Based on one of the greatest video game series of all time, Fallout is the story of haves and have-nots in a world in which there’s almost nothing left to ha...
In my opinion, it very quickly became a generic zombie apocalypse survival story after a couple episodes. I thought the fungal angle to a zombie outbreak was a very interesting take, and I would’ve liked to see a bit more focus on that aspect of things. But they hardly showed off the zombies at all. It gave me TWD vibes for most of the episodes. And not the good “look at the flowers” vibes, but the “spend half of Season 2 walking up and down this small stretch of road looking for a girl who isn’t there” vibes.
The cast were all fantastic, but I just wasn’t that hooked with the storytelling, I guess.
I couldn’t disagree about genericness more. Also, the zombies have never been the central source of conflict for TLoU; they are just a plot device used as backdrop to flush out interpersonal and fundamentally human conflicts.
In my opinion, it very quickly became a generic zombie apocalypse survival story after a couple episodes. I thought the fungal angle to a zombie outbreak was a very interesting take, and I would’ve liked to see a bit more focus on that aspect of things. But they hardly showed off the zombies at all. It gave me TWD vibes for most of the episodes. And not the good “look at the flowers” vibes, but the “spend half of Season 2 walking up and down this small stretch of road looking for a girl who isn’t there” vibes.
The cast were all fantastic, but I just wasn’t that hooked with the storytelling, I guess.
I agree, was meh. Didn’t finish the season.
I couldn’t disagree about genericness more. Also, the zombies have never been the central source of conflict for TLoU; they are just a plot device used as backdrop to flush out interpersonal and fundamentally human conflicts.
Eh, I feel like that’s actually what makes it generic. The “survivors are the real monsters” trope is kinda played-out, IMO.