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  • The discovery of the atomic bomb in the 1940s has given humanity a question the FALLOUT

  • series has strived to answer. If ever there would come a day when mankind possessed the

  • capacity to destroy himself, what would come of us? Some predict that’s where our story

  • will end, but what if it was only another bloody chapter of human history? You've experienced

  • the FALLOUT series in your own way, but want to learn more about its story. Well- to get

  • to the heart of the story- you have to go back to the beginning

  • Change comes to all nations...

  • In the early twentieth century the great powers of the old world thought that their rule would

  • never end. The Czars of Russia met their downfall at the hands of a bloody revolution. Western

  • Europe fought a great war against fascists who sought to build a reich that would last

  • a thousand years. It crumbled in less than a decade. The Japanese believed their Imperial

  • rule was eternal, yet they were the first to have their pride seared away by atomic

  • fire.

  • The United States of America emerged as the world's great power by the nineteen fifties.

  • Vast nuclear arsenals ensured that open warfare was a thing of the past, and soon after, America

  • entered a cold war with their enemies. It was a long uneasy peace – a perpetual status

  • quo as though the world were freeze dried and sealed in a vault for a century.

  • Those wandering the wasteland today might find it hard to believe that only two hundred

  • years ago the richest nation in the world existed here. No deathclaws, no super mutants,

  • no ghouls...

  • Most folk back then didn't have to fight for survival, or scavenge supplies. Factories

  • produced everything a person could wantby the millions. Walking into a store with a

  • stack of paper money, they could buy as much food, ammo, or clothing as they could carry.

  • In fact the biggestproblempeople faced was finding a place to keep it all.

  • Highways stretched three thousand miles from coast to coast with roadside diners selling

  • fresh burgers made from something the Old World called a “cow”. Riding in gas-guzzling

  • Chryslus cars, and drinking ice-cold soda pop, the Americans enjoyed their prosperity

  • for generations. Secure in their belief that their way of life would never alter. That

  • they would never be forced to evolve.

  • Change came slowly at first. And it was welcomed. People weren't satisfied just having a house

  • where fresh water came right out of a pipe in the wall. No, they wanted more. Always

  • more. They wanted robots to do their work for them, and they needed electronic computers

  • to do their thinking for them.

  • Companies like RobCo filled the demand for domestic robots so that citizens didn't have

  • to lift a finger. A robotic Mister Handy could walk the dog, do the laundry and watch over

  • the kids too, leaving mom and dad free to spend an evening on the town, or to watch

  • the latest show on the old Radiation King television set.

  • If they got lost on the road, an American consumer could use the new Personal Information

  • Processors to see where they needed to go without ever needing to open a map.

  • Of course all of these new-fangled technological wonders needed power to run. Gasoline had

  • been plentiful for over a hundred years, but the Earth had started to run dry by the middle

  • of the twenty-first century. More and more of the power came from atomic energy and,

  • thanks to companies like General Atomics, there were atoms to spare for decades to come.

  • Cities lit up, robots kept on humming and computer monitors kept glowing. Some factories

  • even started turning out atomic-powered cars with fuel cells that still have some juice

  • in them today - so don't go using those rusted old Corvegas for target practice.

  • Factories churned out toys for the kids, teddy bears, tricycles and comic books by the ton.

  • Dad could mix his rum with a bottle of Nuka Cola, and mom had new spring fashions every

  • year. Shelves were filled with snack cakes, canned meats and sugar-coated cerealsall

  • of it pumped full of preservatives so that it would stay fresh forever and mom wouldn't

  • have to take so many trips to the grocery store. You see, when it came to consumption-

  • the Americans were the best.

  • Yet even with the increased use of atomics, there wasn't enough energy for the billions

  • of people across the world. Oil was more precious than ever and the petroleum rich countries

  • of the middle-east sold their dwindling supplies at ever-higher prices.

  • Eventually the wells ran dry in most of the world. The uranium mines were scraped clean,

  • but no one wanted to give up their shiny new technology.

  • Change had come and with it, war.

  • The Middle East could have used their limited uranium stock to power reactors for a few

  • decades, but instead they squandered it on weapons to settle old scores. The European

  • Commonwealth had been proud of how they had joined together in one glorious unified state,

  • but it didn't take long before they turned on each other, scrambling for the last drops

  • of oil within their borders.

  • Alaska, with its abundance of natural resources, remained the source of America's power, and

  • the only place on Earth where oil still flowed. The far off territory was a tempting target

  • for a desperate China. The Americans foresaw invasion and fortified Alaska, but nothing

  • could deter China from capturing Anchorage.

  • With the two remaining superpowers at war, Canada was trapped in the middle and soon

  • annexed by their neighbors to the south. Allegedly this was so that the entire continent could

  • be one continuous nation allied against the Chinese invaders, but Canadians viewed it

  • as a ruthless bid for America to retain control of the world's remaining oil supply.

  • The Resource Wars had come to American soil.

