Did Bethesda’s Todd Howard put a Fallout Vault in his hometown? 🤔

The Fallout TV show may have just revealed there’s a Vault where Bethesda’s director grew up.

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

What you need to know

What you need to know

Amazon’s popular newFallout TV showis canon, and has tons of links to the franchise’s mythos that include the appearance of several well-known factions, various references to the events of the games, and even a cameo from a character thatFallout: New Vegasfans will recognize instantly. One of the more interesting connections, though, is a map visible during Season 1’s finale episode that shows the locations of Vault-Tec’s various nuclear survival shelters.

The map doesn’t appear to have a blue light foreveryVault in the post-apocalyptic — it seems to be missing a few from variousFalloutgames — but it does have most of them, including several that we’ve never seen or heard of before. And thanks to Fallout content creator Tunnelsnakesfoolmapping the Vaults with Google Earth, we now have a rough idea of where each bunker site is.

Tunnelsnakesfool’s map (check it out inthis Reddit post) has revealed some intriguing potential new information about Vault-Tec’s shelter network, such as the possible presence of a Vault in Canada and a huge cluster of the sanctuaries in Texas. A friend of Windows Central, though, showed us the coolest implication of all: the possibility that there’s a Vault located in the hometown of none other than Todd Howard himself, director of the Fallout series' steward Bethesda Game Studios.

Howard was born in Lower Macungie Township in Pennsylvania, so I plugged its name into Google Maps and cross-referenced its position with the map of all the Vaults from the TV show. Sure enough, there’s a telltale blue dot nearly right on top of the township’s location, suggesting Vault-Tec may have placed a bunker in or close to the area in Fallout canon. The screenshots above illustrate this clearly, though you can also use Google Maps to see for yourself.

-Best Fallout games, ranked-Fallout player count resurgence-Best Fallout franchise sale deals-Fallout games now streaming-Fallout TV show interview-Fix Fallout 4 ultrawide

There’s no concrete confirmation of this, of course — it was determined with an unofficial (but very well-made) community-drawn Google Earth chart, after all. It’s also entirely possible that Bethesda’s placement of a Vault in this region of eastern Pennsylvania was completely coincidental. Even so, it’s a fun potential easter egg, and I’m choosing to believe it was intentional even if it wasn’t. Showrunners and game developers are keenly aware of how dedicated fans of their creations are, so it wouldn’t surprise me if this detail was included purposefully.

Sadly, there’s no way to know what wasactually going onin that Vault; as veterans of the Fallout games know, most of the shelters were secretly designed as controlled environments for scientific experiments (many of them were quite horrifying). Maybe this one was one of the more innocent ones, though, and merely tasked its inhabitants with making games about shouting dragons and ancient artifacts in space. Who knows?

If you’ve never played any of the Fallout games Todd Howard, Bethesda, and other developers have worked on, now is a great time to step out of the Vault and explore the wasteland. Every game in the franchise is available to play either on Xbox withXbox Game Passor PC withPC Game Pass(Ultimate gives you access to the games on both platforms); this includes Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout Tactics: Brotherhood of Steel,Fallout 3, Fallout: New Vegas, Fallout 4, andFallout 76.

Get the Windows Central Newsletter

Get the Windows Central Newsletter

All the latest news, reviews, and guides for Windows and Xbox diehards.

Notably,Fallout 4— the latest single-player entry in the series — just gotits long-awaited next-gen update. To be honest,it’s pretty disappointing for PC players, though big performance enhancements and new visual and performance modes on console make it a good patch for Xbox and PlayStation users.

Brendan Lowry is a Windows Central writer and Oakland University graduate with a burning passion for video games, of which he’s been an avid fan since childhood. He’s been writing for Team WC since the summer of 2017, and you’ll find him doing news, editorials, reviews, and general coverage on everything gaming, Xbox, and Windows PC. His favorite game of all time is probably NieR: Automata, though Elden Ring, Fallout: New Vegas, and Team Fortress 2 are in the running, too. When he’s not writing or gaming, there’s a good chance he’s either watching an interesting new movie or TV show or actually going outside for once.Follow him on X(Twitter).