VaultTec rebuilds the Fallout RobCo terminal as a working web experience. We started with the machine itself, then wired it up to a navigable New California Republic map, a vault reservation flow, and a hidden S.P.E.C.I.A.L. stat screen.
VaultTec rebuilds the Fallout RobCo terminal as a working web experience. We started with the machine itself, then wired it up to a navigable New California Republic map, a vault reservation flow, and a hidden S.P.E.C.I.A.L. stat screen.
A RobCo terminal doesn't glide. It clunks. It moves with a deliberate, mechanical stiffness, and reproducing that stiffness is the entire job. Navigation stays keyboard-driven and data-style, paced like the in-game hardware, so using it feels like operating a machine rather than clicking around a site.
The wording matches. "ROBCO INDUSTRIES UNIFIED OPERATING SYSTEM." "TERMLINK PROTOCOL." "Welcome, Vault Dweller." Boot text, menus, form headlines, all of it speaks one language, because a single ordinary button would knock the fiction over.
A complete four-screen terminal experience, all in Webflow.
Underneath all of it runs one in-universe copy system: every headline, label, and microcopy line written to stay inside the fiction.
Built start to finish in Webflow. No client, no brief, the only benchmark was the original terminal and how close a browser could get to it.