You can also open up the waiting menu by interacting with a bed that is not considered owned by another NPC, although this will trigger Resting instead. Resting is functionally similar to waiting, but it also restores Health and may confer other temporary status benefits, such as Well Rested.
Fallout New Vegas How To Wait
In certain circumstances, there may be times when you are unable to wait. You cannot wait while enemies are nearby, when trespassing, while jumping or falling, while swimming, while being irradiated, or during dialog. These restrictions also apply to resting.
To wait, the Sole Survivor must first sit down on a chair, couch or bench. If you are allowed to wait at that time, the game will then indicate what button to press to wait at the bottom of the screen.
Waiting is an action in Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas. It can be used to wait for a period of time. Waiting is useful for getting into stores that close a specific time, and waiting for the sun to come up or go down. In the PlayStation 3 version, it is done by pressing the "Select" button, the "Back" button on the Xbox 360 and the "T" button (by default) for the PC.
In certain circumstances, there may be times when you are unable to wait. You cannot wait while enemies are nearby, when trespassing, while in the air, if you are being irradiated, during dialog, or in water.
Waiting is a useful tool when dealing with Caravan Merchants. Travel to Canterbury Commons and wait for two hours by the large tree in the center of the cul-de-sac on the western edge of the town. If the merchant you want does not appear wait another two hours. This way you can cycle between merchants quickly. Other places you can wait for merchants at are by the Rivet City platform, outside Megaton, Temple of the Union, Agatha's House, Paradise Falls, Arefu and at Evergreen Mills.
JOBRANI: I can't wait. I have one quick question because, as I was reading your book, you talked about how when you were teaching at Harvard, you started going down to Washington and talking to them about the need for a consumer protection agency. And you said one Congress member laughed in your face. Who was that?
Nonetheless, there's list doubt fans are looking forward to a more-redeemed Fallout 5. There's one feature fans have been asking for for years which, if included and properly developed in Fallout 5, could make the game well worth the wait.
It has been reported, however, that The Elder Scrolls 6 will not release until after Starfield. This makes it's likely that if Starfield releases at some point in the next three years, fans could be waiting until 2026 or beyond for the next installment of Bethesda's flagship fantasy franchise.
This would give Fallout 5 huge replay value, while also allowing players to have far more control over their character and their backstory than Fallout 4's prescriptive opening allowed. It would be a step forward which would realize more of the roleplaying possibilities of the Fallout universe while still sticking to the Bethesda RPG formula. If fans of Fallout face a potentially decade-long wait for the next game, a fully-realized feature like this could make that wait worth it in the end.
If the player is given the key to Benny's suite or is able to pickpocket the key, Benny will eventually path to the room. If Benny isn't there when you arrive, select the "Wait" command and wait a few hours. If this still doesn't work, try waiting a longer period. Benny operates on a schedule where during a part of the day he will head to his suite.
Finally after tring everything under the sun i got it. first i deleted the patch and then went to caesars tent told lilly to wait outside. went in turned in a quest and went out fast traveled to vault 22 went to 5th floor only lillly was there. okay that didnt work now i fast traveled to the lucky 38 went in the suite and went in the bedroom. from here i waited 7 in game days and on the 7th day boom. you have lost ed-e perk and he has returned to primm. woohoo finally rid of the invisible companion time to get rex. oh and the achievement !!! :woop:
When trying to enter Caesar's tent at his fort, it will tell you that you have to enter alone, but you can't make ED-E wait if you can't see him, so you have to go to someplace like the Lucky 38 and enter the Penthouse, which will automatically set your followers to wait. It won't help get your lost companion back, but once you fast travel back to Caesar you will be able to enter his tent.
Ill have o go the waiting a try. Maybe it will work. Tried the elevator no dice I just hit level 30 on my second playthrough and was going to get the companion achievement before finishing the house missions this time. Hope that patch that pc got recently fixing this comes our way soon.
