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How to Assign Settlers in Fallout 4

Furious

  • Published July 4, 2021
  • Updated September 8, 2021

Fallout 4 How to Assign Settlers

Congratulations! You’ve planted your first carrot. But wait, why isn’t the food meter going up? Well it’s because you haven’t assigned anyone to harvest it!

From crops, to shops, to guard posts, there are many important jobs you can give to your settlers to ensure your settlement is defended and its people are fed. In this guide we will discuss how you can see what positions are available, how to assign people to them, and how to check what settlers are already working on something.

(We suggest you check our Fallout 4 Settlements Guide when you are done, since there are many aspects of your settlement that you can take advantage of, if you know what to look for.)

all fallout 4 settlement guides

Settlements Guide

fallout 4 settlements guide how to use power

How to Use Power

fallout 4 settlements guide food and water

Food and Water

fallout 4 settlements guide settlement defense

Settlement Defense

fallout 4 settlements guide how to assign settlers

How to Assign Settlers

fallout 4 settlements guide settlement happiness

Settlement Happiness

Which Resources Require Worker Assignments?

Besides food, there are several other objects in your settlement that will not function properly without someone operating it such as guard posts and vendor stalls. In workshop mode, you can tell if a resource has an assigned settler by aiming your crosshair at it . Beneath the description you’ll see a vault boy icon. If he is red, this means there is no one assigned to it. If he is the color of your HUD, it is occupied.

Aiming at the objects inside your settlement is a great way to see what resources require a worker assignment to begin with. As a bonus, you will see how many workers it requires, whether it requires power, as well as the amount and type of resources it produces.

Fallout 4 Unassigned Settlers

Little tip : if you hover over a settler that was assigned to a job, their associated place of work will get highlighted along with the settler (their assigned bed will light up as well).

How to Assign a Settler to a Task?

To assign a settler to a resource, simply aim your crosshair at a settler and then “Command” them with the interact button (you will see the options on the bottom). Then hover your crosshair over the object you want to assign them to and hit the interact button again to “Assign”.

There should be a prompt telling you that the resource is now assigned. If you had someone else assigned to the position before, they will be automatically unassigned.

Be mindful that you cannot assign settlers to multiple jobs. For example, you can’t have a single settler occupy a guard post and harvesting carrots at the same time.

Did you know that if you have 5 or more unassigned settlers you aren’t going to get new recruits ? Of course, you can only have as many as your Charisma score + 10. Remember that the happier your settlers are , the higher the chance that you will get a new recruit!

Furious

If I'm not working or spending time with the family I'm probably gaming. Some of my favorite recent games I've played are Far Cry 5, World of Warcraft Classic, and 7 Days to Die.

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Carl's Fallout 4 Guide for PC, Xbox One, and PS4

  • Fallout 4 Guide
  • Character Stats
  • Leveling System
  • Difficulty Settings
  • Settlements Guide
  • Finding Materials
  • Supply Lines

Scavenging Stations

  • Water & Food
  • VATS & AP Cost Guide
  • Action Points
  • Sniper Rifle Example
  • Critical Hits
  • Chems & Addiction
  • Companion Perks
  • Gameplay Tips
  • Gunslinger Build
  • Melee Build
  • Sniper Build Guide
  • Legendary Enemies
  • SPECIAL Stats
  • Strength Perks
  • Big Leagues
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  • Solar Powered
  • Charisma Perks
  • Cap Collector
  • Black Widow/Lady Killer
  • Lone Wanderer
  • Animal Friend
  • Local Leader
  • Inspirational
  • Wasteland Whisperer
  • Intimidation
  • Intelligence Perks
  • Robotics Expert
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Fallout 4: Settlements

Tutorial for managing, building, and optimizing towns.

Build up Sanctuary, your first Settlement

Fallout 4's Settlements system is a key part of gameplay. You can ignore them, but rallying the people of the Commonwealth and improving their lives is a core idea in this game. They don't tell you much in the beginning. You're suddenly given the ability to build things in Sanctuary, so I'm going to go over some of the factors that make a Settlement: water, power, happiness, and defense. We'll also teach you how to manage your Settlers.

Here are the things we'll cover about Settlements. Jump to the section you need help with or scroll down to learn the basics:

  • Basic Things to Know
  • Population Cap and Charisma

Getting Started

Assigning settlers to garden.

  • Power and Wiring
  • Lighting the Town
  • Recruiting New Settlers
  • Establishing Supply Lines (Local Leader)
  • Defending the Settlement Against Raiders
  • Settlement Size Stat
  • Building Up New Settlements with Supply Lines
  • Benevolent Leader Achievement

Preston Garvey in Fallout 4 will give you quests.

