Warning: this article contains spoilers for Better Call Saul season 6.
As a prequel to Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul reveals many secrets about Vince Gilligan's first series, and season 6 better explains how Gus Fring constructed the idea for his meth superlab. Throughout Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad, Gus Fring is known for his cautious and calculated schemes, appearing as just an innocent businessman to unassuming civilians. Even in his first meeting with Walter White in Breaking Bad, Gus assumes his persona as the owner of Los Pollos Hermanos and only breaks character when necessary. One of the greatest examples of Gus' circumspect nature is how the hub of his drug empire in Breaking Bad is situated in a clandestine laboratory that's hidden underneath a laundry.
While Gus' superlab is not in operation yet in Better Call Saul season 6, its construction began in season 4. Mike was in charge of Werner Ziegler and his team of German engineers, who constructed most of the laboratory that Walt and Jesse work in during Breaking Bad. The construction is yet to be complete, however, after Ziegler went rogue and sparked the curiosity of Lalo Salamanca, giving Lalo his first inklings that Gus is working towards his own aims. In Better Call Saul season 6, Gus is convinced that Lalo is still alive, and has ramped his precautions up to another level.
Related: Better Call Saul: What That Red House Really Means (& Why It's Bad For Gus)
Better Call Saul season 6 shows that Gus' secrecy extends to all aspects of his life, even his home. Better Call Saul season 6 episode 4, «Hit and Run,» sees Gus travel in an underground tunnel between his house and his neighbors'. While his neighbors' house appears ordinary, they only occupy a
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