Nuka-Cola

The Nuka-Cola was the most popular flavored soft drink in the United States before the Great War. After it, the Nuka-Cola remains the most popular soft drink of the post-nuclear world, as much of it was preserved in fairly good state, although it tends to be warm and flat. Consumed in masses it has an addictive effect.

After drinking a Nuka-Cola, the bottle cap lands in the drinker's bag.

History
Nuka-Cola was invented in 2044 by John Caleb-Bradberton. Its unique taste gained widespread popularity quickly, ending with it becoming the most popular soft drink with an extremely dedicated following.

It's ingredients are Carbonated Water, Caramel Color, Aspartame, Phosphoric Acid, Potassium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Natural Flavors, Citric Acid and Caffeine. The widely known Dazzling Blue bottle colour was adopted as standard in 2052, after market research programmes indicated that the blue color was the favorite in 86 people out of a hundred polled.

By 2067, vending machines with ice-cold Nuka-Cola could be found on virtually every street in America.

Flavour
The flavour of the Nuka-Cola is the essence of seventeen different fruits mixed in just the right proportion to give the beverage its trademark taste. During the Great Passion Fruit Famine, people actually noticed the taste difference when the flavour was changed. Some versions of the drink also include vitaminerals and health tonics.

Aside from the original version, the company also created Cherry Nuka-Cola, but nobody liked the new taste. This resulted in a marketing disaster for the company, which quickly attempted to save the brand by introducing the Classic Nuka-Cola, tasting exactly like the original but in a new bottle.

In 2077, a new version called Nuka-Cola Quantum was introduced. According to the advertisements, it had twice the calories, twice the carbohydrates, twice the caffeine and twice the taste. To make it stand out more on the shelves and to give it an extra kick, the Quantum included a mild radioactive strontium isotope (and an eighteenth fruit flavor - pomegranate). The effect was a drink that not only boosted your energy, but also glowed with a bright blue light. While no ill effects were recorded by the Food and Drug Association, the isotope also caused the drinker's urine to glow.

The company's main factory was located in Washington, DC, which used cutting edge equipment to keep the world's most popular soft drink in full production 24 hours a day.

Fallout, Fallout 2 and Fallout Tactics
Nuka-Cola appears in all Fallout games save for Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel where it is replaced with the real-life Energy Drink brand of Bawls, much to the chagrin of fans. The Cherry and Classic variants appear only in Fallout Tactics.

Supply and Use
One of the three ingredients of a Super St\impak as crafted by the artiste of the test tube known as Myron, Nuka-Cola restocks in shops in Klamath, and on the oil tanker in San Francisco. Left click on a Nuka-Cola machine and drag the mouse to access the backpack and put coins in the slot. Nuka-Cola machines inexplicably, other than for reasons of gameplay, restock every one to seven weeks.

On the 360 version of the game, Nuka Cola will give you 5 Rads and 10 Health. Nuka Cola Quantum will give you 20 AP and 5 rads. This will give you approximately 1 more hit in V.A.T.S., so use it when both you and your opponents health are low, so that you don't get damaged, but the opponent does.

Fallout 3
In Fallout 3, Not only do Nuka-Cola and Nuka-Cola Quantum appear in bottle form, but the bottling factory can also be entered. Nuka-Cola branded security robots guard the factory floor, directed by their Robotic Foreman, but the offices and irradiated underground area is also infested with curiously mutated Mirelurks, called NukaLurks. The factory is located along the southern highway going towards Rivet City.

Appearances in Real life
During the 2008 E3 as a promotional item, people were given a real drinkable version of the product. It greatly resembles the 1950's look of the Coca-Cola brand bottles.

Nuka Cola Website
There appears to be a Nuka Cola website in existence. The Nuka Cola website and the associated Rad-Away and Enclave Radio websites are not, in fact, official. They were created by a private web-designer.