This is the best fallout 4 build tutorial video and is the video I have literally been searching for. It should be, in my opinion, the most viewed fallout 4 build video on youtube.
This is good info, especially for new players. The different materials seem more interchangeable at first, but they don't play nice together. Plus there's really no in-game guidance on how the system works. Kudos!
The size and snapping of the concrete walls is precisely why I hate using them (they end up sticking out on the outside, you need to use the little pillar wall pieces to fill corners, etc) but maybe with some of these tips I can make better use of them at some point. I generally build with just the warehouse and barn sets because they play nice, they've got all the pieces you need, and with two sets that are basically reskins of each other you can have some variety. And I just like the look better for structures I'd invite people to live in. I use concrete for my industrial and security spaces. Plus I think about how much work mixing and pouring concrete would be...
You can snap concrete walls flat against one another. Place your wall, then snap another wall to the first on the inside of your build. Concrete is honestly one of the most versatile building groups in the game. I like to use the walls as the base of a security fence, and usually they have no problem snapping, no matter how rocky the terrain is.
I really thank you for this video; I found it extremely interesting and informative. When I first started watching some of your videos, showcasing your settlement builds, I thought - WHAT!? How the hell did he build that? I just didn't think such settlements builds were even possible. I had scruffy, scrappy little run-down, falling apart shacks in my settlements - mainly the pre-build ones under, "wood>prefabs" becuase they werfe quick and easy, and I didn't really know how to do much more. I never used concrete in my builds before watching your vids; I now use it much more. I never used multi-storey buildings before; I have now started to build them - thanks to you. This video was particularly helpful as I seek to improve my building techniques. I know this video it hasn't received too many views yet, but for those of us who have watched it, it has been really helpful and appreciated, and even though much of it was 'at night', it didn't really bother me - I still learnt a lot. Thanks again.
A key component to making individual rooms in the wood and metal build sets is the prefab units available at the left side of each menu - there are rooms, hallways and even doorways already assembled for you to simply put together in your multistory designs. They're not perfect, but better than nothing. Those pieces are my go to parts for putting together my bunkhouse that sit on top of my Red Rocket garage and for the market buildings with upstairs living quarters for the vendors that I build in Sanctuary Hills.
I really like to use concrete for the ground floor of my structures. Then, you attach upper floor pieces to the concrete walls, which can take either standard height shack walls, OR extended height barn or warehouse pieces. It makes it look like the builders were conserving resources, using sturdy concrete for the lower floors (which also won't rot or rust in wet ground like wood will) and flimsier construction on the upper levels. A lot of these buildings aren't pretty, but... you use what you have. There's some nice stuff in the Creation Club; in particular, the Slocum Joe's build set includes brick walls in both red and whitewashed. Which actually makes some lore sense, since settlers could disassemble old brick buildings and construct new ones.
I have tons of hours of settlement building but rarely used concrete walls. Started watching your videos and decided to make a castle with them. Made four awesome towers with the 1/4 tube ones, but when I started making stairs for them I realized the damn stairs snap at both ends but they are a hair shorter than the walls. Triggers me so hard!
I found for building a regular home, I like using the barn and warehouse sets together. The barn for the walls and doorways and warehouse for unbroken windows and stairs. Building rooms is still a little finicky but, in the end, I was happy with how my farmhouse on A. Farm came out.
Video was a lot of help, would like to see one that shows more detail building with the concrete build set, ie. interior walls, rooms, hallways, stairwells. Love your videos they give some great ideas and help, please keep them going
Everything you do is worth doing. 😁 Whether simple or not, there is always more to learn as far as building in this game goes. As far as the concrete set though, the 1x1 and 1x4 piece walls can sometimes be invaluable for creating extra snap points. Also, the elevators in the warehouse section can be quite the pain to enclose as part of a structure. Sometimes walls snap, sometimes they don't. I'd love to see how you tackle them sometime.
