’s first episode introduces fans to Vault 24, an eerie location with a fascinating mystery at its center.
Was That a Zetan?
YEAH DAWG IT WAS. As fans know, the Zetans are a species of alien who have been involved with the Fallout timeline since before The Great War. They remain largely mysterious, other than it’s just cool and fitting to have aliens in this post-apocalyptic setting. Indeed, they’ve appeared in most games since Fallout 3, including its Mothership Zeta DLC, New Vegas, Fallout 4, Fallout 76 (Invaders from Beyond), and Fallout Shelter Online.
- Fallout 3 – Extremely rare encounters that introduced them into Fallout lore
- Mothership Zeta DLC – Introduced new models, ranks, and firmly established them in Fallout lore
- Fallout: New Vegas – Rare encounter, save for those with the Wild Wasteland perk that gave them a peek at a Mothership
- Fallout 4 – scripted rare encounter, more on par with New Vegas than Zeta
- Fallout 76: Invaders from Beyond – Zetans openly invade Appalachia, pushing them further toward antagonists. Introduces even more variants.
- Fallout Shelter Online – Enemy Units
What makes this Easter egg so special is how entirely optional it is; it was not needed in that Brotherhood of Steel scene at all. It shows that there is a lot of collaboration and integrity in this adaptation, which explains its Rotten Tomatoes record to some degree. Indeed, Walton Goggins had made it clear that he hasn’t (and likely won’t) play the games to maintain the authenticity and originality of The Ghoul. It makes perfect sense for the actor, but for those writing and crafting the world of Fallout‘s show, it’s clear they very much care and are involved. Seeing a Zetan feels almost like a fever dream, like the one thing they wouldn’t adapt, and it’s all the more special because of it.
The Fallout Franchise’s History With Aliens
Aliens have had a constant presence in the Fallout series, but related encounters seem to be on the rise as more Fallout titles are released.
Aliens Have No Real Consequence in Fallout Lore
That brief glimpse also reopens one of Fallout’s longest-running tonal debates: do aliens fit in this world? Aliens have always existed on the fringes of Fallout, hovering between joke, horror, and genuine sci-fi intrusion. By acknowledging them visually, even in passing, the show signals that it isn’t afraid of Fallout’s strangest corners, but it’s also careful not to let them dominate the narrative. The Zetan sighting doesn’t derail the Brotherhood storyline and doesn’t really need explanation. It simply exists, much like they do in the games themselves.
Fallout works best when its weirdness feels earned, rather than foregrounded. The show seems to understand that Fallout‘s Zetans are most effective when they provoke questions instead of answers. Why was it there, and what was it doing before? Were they observing? Abducting? Interfering? Or was this just another quiet reminder that the Fallout universe is bigger, older, and more unknowable than any single faction’s plans for the world?
More importantly, this moment reinforces trust. It tells viewers that the creators know the lore deeply enough to pick their spots and are confident enough to leave some things unexplained. If Season 2 continues to deploy deep-cut elements like this with the same level of care, Fallout will no doubt continue its hot streak, even if this particular moment is hard to top.
- Release Date
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April 10, 2024
- Showrunner
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Lisa Joy, Jonathan Nolan
- Writers
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Lisa Joy, Jonathan Nolan
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Ella Purnell
Lucy MacLean
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