ALBAWABA - Unlike recent disasters, including the new Borderlands movie and Minecraft's live-action trailer, Fallout just received a Creative Arts Emmy Award for Best Music Supervision, which doesn't come as a surprise as it had an excellent soundtrack complementing the already great live-action adaptation.
Amazon's live-action answer to the Fallout series featured songs that suited the vibe and setting of Bethesda's beloved game, including 'I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire' by The Ink Spots, 'Blue Moon' by the legendary Frank Sinatra, 'All Over Again' by Johnny Cash, and many more.
Amazon's Fallout cops first-ever Emmy Award
The series quickly became a top contender for one of the best video game-to-series adaptations next to series/movies like HBO's The Last of Us, Neteflix's Arcane, Illumination's The Super Mario Bros., and arguably the Sonic movies as well.
It was received well by both fans and critics alike garnering an 8.5/10 on IMDB and 94 percent on Rotten Tomatoes.
Fallout told the story of characters we never met in the game franchise but did it so well that nobody could've complained about it as things like this could go downhill pretty fast.
(Amazon Prime/ Bethesda/ Fallout)
IMDB describes the series as "In a future, post-apocalyptic Los Angeles brought about by nuclear decimation, citizens must live in underground bunkers to protect themselves from radiation, mutants, and bandits."