Your supposed to mix metal and wood build. You don't have stairs in metal components, you have wood stair well. The double floor really helps you connect walls one floor level to another.
My favorite sets to build with are the barn and the concrete sets. This is mostly because the other sets don't have any completely holeless walls. Anyone who has been in Massachusetts in winter knows how cold it can be.
Great video series. I love Fallout 4 mainly because of the settlement building. I would love to figure out how to do massive structures with the metal pieces--but I don't see others doing it much, so it's probably not possible?
I like concrete but has to be some planning for interior walls since they can snap on one side or the other of a floor. Can have a set of rms that seem cramped and others that are spacious or hallways thatbmight look wonky if younarent careful
Great content. Would be good to record this in daylight for better visibility. Could you do a video on wiring electric doorways so they can be opened using switches from both sides?
The Fallout 4 build system is really flawed. I hope that they add the build sets from Fallout 76 when they do the next gen update, because that is so much easier to work with. Wall sizes are standardized, everything is interchangeable, and it’s just so nice.
Every time I try to build with the concrete build set I can’t get anything to line up. My floors and walls are fine but the moment I go to add another floor, no matter if I use floors or ceilings, that top floor will not line up with my first floor walls. I’ll always end up with a gap on either end. Never have that issue with the wood, barn, or warehouse set. I don’t know how you manage this because you seem to avoid explaining how you do it but judging by your choice of building textures it seems mods are at play.
nope, no mods. just start your second set of walls and snap your next floor to the wall. you can actually see it hin this video when I'm talking about collisions with the concrete set, when I place one roof piece and one second floor piece side by side.
Great content, spend every time hours to find the right material to build, and sometimes still don't understand why the don't match correctly! BUT why record by night?? I can almost see nothing...
The vault atrium floor can connect to all other floors. You can place stuff upsidedown using the workshop and a little wall, just be in buildmode and push over the item, making vid on it😂
Jesus, man. I think I agree with your sentiment but I damn-near had a stroke when I tried to parse what you wrote. Spelling and grammar aren't just some tedium invented by schools to waste your time: they're intended to help you make yourself understood quickly and easily, so you don't look like a drooling imbecile and the person reading your messages doesn't have to spend time trying to figure out what in the hell you're saying. My translation, and hopefully I'm correct: "This was somewhat helpful but you really need to record in daytime or have lights on when you do these videos." I'd even add in, "It's hard to see details on a recording when the game is in night mode" for specificity's sake.
I'm afraid I don't understand the question. all DLC can be acquired through the respective game marketplace you used to purchase fallout 4. also I'm not sure what you mean by build sets DLC. there are lots of DLCs that add additional build sets but there isn't a DLC called build sets.
Cracks me up. You apologize at the end knowing people will dislike the video because you did it at night but yet you still post it? Why not just redo it? And by the way I couldn’t see what you were doing.
15:02 for some reason my brain kept using the words "floor" and "door" interchangeably... sorry about that...
Well they do rhyme.
Sleep. Need more relax time
This is the best fallout 4 build tutorial video and is the video I have literally been searching for. It should be, in my opinion, the most viewed fallout 4 build video on youtube.
This is good info, especially for new players. The different materials seem more interchangeable at first, but they don't play nice together. Plus there's really no in-game guidance on how the system works. Kudos!
The size and snapping of the concrete walls is precisely why I hate using them (they end up sticking out on the outside, you need to use the little pillar wall pieces to fill corners, etc) but maybe with some of these tips I can make better use of them at some point. I generally build with just the warehouse and barn sets because they play nice, they've got all the pieces you need, and with two sets that are basically reskins of each other you can have some variety. And I just like the look better for structures I'd invite people to live in. I use concrete for my industrial and security spaces. Plus I think about how much work mixing and pouring concrete would be...
You can snap concrete walls flat against one another. Place your wall, then snap another wall to the first on the inside of your build. Concrete is honestly one of the most versatile building groups in the game. I like to use the walls as the base of a security fence, and usually they have no problem snapping, no matter how rocky the terrain is.
