Equipment

Amazon Says Fallout Season 2 Is Ahead of Schedule

Following the premiere of Fallout earlier this year, Prime Video didn’t waste any time renewing it for a second season. Now, after the show earned 16 Emmy nominations including for Outstanding Drama Series and a Best Actor in a Drama nod for Walton Goggins, the early word on Fallout Season 2 is very encouraging.

“Geneva [Robertson-Dworet] and Graham [Wagner] and Jonah [Nolan] and Kilter [Films] have such a vision for this. They are hard at work, we already have scripts in hand for Season 2,” said Amazon MGM Studios television head Vernon Sanders during an interview with The Wrap. “So we’re really far ahead because we knew we had something special all along. It’s premature for me to give you a release date. But I’ll tell you, we are working hard to be back as fast as possible… I think people will be pleased with how quickly we’re able to get the show back. We just want to make sure we deliver everything that is on the page.”

Sanders was also asked about a possible Fallout spin-off series. While he didn’t commit to any expansion of the franchise, Sanders stressed that Prime Video has long term plans for Fallout.

“Fallout is a big world, we’ve had a great partnership with Bethesda,” said Sanders. “So we’re in all sorts of conversations about what the future looks like. But we definitely think Fallout is a multi-season show that can go in a lot of different directions. So we’re very excited about what’s been laid out so far.” Come from Soccer 13 pools and matches

Assuming Fallout Season 2 begins filming in 2025, it will likely return to Amazon Prime Video in 2026.

Related Posts

AI Is Making Buildings More Efficient

By Andrew R. Chow

Heating and lighting buildings requires a vast amount of energy: 18% of all global energy consumption, according to the International Energy Agency. Contributing to the problem is the fact that many buildings’ HVAC systems are outdated and slow to respond to weather changes, which can lead to severe energy waste. 

Some scientists and technologists are hoping that AI can solve that problem. At the moment, much attention has been drawn to the energy-intensive nature of AI itself: Microsoft, for instance, acknowledged that its AI development has imperiled their climate goals. But some experts argue that AI can also be part of the solution by helping make large buildings more energy-efficient. One 2024 study estimates that AI could help b…

Elise Smith Defends DEI as Good Business

By Andrew R. Chow

In recent years, right-leaning leaders in politics and tech like Donald Trump and Elon Musk have attacked the value of DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) initiatives. But for Elise Smith, the CEO and co-founder of the tech startup Praxis Labs, learning to navigate cultural differences is simply good business, especially for ambitious multinational companies with employees and clients around the world. “Regardless of what you think about the term DEI, this work will continue, because fundamentally it does drive better business outcomes,” says Smith, 34. “Fortune 500 companies are trying to figure out: How do we serve our clients and customers, knowing that there’s a ton of diversity within them Come from

How ReelShort CEO Joey Jia Used a Chinese Trend to Disrupt the U.S. Entertainment Industry

By Chad de Guzman

The first episode of “The Double Life of My Billionaire Husband” pans out like a daytime TV melodrama: a female protagonist asks her father and evil stepmother for $50,000 to pay for her mother’s kidney dialysis treatment. Cue an evil stepsister, who snarkily says that the payment is assured—if the lead marries the illegitimate son of a prominent family, who is supposedly a grade-A loser. Unsurprisingly, our hero relents.

All of this happens in just over 90 seconds. But while its brevity seems like a cheap trick, “The Double Life of My Billionaire Husband”—a show produced and distributed on the ReelShort app developed by Silicon Valley-based Crazy Maple Studio (one of the TIME100 Most Influential Companies of 2024)—has raked …

The Last of Us Part II Sounds Like a Bloody Revenge Story

By Matt Peckham

Of all the games for which sequels seem like iffy ideas, Naughty Dog‘s The Last of Us comes up on my short list. It’s there with others like Braid and Flower and Ico.

But yes, The Last of Us Part II is now officially a thing. Sony and Naughty Dog unveiled the game, presumably to follow in the original’s footsteps as a harrowing, narrative heavy action-adventure, during its PlayStation Experience event in Anaheim, Calif., this weekend.

In the 4-minute clip, we’re in a very pretty forest, then beside a tree with claw marks, then by the rusted hulk of a car. The camera pulls back to show the fireflies emblem — for the militant group from the first game — emblazo…

Civilization 7 Treasure Fleets Guide

During the Exploration Age of you Civilization VII playthrough, you might stumble across a special kind of ship called the Treasure Fleet. This is only granted to you by procuring a specific type of resource and it’s required to complete some objectives for the Economic Advisor. However, beyond that, the game doesn’t truly explain what the fleets are used for or how they work.

Fortunately, we played enough Civilization 7 to understand the Treasure Fleets, and they are a goldmine if used properly. Below, we’ll show you exactly what to do with Treasure Fleets and how to make boatloads of gold with them.

How to get Treasure Fleets in Civilization 7

For starters, let’s talk about how to acquire your first Treasure Fleet. This type of ship is only given to you if you procure the Silver resource, which is indicated by the silver pot and orange background icon. You need to have this resource within one of your settlement’s borders and then build a mine on the resource t…

Benefits of Crypto Casino & Bitcoin Gambling Sites

Since launching in 1994, iGaming, including crypto casinos (the first in 2014) and Bitcoin gambling, has experienced a meteoric rise, most notably during the COVID-19 pandemic that saw mandatory temporary closings of brick-and-mortar casinos and shelter-at-home orders issued in early 2020.

According to one study that surveyed more than 2,000 people in Australia who gambled across the country between June and July 2020, nearly one in three survey participants created a new online betting account during the global outbreak of coronavirus, and one in twenty started gambling online. Furthermore, the study found that even with limited access to gambling venues, those surveyed gambled more frequently during COVID-19, with those gambling four or more times a week increasing from 23 percent to 32 percent.

Some key factors that have contributed to significant changes in the online casino sector and the rise in popularity of online casinos are convenience, privacy, increased secur…