Go to Vault 22 and use the central elevator (which you may need to repair at a skill level of 50). Choose to go to Level 5 - Pest Control. Your missing Companion(s) will be waiting there at the exit of the elevator. You will need to use the Companion wheel to tell them to follow you again as they will be in "Wait Here" mode. It appears that the game does some sort of companion check when using this elevator, and will move your companions here regardless of their status.
*Update* so far nothing has worked. Tried waiting over 7 days in 2 spots nothing. Went to ceasers tent went in then fast traveled to vault 22 used the elevator only boone was there no ed-e. Rex just growls at me when I try to get him to come with. Tonight I'm goof to delve the patch and see if that solves my issues. Very annoying.
There's never been a better time to jump into these great games like Fallout. We were recently given our first look at the Fallout TV show and Vault 33, and Fallout 5 remains on the (very distant) horizon. So while you could go back and play Fallout 4, why not check out some of the other best RPGs that are out there? You'll find plenty of those here, as we have prioritised awesome adventures with fantastic worlds, combat systems, and character customisation options. So what are you waiting for? Lose a few hundred hours in one of these games like Fallout while you still can.
Students put a lot of their focus on grades and school to gives themselves a brighter future. When it comes time for a six weeks to end, most people want to make sure their grades have remained up to par. This cannot happen when a teacher waits until the last minute to put in grades, especially a major grade. If that major grade turns out as an F, it will bring down the grade leaving students with no time to redo. If it ends up as a C, it will bring the grade down with no chance to redo because the student did not fail.
Waiting to put in grades not only adds stress on the student but also the teacher. When they wait until last minute it gives them more work to do and adds more grading stress on them. For classes where students writes an essay makes this especially hard to grade at last minute. Each teacher has about 200 students, grading 200 papers at last minute puts a lot of pressure on a person.
Additionally, teachers should not wait to grade at the last minute because it causes a lot of angry parents to call, email, or schedule a meeting with the teacher. Students can blame the grades on the fact that they did not have time to redo because of the teacher. If teachers graded in a responsible amount of time no student could blame the bad grade on the teacher. However parents and students should understand that teachers have a lot of students papers to grade for each assignment.
The Department of Veterans Affairs in 2014 was embroiled in a scandal over massive wait times in its health-care system, particularly at one hospital in Phoenix. In the aftermath, Congress and the White House took steps to reform the VA.
Officials at the Phoenix VA hospital were accused of keeping a secret wait list of veterans who were seeking health care. This list was kept out of sight of federal regulators, who were instead sent documents that vastly underreported how long it took for patients in Phoenix to see a doctor.
The secret wait list kept out of view, for example, that patients had to wait an average of 115 days to be seen by a primary care provider. Those long wait times may have had dire consequences: CNN reported that as many as 40 veterans died while on wait lists at the Phoenix hospital, and an official investigation found the wait time contributed to deaths.
VA officials could have, of course, reported those long wait times to the federal government, but that could have meant losing out on pay bonuses hospitals receive for keeping wait times short. What's scandalous about the behavior at the Phoenix VA hospital is that instead of making the long wait times public in hopes of fixing the problem, administrators tried to make it look like the issues didn't exist at all.
The scandal at the Phoenix hospital also led to greater scrutiny of other VA-run facilities and whether they also have unacceptable wait times for patients. And it put a spotlight on the care the VA provides, which has alternately been praised as an exemplar of modern health-care systems and derided as failing America's veterans.
The American Legion tracked reports of mismanagement at hospitals across the country. At the time, the group located attempts to conceal long wait times in at least 10 other VA facilities besides the one in Phoenix, Arizona.
These problems included a range of alleged bad practices. One St. Louis, Missouri, director, for example, said he was demoted for trying to boost productivity. Whistleblowers in Texas and Colorado claimed local VA administrators manipulated the scheduling system to conceal wait times. And an audit team in Florida found secret wait lists similar to those in the Phoenix VA facility. 2ff7e9595c
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