Fallout 76: 16 Tips For Playing Solo (2024)

Highlights

  • Dive into Fallout 76 solo for a classic single-player experience with more NPCs, exploring Appalachia at your own pace.
  • Master weapons for your playstyle, focus on good loot and situational awareness to navigate the wasteland alone.
  • Utilize Pacifist Mode, avoid other players, prioritize leveling up, and invest in Luck and stealth for survival success.

As one of the most downloaded and played Game Pass titles, more players than ever are giving West Virginia's take on the nuclear apocalypse a chance. Given its multiplayer nature, plenty of folks wonder if you can play Fallout 76 single-player. Some players may want to attempt surviving Appalachia alone, whether it be your personal preference or lack of friends interested in playing.

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With each future update or expansion, Fallout 76 looks more and more like the classic single-player titles that came before. More NPCs fill the world than ever before, so maybe now is the time for those who prefer single-player to give it a go. Fallout 76's vision was indeed formed around playing with friends, but now more than ever, a solo run is not only possible - but promising.

Updated on June 1, 2024: Looking to dive into the harsh and desolate world of Fallout 76, but taking the lone wanderer route? We've added our video here for you to take a look at, so you have all you need to go solo in the wasteland.

16 Explore, Explore, Explore

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The only surefire way to get stronger in Fallout 76 is to explore. Exploration is a critical element to open-world games in general but is arguably more important in a game that consistently pits you against other players. Most of these players have probably teamed up, immediately putting you at a disadvantage.

Exploring Appalachia is one of the true highlights of Fallout 76, even when the game was riddled with bugs and technical issues back when it launched. As a solo player, the more you explore, the more you will be able to find coveted loot, fantastic outposts, and serviceable hiding spots for when the need arises. Get as familiar with Appalachia as you can, especially early on in the game.

15 Find The Best Weapons For Your Preferred Playstyle

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How are you going to spend your time playing Fallout 76? Are you going to focus on stealth, moving in silently to take down any unsuspecting mutants or foes? No matter how you choose to play, you will need to get to grips with the various guns and plethora of weapon mods in and around Appalachia.

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Solo players lack what teamed-up players have, namely, a diversity of skills and weapons. As soon as you start having the option to utilize various weapons, find at least two or three that you feel extra confident with. You are a much more formidable lone wolf if you have your go-to weapons from the start.

14 Master Your Environment

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Following the exploration and weapon-choice tips, it's important to understand that Fallout 76 single-player is a test of your situational awareness.

Combat opportunities can surface at any moment, so you need to know how you'll respond. If you're stepping into a dark tunnel or abandoned building with small rooms, it would suit you to have a melee weapon at the ready so you are prepared to fight in close quarters at a moment's notice.

When you find yourself roaming the tree-lined forests, a sniper rifle or a silenced automatic weapon could help you deal with a dangerous pack of enemies from a distance, without giving away your location.

Be aware of what threats may linger in a given area, as foes with smarter AI, like Super Mutants, will chase you down if you give away your position.

13 Pacifist Mode

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Turning on pacifist mode in your options menu is a great place to start. Enabling Pacifist Mode disables your ability to damage other players. While this is helpful on a surface level, it goes a bit deeper. Players who still attack you regardless will find it more challenging to damage you significantly and, on top of that, are branded a murderer on the map.

Bounties are placed on these types of players to not only deter them from doing so, but the bounty incentivizes other good-natured wastelanders to come to your aid. Pacifist mode is a must but doesn't completely erase the threat other players pose. Luckily, it's still just an option in settings, meaning you can turn it on and off as you please.

12 Avoid Other Players

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This may seem obvious, but it is crucial to surviving the Fallout 76 single-player experience. Utilizing the map, you can see every individual player on the same server. Other players are represented by small dots, revealing their usernames and levels.

For some, never seeing another player may be preferred as their usual immersion relies on them being the lone wanderer. Utilizing the map may not always be a perfect answer for avoiding the potential dangers of other players.

Still, it will improve your odds and get you used to using the map, something crucial for this style of game regardless of playstyle.

11 Avoid Public Events

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Public Events don't evoke playing alone. Public events are meant for multiplayer parties to participate in and involve several other players converging to one spot at once. You may want to give it a shot regardless, simply due to the rewards.

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Public Events offer good loot and experience points. Single-player savants may be willing to forego their immersion if in need, so it's worth knowing that these events are usually relatively entertaining. However, those committed to going the solo route all the way through should avoid them.

10 Strength Build To Start - Melee And Shotguns

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Investing in your melee skill early on almost guarantees that you will do reasonably significant damage right away, and always having a weapon at the ready is smart. Melee weapons are a dime a dozen in these wastes, and ammo crunching simply doesn't apply to them.

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On top of always having a melee weapon, investing in shotguns makes you prone to doing considerable damage early on in more ways than one. Also, if aiming is a pain, shotguns could be the way to go, regardless. Who doesn't enjoy a good shotgun?