The Basics - Settlement Management

Enter the Settlement Management screen by holding the button you use to change views from 1st to 3rd person. From there, you can see the Settlement's stats - people, food, water, beds, electricity, and defense. Each of these impacts something, and improves the quality of life of your Settlers and their Happiness - the final stat. A safe place with food and water is hard to come by in post-apocalyptica, so if you can give that to them, they'll be happy. Lastly, there is a bar that indicates how full the Settlement is as far as objects go. It is up to you to manage the people and assign them to tasks in order to give the Settlers a productive and safe life.

See All Settlement Status : You can see the status of all your Settlements by using your Pip-boy to go to Data > Workshops

Building Materials, Junk, Food and Water all go automatically into that Settlement's crafting stations. Some, you'll have to deposit yourself. If you have an item like an aluminum can in the storage, it'll be automatically broken if you need aluminum with the excess left behind in storage as raw materials (3 left if it provided 4 and you needed only 1). It's a slick system.

Storing Junk - Select the workshop station and store all junk to have all items that qualify as junk automatically deposited, freeing up your inventory. Many items' only purpose is to provide materials - like desk fans and bottles. When you're building, you have access to all of these materials - whether for crafting or weapon/armor modification - wherever you are in the Settlement.

free resources deposited from having excess materials in Fallout 4

The Benefits of Building Settlements

Some may choose to ignore this aspect of Fallout 4, but it's not necessarily a good idea. You can get a ton of free items by building up your Settlements, and eventually have easy access to great stores that let you buy ammo or sell your items for money. You can even set the fast travel spot for a Settlement and pop up right in front of crafting stations and stores if you've taken the Local Leader trait.

Setting up Supply Lines, you can have access to all resources in one settlement at another one when using the crafting stations, so you can upgrade/improve things in smaller Settlements without carrying around building materials. For you the player, this also means lots of scavengers working for you, free water and food ! The more extra food and water you have when compared to the population of a Settlement, the more will be deposited. You need to remove excess water and use it or put it in another container, but excess vegetables and scavenged items will continually accumulate. This is a good reason to make way more water and food than your Settlement really needs. These items can be used to cook and purified water is worth a good number of caps.

Scrap ruined houses to get steel and get wood from trees in order to build the basics for your village

You can go about the Settlement and destroy ruined houses and trees - downed or logs - in order to get the most basic resources - steel and wood. You can also go into homes and look for broken objects to scrap. You don't have plumbing, so you don't really need toilets and broken sinks, nor children's toys and couches can't be slept on. Spend some time doing this to build up your resources, but DON'T scrap light poles. You can use them to hang light bulbs later . You can take these resources to ANY crafting station, even the cooking station, select store all junk, and the whole Settlement will have access to them while freeing up your carrying capacity. This is key, because how can you lug around 100 steel, lumber, ceramic and other materials while still managing to hold your own in a fight after traversing the map!

While you can build custom houses, making things pretty isn't my specialty. It's something you may want to do eventually in order to make it more pleasing to the eye, but I focus on the basic stats and think that is the main thing people need to know. You ARE able to make things entirely custom, and magazines out in ruined buildings may teach you to make things like patio furniture and other decor in your Settlements.

Settlement Population Cap

Settlers will gradually come in so long as your Settlement has a recruitment beacon working, and you've got an abundance of at least a few of the things listed below. If the Settlement is unhappy, no one will bother to come. The Settler Cap is 10 + Charisma. I've had my Settlement size pass my Charisma, because often I've used hats/suits to raise Charisma while in town and shopping at my own stores. I have NOT seen it go down, though I've seen it reported.

Settlers need beds to sleep and be happy

The best thing to do is use the homes you can't destroy and put beds inside them. The only things I didn't really tear down are street lights, as they can come in handy to light an area in the street later in our building process. I placed beds in what were obviously once the bedrooms after scrapping everything inside. Along with food, which we'll cover next, people need beds to be happy. You must have enough beds for your population - one for each of them - and one for yourself (optional). If people passes the number of beds, happiness will drop. You can assign settlers to specific beds, but it doesn't really matter. This is purely about the stat. Having extra beds will not necessarily attract new settlers, but it will prevent those who move in from lowering your Happiness stat when they arrive.

You can make beds by going to Furniture > Beds in the Settlement Management screen. People don't even need to be able to walk up to them for this to work, but it looks awful if you lay them side by side and you may want to use one here and there to get the Well Rested buff. You should be able to provide plenty for the initial settlers just by breaking down the things in Sanctuary's ruined homes. Settlers are just as happy with a mattress on the floor as they are with full-sized beds.

