
Those materials are common and can if you come up short can almost always be found near your campsite. You can see in the Junk menu on your Pip Boy which components a scrapped piece of junk will give you. Start by ignoring things that offer steel and wood only. In Fallout 76 players shouldn't pick up everything they see, and need to loot junk more carefully if they want to be able to cover vast distances on foot without becoming weighed down. In Fallout 4 settlements offered limitless stash boxes and huge building sites, so there was never a need to be selective. New Fallout players will probably have an easier time than veteran fans with leaving junk on the ground. There isn't any particularly grindy loot locations like Destiny's infamous Loot Cave that we've found so far in Fallout 76. There's an "Uncanny Caverns" sign on the world map that is close by. Pleasant Hills Cemetery is towards the Southwest corner of the map. One video from user Savage Discavage shows the Pleasant Hills Cemetery has a number of safes to break into, each one filled with loot. YouTube is filled with videos of various locations, or attempts at reaching those locations. Outside of campaign missions, a number of lucrative loot locations have popped up. The nice thing about sticking with the campaign missions is the loot is usually level-appropriate as well, meaning you can use your new finds immediately. These usually culminate in an area where you can loot the environment or a tougher enemy that is carrying some good gear. The best loot we've run across so far comes from playing the campaign missions. Missile launchers are way too heavy for the limited damage missiles can deal, so. Weapons tend to be the heaviest thing in your inventory, so it's important you keep things simple and keep some of the heavy weapons in storage until you go up a few levels. Scrapping weapons yields materials and unlocks new mods, so don't be afraid to dismantle those pipe weapons for parts. Best to let your ammo counts dictate your weapons. Instead of grabbing every gun you find, you might want to only carry one or two of each type, or only focus on one type of weapon. If you find yourself with too much of one thing, simply sell it off for caps.įor your personal loot weight limit, you are also going to need to be more selective with your weapon choices. These bulk resources can also be sold to vendors for a decent price. Some crafting materials, like wood and cloth, can be bundled into bulk versions. Stash limit is only 400 and you're going to want to save room for power armor components and fusion cores when you find them, as they'll take up about ¼ of that limit. Be careful not to store unscrapped junk in your box too. Your Stash Box is universally linked, so putting an item in one makes it available at all locations. Your Stash Box can be found at your camp, but can also be found at vendor locations and other places here and there around the world. If you're at camp, scrapped junk stays in your inventory so deposit it in your stash box when you're done. Press Y/Triangle in the scrap menu to quickly scrap all your junk. Junk breaks down into crafting components like cloth and wood, which weigh much less than a shovel or set of clothing. The easiest way to drop some pounds is stopping by any workbench (excluding cooking stations) and scrapping your junk. The first is how much your inventory weighs and the second is your max capacity. You'll see two numbers in the bottom left corner of the screen. To see your max capacity, and how much weight you are currently carrying, open up your Pip Boy and navigate to the Items menu. When you are over encumbered, your AP drops with every step you take, which is really annoying if you're trying to run away from a dangerous enemy. It's really easy to become over encumbered in Fallout 76. What do you do with all that junk in Fallout 76? Bethesda Fallout 76 Stash Weight Limit Management Guide
