The Settlements system is both the best and worst new feature incorporated to the Fallout series in "Fallout 4." Great enough to appear like a full game, the Settlements of "Fallout 4" can be so exasperating essentially because it does not often live up to its own promise.
However, since Settlements are vital to the gameplay, fans expect this mechanic to grow with the game. It does not matter whether it will be through official Bethesda updates or "Fallout 4" mods, which the developer company promises to be available on PS4 and Xbox One, Settlements will change and grow, according to Gamespot.
Here are three top updates that fans expect seeing a change with regard to the "Fallout 4" settlement system.
1. God's Eye
It is frustrating to assign settlers to activities like defending, farming, and soldering scavenging points without a reason. Gamers are compelled to not only track down settlers, hiding in strange places, but also run their assignment.
Bethesda should provide players with a page in the Pip-Boy or on the settlement Workshop menu, with all the important settler information. Gamers should see settlers' assignments, dole out assignments, and rename them.
According to Kotaku, the developers should give players a God's Eye view and allow them create "Fallout 4" settlement just in the same way as playing a hardscrabble, radiation-soaked Rollercoaster Tycoon.
2. Shared Workshop Inventories/ Fixed Supply Lines
Another imperative fix would be to change the Local Leader Perk so that all settlement workshop inventories are shared. In case this is very radical, a change should be made on the supply lines.
Now, sharing items between workshops involves assigning one of the gamer settlers to communicate between their home settlement and another. While this seems simple, it can be dangerous especially with the scarcity of "Fallout 4" settler data.
3. Clip Everything
In case "Fallout 4" can allow a player build skyscrapers supported by nothing, a central concern is why not allow gamers use their jagged fences. There is no need for complex workarounds like the one shown in the clip below.