A garden in Fallout 4

Building a Food Supply

This is a major factor for the success of your Settlement. Without enough food to feed those who are around, why would someone else want to move there? You can collect plants from all over the world - mainly at other towns in existing gardens - and plant them. Harvest them when they grow after a few days and replant them in order to be able to expand your food supply, and be on the lookout for foods that can be grown as you travel. Really, just pick up almost everything! For the plants in your settlement to grow, you must assign a Settler to the task.

Mama Murphy working the garden.

First, plant the produce in rows. Harvesting vegetables from other places isn't considered stealing. You're most likely to have 'Tatos and melons early on, if you're following Preston Garvey's quests to restore the Minutemen. With the Settlement Management screen open, go to Resources > Food and select the types it says you have on hand. Plant them in rows. Now, select one of the Settlers. Don't put Marcy Long on this because she's such a rude bitch that you want her on the front-lines if raiders attack. It's a good job for a struggling drug addict, so how about Mama Murphy?

You need some fruit and vegetables to get started. You can find some by simply doing the quests offered by Preston Garvey. He will send you to a couple of small villages that need help in order to get you started. Don't worry if Sanctuary is technically starving for a while. You can pick produce at these Settlements without it being considered stealing, then plant them when you get back to Sanctuary Hills and begin assigning Settlers to grow them for you.

In Settlement Management, click a Settler then go to your garden. Pick 'assign' with a plant selected. It should say, "This Resource has been Assigned". One Settler can work up to 12 plants or 6 units of food - depending on how many food that plant says it produces. Most produce half a unit, hence the 12. Mutfruit is 1, so a Settler working 2 mutfruit could also work 8 tatos (to reach 6 food). If you start with 5 half food plants, then later plant 7 more, the Settler will automatically take up responsibility for those other 7 plants. Great, huh?

Thankfully, you don't have to choose between Food and water since they take completely different resources to craft. When you harvest vegetables, please note that they are not stored like other junk in your Settlement inventory. Lugging around 30 Tatos and 20 Mutfruit is a lot, so put those along with any wild animal meat you've collected into your Settlement's workshops manually. You can then use it at the cooking station there, and later at other Settlements if they are connected via Supply Lines. Excess food is regularly deposited into the Workshop's inventory, where it can be used for cooking or planting in future Settlements. You can even sell it if you get hard up for caps. Don't go overboard though, you want more Settlers working as Scavengers and only need that 1 food per Settler. Shoot for 20-25 food tops, unless you get a higher population.

Regular water pumps in Fallout 4

Now your Settlers need a good water supply. You can choose normal pumps which go in the dirt or purification stations. Water needs to surpass the amount of Settlers, and the higher it is the happier they will be. Maybe they want to actually bathe. Water Purification stations are great, and can be put in the stream near the bridge, but you'll need a power generator to do that. Normal pumps are easy enough to place, so I'll assume you have the stuff you need to make one in the water so I can teach you just a bit about wiring.

Like food, water is regularly deposited into the Workshop inventory based on the amount you have. However, unlike food, it is OK to go overboard with this - Settlers don't work your water pumps. Water will be deposited into your Workshop inventory regularly, every 30 minutes to 1 hour, and you can use it to heal or sell it for caps.

Settlement Happiness Factors

Happiness is the measure of your Settlers' contentment with these inter-working systems and improves their efficiency. In particular, you'll get more excess food and extra scavenging resources the happier your Settlement has become. Having enough food, water, and beds are obvious, but what else affects Happiness? Happiness can be raised by ensuring no Settlers are unassigned. While we do not yet have a list of all Settlers and the roles they're assigned to, you can do a patrol around the Settlement and look for Settlers who do not have a job by looking at the icon. If it's red, they have no job. Different symbols represent different jobs. Assign them to scavenging stations if you have the food required to feed your Settlers. The rare materials you'll occasionally get are better than more food, and the higher your food count, the greater the chance of a raider attack.

Little things like the random encounter with a wasteland resident who will sell you a dog can give you extra happiness - the Settlement it's sent to will get a small boost. Having the shops you can build/purchase with Local Leader rank 2 (Charisma Perk) will greatly improve happiness. Decorations and lighting have no impact on happiness at all, though maybe this will change one day. Adding additional shops does affect Settlement Happiness.

Giving the town electricity

Power and Wires

I say 'Stuff' because you have many different things that can be wired, from certain defense systems to poles that allow you to extend them. See, wires have a limit on how far they can go. So if you're putting a purification pump in the stream, you should put the generator nearby else you need to use more resources putting up power poles on which to hang wires. The taller ones let the wires go further. On PC, I select the thing that needs power, press space, and it allows me to then attach a wire to the generator or power pole. On Xbox and Playstation you should see the necessary button on the bottom of the screen when selecting the object that requires power. You may need to make several hops to wire something distant, which is why I recommend just putting generators nearby. Poles aren't necessary in some cases - you may have a light source that needs power, and can then hop a wire from that to the next thing.

