The show is apparently canon. It's not like the All Roads comic, Fallout Tactics, or the Fallout Bible where it's considered flavor materials and only elements of it are later added to the canon.
"We view what’s happening in the show as canon," Bethesda director Todd Howard told Vanity Fair. "That's what's great, when someone else looks at your work and then translates it in some fashion."
https://www.gamesradar.com/is-the-fallout-tv-show-canon-bethesda-games-todd-howard/
The show takes place in 2296 making it the furthest along we've seen the world of Fallout so it might gives us some leads on canon endings of Fallout 3, NV, and 4.
I've only watched through the show once but I am wondering what you felt were significant additions to the canon or lore of Fallout?
Here's some stuff I thought of:
-
We knew there were Vault-Tec brand vaults in Canada following the annexation because of letters found in mailboxes outside of Vault 101 in Fallout 3 but a lot of people assumed this would be limited to major cities. Some people believed the settlement to the north mentioned in The Pitt DLC was a reference to Toronto and thought there might be a vault there. The map in one of the latter episodes seems to suggest there are a lot more vaults up there than people thought.
-
I feel like there were enough references to the situation the Brotherhood of Steel is currently in with the early episodes to suggest what happened to them in the non-isometric games but I'd need to rewatch it to dig deeper. I don't know if there are mentions of their command structure or the Mojave chapter. Either would likely be a giveaway. I don't think the destruction of the Prydwen in Fallout 4 is out of the question. In Fallout 4 Captain Kells talks about the prior construction of airships on the West coast and Scribe Rothchild from Fallout NV mentions a rogue detachment of the Brotherhood of Steel that might be able to fill emerging power vacuums.
-
Even with Shady Sands gone I feel like the NCR might still exist elsewhere. The population of the NCR according to a holotape in Fallout 2 is around 700,000 and with around 30,000 people in Shady Sands I feel like that means there were a lot of people outside this region. Unless this is being retconned. The whiteboard in the show, if I recall correctly, had a note that said the fall of Shady Sands was in 2277 which would have put it during Fallout 3 and before Fallout NV.
-
I think it has finally been confirmed that Vault-Tec kicked off the nuclear war in some way like the cancelled Fallout film from back in the day originally wanted.
-
New Vegas might may have been destroyed. It looks like it isn't lit up and the buildings have been further damaged.
IMHO, it doesn't matter how the show does the lore. Just finished the 7th episode, and I love how they're tieing it all together. Sure it doesn't work chronologically, but it's pretty damn good how they've done it.
As someone who waited outside an Electronics Boutique, at a mall, at 5am to get a copy of "Fallout: A Post Apocalyptic Role-Playing Game", I'm enjoying it. Every Fallout game since that day in 1997, I've loved. Although 76 was a little wonky...
I have ~1400 hours in New Vegas, and ~1300 in FO4. Who knows how many hours in the others, as I didn't use Steam until 12 years ago....
I’m with you, I’m a fan since FO1 dropped in 97. I loved the show. I don’t care about fudged dates or whatever. The adaptation was solid as hell and I’m hungry for more
This about the 2277 shady sands thing?