I really thank you for this video; I found it extremely interesting and informative. When I first started watching some of your videos, showcasing your settlement builds, I thought - WHAT!? How the hell did he build that? I just didn't think such settlements builds were even possible. I had scruffy, scrappy little run-down, falling apart shacks in my settlements - mainly the pre-build ones under, "wood>prefabs" becuase they werfe quick and easy, and I didn't really know how to do much more. I never used concrete in my builds before watching your vids; I now use it much more. I never used multi-storey buildings before; I have now started to build them - thanks to you.
This video was particularly helpful as I seek to improve my building techniques. I know this video it hasn't received too many views yet, but for those of us who have watched it, it has been really helpful and appreciated, and even though much of it was 'at night', it didn't really bother me - I still learnt a lot. Thanks again.
It's insane how user un-friendly the base building is in this game
Thank you! Very happy to see someone putting out FO4 content! I'm back playing it as I look forward to the next Gen update next year.
I definitely found this helpful! It explains why my buildings have so many speed holes.
A key component to making individual rooms in the wood and metal build sets is the prefab units available at the left side of each menu - there are rooms, hallways and even doorways already assembled for you to simply put together in your multistory designs. They're not perfect, but better than nothing. Those pieces are my go to parts for putting together my bunkhouse that sit on top of my Red Rocket garage and for the market buildings with upstairs living quarters for the vendors that I build in Sanctuary Hills.
I really like to use concrete for the ground floor of my structures. Then, you attach upper floor pieces to the concrete walls, which can take either standard height shack walls, OR extended height barn or warehouse pieces. It makes it look like the builders were conserving resources, using sturdy concrete for the lower floors (which also won't rot or rust in wet ground like wood will) and flimsier construction on the upper levels. A lot of these buildings aren't pretty, but... you use what you have.
There's some nice stuff in the Creation Club; in particular, the Slocum Joe's build set includes brick walls in both red and whitewashed. Which actually makes some lore sense, since settlers could disassemble old brick buildings and construct new ones.
I have tons of hours of settlement building but rarely used concrete walls. Started watching your videos and decided to make a castle with them. Made four awesome towers with the 1/4 tube ones, but when I started making stairs for them I realized the damn stairs snap at both ends but they are a hair shorter than the walls. Triggers me so hard!
I found for building a regular home, I like using the barn and warehouse sets together. The barn for the walls and doorways and warehouse for unbroken windows and stairs.
Building rooms is still a little finicky but, in the end, I was happy with how my farmhouse on A. Farm came out.
Video was a lot of help, would like to see one that shows more detail building with the concrete build set, ie. interior walls, rooms, hallways, stairwells. Love your videos they give some great ideas and help, please keep them going
That double thick floor tip really helps. Thanks.
Everything you do is worth doing. 😁 Whether simple or not, there is always more to learn as far as building in this game goes. As far as the concrete set though, the 1x1 and 1x4 piece walls can sometimes be invaluable for creating extra snap points. Also, the elevators in the warehouse section can be quite the pain to enclose as part of a structure. Sometimes walls snap, sometimes they don't. I'd love to see how you tackle them sometime.
That's why I almost exclusively use the warehouse/barn assets. Easy rooms, easy stories.
Your supposed to mix metal and wood build. You don't have stairs in metal components, you have wood stair well. The double floor really helps you connect walls one floor level to another.
My favorite sets to build with are the barn and the concrete sets. This is mostly because the other sets don't have any completely holeless walls. Anyone who has been in Massachusetts in winter knows how cold it can be.
that is generally why I like those sets as well.
Thank god. I havent played this game in years and couldnt remember how to make multilevel buildings without big gaps between floors 😂
Good info! The air gap and and stairs were driving me crazy.
Great video series. I love Fallout 4 mainly because of the settlement building. I would love to figure out how to do massive structures with the metal pieces--but I don't see others doing it much, so it's probably not possible?
