There are a lot of different ways to set up supply lines in , but some ways are better than others. Some choices for setting up supply lines between settlements are simply an aesthetic choice, but there is some practicality to players’ choices. With a little planning, you canconnect your settlements in ways that look nice and feel practical.
Settlements in provide a wealth of different benefits to the player, but having supply lines makes those benefits even better. It allows you to use some inventories of any connected settlement in the workshop or crafting stations, such as the Junk and Miscellaneous categories. Any excess food and drinks will be sent to connected settlements that do not have enough. Additionally, a provisioner assigned to supply lines can act as a patrol who can take out enemies along the route.
The provisioner cannot be killed by NPC attacks, and if attacked they will get up and keep working. However, they can be killed by player mines, so be careful where you put them.
Fallout 4 players eager to climb aboard a Vertibird without the help of the Brotherhood of Steel should heed this veteran's sage advice.
As stated before, there are several different ways to connect your settlements. Notably, as long as a settlement is connected to another one that is connected to every settlement, they will be connected to every single one. So as long as you have one connection that goes to every single settlement, that’s all you need.
YouTuber Oxhorn goes over several different methods by which to connect your settlements, but two stand out as being better. The last, what he calls the Circle, looksnice aesthetically but is not practical, and your provisioners will take a long time to travel. The second, the Community Hub, makes more but might be the most complicated for you to try to connect yourself.
That leaves the Star pattern and the Constellation pattern. The Star in Oxhorn’s video is based out of The Mechanist’s Lair, but the basic idea is to pick a
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