If you want to be extra economical, a Bloodied build will allow you to focus on staying at low health, to reduce the cost of healing items and chems you may need.

9 Follow The Main Quest For A While

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Sticking to the main quest and related side quests for a moderate amount of time guarantees that you will understand your place in the world, the fun new lore, and several basics revolving around this unconventional Fallout title.

Following this line of quests also assists with acquiring workbench plans early on. It is worth noting that rewards do scale to your level. Taking that as it is, having rewards scaled proves both valuable and troubling.

Following other questlines will give you similar loot and rewards but won't offer the benefits of learning the plans mentioned above - though the rewards will be way more fruitful the higher your level. So, finding a balance between reward scaling and learning the basics while completing the main quest could prove very useful.

8 Don't Hoard

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This time around, having more of a survival element means you won't carry as much or save everything you find. Most things that have been weightless in your inventory in past games now have some bulk to them. Yes, even Bobby pins.

More importantly, stocking up on every ammo type imaginable won't be ideal. So, sticking to a few specific types you are using at the moment would be much more effective. On top of that, you can scavenge or craft other types if you come across a new shiny weapon that piques your interest.

7 Level Up However You Can

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Yes, it's obvious. However, as a lone wanderer, you should target even higher levels than the enemies you encounter. After all, you won't have others to rely on, as the game assumes.

Therefore, grinding before attempting anything significant may be beneficial. Admittedly, grinding may become an annoyance, but utilizing this to experiment with other activities could also prove helpful.

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Doing nearly anything gives your character experience points. Cooking, discovering locations, building, and crafting are all extremely beneficial and rewarding experiences. As you approach essential segments in the main quest, you'll need to be at a relatively high level.

6 Lone Wanderer Perk

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There's a perk in the Charisma skill tree called Lone Wanderer. Not only does the card's name revel in the single-player mindset, but this perk buffs your damage reduction and adds faster action point regeneration when traveling solo. This card is available exceptionally early on too, so feel free to respec your cards if you missed it.

It requires four points invested in Charisma, but those familiar with the Special skill tree and cards will know it is very doable from the get-go. It's also pretty refreshing that this perk card exists – both with its familiar title and for accommodating this type of playstyle.

5 Focus On Food And Explosives

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With weightless items becoming nearly nonexistent, players need to pick and choose what to keep in their limited inventory. With ammo being reasonably hard to come by early on, focusing on food and explosives could prove very useful. With food, buffs stack and last at least thirty minutes each.

Explosives could be what saves a solo player. They pack a punch, so if surrounded, laying down a bunch of mines or explosives of choice could be what keeps you alive. Wait for enemies to bunch up, and send them flying.

4 Invest In Luck

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One Special skill perk to invest in is Luck. While it may seem a bit odd compared to the others, you could reap some genuine benefits. Improving your Luck and choosing the perks that enhance the number of items found dramatically increases your chances of staying stocked accordingly.

The perk card "Pharma Farma" grants a 40 percent chance to find more chems when looting. "Scrounger" and "Can Do" do the same thing for ammo and canned food, respectfully. Luck is also just an all-around fun perk to invest in.

3 Check Out Other People's Camp Shops

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While other wastelanders won't always be helpful to you, their home camps or resource extractors might! Oftentimes, other people on the server will have a shop set up, selling items like ammo, blueprints, and weapons or armor with Legendary effects.

Why not use that capitalistic kindness to your benefit? By this point, you're well aware of how often you come across equipment and ammo; you could set up your C.A.M.P store, selling items and equipment you gathered but don't need. It's a great way to help out fellow vault dwellers, potentially making yourself some extra caps in the process.

2 Area Too Strong? Consider Stealth

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In a game world designed around groups, you'll inevitably encounter areas or challenges that are simply too powerful. And while going in guns a-blazin' is a lot of fun, it's not a strategy that tends to last very long. When stuck between a rock and a hard mutant, there's only one thing left to do: hide.

Using stealth effectively opens the door for a few life-saving mechanics. You can heal, slowly, from items like food and salve, you have enough time to change weapons and equip explosives, and you can deal sneak attack damage.

We've launched nukes on our own using this method. It is a slow one, though. If your problem is time-sensitive, this may not be the best approach.

1 Participate In Nuke Drops

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Yes, we mentioned avoiding group events. But this is the exception. Whenever a nuke launch is announced, participate in the upcoming radioactive showdown.

Suit up, either in a rad suit or power armor, and wait outside the blast range. When it drops, the area will be full of powerful creatures, many of them legendary. When defeated, they will drop weapons and armor with legendary effects.

Even better is when this happens at the lair of the Scorchbeast Queen (the southeast corner of the map). The Queen herself is pretty hard to defeat, but if you and everyone else succeed in taking her down, the rewards are some of the best in the game.

You don't need to kill them yourself; as long as you deal damage, you are granted their loot. Go around, shoot everything you can, and hope that the larger teams will finish them off. Stay moving, heal up, and you should survive the massive battle.

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Fallout 76: 16 Tips For Playing Solo (2024)

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