Megaton

 is a sprawling settlement set in a crater and surrounded by impenetrable walls. It is one of the two largest settlements in the Capital Wasteland, with 28 named inhabitants and several Megaton Settlers, rivaling only Rivet City in sheer size of population.

Megaton will often be the first populated town the player encounters after leaving Vault 101. Its proximity to Vault 101, its distinctive silhouette, and the relatively straight route make it extremely difficult to miss, and it will very likely be the first trace of civilization the Lone Wanderer encounters.

Background
Megaton was built by a large group of people who originally planned to seek shelter in Vault 101 but were denied access. Without shelter, they sought refuge in a large crater made by aircraft dropping from the skies due to the bombs. The settlers constructed a place to call home from pieces of metal/aircraft found nearby at a air station. They were aided by the Children of the Atom, who worshiped the undetonated bomb in the crater they were building around which is why the bomb still stands there today, because the followers of the Children of the Atom helped build Megaton, they do not allow the other settlers in Megaton to move the bomb. The settlements name comes from the undetonated bomb sitting in the center.

First contact with Vault 101
In February 2241, an expedition party sent by the Overseer of Vault 101 contacted the residents of Megaton. Initially, the residents were cautious with these strangers before they eventually accepted and welcomed them into the settlement. Two Vault residents, Agnes and Lewis, were appointed as Vault ambassadors to Megaton by the expedition leader Anne Palmer. A record of this expedition was archived in the Overseer's terminal.

Boppo's raid
In 2277, a gang of Raiders established a base camp at Springvale Elementary School, with the purpose of mining their way into Vault 101. Some of these gang members, led by Boppo attempted a raid into Megaton. The attack ran afoul of Megaton's defenses and her determined defenders. The town's sheriff, Lucas Simms, killed the leader of the raiding party.

Layout
Megaton is roughly circular, with a central plaza around an atomic bomb resting in a puddle of radioactive water. Starting in the north and proceeding clockwise, the plaza is ringed by The Brass Lantern, Mister Burke's House, Children of Atom, and Megaton Clinic. Pathways lead from the plaza to the gate of Megaton, Craterside Supply and the Common House. A major attraction of the plaza are the sermons of Confessor Cromwell.

Around the central buildings, a ring of buildings is built higher up in the crater. The Water Processing Plant and Moriarty's Saloon can be found here along with most of the inhabitants' private houses.

It seems the left side is where the town people live, and the right side has shops.

Notable loot

 * Bobblehead - Strength - inside Lucas Simms' House, on a desk in a bedroom on the second floor. To avoid bad karma from picking the lock, wait until Lucas or his son are in his home.
 * Grognak the Barbarian - in Jericho's House, on the floor, between a teddy bear and a red pylon. You have to steal this item.
 * Nikola Tesla and You - in your Megaton home after buying the Science Theme from Moira Brown.
 * Lying, Congressional Style - in your Megaton home when you buy the Love Machine Theme from Moira Brown.
 * Just outside of Megaton, precisely near the back of it, there is a rock, with three trees forming a triangle around it. Inside of the rock ,labeled Hollwed-Out Rock, lays a Sniper Rifle, .308 rounds, a Stealth Boy and a note.
 * 4 Pre-War Books - in Billy Creel's House.

Related quests

 * Following in His Footsteps
 * The Power of the Atom
 * The Wasteland Survival Guide
 * Blood Ties
 * The Replicated Man
 * Holy Water (Broken Steel)
 * Treatment
 * Walter's Scrap Metal
 * Church Donations
 * Leo's Drug Habit

Appearances
Megaton only appears in Fallout 3.

Behind the scenes

 * The bomb in the center of the town and the people worshiping it are likely a reference to Beneath The Planet of the Apes, which features a cult worshiping an undetonated nuclear weapon after the modern world has been destroyed.

Japanese version
In the Japanese version of Fallout 3, the quest to blow up Megaton has been completely removed due to its "parallels to real historic events" quotes Official Xbox Magazine. They are referring to the atomic bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

Gallery
Megaton Megaton

Megatona Мегатонна