Each settlement needs the numbers next to food and water to be higher than the number of settlers who live there. To increase your food supply, plant crops and assign settlers to manage them. For water, build a few water pumps or – if the settlement is on the coast or contains a large puddle – a water purifier.
1: Go to the Workbench you wish to move , Open your Console then click on the Workbench. The id code of the workbench will appear on top of your console. 2: Close the console. 3: Create a small wooden floor (the really small one) at the place where you wish to move your Workbench to.
Filling up the resources at the top will help out in getting Settlers.
- Food – The more food you have, the more people you can get.
- Recruitment Radio Beacon – This will be your bread and butter for recruitment.
- Water – Making sure you have enough water is another key.
- Beds – A bed per head is the motto here.
To construct a building: Walk up to the building's sign post and select Interact. You can locate these sign posts using Odin's sight. Hold down the Build button.
The weapons workbench is a crafting station in Fallout 4.
To wait in Fallout 4, you must find (or craft!) a chair for your character to sit in. Once you are sitting down, you can select how long you wish to wait.
To assign a worker you'll need to open up your building menu, and then locate the person you want to Assign. Once you locate them, choose the COMMAND option, then walk to the thing you want to assign them to and click the ASSIGN button.
Wasteland Workshop is the second add-on for Fallout 4, and focuses on the workshop feature. It adds a number of new world objects, and the ability to build arenas to stage fights for captured humans and creatures.
Anything that you store in workshop will have a number on the icon where you build the item. For example if you stored 3 doors to the workshop when you are on the build menu for doors you will see a number 3 on the type of door you stored.
Fallout 4 vanilla settlement locations
- Sanctuary Hills. Located to the east of your starting vault and visited in the course of the main quest.
- Red Rocket Truck Stop.
- Abernathy Farm.
- Sunshine Tidings Co-op.
- Starlight Drive In.
- Ten Pines Bluff.
- Graygarden.
- Oberland Station.
As for why you can't build beds, the only thing I can think of is that you built too big of a settlement with too few settlers. You can only build so many items in a settlement relative to how many settlers you have. Store a few non-essential items for now, then try to build beds.
Building a settlement is the biggest new addition to Fallout 4, and sadly, the game doesn't really hold your hand when it comes to building your very own town. Sure, it's great that the game gives players so much freedom, but it doesn't necessarily do the best job of explaining everything.
Sleeping in these will provide you with the "Well Rested" bonus.
- Megaton, Moriarty's Saloon, Nova, 120 caps.
- Rivet City, Weatherly Hotel, 120 caps.
- Underworld, Carol's Place, 120 caps.
Walk over to the generator and you should see an option on the bottom to run a wire. Press X to start the wire at the generator, walk over to the powered item, press X, and the wire will auto-complete. Voila, power.
Inside a settlement yes, but not across the world.
There is no workbench in Salem for you to use so you can rebuild the town into a settlement again. No workbench for you to do it yourself. No other quest that allows you to retake Salem.
All possible settlements in the base game with the exception of Home Plate There are 37 unlockable settlements total with 30 in the base game, one in Automatron, four in Far Harbor, one in Vault-Tec Workshop and one in Nuka-World.