3:36 could we use this concept to clip a metal door through a floor by replacing one of the concrete foundations with one floor panel at 15:25
I like concrete but has to be some planning for interior walls since they can snap on one side or the other of a floor. Can have a set of rms that seem cramped and others that are spacious or hallways thatbmight look wonky if younarent careful
Expert tips
You can place warehouse (wh) wallsand half walls inside concrete walls.
You can place walls 3 thick with the help of 2 concrete walls.
great vid thank you for sharing
Great content. Would be good to record this in daylight for better visibility.
Could you do a video on wiring electric doorways so they can be opened using switches from both sides?
I actually already tackled that one. it should be in my commonwealth contractor playlist.
Use Console Command to stop time, so that you don't have to worry about it anymore.
The Fallout 4 build system is really flawed. I hope that they add the build sets from Fallout 76 when they do the next gen update, because that is so much easier to work with. Wall sizes are standardized, everything is interchangeable, and it’s just so nice.
What do you mean "fireproof" when talking about the metal walls, etc?? Since when can the place be set on fire and burn down?
Every time I try to build with the concrete build set I can’t get anything to line up. My floors and walls are fine but the moment I go to add another floor, no matter if I use floors or ceilings, that top floor will not line up with my first floor walls. I’ll always end up with a gap on either end. Never have that issue with the wood, barn, or warehouse set. I don’t know how you manage this because you seem to avoid explaining how you do it but judging by your choice of building textures it seems mods are at play.
nope, no mods. just start your second set of walls and snap your next floor to the wall. you can actually see it hin this video when I'm talking about collisions with the concrete set, when I place one roof piece and one second floor piece side by side.
@@Theegreygaming this still doesn’t work. I don’t know. Maybe it’s a console issue?
Great content, spend every time hours to find the right material to build, and sometimes still don't understand why the don't match correctly!
BUT why record by night?? I can almost see nothing...
The vault atrium floor can connect to all other floors.
You can place stuff upsidedown using the workshop and a little wall, just be in buildmode and push over the item, making vid on it😂
Some what helpful u need rc in daytime or have ur fialigth on when u do these videos
Jesus, man. I think I agree with your sentiment but I damn-near had a stroke when I tried to parse what you wrote. Spelling and grammar aren't just some tedium invented by schools to waste your time: they're intended to help you make yourself understood quickly and easily, so you don't look like a drooling imbecile and the person reading your messages doesn't have to spend time trying to figure out what in the hell you're saying.
My translation, and hopefully I'm correct: "This was somewhat helpful but you really need to record in daytime or have lights on when you do these videos." I'd even add in, "It's hard to see details on a recording when the game is in night mode" for specificity's sake.
is there a way to make these buildings look more organic?
Trying to demo the techniques at night makes it difficult to watch.
Why on earth did you record this at night?
I'd love to be a top notch electrician in the Commonwealth, any tips?
Where is this?
Dude you need to use the fireworks to make it daylight, I can barely see anything in the dark
Where did you get the concrete set? Is it something you unlock later in the game or is it from a dlc/creation club?
it's one of the game's DLCs. I think wasteland workshop.
Where did you get the build sets, DLC? Thank you.
I'm afraid I don't understand the question. all DLC can be acquired through the respective game marketplace you used to purchase fallout 4. also I'm not sure what you mean by build sets DLC. there are lots of DLCs that add additional build sets but there isn't a DLC called build sets.
@@Theegreygaming You call them build sets so I was wondering if you meant DLC. Thank you for answering and sorry for any confusion.
@@dennis2376 no problem, when I say build set, I am just referring to which menu I'm using to construct the items (wood, metal, vault, etc).
Oh my god bro thank you
Cracks me up. You apologize at the end knowing people will dislike the video because you did it at night but yet you still post it? Why not just redo it? And by the way I couldn’t see what you were doing.
Please do something with your sound compression/loudness. This is a torture for ears to listen to.