If you thought My Fault: London left your heart in pieces last February, brace yourself: Prime Video has just unleashed the official trailer for Your Fault: London 2, and it’s a full-on emotional apocalypse. Clocking in at a blistering 2:38, this sequel teaser is pure cinematic adrenaline—steamy glances across mahogany boardrooms, rain-soaked arguments on Thames bridges, and one devastating final shot that has already racked up 28 million views in under 48 hours. Fans are losing their minds on TikTok (#YourFaultLondon2 trending at No. 1 globally), screaming theories into the void: Is Nick’s ruthless climb up the corporate ladder about to destroy everything he and Noah fought for? Or is this the explosive breakup we’ve all been dreading since that forbidden step-sibling spark first ignited?
For the uninitiated—or anyone who’s been living under a rock since Valentine’s Day 2024—My Fault: London was the British remake of Mercedes Ron’s smash-hit Culpa Mía trilogy, a deliciously toxic cocktail of forbidden love, family secrets, and enough sexual tension to power the National Grid. Asha Banks and Matthew Broome exploded onto screens as Noah and Nick, the step-siblings whose electric chemistry turned a seemingly innocent family merger into a scandalous romance that had viewers clutching pearls and rewinding scenes. Directed by Dani Girdwood and Charlotte Fassler, the first film ended on a gut-wrenching cliffhanger: Noah discovering a bombshell family secret while Nick vowed to fight for her—no matter the cost. Critics called it “After on steroids with actual acting” (The Guardian) and “the steamiest British export since Bridgerton” (Variety). It smashed Prime Video records, holding the No. 1 spot in 47 countries for three straight weeks and spawning endless fan edits set to Chase Atlantic and The Weeknd.
Now, Your Fault: London 2—dropping worldwide on February 13, 2026, just in time to ruin (or save) your Valentine’s plans—promises to crank the drama to nuclear levels. The trailer opens with a slow-burn montage of domestic bliss that feels almost too good to be true: Noah (Banks, luminous and fierce) unpacking boxes in an Oxford dorm, her acceptance letter pinned proudly to a corkboard. Cut to Nick (Broome, all sharp suits and sharper jawline) striding into the glass towers of his father William’s (Ray Fearon) elite law firm, handshake deals sealing his ascent to power. The voice-over—Nick’s gravelly baritone—sets the stakes: “We survived the lies. We survived the secrets. But can we survive… us?”
And then the trailer detonates.

What follows is a masterclass in tension-building: quick-cut flashes of forbidden touches in empty offices, heated arguments in rain-lashed alleyways, and a jaw-dropping sequence where Noah confronts Nick in a packed lecture hall—her voice cracking as she whispers, “You promised me everything, and you gave me nothing.” The chemistry between Banks and Broome remains volcanic; one scene has them pinned against a bookshelf in the firm’s law library, breaths mingling, hands clawing at designer shirts in a moment so charged it’ll have you fanning yourself. But this isn’t just recycled steam—the trailer teases real evolution. Noah’s Oxford arc isn’t background noise; it’s the emotional engine. We see her thriving in seminars, laughing with new friends (hello, potential love triangle with a charming philosophy major played by newcomer Theo Augustus), and wrestling with independence for the first time. “I’m not your little secret anymore,” she hisses at Nick in one killer line, her eyes blazing with the kind of empowered fury that signals a heroine done playing second fiddle.
Meanwhile, Nick’s corporate ascent is painted in darker strokes. Fearon’s William Leister looms larger than ever, his disapproval morphing into outright sabotage. “You think love conquers all?” he sneers in a boardroom showdown. “In this world, power does.” Broome sells Nick’s internal war beautifully—those haunted eyes that once looked at Noah like she was oxygen now flicker with ambition’s poison. Is he becoming his father? The trailer hints at yes: shady deals, late-night calls, and a mysterious envelope marked “confidential” that could unravel everything. Add in returning favorites—Anna (Eve Macklin) scheming from the sidelines, Dan (Jason Flemyng) offering gruff fatherly wisdom—and new blood like the enigmatic Sofia (Valentina Lodovini), a senior partner whose lingering glances at Nick scream trouble, and you’ve got a pressure cooker ready to explode.
