🚨 YOUR FAULT: LONDON S2 TRAILER DETONATES: Noah’s Oxford Ring Ignites a Jealousy Inferno—Nick’s Empire Crumbles as One Betrayal Slashes Deeper Than Any Knife! 💍🔥
Spotlit spires of Oxford loom like a trap as Noah drops to one knee in a rain-lashed quad, ring glinting under thunder— but whose hand is she slipping it on? Nick’s boardroom throne? Toppled by Sophia’s venomous whispers and a corporate mole leaking family sins. Underground races explode into shootouts, Briar’s Oxford web snags Noah in forbidden flings, and Michael’s “friendship” kiss seals a pact that could bury their vows before they’re spoken.
This proposal isn’t romance—it’s a reckoning. Fans are splintering: “Noah deserves better than Nick’s chaos!” vs. “Fight for it, you idiots!” From leaked wedding crashers to Ronnie’s revenge crew, S2 shreds the fairy tale. Click for trailer deep-dive, cast dirt, and the gut-wrenching twist that flips the trilogy’s endgame. No spoilers spared—your heart’s not ready. 👀💔

The fog-shrouded streets of London and the ancient stone arches of Oxford University are about to become battlegrounds for love, ambition, and unforgiving betrayal in Prime Video’s steamy YA saga. Following the blistering success of My Fault: London—which racked up 47 million global views in its first week after a February 2025 premiere—the streaming giant has unleashed the official trailer for Your Fault: London Season 2, teasing a 2026 drop that promises to torch Noah and Nick’s fragile union. Clocking in at a pulse-racing 2:15, the footage spotlights “The Oxford Proposal,” a heart-stopping sequence where Noah Morgan (Asha Banks) navigates fresh starts and old flames, only for a glittering ring to upend everything. With production wrapped in August 2025 after a whirlwind shoot across the UK, showrunners are betting big on the Mercedes Ron adaptation’s second installment to eclipse its predecessors—blending forbidden romance with high-stakes corporate intrigue and underground thrills.
The Culpable trilogy, Ron’s Wattpad-born phenomenon that exploded into a 50-million-reader frenzy before hitting bookshelves in 2017, has already spawned Spanish hits Culpa MĂa (2023) and Culpa Tuya (2025), both directed by Domingo González and starring Nicole Wallace and Gabriel Guevara as the original Noah and Nick. Prime Video’s English reboot kicked off with My Fault: London, transplanting the stepsister-stepbrother drama to a posh British backdrop—complete with Leister family estates and illicit street races—earning praise for its glossy production and electric chemistry between Banks and newcomer Matthew Broome as Nicholas Leister. Season 1 wrapped on a knife’s edge: Noah and Nick’s secret wedding vowing eternal loyalty amid family fractures, only for William Leister’s (Jasper Britton) health scare to drag Nick into the family shipping empire, while Noah eyes Oxford’s hallowed halls. The trailer, dropped November 25 during Prime Video’s holiday sizzle reel, picks up threads from Ron’s Your Fault (translated 2023), where distance breeds doubt and temptations lurk in every shadow.
Filming for the 8-episode sophomore run began in May 2025 in London’s bustling financial district—doubling as Leister Enterprises’ gleaming HQ—and Oxford’s dreaming spires, wrapping amid unseasonal gales that forced indoor reshoots for the proposal centerpiece. Director Elena Carerra, stepping in from the Spanish franchise’s stunt coordination, amps the visuals with drone sweeps over Christ Church Meadow and gritty night shoots in East London’s abandoned warehouses for race scenes. Composer Nathaniel MĂ©chaly returns with a score blending orchestral swells for romantic beats and trap-infused bass drops for the adrenaline rushes, echoing the bilingual soundtracks that hooked global audiences. No firm premiere date yet, but insiders peg a mid-2026 slot—post-Our Fault: London greenlight in April 2025—to capitalize on the trilogy’s momentum, with Prime targeting 100 million hours viewed across the arc.
The trailer’s hook lands like a sucker punch: A sepia-toned montage of Noah and Nick’s Season 1 highs—stolen kisses in Hyde Park, vows under rain-soaked arches—fades to black as voiceover Noah (Banks, her voice husky with resolve) intones, “We promised forever. But Oxford? It’s rewriting the rules.” Cut to her arrival at Oxford: Cobblestone quads buzzing with scholars, where she locks eyes with Michael (Joel Nankervis), a tousle-haired history major whose “patient charm” masks a simmering hunger. Their “immediate friendship” sparks over late-night library sessions, but the trailer teases more—a charged hand-brush in the Bodleian, a whispered confession under Magdalen Bridge—that has Nick’s jealousy boiling over via frantic FaceTime rants.
