16 NUMBER-ONE HITS. 500 SONGS. A NASCAR CAREER. AND A VIDEO GAME HAD TO REMIND THE WORLD HE EXISTED. Marty Robbins recorded over 500 songs across 60 albums. He won two Grammys. He was named Artist of the Decade. Johnny Cash said there was no greater country singer. He raced in NASCAR — not as a hobby, but at 170 mph against professionals. And by 2009, most people under 40 had never heard his name. Then a video game called Fallout: New Vegas put “Big Iron” on a fictional radio station — and millions of kids discovered a voice from 1959 that sounded like it was made for the end of the world. “El Paso” broke the time barrier in pop music. “A White Sport Coat” crossed into rock and roll. “My Woman, My Woman, My Wife” won a Grammy. He didn’t belong to one genre — he owned whichever one he walked into. But Nashville let him fade into museum exhibits and AM radio frequencies. It took a wasteland simulation to bring a real legend back to life. So what does it say about country music when a video game does more for your legacy than the industry you helped build?
When a Video Game Brought Marty Robbins Back From the Dust Some legends never really disappear. They just wait for…