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Glossary · 5 min read

Skool Fallout 4 — gaming search vs the actual platform

If you typed 'skool fallout 4' looking for gaming content, this isn't the page. Here's what skool.com actually is.

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What 'skool fallout 4' usually means

'Fallout 4' is a video game by Bethesda. 'Skool Fallout 4' isn't a feature on skool.com — most likely it's a misspelled gaming search, a creator's content title combining school + gaming references, or fan content unrelated to the skool.com platform.

If you were looking for actual Fallout 4 content (mods, walkthroughs, etc.), this isn't the right page — try a gaming forum or YouTube directly.

If you typed it casually and were actually curious about the skool.com platform that creators like Alex Hormozi keep mentioning, the rest of this page covers that.

skool.com logo

Start your own Skool community in 60 seconds.

14-day free trial — no card required. Most community owners decide whether Skool fits within the first week.

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The skool.com platform

skool.com is a SaaS product founded by Sam Ovens (Consulting.com); Alex Hormozi became co-owner in 2023. It hosts paid (and free) creator communities at URLs like skool.com/your-slug.

What's inside every community: a feed for posts, a classroom for course content, a calendar for events, a leaderboard with native gamification, a members directory, and a chat tab for DMs.

Native iOS and Android apps mirror the web. There's no native Windows or Mac desktop app — skool.com works in any browser.

Gaming communities on Skool

Some gaming creators do run paid communities on Skool — Roblox, Minecraft, Fortnite, esports coaching, speedrun communities. The platform handles structured content (VODs, tutorials, courses) well, while real-time gaming sessions usually live on Discord that's linked from the Skool community.

Fallout 4 specifically isn't a major gaming-niche on Skool — single-player games with established mod communities tend to live on Reddit, Nexus Mods, or Discord rather than paid Skool memberships. Multiplayer-competitive niches are a better fit for Skool's recurring-membership model.

If you're a gaming creator considering Skool, see Skool Game for the niche-specific guidance.

Pricing

For owners: $99/month per community after a 14-day free trial. All features included on every account.

Plus Stripe (2.9% + $0.30) and a small Skool platform fee on member payments — about 5–6% of gross goes to fees combined.

For members: free, unless the owner has set a fee. Common gaming community fees on Skool are $9–$49/mo for content-only or $99+/mo for coaching.

Automation gap

Native Skool ships almost no welcome DM sequences, churn-recovery DMs, or member CRM. Gaming communities, where churn is typically higher than B2B, especially benefit from filling this gap.

tools4skool fills the gap as a Chrome extension. Free plan: 1 sequence, 20 DMs/day. Paid: $29/$59/$149 per month. Kate Capelli's case study — $59/mo subscription producing $4,000/mo additional revenue in two weeks — applies to gaming communities the same as any niche.

Stop leaving DMs, churn, and revenue on the table.

tools4skool plugs the holes Skool ships with. Free plan forever, paid tiers from $29/mo.

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Frequently asked

No. Fallout 4 is a Bethesda video game; skool.com is a creator-community platform. The two are unrelated. There's no Fallout-themed feature, module, or major community on skool.com that I'm aware of as of 2026.

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