But the real gut-punch comes in the final 20 seconds. As Chase Atlantic’s “Swim” throbs underneath, we get rapid-fire flashes: Noah packing a suitcase in tears, Nick slamming his fist into a mirror, a pregnancy test (positive? negative? the camera cuts away cruelly), and—brace yourselves—a ring box snapping shut as Nick whispers, “It’s over.” The screen smash-cuts to black with the title card: Your Fault: London 2 – February 13, only on Prime Video. Cue collective internet meltdown.
Director duo Girdwood and Fassler, fresh off the first film’s success, have clearly leveled up. “We wanted to honor the fans who lived every heartbeat of Nick and Noah’s story,” Fassler told Variety in an exclusive sit-down. “But growth means pain. This isn’t just more of the same—it’s the consequences.” Shot across London’s sleek financial district and Oxford’s dreaming spires, the sequel leans harder into psychological drama while keeping the signature sensuality that made the original a guilty pleasure phenomenon. Cinematographer Ben Wheeler (Sex Education) bathes scenes in moody blues and golds, turning rainy London nights into fever dreams. And the soundtrack? Curated fire: The Weeknd, Arctic Monkeys, and an original track from rising star Griff that plays over the end credits teaser.

The fan reaction has been seismic. Within hours of the trailer drop on December 10, #YourFaultLondon2 racked up 1.8 million posts on TikTok, with duets recreating that library scene hitting 50 million views. Theories are flying: Is the pregnancy real, or a red herring? Will William’s machinations force Nick to choose between love and legacy? And that ring box—proposal gone wrong, or breakup gift? Reddit’s r/YourFaultLondon subreddit exploded to 250K members overnight, with megathreads dissecting every frame. “Noah deserves Oxford and freedom,” one top comment reads (42K upvotes). “Nick’s becoming the villain we always feared,” counters another. Shippers are divided: #TeamNickNoah forever, or time for Noah to sail solo?
Behind the scenes, the cast has been teasing the emotional toll. Banks, 21 and riding high after a breakout 2024 (including a cameo in Bridgerton Season 4), posted a tearful reaction video: “Filming those breakup scenes wrecked me. Noah’s growth is everything.” Broome, 27 and fresh from a gritty turn in Apple TV+’s Bad Sisters Season 2, called it “the hardest thing I’ve ever shot. Nick’s not evil—he’s lost.” Ron herself, the Spanish author whose Culpables trilogy has sold over 3 million copies worldwide, flew to London for reshoots and declared the adaptation “even better than the books—darker, sexier, more honest.”
Critics who’ve seen early cuts are buzzing. “If the first film was the spark, this is the wildfire,” wrote Empire’s Beth Webb after a press screening. “Banks and Broome deliver career-best work, turning toxic romance into something raw and real.” The Hollywood Reporter praised the sequel’s maturity: “It dares to ask if love can survive when ambition and independence collide.” With a reported £25 million budget—double the original—Prime Video is all-in, banking on the franchise to rival Netflix’s 365 Days steam with substance.
But beneath the glamour lies deeper resonance. Your Fault: London 2 isn’t just fan service; it’s a mirror to Gen-Z relationships—long-distance strains, power imbalances, the terror of outgrowing someone you once couldn’t live without. Noah’s Oxford dream symbolizes every young woman choosing self over suffocating love, while Nick’s corporate climb echoes the seductive poison of unchecked ambition. In a post-#MeToo world, their dynamic—once pure fantasy—now grapples with consent, agency, and growth. “We wanted to honor the messiness,” Girdwood said. “Love isn’t a fairy tale; sometimes it’s the thing that breaks you open so you can rebuild stronger.”
As February 13 looms, one thing’s certain: Your Fault: London 2 won’t just break records—it’ll break hearts. Will Nick and Noah find redemption, or will their forbidden fire finally burn out? The trailer ends on that devastating ring box, but the real question hangs in the air: Whose fault is it this time?
Prime Video has gifted us a sequel that’s bolder, sexier, and more heartbreaking than we dared hope. Stock up on tissues, clear your weekend, and prepare for the ride. Because when Nick and Noah collide again, London won’t be the only thing left in ruins.