Walton Goggins Teases FALLOUT Season 2 Says It's “A Whole ‘Nother Level”
If you thought Fallout season 1 blew the doors off the vault, Walton Goggins says you haven’t seen anything yet. While speaking to GamesRadar+, Goggins didn’t hold back on his excitement for what’s coming next:“I can tell you, being a big fan of the first season, that I'm so proud of – I'm not talking about my work, but all of the work that so many artists kind of put into that, like all the love that went into that. “This is a whole ‘nother level. I wasn't prepared for where the story was gonna go and, uh, and how fully fleshed out on the other side of introducing this world to people. “Now it is so lived in as if it's been there for two hundred years. It's really quite something. I can’t wait for people to see it.”That’s exciting to read! The show quickly became the streamer’s most-watched original series, and Goggins, who plays the Ghoul, a grotesque, gun-slinging post-apocalyptic outlaw with a past as a father and actor, earned an Emmy nomination for the role.The first season ended with a clear tease for what’s ahead… a trip to New Vegas and their a lot of potential for pure radioactive chaos.As for Fallout season 2, no official release date has been announced. But if Goggins is this floored by what’s coming, fans better buckle up.Fallout is the story of “haves and have-nots in a world in which there’s almost nothing left to have. 200 years after the apocalypse, the gentle denizens of luxury fallout shelters are forced to return to the irradiated hellscape their ancestors left behind — and are shocked to discover an incredibly complex, gleefully weird and highly violent universe waiting for them.”The world of Fallout is “one where the future envisioned by Americans in the late 1940s explodes upon itself through a nuclear war in 2077. “In Fallout, the harshness of the wasteland is set against the previous generation’s utopian idea of a better world through nuclear energy. It is serious in tone, yet sprinkled with moments of ironic humor and B-movie-nuclear-fantasies.”Are you ready for what's next in the wasteland?


If you thought Fallout season 1 blew the doors off the vault, Walton Goggins says you haven’t seen anything yet. While speaking to GamesRadar+, Goggins didn’t hold back on his excitement for what’s coming next:
“I can tell you, being a big fan of the first season, that I'm so proud of – I'm not talking about my work, but all of the work that so many artists kind of put into that, like all the love that went into that.
“This is a whole ‘nother level. I wasn't prepared for where the story was gonna go and, uh, and how fully fleshed out on the other side of introducing this world to people.
“Now it is so lived in as if it's been there for two hundred years. It's really quite something. I can’t wait for people to see it.”
That’s exciting to read! The show quickly became the streamer’s most-watched original series, and Goggins, who plays the Ghoul, a grotesque, gun-slinging post-apocalyptic outlaw with a past as a father and actor, earned an Emmy nomination for the role.
The first season ended with a clear tease for what’s ahead… a trip to New Vegas and their a lot of potential for pure radioactive chaos.
As for Fallout season 2, no official release date has been announced. But if Goggins is this floored by what’s coming, fans better buckle up.
Fallout is the story of “haves and have-nots in a world in which there’s almost nothing left to have. 200 years after the apocalypse, the gentle denizens of luxury fallout shelters are forced to return to the irradiated hellscape their ancestors left behind — and are shocked to discover an incredibly complex, gleefully weird and highly violent universe waiting for them.”
The world of Fallout is “one where the future envisioned by Americans in the late 1940s explodes upon itself through a nuclear war in 2077.
“In Fallout, the harshness of the wasteland is set against the previous generation’s utopian idea of a better world through nuclear energy. It is serious in tone, yet sprinkled with moments of ironic humor and B-movie-nuclear-fantasies.”
Are you ready for what's next in the wasteland?