Amazon Prime Video’s drama series Fallout is being transformed into a new haunted house at Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights in Orlando and Hollywood.
The Fallout haunted house will be available at both Universal Orlando and Universal Studios Hollywood for this year’s Halloween Horror Nights.
Inspired by the post-apocalyptic TV show and Bethesda video game franchise, the Fallout experience launches on 29 August at Universal Orlando and 4 September at Universal Studios Hollywood.
The series is set in the year 2296, 200 years after a nuclear war destroyed civilisation.
All that’s left is “an eradicated and highly violent hellscape known as the Wasteland”, which is home to “mutated animals and creatures, while gentle citizens take refuge underground in luxury fallout shelters known as Vaults”, Universal said.
In the haunted house, guests will see iconic scenes and characters from the show, with the journey starting in Vault 33 with Lucy MacLean as she escapes a “bloody massacre, only to discover an evil hidden secret”.
From there, guests will make their way to the surface, where they’ll dodge attacks from Scavengers and Raiders, as well as mutated cockroaches known as Radroaches.
New post-apocalyptic experience at HHN
As guests travel through the Wasteland, they will explore locations like the Super Duper Mart and meet the Ghoul, a bounty hunter who has been exposed to radiation.
Halloween Horror Nights runs until 2 November at Universal Orlando and Universal Studios Hollywood.
In more news for horror fans, Universal Destinations and Experiences‘ first year-round horror experience is opening in Las Vegas on 14 August as part of Area15’s 20-acre expansion.
The new attraction includes four haunted houses. These are themed to The Exorcist: Believer (2023), Universal’s classic monsters, an original story called Scarecrow: The Reaping, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974).
In an interview with blooloop, Universal Orlando’s Lora Sauls said: “It’s going to be an amazing experience, we love that Halloween Horror Nights is now its own IP and has grown beyond even just the parks.”
Images courtesy of Universal