The Fallout Mysteries Iceberg (Part 1)

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Published 2023-07-23
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The Fallout Universe has long been home to some of the biggest (and smallest) mysteries in gaming. Over the last few months, we've slowly compiled a great list of virtually every Fallout mystery and theory that could come to mind and assembled it all into an Iceberg format. Today is part one.

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Special thanks to ‪@TKsMantis‬ and ‪@UraniumFever76‬ for additional footage!

All Comments (21)
  • @CaptainSam666
    So there is a long running history in the fallout series of wastelanders calling things and places whatever their name sounds like or reads as instead of the correct name. Big Mountain -> Big MT -> Big Empty. Well I'm convinced that the "Blue Ghoul Whale" was her not understanding what her grandpa was saying when he told her that he saw a Beluga whale.
  • @dougla517
    Fun fact about the Mysterious Stranger in FNV: if you had the perk, the developers wanted to code it so that the Stranger would actually turn on you and kill you if you tried to target the Lonesome Drifter in VATS, but it was never implemented. It would have been the smoking gun and matching bullet casing to prove the connection between the two.
  • Fun Fact: The Fairline Hill Estates has a similar layout to Tranquility Lane from Fallout 3, with the houses and playground being nearly identical. If you felt some deja vu when you first went there, this is likely why.
  • @GlizKhalifa
    My theory for the Talon Company's benefactor has always been the Enclave. Artificially destabilize the region, while also getting rid of "do-gooders" who might oppose them taking control. Then, when they do successfully swoop in, they call off the Talons, and suddenly they're everyone's heroes for restoring stability to the region.
  • @thedullfork
    I've always wondered if the freaky mannequins in Fallout 4 were possibly a tongue in cheek reference to the clothing mannequins in Skyrim, which did in fact move around on their own due to a coding bug.
  • @AustinFoss00
    I always just assumed Deezer's lemonade was purified water with Mutfruit in it since he doesn't have lemons. And the "lemonade" healed you more than regular purified water because it heals as much as water + eating a mutfruit would
  • @madnessman179
    The reason that the mysterious stranger again looks like a clean shaven young fellow is mainly because fallout 76 takes place CENTURIES before any fallout game.
  • @shadesofslay
    I dunno why, but even now, in my late 30s, I find the cosmic horror hints in the fallout universe as creepy as I did as a kid. I think it’s the juxtaposition with the world or something, I can’t explain it. The damn Dunwich building creeped me out more than any horror game
  • @Zeraph_775
    Please never stop making fallout content. I absolutely love putting these vids on and learning from you
  • @Galvamel
    I think the chained up ghouls were not that man's family, I think they were security. Whatever that guy was hiding from was so terrifying that he fortified his house with monsters. If you look at all the alarms (hanging cans) and chains, they weren't designed to keep the ghouls in, they were designed to keep something else out.
  • I just like to imagine raiders or any other wanderers of the wasteland setting mannequins up anywhere and everywhere for the giggles like imagine setting up a whole scene like a murder with mannequins just to freak out the next raider group passing through
  • @CrypticNat
    Personally, I like to think that the mannequins we see standing around the streets of Boston are actually possessed by people who died back in 2077. Because the mannequins are the closest things they can find to having a "human body" again, they latch on to them, and they try to go about their days just like they did before, perhaps not even realizing what they're doing. That's why they're standing around in the streets. Maybe they were trying to walk there. Or when they're underground in subway stations, they might wait for the train/subway there, just like they would have done back when they were alive. Makes me feel bad for always shooting those mannequin's heads off, though.
  • @satlypepsi
    Fallout 4 had a quest that shows you teleportation can be used with radio frequency and disguise it with music this could explain some parts of the mysterious stranger
  • @tri-sapien6487
    I've always preferred longer videos over shorter ones. EpicNate never disappoints. Still would wish for a full 2-3-4 hour video, but that would be hell to edit.
  • @TheoRae8289
    After learning the teddy bears frequently represent babies (thought I'm sure not always), I had the thought that the mannequins might have been stand-ins for people evaporated by the bombs, like the shadows that are apparently in Hiroshima. But they could be a doctor who reference. There were murderous mannequins in Chris Eccleston's first couple of episodes at the 9th doctor. (I think they show up during Tennant's first run in like 1 episode)
  • @Vavalry
    There were 3 expeditions sent to the commonwealth, with Danse saying the first one was a “huge success bringing back tons of prewar technology and documents”. Its highly likely the initiate was part of that first expedition and just died there since we get no confirmation for who lived and died in the first initial expedition
  • @matth2283
    The Mysterious Stranger being tied to luck, to me, suggest that it is a complete random occurrence, meaning you two just so happen to want to kill the same target. Why he wants to kill that person is the better question.
  • What if the rest of the world is fine and people come to America for the chaos?