So this brings us to the Power stat. This is a largely useless stat unless all of your items are connected via wire. Early on, it's a generator feeding a water purifier or lighting, and knowing the amount of power isn't that important. Just be sure your generators are adequate for what you're hooking up. If it doesn't help happiness, it's too bad it doesn't just show you how much extra you have minus consumption. Regardless, this metric is nearly pointless as you should keep track of how much is needed to power your purifiers, defenses, lighting, etc. based on the power generators' output.

Lighting the Settlement of Sanctuary

Lighting is not necessary at all, but does improve the look of your Settlement and may help during a night-time raid. You need light to see to fight effectively and navigate the town. It makes it look like a booming town rather than a bunch of run-down shacks. Look to Power > Connectors and Switches and note Power Pylons and conduits. Both of these emit an aura that will allow a home or street to be lighted. You can connect either to a generator, hopping with wires as necessary, and the lights will just 'work'. Switched Pylons/Conduits will let you turn them off if you please, but they're hardly necessary. If you're short on power, prioritize this later than other things.

Recruiting new settlers to the town.

Settler Recruitment: The Radio Beacon

Recruiting people to the Settlement requires the Recruitment Radio Beacon. It must be connected to your power grid via a wire. Build this in each Settlement as soon as you can, because more Settlers (who have no names but can be used for a number of things) is a good thing and helps make your town more defensible. Basically, without this radio beacon, how would you get the word out that there's a good place to live in the area? Towns that welcome newcomers and offer food and protection are rare in the Commonwealth. Once you've built the settlement recruitment beacon, please make sure that it's switched on by activating it outside the build mode! Afterward, when you're listening to the radio you may hear mention of your little project to build a nice town.

Local Leader also lets you make shops in Fallout 4

Scavenging Stations require a Settler be assigned to them. While unassigned Settlers may find one item, Settlers assigned to Scavenging Stations find twice as much and are happy to have an assignment. You can build a Scavenging Station by going to Resources > Miscellaneous. These dutiful townsfolk will randomly deposit items they find into the Settlement's crafting stash. This happens every few days, and you never know what they'll find. It's always materials, but it can be some really good stuff, especially as your level raises.

Scavenging Stations are entirely optional and should probably come last in your priority list as far as assigning work duties, but is the best thing to do with extra Settlers once their basic needs are taken care of - 6-8 Settlers on Scavenging Stations can produce a lot of materials for building other Settlements and modifying your weapons and armor. It's one of the best parts of using Settlements in Fallout 4. Read the article linked above to get an idea how powerful this can be with supply lines.

Brahmin feed troughs - what do they do?

Brahmin - Feed Troughs and What Brahmin Do

Attract a Brahmin to your Settlement by going to Resources > Miscellaneous and building a Brahmin Feed Trough. Having Brahmin in your Settlement does not contribute to food, nor should you kill them - you'll aggro the whole town. Only wild Brahmin may be slaughtered for meat and leather. Brahmin in a Settlement generate Fertilizer in the workshop's stockpile automatically. Fertilizer is great for people who like explosives, as it's used in a number of chemistry station craftables. Additionally, it's required to make your own Jet.

Establishing a supply-line in Fallout 4

Supply Lines and Local Leader for Settlements

With the Local Leader Perk ( Charisma 6 ), you can establish Supply Lines. This can only be accomplished by selecting someone who is named simply 'Settler'. Pick them with the Settlement Management screen open and you can then pick establish supply line . Tell them where they'll go. You can make networks of supply lines in this way, and have access to all building materials at all Settlements . It's incredibly useful for building up new towns, and you can even have access to your weapon/armor modification items at these crafting stations as well, so it can save you some significant travel time, especially if you were playing on Survival difficulty.

Settlements with excess food and water will share with the other Settlements they are connected to, though this will not be displayed at the connected Settlement. It may show 0 food, but the people could be fed if food is in abundance. Your total food/water production in each settlement can be subtracted from the amount of Settlers you have. This means some Settlements do not need many farmers or even water pumps, so long as they are connected by supply lines.

Settlers assigned to guard the Settlement in Fallout 4.

Settlement Defense Stat

Defense is a key aspect of happiness. The wastes are absolutely ripe with rape and pillage, so people need to know they're safe. You can achieve this with guard posts and automated gun turrets - some simple ones do not require power and can absolutely butcher Raiders with your help and that of the people you've chosen to be defenders. Note you can't order Preston Garvey around until a little later in the quest, but can eventually assign him to this task.

