Summary
Fallout 76has allegedly used some Vault Boy fan art without its creator’s permission. But the purported move appears to have been made in error, which theFallout 76team has reportedly already taken steps to remedy.
Bethesda’s West Virginia-set live-service RPG introduces new artwork on a regular basis. Aside from seasonal content, such art is often added as part of the weekly Atomic Shop rotation, being most frequently attached toFallout 76item bundlesand other in-game storefront listings.

Fallout 76 Flag Waving Bundle Reportedly Used Unofficial Vault Boy Artwork
Another such offering debuted on July 2 in the form of the Flag Waving Bundle. As is often the case, the first image in the new item pack’s contents gallery was an illustrative icon depictingFallout’s Vault Boy mascot. Except that this particular artwork reportedly wasn’t made by Bethesda but was instead created by one Zack Finfrock. That’s according to Finfrock himself, who took to Twitter to claim that the illustration was included without his permission shortly after the Flag Waving Bundle debuted in the Atomic Shop.
Bethesda Has Already Replaced the Unofficial Atomic Shop Bundle Icon
The freelance artist acknowledged that he doesn’t own the Vault Boy, but that he would have nonetheless welcomed the opportunity to draw a “newer, better version” of his flag-waving artwork if Bethesda contacted him before using the image. Finfrock taggedFallout 76Creative Director Jonathan Rushin his tweet, who promptly responded to the message with an apology, stating that the move was made in error. Elaborating on that point, Rush attributed the inclusion of the image to a “mix up [sic] with an external vendor,” stating that the developer was already in the process of replacing the image, according to a screengrab of his Twitter DMs shared by Finfrock.
Game Rant’s review of theFallout 76Atomic Shopsuggests that replacement was completed no later than 3am ET on July 3, as the bundle was already using a crop of one of Bethesda’s promo screenshots by that time. Finfrock used this mix-up as an opportunity to offer his services to Bethesda and make an official contribution to the live-service RPG, to which Rush responded positively.
As a result, Finfrock will produce some artwork for the futureFallout 76bundle assets and at least one of the game’s daily messages. Being able to contribute to the franchise in an official capacity may be a dream come true for the LA-based artist, who spent over a decade producing unofficialFalloutworks, ranging from memes and other types of artwork to a full-fledged web series calledFallout: Nuka Break.
Fallout 76
WHERE TO PLAY
Bethesda Game Studios, the award-winning creators of Skyrim and Fallout 4, welcome you to Fallout 76. Twenty-five years after the bombs fell, you and your fellow Vault Dwellers—chosen from the nation’s best and brightest – emerge into post-nuclear America on Reclamation Day, 2102. Play solo or join together as you explore, quest, build, and triumph against the wasteland’s greatest threats. Explore a vast wasteland, devastated by nuclear war, in this open-world multiplayer addition to the Fallout story. Experience the largest, most dynamic world ever created in the legendary Fallout universe. Expand southward to Skyline Valley – a brand-new region of Appalachia. Investigate the cause of the electric storm circling overhead and unveil the mystery around Vault 63 and its dwellers, including a shocking new Ghoul type – The Lost.