The spires of Oxford pierce a stormy English sky, ancient libraries whisper secrets of power and betrayal, and Noah—once the wide-eyed American transplant navigating London’s elite world—steps into a arena where innocence is a liability. Prime Video has unleashed the official trailer for Your Fault: London (2026), the highly anticipated sequel to the breakout hit My Fault: London, and it’s a masterclass in escalation. Gone is the breathless discovery of forbidden love; in its place, a colder, more calculated game where ambition devours vulnerability, and the Leister family empire becomes a chessboard of manipulation and revenge.
“She didn’t come to Oxford for friendship. She came to claim a legacy.” These chilling words, delivered in a haunting voiceover as Noah (Asha Banks) strides through the hallowed halls of one of the world’s most prestigious universities, set the tone for a story that promises to redefine the boundaries of toxic romance. What began as a steamy step-sibling saga in the original film—where Noah’s arrival in London sparked an irresistible pull toward her brooding stepbrother Nick (Matthew Broome)—now morphs into something darker. Oxford isn’t just a backdrop; it’s a battlefield, and Noah’s enrollment marks her transformation from reluctant outsider to a woman ready to seize control.

The trailer, dropped amid feverish anticipation in late 2025, opens with sweeping aerial shots of Oxford’s dreaming spires, golden stone glowing under autumn rain. But the beauty is deceptive. Quick cuts reveal Noah unpacking in a grand dorm room, her face hardened with determination. “I didn’t cross an ocean to play nice,” she declares in a voiceover, intercut with flashbacks to the passionate, tumultuous ending of My Fault: London. There, Noah and Nick finally surrendered to their feelings, defying family pressures and societal judgment. Now, separation looms: Nick dives deeper into the cutthroat world of Leister Enterprises alongside his billionaire father William, while Noah pursues her academic dreams at Oxford.
Yet the trailer teases that this distance is no accident. “The Leister Trap is tightening,” the narration warns, hinting at William’s shadowy machinations to keep the young lovers apart. Flashes show Nick in sleek boardrooms, fending off advances from Sophia (Louisa Binder), the stunning, ambitious intern whose predatory smile screams trouble. Sophia isn’t just eye candy; she’s a weapon, planted to exploit Nick’s vulnerabilities and fracture his loyalty to Noah.
Meanwhile, at Oxford, Noah encounters a web of intrigue that rivals any corporate conspiracy. Enter Briar (Scarlett Rayner), the seemingly warm upperclassman who befriends Noah with offers of study groups and society invitations. But the trailer’s sinister undertones reveal Briar’s true nature: a “master strategist” with hidden motives tied to the Leisters’ past. Close-ups of Briar’s calculating gaze as she whispers secrets to Noah suggest she’s unraveling family skeletons—perhaps connected to Nick’s late mother or William’s ruthless business dealings. “What looks like opportunity may be the most calculated move of all,” the voiceover intones, as Noah uncovers documents hinting at a buried scandal that could destroy the empire she’s now entangled with.

The chemistry between Banks and Broome, which ignited screens in the first film, burns fiercer here. Stolen moments show them reuniting in secret: rain-soaked embraces on Oxford’s cobblestone bridges, heated arguments in hidden libraries that dissolve into desperate kisses. Broome’s Nick, torn between duty to his father and devotion to Noah, delivers lines laced with anguish: “I built walls to protect us… but you’re tearing them down.” Banks, evolving Noah from naive newcomer to empowered force, radiates quiet intensity—her eyes conveying a shift from hesitation to resolve.
New threats amplify the danger. Michael (Joel Nankervis), the charming Oxford student who befriends Noah, harbors romantic intentions that complicate her fidelity. His patient pursuit adds emotional layers, forcing Noah to question if Nick’s world of wealth and secrets is worth the isolation. On Nick’s side, the underground racing circuit resurfaces with Cruz (Orlando Norman), a menacing figure tied to old rivals, pulling Nick back into adrenaline-fueled risks that echo his rebellious past.
Directors Dani Girdwood and Charlotte Fassler, returning from the first film, elevate the stakes visually. The trailer boasts cinematic grandeur: high-speed chases through London’s neon-lit streets bleeding into Oxford’s timeless elegance, slow-motion confrontations in opulent balls where alliances shatter, and intimate scenes lit by flickering candlelight in ancient colleges. The score, a pulse-pounding mix of orchestral swells and electronic beats, underscores the shift from romance to thriller.
Based on Mercedes Ron’s bestselling Culpables trilogy—specifically adapting the second book Culpa Tuya—Your Fault: London stays true to the source material’s exploration of jealousy, betrayal, and redemption while infusing British flair. The original Spanish adaptations (Culpa Mía, Culpa Tuya, and upcoming Culpa Nuestra) captivated global audiences with their raw passion, but the English remake distinguishes itself with nuanced performances and a sharper focus on class warfare and legacy.
Filming wrapped in summer 2025 across iconic locations: London’s financial district for Leister Enterprises scenes, Brasenose College in Oxford for academic intrigue, and rural Hampshire for high-stakes races. Banks and Broome have teased the intensity in interviews: “This isn’t just about love anymore,” Banks said. “Noah’s claiming her power, even if it means playing dirty.” Broome added, “Nick’s trapped between blood and heart—the Leister name is a curse as much as a crown.”
Supporting cast returns with added depth. William’s manipulative edge sharpens, while Noah’s mother Ella grapples with guilt over the family’s fractured dynamics. Fan-favorite side characters inject humor amid the darkness, providing breaths of levity in a narrative that’s unapologetically addictive.
Thematically, Your Fault: London delves into inheritance—not just wealth, but emotional baggage. Noah’s quest to “claim a legacy” isn’t mere ambition; it’s survival in a world where the past dictates the future. The trailer ends on a gut-wrenching cliffhanger: Noah discovering a devastating secret about Nick’s family, her hand trembling as she confronts him. “Survival depends on who controls the past,” the final line echoes, fading to black on their tear-streaked faces.
Early reactions are explosive. Social media erupts with theories: Will Briar’s manipulations expose a Leister scandal? Can Nick escape Sophia’s seduction? Is Michael’s friendship a genuine escape or another trap? Fans hail the trailer’s darker tone: “From forbidden fling to full-on power struggle—I’m obsessed!” one viral post declares.
As 2026 approaches, Your Fault: London positions itself as more than a sequel—it’s an evolution. Prime Video’s bold reimagining honors the Wattpad roots that birthed a phenomenon while crafting a sophisticated saga of desire, deceit, and destiny. With a third film, Our Fault: London, already in the works to conclude the trilogy, the stage is set for an epic showdown.
The trap tightens. Legacies clash. And in Oxford’s shadows, Noah’s innocence dies—for good. Get ready: this fault line is about to erupt.