For Sanctuary, the main entrance is the bridge although I'm sure they can come in from elsewhere. You need to build guard posts - the tall one being best, along with a couple of turrets. The higher your Defense, the less likely it is to be attacked - especially if you have a high food/bed/water stat and low defense - that will absolutely attract attackers.

A defense turret in Fallout 4

You assign Settlers to defense positions just as you do gardening and other tasks. Each Settler can guard 3 posts, which means if you have the materials you can get a good defense rating straight away and greatly reduce risk of attack. But there's something worth noting here. You should gear up your guards, and not rely on just one! Give them items better than pipe pistols. Always give them your hand-me-down armor as you get new stuff, and occasionally upgrade it for them with stats like damage/energy resistance. Everyone in town will give you full access to their inventory, and you can choose to equip an item you've given them. Note there are clothes that cover the full body, then 2 pieces for arms, legs, and chest - so 6 pieces total, along with a weapon and ammunition. I don't know just yet if they'll use Stimpaks, but it's not a bad idea to give them some.

Every Settlement needs defense as it grows. Raiders want your resources, and they will come after them. The higher your food/water ratings, the more likely they are to attack however defense can lower this chance . Regardless, there is a small chance of attack each day. You may need to repair defenses and other objects from workshop mode if there is a bad attack with collateral damage. You will be notified if a Settlement is under attack and have time to fast travel to it. People may die, and happiness could go down and need to slowly rise back up after the attack. One of the only limiters to this is Size , which determines how many objects can be placed throughout the Settlement. Some have more room than others, based on existing structures.

To reiterate this from earlier in the guide, Settlement Defense needs to be higher than Food plus Water combined . The higher you raise defense, the lower the risk of attack. Getting defense to 100+ is a good goal for all your Settlements to prevent random attacks. This can help prevent annoying defend X settlement quests that come up at random, but will take a lot of oil and circuitry because the best way is masses of Turrets. Your scavengers and selective looting when adventuring can help you to have enough resources to do this.

Defending Settlements Under Attack

Occasionally, one of your Settlements will come under attack. You'll know this because Help Defend X Settlement will appear to the left of your screen as though you've got a new quest. If you forget which one it was, because you were wrapping up another quest, you can view these on the Quests tab in the Pip-boy under Miscellaneous - it will indicate which Settlement needs your help. They must have good scouts, because you do have some warning before raiders/whomever attack the Settlement. The attack usually begins shortly after your arrival. If you wait too long, some infrastructure will be destroyed, some Settlers may be lost, and as a result Happiness will drop - so choosing to ignore these is an option, but not entirely recommended. Avoiding The Castle and Preston Garvey can help you get less of these missions.

New towns may join you, allowing you to build up your network of villages.

Abundance and Making More Settlements

There's a lot more to the Settlements sytem, but you should be able to gradually improve your towns as you find more materials while exploring. As you go, you'll notice that excess food and purified water are deposited into the crafting station for the Settlement. Stated before, but take the purified water out of the settlement's inventory and put it in a normal container if you want even more to accumulate - there is a cap. As you advance in the game, Preston Garvey will give you quests to help other Settlements. After completing said quest, you will govern them the same way you do Sanctuary and add them to your Commonwealth 'empire'. You will also run across places that Garvey doesn't mention that will join you if you offer them some help with a local problem. You can actually civilize the wastes in Fallout 4.

The Size Stat - What It Means

Each Settlement has a maximum amount of objects that it can hold. Therefore, later on it's better to have only necessary things and replace smaller things - like generators and water pumps, with more powerful generators and industrial water purifiers. These will lower the total object count for you, while providing a larger output of these resources. The only thing you can't really upgrade are beds and plants. This metric is NOT an indicator of how full your Settlement is. Settlements' max populations can easily pass 20 with some time investment, and a large Settlement like this is unlikely to be attacked if it has a sufficient defense rating.

Settlements in Mid to Late-Game

As above, you want to upgrade things to improve your Settlements. Make supply lines connect to your 'capital' by having Settlers in new Settlements establish Supply Lines there. You can then immediately build some defense, water, beds, and assign workers to food when they arrive later on. Again, if you have an abundance of food and a supply line this isn't necessary to feed the new residents.

You can view the status of all of your Settlements by viewing the Pip-Boy, going to Data then Workshops. There it will show you caution signs if a stat is too low or nearly used up - like 3 Settlers with 3 beds. If none of these are displaying warnings, the Settlement will naturally grow. If you want one really good Settlement, you can tell newcomer Settlers to go to a specific town. You'll also meet people who need a home in your travels, along with Companions, and can tell them to take residence in one of your Settlements.

