Vault 77

Vault 77 was one of the Vaults created by Vault-Tec, and part of the Vault Experiment. Only one man entered this Vault, which also contained a crate of puppets. Its location is unknown.

During the first months, the Vault 77 Dweller went through the initial panic and depression caused by being locked alone in a Vault. He didn't actually open the puppet crate until one year, three months and twelve days after the lock-up.

After opening the crate, he takes particular interest in a dog puppet (which he named Reverend Hound who he also decided to make Sheriff), a king puppet, and a grandmother puppet.

These 3 puppets appear to give him something to do to stave off insanity for a white, but unfortunately, he finds a Vaultboy puppet that he either imagines is an evil killer or perhaps even IS an evil killer (it is never specified which) who kills the King puppet one night, telling the Dweller that they in fact did it together and must flee before Reverend Hound comes for them.

They open the vault soon after to which he quickly closed it discovering a 747 sized radscorpion holding up two cars in each claw. The Dweller decides they should sleep on the plan.

Eventually, he somehow managed to leave the Vault, befriending a giant ant which he takes as a mount. Soon, he is captured by Slavers who decide to keep him overnight, not sure whether to cook him for meat or actually sell him into slavery, he begs them to let them go as his puppet is a killer. As the night falls, the puppet/Dweller does indeed escape and starts brutally slaughtering Slavers left and right, leaving a horrifying pile of bloodied bodies when it is all over, the Dweller has finally gone insane.

In total, the comic runs for 12 strips and has an appropriate ending in the spirit of the Fallout series.

List of puppets
List of known puppets from the crate (and the names given to them by the Vault 77 Dweller:
 * The King
 * Grandma
 * Reverend Hound
 * Vault Boy

Appearances
Vault 77 appears only in the official Fallout 3 Penny Arcade Comic, written by Jerry Holkins and illustrated by Mike Krahulik, in cooperation with Emil Pagliarulo.