Enter the love quadrangle’s venomous vipers. Louisa Binder’s Sophia slinks into Leister Enterprises as Nick’s ambitious assistant, her “beautiful poise” a Trojan horse for corporate sabotage—leaked memos hint she’s William’s plant to test Nick’s mettle, but her flirtations with the heir (lingering touches in boardrooms, a “accidental” elevator lock-in) scream ulterior motives tied to a rival firm’s buyout bid. Scarlett Rayner’s Briar, Noah’s “kindly” Oxford flatmate, unfurls as a “manipulative strategist” with eyes on the Leister fortune—trailer flashes show her plying Noah with spiked punch at a bop, only to whisper Nick’s “secrets” (echoing Season 1’s race-fueled betrayals) that fracture trust. Nankervis, a Derry Girls alum breaking out at 22, told Collider in October 2025 that Michael’s arc “starts sweet, ends savage— he’s the mirror to Nick’s fire, but colder.” Binder, fresh from The Crown‘s final season, gushed about Sophia’s duality: “She’s climbing ladders, breaking hearts—women like her don’t apologize.”
The Oxford Proposal steals the show, a 30-second fever dream midway through the trailer: Noah, windswept in a crimson gown amid autumn leaves, kneels before a blurred figure—rain blurring the ring’s inscription as thunder cracks. Is it Nick, racing from a London crisis? Or Michael, seizing the moment in a candlelit hall? The ambiguity detonates fan theories; a viral X thread from November 26 posits it’s a misdirect for Briar’s scheme, with 18K likes debating “proposal or poison?” Ron’s novel layers this with Noah’s campus temptations—age-gap parties, thesis pressures—and Nick’s empire burdens, where William’s “legacy lessons” force moral gray zones like shady mergers echoing the books’ cartel whispers. Carerra confirmed to Variety the adaptation “honors the heat but sharpens the stakes—no glossing over the toxicity.”
Supporting players crank the chaos. Orlando Norman’s Cruz, Ronnie’s (Kieran Cunningham) enforcer in the underground racing circuit, revs up as a wildcard ally to Nick—trailer clips show high-octane pursuits through Soho alleys, engines roaring as Cruz dodges cop lights to deliver a “game-changing” flash drive exposing Sophia’s play. Cunningham’s Ronnie, the grizzled race kingpin from Season 1, lurks larger, his “right-hand shadows” tying back to Noah’s Toronto scars—leaked set photos from July 2025 capture a warehouse confrontation where he dangles blackmail over Nick’s wedding band. Returning vets like Britton’s ailing William grapple paternal regrets, while Jenna Coleman cameos as Noah’s estranged mum Jenna, jetting in for a mid-season Oxford visit that unearths buried family lore. Broome, channeling Nick’s brooding intensity (think a young TimothĂ©e Chalamet with tattoos), shared at London Film Fest that Season 2’s “tests us off-screen too—fights, makeups, the works.” Banks, the Loki star elevating to lead, called the proposal “visceral terror—love’s not a choice anymore, it’s survival.”
Subplots simmer with trilogy teases. Lionel’s (Elliot Cowan) rehab recovery fuels awkward family dinners at the Leister manor, where he eyes Sophia suspiciously—hinting at Our Fault‘s explosive reveals. Noah’s Oxford circle expands with a queer-coded undercurrent via Briar’s “hidden motives,” nodding to Ron’s diverse fanbase without book-direct lifts. Racing sequences, amped by practical stunts on modified Audis (sourced from UK tuners), collide with academic intrigue: A thesis heist at the Ashmolean Museum doubles as a metaphor for stolen hearts, per Carerra’s BTS Instagram. Costume designer Sophie Canale blends Oxford tweeds with Nick’s tailored suits—ripped in fury during a trailer brawl—while intimacy coordinator Amanda Kirpich ensures the “electric sparks” (Ron’s phrase) stay consensual amid the angst.
The trailer’s social ripple hit tsunami levels: YouTube premiere racked 3.2 million views in 24 hours, outpacing After‘s sequels, with X ablaze under #OxfordProposal—trending UK-wide as fans dissect freeze-frames for ring clues. Reddit’s r/Culpable exploded with 7K-upvote threads theorizing Michael’s endgame (“He’s the real fault!”), while TikTok edits mash the proposal with Taylor Swift’s “The Archer” for 50 million impressions. Critics are cautiously bullish: A Hollywood Reporter early peek hailed it as “After on steroids—messier, meaner, magnetic,” but purists gripe the English pivot softens Ron’s raw edges, echoing Spanish fans’ “cultural bleach” backlash on X. Ron, the Argentinian phenom who parlayed Wattpad virality into NYT bestsellerdom, blessed the trailer via IG: “Noah’s proposal? It’s the fault line where love quakes.”
As Our Fault: London preps scripts for a 2027 finale—confirming the trilogy close—Prime’s investment signals franchise fever: Merch drops (Noah’s Oxford hoodie, Nick’s race jacket) hit Black Friday, and a graphic novel tie-in with Ron’s annotations eyes Q1 2026. Yet amid the gloss, Season 2 probes deeper scars—trauma’s long shadow, trust’s razor wire—reminding that in the Leister world, proposals aren’t promises; they’re provocations. As Nick snarls in the trailer’s closer, ring box crushed in his fist: “You think Oxford changes us? It breaks us.” Fault-finders, queue up—the spires are calling, and they’re hiding daggers.