The Benevolent Leader Achievement

If you'd like to get the Benevolent Leader Achievement, you must strive to max Happiness . You may want to read this whether you've got an interest in the achievement or not, because I've added in some tips to managing Settlements that is beyond the scope of this tutorial. I've put this in a separate article, because it's not something you can do early on in the game and littering that advice throughout this article might overwhelm a player new to Fallout 4.

I hope this was helpful - if you have any feedback, email [email protected] , whether to let me know it helped you or to offer up a suggestion for improvement.

More Fallout 4 Guides

  • Raider Outposts in Nuka World
  • Nuka World - Play as a Raider in this DLC
  • Far Harbor - Learn about the DLC, its secrets, and read walkthroughs
  • Automatron - Guides to building bots and quest walkthroughs
  • Settlements - An in-depth guide to Settlements and managing them
  • Melee Build - the best perks for a melee character
  • Sneaking - Learn to be stealthy
  • Critical Hits - Shots to Crit and Crit damage mechanics
  • Tips for Making a Build - General advice for creating your own build
  • Action Points - AP and all the things that affect it
  • VATS - all about the V.A.T.S. and AP usage on weapons
  • Gameplay Tips - pointers that will help new players
  • Making a Sniper Rifle Weapon mod examples. Heavy hitter and fast-firing Comparison - two guns from the same base.

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Settlements in Fallout 4

Settlements Guide Water and Food Scavenging Stations Supply Lines Benevolent Leader

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Nuka world dlc guides.

Fallout 4 Nuka World Guide Fallout 4 Nuka World Walkthrough: Quest 1 The Gauntlet & Taken for a Ride Walkthrough Boss Fight: Overboss An Ambitious Plan & Faction Leaders The Grand Tour: Park Areas and Choosing Where to Go Kiddie Kingdom & Claiming Raider Territory Nuka Bottling Plant & Power Armor Power Play New Open Season New Raider Outposts New Endings Guide New Gage's Likes/Dislikes Faction & Special Perks Scav Magazine Locations New

Far Harbor DLC Guides

See my Far Harbor Guide for new features in the DLC. There, you can also watch the trailer and view new weapons that can be found. The area is massive, so we can expect plenty of quests and exploration in a foggy, rugged area with new and challenging creatures to battle. Pleae note there are different endings for this DLC, something we all wanted! It's like the actual end-game of FO4 in that you can choose the outcome. Walkthroughs Islander's Almanac Magazine Locations Far From Home: Quest 1 Walk in the Park: Quest 2 Where you Belong: Quest 3 Best Left Forgotten: Quest 4 Ware's Brew Quest New The Striker New

Automatron Guides & Walkthrough

The final quest Restoring Order (Mechanist Fight/Options) is now available. I've also released a page that describes Getting Started in Automatron to accompany the main page about the DLC . This covers how to make the Robot Workbench to begin making your own Automatrons, and walks you through the first two quests while providing some tips for fighting the Mechanist's creations. Quest 3 Walkthrough: Headhunting is also live on the site. Robots in Automatron New Mechanist's Lair, Eyebots, and Rogue Robots covers what happens after the Mechanist story is complete.

Perks & Bobbleheads

Now that I've written about all Perks in Fallout 4, I've put them all in a list , with how they work, what you can expect, and my own opinions on them. Hope this is handy! I've also compiled map shots of all Bobblehead Locations in the game. You can choose to explore the locations on your own or read descriptions for those I've taken notes about.

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fallout 4 settler assignment icons

Originally posted by Mr. Manovar nr. 6 : This seems to be a popular game breaking bug for Fallout 4. You wanna assign settlers to just about anything they can be assigned to, they won't get assigned. EVER. Not even to beds. And this also seems to affect getting more settlers, because even with the recruitment beacon, no more settlers will come. The fix seems to be loading an older save and starting over from there, OR scrapping at your settlement whatever caused it in the first place (in my case it was the caravan stops). But with those fixes, the bug is still liable to happen again in th future. I don't think I'll ever be able to play Fallout 4, ever again, but still, I just wanna leave it out there: This bug is still out there, and its ruining hours of gameplay to dozens of players. Modders or Bethesda, FIX IT!!!!
Originally posted by Snidely Whiplash : Yea, it's annoying. If you're not afraid of modding, try Sim Settlements, though. Just plop down a lot and your "village idiots" will build things and assign themselves accordingly. IMO, Beth did a lazy job with the settlers, but it can also be argued to simply not build anything (i.e., "to hell with NPCs").

