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Big news for Fallout fans: reliable sources at Windows Central have confirmed that both Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas are getting full remasters or remakes.

TL;DR

Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas remasters confirmed — what’s real, what isn’t, and why it matters

Windows Central confirms both Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas are in active development as full remasters or remakes, separate from any Fallout TV show countdown.

The Fallout TV countdown confusion

  • The interactive countdown tied to the Fallout TV show is not connected to the remasters.
  • Jez Corden confirmed there is no shadow drop planned with the Season 2 finale.
  • The countdown points to a different, unknown announcement, likely show-related.

What is actually confirmed

  • Fallout 3 is getting a remaster or remake.
  • Fallout: New Vegas is also in development and expected to follow.
  • Both projects are being treated similarly to The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered.
  • They are real, greenlit projects — not rumors.

How these remasters are expected to work

  • Likely a hybrid approach: modern visuals (possibly Unreal Engine 5) paired with original Gamebryo gameplay systems.
  • The goal is to modernize performance and visuals without changing how the games feel.
  • This mirrors Oblivion Remastered’s approach, which exceeded internal expectations.

Possible bundle and developer questions

  • Fallout 3 and New Vegas could release together as a collection, though nothing is confirmed.
  • Obsidian’s involvement (New Vegas’ original developer) is unconfirmed, despite fan speculation.
  • Platforms, pricing, and release order are still unknown.

Why this is a big deal

  • Both games are notoriously unstable on modern PCs, especially Fallout 3.
  • An official remaster means proper modern support without community fixes.
  • The Fallout TV show has created a huge new audience that needs accessible versions of the classics.

What we still don’t know

  • No release window.
  • No confirmed platforms.
  • No official announcement from Bethesda or Xbox yet.

Important tips: The remasters are real but not imminent. Ignore the TV show countdown hype — expect an official reveal later, not a surprise release.

It doesn’t sound just like rumors anymore. The games are real, they are in development, and they are being treated with the same level of care as The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered.

But before anyone links this to the Fallout TV show countdown, slow down. The timer on the official show’s interactive site is not connected to these remasters.

People assumed a surprise drop was coming with the Season 2 finale, but it is not. Jez Corden of Windows Central made that clear. The remasters are real; but the countdown is something else.

The Countdown Mix-Up

Season 2 of the Fallout show is doing exactly what Season 1 did back in 2024. It is making people reinstall the games. So when fans spotted a countdown that matched up with the Season 2 finale, hype exploded. Some expected a shadow drop. A stealth release of Fallout 3 or New Vegas the second the episode ended.

That theory is off the table. Windows Central says their sources confirmed the remasters are separate. The timer is for a different announcement entirely. What that is, nobody knows yet. We will find out when the finale hits. It could be another show-related event. Maybe something tied to in-universe lore. Just don’t expect it to be a new game.

What Is Actually Happening

What is confirmed is that a Fallout 3 remaster or remake is in the works. And Fallout: New Vegas is next in line. They are being handled in a similar style to Oblivion Remastered, and that means visual upgrades, modern hardware support, and possibly some system updates.

Oblivion’s remaster last year was a quiet hit. It performed way above Microsoft and Bethesda’s internal expectations. That success pushed them to greenlight more legacy upgrades. Fallout 3 and New Vegas are perfect candidates. They are fan favorites, but hard to play cleanly on modern systems.

We do not have platforms, dates, or full feature lists, but they are in production.

Technical Details and Engine Talk

One of the big questions is how these remasters will work under the hood. Early talk suggests a hybrid method. Visuals rebuilt in Unreal Engine 5, but gameplay staying tied to the original Gamebryo systems. That may sound odd, but it makes sense.

Oblivion used a similar model. It looked great on modern machines, but still felt like classic Oblivion. For Fallout fans, that balance matters. You want it to run well and look clean, but you don’t want the mechanics rewritten.

There is also talk about bundling. Since Fallout 3 and New Vegas share a lot of assets and engine DNA, they could come in a joint release. Something like a Fallout Collection. No confirmation yet, but the idea is floating around, and it would make sense. Especially for fans of the Tale of Two Wastelands mod, which already connects both games into one continuous experience.

Then there’s the Obsidian question, as they made New Vegas. Tim Cain, one of the series’ creators, is now back at Obsidian. The studio has four active projects, but no confirmation if one is this remake. Fans are speculating, but nothing solid has been said.

Why These Remasters Are a Big Deal

Trying to run Fallout 3 or New Vegas on a modern PC is not fun. The games are really unstable. Fallout 3 especially is infamous for crashing, needing workarounds, and acting up with modern operating systems. Even with community fixes and guides like Viva New Vegas, it takes effort just to get a stable version running.

An official remaster would solve that. Clean installs, modern support, and no modding to fix basic issues. It also opens the door for a new generation of players who found Fallout through the show. They should be able to play these classics without fighting the software.

What We Still Don’t Know

Right now, there is no public info about developers, pricing, or release windows. We don’t even know if Fallout 3 will launch first, or if both games drop together. All of this is still in development and Bethesda and Xbox have not made any official announcement.

So this is not a “get ready to play next week” situation. It is happening, but it is not happening tomorrow.

Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas Remasters

If you had to pick, would you jump back into the Capital Wasteland or head straight for the Mojave?  Either way, the fact that both games are being worked on is good news.

Until we get an official trailer, it is all rumors and pieces. But this is the clearest sign yet that Fallout’s past is getting a proper update. And if they stick the landing, it could be the blueprint for more remasters to come.