This is one of the biggest things that really annoys me about settlements - your buildings won't protect you from radiation storms, because you're still technically 'outside'.Does anyone think it will be possible to remedy this once the modding tool is released? Could a building enclosed by four walls and a roof somehow be scripted as a no-radiation zone?Yeah, this can be done, it's a little tricky but certainly possible. Doesn't need the creation kit though.The way Thing123 suggested would be a lot easier to script, although potentially a little less immersive. For a radiation-free zone item, why not give those Pulowski Preservation Shelters the ability to function for their intended purpose? Was quite disappointed the first time a Radstorm rolled in, and I tried to seal myself up inside one and wait it out only to realize that they weren't actually radiation-proof. It would make a little more sense, too.

Fallout 4 How To Reduce Radiation

Four junk walls and a corrugated roof isn't exactly a radiation shield, but a cylinder that is explicitly designed to offer protection against it should actually perform as advertised.Edited by ZetsumiNihilus, 23 March 2016 - 10:02 PM. I'll take a look at the radiation effects used by the rad storms and see if it's possible to set a LOS (line of sight) flag on them. That would be the simplest solution.It might be technically possible to put an enchantment (aka.

How to reduce radiation exposure

In the nuclear wasteland of Fallout 76 most of the environment is riddled with pockets of dangerous radiation and if the player is exposed to excessive radiation they can become mutated.

Object effect) of the Pulowski's, that in turn, would put a cloak spell on the player giving them rad resistance.There are so few Pulowski shelters. Imagine the chaos when the bombs struck, hundreds of people all fighting each other to get into that one little shelter?Edited by steve40, 24 March 2016 - 01:17 AM. A radiation storm is where the radioactive particles still on the ground are whipped up among the winds and rains, and spread more easily through the gaps in the buildings (where they're then inhaled/ingested by you and the settlers). For a radiation-free zone item, why not give those Pulowski Preservation Shelters the ability to function for their intended purpose?

Was quite disappointed the first time a Radstorm rolled in, and I tried to seal myself up inside one and wait it out only to realize that they weren't actually radiation-proof. It would make a little more sense, too. Four junk walls and a corrugated roof isn't exactly a radiation shield, but a cylinder that is explicitly designed to offer protection against it should actually perform as advertised.This assumes they actually function as advertised.

Protection From Radiation Fallout

You find a lot of dead people and ghouls in them. For a radiation-free zone item, why not give those Pulowski Preservation Shelters the ability to function for their intended purpose? Was quite disappointed the first time a Radstorm rolled in, and I tried to seal myself up inside one and wait it out only to realize that they weren't actually radiation-proof. It would make a little more sense, too. Four junk walls and a corrugated roof isn't exactly a radiation shield, but a cylinder that is explicitly designed to offer protection against it should actually perform as advertised.This assumes they actually function as advertised.

Fallout 4 How To Reduce Radiation In Body

Fallout 4 how to reduce radiation size

Fallout 4 How To Reduce Radiation

You find a lot of dead people and ghouls in them.Yes, which I suppose is the in-universe explanation for why they don't even provide rad resistance to someone standing inside them. The out-of-universe explanation is laziness on Bethesda's part. Nonetheless, it seems like a bit of wasted potential to have them everywhere and not have them actually provide you resistance against radstorms.