fallout 4 settler assignment icons

Originally posted by casualsailor : I am unable to duplicate your issue. Nor can I find this issue reported in the vanilla game. This seems only to occur when using mods or exploits. Are you running any mods?
Originally posted by Ilja : Originally posted by Snidely Whiplash : Yea, it's annoying. If you're not afraid of modding, try Sim Settlements, though. Just plop down a lot and your "village idiots" will build things and assign themselves accordingly. IMO, Beth did a lazy job with the settlers, but it can also be argued to simply not build anything (i.e., "to hell with NPCs").

fallout 4 settler assignment icons

Originally posted by Ilja : Leave the settlement for a while. It will reset things and everything should be normal once you get back. There are few similiar issues like this, but area refresh usually solves the problem. I haven't seen any persistent issues that I couldn't deal with. Beacon may sometimes take time to bring new settlers. The amount is of course tied to your Charisma.
Originally posted by Zee_ : If you build a huge settlement the settlers can be very slow to be assigned to thier jobs, they will eventually get assigned though it may take a few in-game hours. However, I'm talking over 8 times the base settlement size here. Settlers that already have jobs will still be assigned and whatever resources you have them assigned to will be gather whether they are actively working them or not, they just won't always go to their job sites. It takes alot to gum up the works, but it can happen. Another way to run into a similar problem is by making a settlement too complex or so tight that the settlers can't properly path. If the game can't figure out how to path a single settler, it can screw up the queue for everyone else because of the way the game handles settlers and their assignments.
Originally posted by Mr. Manovar nr. 6 : Originally posted by Zee_ : If you build a huge settlement the settlers can be very slow to be assigned to thier jobs, they will eventually get assigned though it may take a few in-game hours. However, I'm talking over 8 times the base settlement size here. Settlers that already have jobs will still be assigned and whatever resources you have them assigned to will be gather whether they are actively working them or not, they just won't always go to their job sites. It takes alot to gum up the works, but it can happen. Another way to run into a similar problem is by making a settlement too complex or so tight that the settlers can't properly path. If the game can't figure out how to path a single settler, it can screw up the queue for everyone else because of the way the game handles settlers and their assignments.
Originally posted by Mr. Manovar nr. 6 : So I don't know if everyone will get a notification of this, but I think I just found the culprit: https://www.reddit.com/r/FalloutMods/comments/5egeel/what_happened_to_dont_call_me_settler_fo4/

fallout 4 settler assignment icons

Originally posted by MageThis : Yeah, if unmoded, so vanilla (UNMODDED EVER), no patch and it has been totally my experience that patience and avoiding spamming the workbenches resolves pathing issues. Unless you are building rad-rat crazy. Even the unofficial patch does not stop all settler scripts refiring everytime you access a crop, workbench, etc.

fallout 4 settler assignment icons

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  5. 26 how to assign settlers fallout 4 Full Guide (12/2023)

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  1. The Most AWKWARD Interaction in Fallout 4

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COMMENTS

  1. Settler Assigned To symbols

    Settler Assigned To symbols. HipHopBeats 8 years ago #1. So I see there are now symbols indicating what settlers are assigned to with the 1.3 patch. My question is, what does the bird or animal symbol indicate? I notice most of the settlers walking around have this symbol when I look at them through Workshop mode.

  2. How to Assign Settlers in Fallout 4

    To assign a settler to a resource, simply aim your crosshair at a settler and then "Command" them with the interact button (you will see the options on the bottom). Then hover your crosshair over the object you want to assign them to and hit the interact button again to "Assign". There should be a prompt telling you that the resource is ...

  3. Settler Assignment Image Key : r/fo4

    Settler Assignment Image Key . Archived post. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. Share ... And it would work on Fallout 4. The pipboy displays more info at once in the same graph-style that SkyUI had. ... i had read about the settler icons, or seen it on a video, and wondered for weeks why I didn't see the icons when I ...

  4. Fallout 4 Settlements Guide

    The Settlement component of Fallout 4 is strategically helpful and improves the game's immersion. Fallout 4's Settlements system is a key part of gameplay. You can ignore them, but rallying the people of the Commonwealth and improving their lives is a core idea in this game. They don't tell you much in the beginning.

  5. FALLOUT 4: How To See What Your Settlers Are Assigned To

    Be Sure To Subscribe To My Channel For More Content!https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC14eCM4nK8vyLBqq4wz4JNQFALLOUT 4: How To See What Your Settlers Are Assi...

  6. Fallout 4: How To Assign Settlers

    Hey guys! In this video I will be showing you how to properly assign settlers to settlements in Fallout 4. With my method, you will always be able to assign ...

  7. Fallout 4 Settlements Guide

    How to assign settlers to jobs and check what they are assigned to in Fallout 4.Be sure to check out my other pages.Official Website https://www.ibarakiben...

