Warning! Contains major potential spoilers for Silo season 2 and Hugh Howey's Shift.

Summary

  • Watching Amazon's Fallout has raised concerns about Apple TV+ Silo's future due to similarities in dystopian themes and ideas.
  • Fallout and Silo share parallels in plot origins and themes of control and power, making one concerned about the novelty of Silo's future seasons.
  • Silo's serious tone and exploration of moral implications set it apart from Fallout, offering a unique perspective on retrofuturistic dystopia.

After watching Amazon's best sci-fi show, I could not help but grow increasingly concerned about an sci-fi shows, like 1899, The Last of Us, and Sweet Tooth, have come out in the last couple of years, but only a few have had a lasting impact on me. The reason being that, as much as I like shows with ambitious explorations of human perception, alternate realities, pandemics, and other epic-scaled fantasies, I'm always more drawn to series with traces of realism and some semblance of truth.

Retrofuturism is another sci-fi theme that has always fascinated me because it creates the perfect paradox between the comfort of the past and the uncertainty surrounding the future. Since Amazon's Fallout and Apple TV+'s Silo tick all the right boxes for me with their retrofuturistic aesthetic and grounded explorations of dystopia, control, and freedom, I was equally excited to watch both live-action adaptations. Little did I know that watching Fallout would reveal a dark truth about Apple TV+'s Silo's future and make me worry about the show's ability to sustain the same level of novelty in season 2 as it had in season 1.

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Silo Season 1 Ending Explained

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2

Fallout Has Already Spoiled One Of Silo Season 2's Biggest Potential Twists

Fallout & Silo's Bunkers Have Similar Origin Stories

As far as character beats and plot progressions are considered, Fallout and Silo are significantly different. Even from a visual standpoint, Silo is bleak with its rusty orange and blue color scheme, while Fallout is much brighter with a vibrant mix of diverse and rich pastels. However, when it comes to the two shows' big twists, they share more uncanny parallels than one.

Silo series, Shift, discovering all the plot points the show's second season will likely cover. The book reveals that only a few selected humans were moved to the silos after a nuclear attack made the world uninhabitable.

While I was initially intrigued by Fallout season 1's ending twists and revelations, the more I learned the truth about its central vaults and Vault-Tec's plans, the more a sense of déjà vu dawned upon me.

Of the 50 silos that exist, 49 accommodate generational populations, and only the citizens of one will ultimately be chosen to repopulate Earth's surface 500 years after the nuclear attack. One of the silos, Silo 1, also accommodates managers/leaders who use cryogenic technology in shifts to control and manage all the other silos. Although there are a few more nuances to the story, Hugh Howey's Shift also discloses that the nuclear attack was orchestrated by the same people who built the central silos.

While I was initially intrigued by season 1's ending twists and revelations, the more I learned the truth about its central vaults and Vault-Tec's plans, the more a sense of déjà vu dawned upon me. I had seen/read all these story developments somewhere else...in Hugh Howey's Shift. Since Silo season 2 will likely adapt at least the first half of Hugh Howey's Shift, its similarities with Fallout season 1's final arc could seem a little too familiar and unoriginal to those who, like me, have watched the Amazon show.

Silo's World Order Operation Fifty & Fallout's Vault-Tec's Plans Seem Eerily Similar

The Antagonists In Both Shows Wanted Control

In Hugh Howey's Shift, the silos' construction falls under a government-planned initiative called World Order Operation Fifty (W.O.O.L.). W.O.O.L.'s primary goal is to prioritize humanity's preservation. Therefore, when enemy nations weaponize the United States' commonly used self-replicating nanobots and threaten the nation's future, the leading forces of W.O.O.L. step in and orchestrate a nuclear attack. This attack forces selected humans to accommodate the silos, and with each ing generation, the silo citizens forget more and more of the truth.

While W.O.O.L. is driven more by a skewed sense of nationalism and Vault-Tec by corporate greed, both highlight the lengths authorities would go to maintain control over the masses.