  • In a resource war, the winner will always be the side that fights most efficiently.

  • China used the greatest minds of the East to create stealth technology that allowed

  • their recon teams to infiltrate and assassinate while remaining completely undetected. Taking

  • down high value targets with a single shot.

  • America had its own brand of eccentric genius. With the power of the atom at hand, unbridled

  • American engineers created scientific marvels the rest of the world couldn't have imagined.

  • The glut of consumer electronics that had flooded American stores were only the beginning

  • of the wonders created by the likes of RobCo and Poseidon Energy whose true focus was the

  • development of new weapons that could replace the inefficient tools of warfare used in past

  • decades.

  • Combat robots, energy weapons and cybernetics entered the war as America sought to retake

  • Anchorage. Battles were fought by daring men who fire nuclear warheads from shoulder-mounted

  • crossbows. Cyberdogs with the brain of a loyal hound encased in an unyielding titanium body.

  • Even robot butlers hovered across battlefields, armed with plasma guns and flamethrowers.

  • There was even a plan to engineer a new breed of mutant super soldiers, but it was the creation

  • of power armor that ensured American victory.

  • Power armor combined the mobility of an infantry soldier, with the resilience of a tank, and

  • the firepower of an entire squad. Fueled by microfusion cells, these elite troops could

  • inflict crippling strikes on Chinese military assets using a fraction of the resources of

  • conventional military units. Early models of power armor were devastating enough, but

  • after a decade of refinement the T-51b power armor represented the height or pre-war combat

  • technology. With the aid of these perfected armored suits, America quickly liberated their

  • territory from the Chinese.

  • In the modern day the T-51b has become a symbol of the Brotherhood of Steel, but centuries

  • ago it was the final majestic icon of American Exceptionalism.

  • By autumn of 2077 the overt conflicts in the Pacific were finished, and most Americans

  • were so tired after a decade of war that they genuinely believed peace had arrived. The

  • paranoid, or perhaps just perceptive, began stocking their bomb shelters, knowing that

  • China would not simply slink away across the ocean in defeat. A final confrontation was

  • coming.

  • In an effort to preserve at least part of humanity from the inevitable end that approached,

  • a secret enclave of America's elite set about ensuring survival at all costs. Victory? Rebuilding?

  • No longer viable options. Their full intent is lost to history, but documented plans include

  • taking refuge within a mountain, or an oil rig, and even launching a ship into space

  • to find a new planet to colonize.

  • The modern Enclave claim to be the descendants of that last group of America's elite. That

  • might be true although many residents of the wasteland would argue that it takes more than

  • a flag and a squadron of vertibirds to be a government of the people.

  • Regardless of whether or not the Enclave's claims are true, the majority of America's

  • population did not have access to off-shore bases, or secret mountain top fortresses.

  • Fortunately for a hundred thousand of them, the Vault-Tec corporation provided access

  • to radiation-proof shelters that could each keep about a thousand people safe while waiting

  • for conditions on the surface to calm down.

  • No where near enough to save everyone, but it offered hope and kept the public from panicking.

  • On October 23rd 2077 alarms rang across the United States, signaling an attack. There

  • had been plenty of false alarms and training drills over the years and it isn't hard to

  • imagine war-weary citizens shrugging their shoulders and going on with their day, unaware

  • that this was really the apocalypse they had feared.

  • Perhaps people laughed when they saw their neighbors racing to Vault-Tec facilities.

  • The lucky and privileged few who had been assigned a place within one of the Vaults

  • might have felt silly when the massive doors rolled shut, but they were among the tiny

  • fraction of humanity that could still feel anything at all when the bombs landed.

  • Historians still don't know much about what happened outside the vaults that day. People

  • weren't concerned with writing in their journals. Hard as it is to believe, there are still

  • ways to hear first hand accounts of the pre-war times. The sources aren’t exactly reliable,

  • though.

  • A few rotten old ghouls claim to have been alive back then. Most of them are just telling

  • tales, hoping to get someone to talk with them for a while.

  • There were a few scientists who managed to preserve their brains in jars before the war,

  • too. Some of those old brains are still alive today and might be able to discuss the old

  • days, assuming that any of them are still sane after being a disembodied brain for two

  • centuries. The right medical equipment has kept at least one person alive since before

  • the war. Trouble is, a man with that kind of will to live isn't going to take chances

  • by chatting with strangers.

  • Knowing how people lived before the war can help the wasteland tremendously. Scavengers

  • and research teams dig up all sorts of things that can't be identified. Any rusty old box

  • could hold an ancient secret to providing clean water or fresh food or limitless electricity

  • to the wasteland. At the very least the modern world can learn from the mistakes of the past.

  • The Americans never truly believed that their way of life could come to such an abrupt end.

  • But change comes to all nations, to all people, all ways of life. The only constant in man’s

  • struggle for survival is war, because war- war never changes.

The discovery of the atomic bomb in the 1940s has given humanity a question the FALLOUT

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