  8. What is the easiest way to tell what resources a settler is ...

    1. As mentioned in the answer in the comment, hovering over settlers will highlight the resources they are assigned to. Additionally, if you hover over a resource, you can check the information window. If the settler symbol in it is red and not green, there is no worker assigned to it and therefore, it won't do anything. Side note: The icon is ...

  9. fallout 4

    No, unfortunately there is no overview of what all of your settlers are doing. However you can see what each individual is assigned to if you have visibility of that individual and their assigned task - this picture will show you what I mean: This settler is only assigned to half of these carrots, another settler is doing the others, so when I ...

  10. Which is the best way to assign settlers? :: Fallout 4 General Discussions

    go in to. [resources] [misc] build the bell somewhere. Go out of workshop mode and ring the bell. All settlers will congregate. Go back into workshop mode and you can select and assign them. You can even assign where they sleep. #2.

  11. How to Manage a Settlement

    Place the generator with appropriate output of power in the area where you want to establish your item. Place your item, then have either the item or the generator highlighted and then hit the ...

  12. "Fallout 4": Settlers Tips, Tricks, and Advice

    Slow down when playing Fallout 4 and enjoy the finer points of the game, like Settler A. I. His advice on paying attention to the details of every aspect of life pays beautifully in this game. Let's crunch some numbers. There are 31 Settlements in "Base Game" (Base Game: A game without any downloadable content: DLC).

  13. status menu for settlers :: Fallout 4 General Discussions

    It seems, that It's only a pop up, if you hover over them. You will see if they are assigned to something or unassigned. No Menu at all, so it seems. You have several icons, like fork and knife for food production, clothes for clothing vendors, shield for denfense (also for the artillery, same symbol) and a eagle symbol, whatever that is.

  14. Settler (Fallout 4)

    Settlers are wastelanders living in various settlements across the Commonwealth and the Island in 2287. Many deceased settlers can also be found around Nuka-World. Settlers are the common people of the Commonwealth. They can include wanderers, former residents of Diamond City or Goodneighbor, scavengers, former raiders or Gunners, and even Gen 3 synths who are covertly working for the ...

  15. Fallout 4

    Our latest Fallout 4 settlement answers the question: How do I assign settlers to roles? Here's how to put your NPCs to work on guard posts, crops, and craft...

  16. Settlement Activity Markers at Fallout 4 Nexus

    Installation and deinstallation. Step 1. Install with NMM or manually (mods should be enabled in your ini file. Use the Nexus instruction to enable modding if you have not done it yet. Download the zip file, extract the archive to any folder, copy all files in my mod's Data folder and put them into your Data folder.

  17. Any way to fix the "Unassignable Settlers" bug :: Fallout 4 General

    Press ~ (opens the debug tool and freezes time). 2. Click on the NPC. 3. Type this command exactly: setpv bCommandable 1. 4. (press enter) 5. Press ~ once again. (to close the debug tool and resumes the game). Leave the area (important) .. go to another settlement for a day, then go back.

  18. Category:Fallout 4 icons

    Category:Fallout 4 perk magazine icons; Q Category:Fallout 4 quest icons; Categories Categories: Icons; Fallout 4 Pip-Boy images; Fallout 4; Languages

  19. Settlers assigned to.....greeting?

    Messages. 4. Aug 18, 2017. #4. So after testing it turns out some of the settlers with that icon were assigned to Rec plots. I used Settlement Management Software mod to locate the Settler who had a home but would not self assign a job. They had this icon as well. Thank you L2K_Perma and Kinggath for the help.

  20. Harvesting, Crafting, and Assigning Settlers in Fallout 4 ...

    A quick look at how to harvest resources, craft and place items, and assign settlers to tasks in the settlements of Fallout 4.Also, remember to check the lit...

  21. Icons meaning / What plots can do (tutorial?)

    This is the "needs" of the settlement you're currently standing in. Those are a percentage of how much of various things they want and have. From top to bottom, those are: Food (knife and fork), Water (droplet), Defense (shield), Power (lightning), Homes (house), Jobs (person with shovel), Hobbies (cards), and Happiness (smiley face).

  22. Can't assign settlers in settlement :: Fallout 4 General Discussions

    Takes sometimes 3-10 sec, or sometimes not at all. Oh this was before "mods" were a thing. I just reset the game and found out that they have a delay after they are assign. I waited 3 in game days till the settler assign shows up. just had to put "in game day" rather than just saying '3 days' to avoid confusion.

  23. Game breaking "Settler assignment" bug :: Fallout 4 General Discussions

    Beacon may sometimes take time to bring new settlers. The amount is of course tied to your Charisma. Originally posted by Mr. Manovar nr. 6: This seems to be a popular game breaking bug for Fallout 4. You wanna assign settlers to just about anything they can be assigned to, they won't get assigned.