u/Archipocalypse

Plea to Developer: Too many water bottles!

Can we please not have water bottles as loot from so many places and mobs? Why should anything drop a water bottle past Springlands or maybe revelwood? For incase you ran out of all food and drink while exploring? That is not a good reason because a water bottle lasts HOURS.

The recipe is easy and cheap, etc. There is no good reason why I have to stop and delete water bottles this often, especially off mobs at mid to late game tiers. Who isn't going 100% prepared at that point? Same thing goes for torches, who past springlands or maybe revelwood needs basic torches dropping? And if you did, a few seconds hitting a tree makes a torch.

Can anyone honestly say they have ever actually needed a randomly looted torch or water bottle past revelwood biome?

I also did post this over on "Feature upvote" If you would like to vote for it so the developers see it.

https://enshrouded.featureupvote.com/suggestions/713024/water-bottles-and-torches-do-not-need-to-be-loot-past-revelwood-imho

(The Feature Upvote will have to be authorized by staff first)

reddit.com
u/Archipocalypse — 9 hours ago

What is the plan for these smart machines and courts starting to rule in favor of cashless = illegal?

Title basically. I've been planning to start a Vending Business with my wife. I've started vetting places to place, and then started seeing the news about some states and cities starting to make it illegal to not accept cash. This seems to be including vending machines.

The smart micro markets do not seem very easy to add cash to them, seems to possibly be a bad idea to buy these because of this. Do any of the smart markets have all of the smart AI features but also accept cash, or which machine would be easiest to add cash to in the event of being forced to?

I'd hate to get several machines placed, loaded, under contract, then be hit with the realization that my machines are now illegal and need either immediate retrofitting or to be replaced.

reddit.com
u/Archipocalypse — 5 days ago
▲ 10 r/fo76

1st Official Mother's Day started In Grafton, WV!

 Mother's Day in the United States was established by Anna Jarvis, with the first Mother's Day celebrated  at St Andrew's Methodist church in Grafton, West Virginia on May 10, 1908.

Source : Wikipedia

I thought that was kinda cool that it kinda started in Grafton! There should be a piece of Mother's day lore in Grafton.

reddit.com
u/Archipocalypse — 10 days ago