Although there are no destructive nanobots on the planet's surface in Fallout, Vault-Tec, like the government organization in Silo, also dropped a nuclear bomb to make people accommodate the bunkers. The leading evil forces in both franchises are power-hungry, determined to blind the populace to their true motives by shrouding facts and limiting everyone's access to information. While W.O.O.L. is driven more by a skewed sense of nationalism and Vault-Tec by corporate greed, both highlight the lengths authorities would go to maintain control over the masses.

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What Has Silo's Author Hugh Howey Said About The Book Series' Fallout Parallels

The Parallels Were Unintentional

Walton Goggins as the Ghoul wearing a cowboy hat next to a weathered picture of the Vault Boy from Fallout
Custom image by Debanjana Chowdhury

Unsurprisingly, on many occasions, Hugh Howey has been asked about his take on the similarities between Silo and Fallout. In a Reddit thread (via Reddit), the author once explained that he and Fallout's game designer, Chris Avellone, grew up in "the same Cold War era." This was one of the primary reasons they had similar influences and created similar post-apocalyptic stories. Howey also added that he loved the first two Fallout games but did not think about them while writing his books.

Name of Show

Rotten Tomatoes Critics Score

Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score

Silo

88%

63%

Fallout

93%

89%

In another interview (via Tumblr), Howey stated how, as much as he loves the Fallout games, his motive was not to draw any inspiration from them when he wrote Silo. However, he also agreed that some similarities were likely "subconscious and coincidental." Hugh Howey's explanation makes sense since Silo and Fallout are not the only shows and games that dabble with similar ideas. Unfortunately, the author's insights do not diminish my concerns about Silo season 2. What does make me feel optimistic about Silo's future, though, is the show's distinct tone and voice.

The second seasons of both Silo and Fallout have been confirmed. While Silo season 2 is scheduled to be released on Apple TV+ in 2025, Fallout season 2's release window remains unknown.

Silo's Serious Tone Thankfully Gives It Its Own Unique Identity

Silo Season 2 Can Still Be Great

Silo looking around a field in Silo

I started watching Silo and Fallout because of their similar retrofuturistic visuals, dystopian themes, and explorations of the human condition in the face of extreme peril. However, I continued watching the two series for entirely different reasons. Fallout drew me in with its hilarious antics and depictions of all the bizarre vaults and creatures in its world. The show's comical gore and dark comedy also kept me entertained, and part of its appeal also came from its ability to not shy away from unfolding multiple stories, across several timelines, simultaneously.

Unlike Fallout, Silo's serious tone made me contemplate the moral implications of the antagonists' actions and ponder over the show's intriguing parallels with Plato's Allegory of the Cave.

I was hooked on Silo from episode 1 because it effectively played with my sense of perception. Like its characters, I was clueless about the world outside the central silo but desperately putting together every piece of the overarching puzzle to learn more. Unlike Fallout, Silo's serious tone made me contemplate the moral implications of the antagonists' actions and ponder over the show's intriguing parallels with Plato's Allegory of the Cave. If Apple TV+'s Silo maintains a similar introspective approach toward its ideas in season 2, I'm sure I will be able to overlook its similarities with Amazon's Fallout.

Silo TV Poster
Silo
Release Date
May 5, 2023

In a dystopian future, men and women reside in a vast underground silo governed by strict regulations, believed to shield them from the hazardous world above. The series delves into the complex social order within the silo and the mysteries surrounding their subterranean existence.

Cast
Rebecca Ferguson, Common, Tim Robbins, Chipo Chung, Caitlin Zoz, Matt Gomez Hidaka, Angela Yeoh, Olatunji Ayofe, Khairika Sinani, Will Patton, Akie Kotabe
Showrunner
Graham Yost
Directors
Morten Tyldum, David Semel
Seasons
2
Streaming Service(s)
AppleTV+