The Front Structure Health

The Front: How To Auto-Repair Structures

Alexis Ongsansoy
2 Min Read

Renovations will always find a way to your base of operations in The Front whether you like it or not. Your base will always take damage for whatever reason. Damage sources can come from the elements, other parties who have hands that allow them to cause harm, or yourself.

It’s not a proper game if you aren’t allowed to fix these damages before they get any worse. But should you really be doing all the work by yourself when you can be focusing on something else? No, that’s why you rely on Auto-Repair. If you haven’t figured out how to make it work yet, then keep on reading the guide below!

How To Auto-Repair Structures

Everything you place on your base will lose hit points over time. To auto repair structures around your base, you’re going to need a Spacetime Beacon. Doesn’t sound that survivor-y anymore but what it does is it sends a signal where supplies can be received.

You can research the Spacetime Beacon by going to the Structures section of your Tech Tree.

The Front Spacetime Beacon

Once you get a beacon up and running, simply walk up to it and wait for the tool tip to appear. You can also open the beacon and it will display the materials needed for Auto-repair to function properly. That will be shown on the upper right of the screen.

Dump all of the available resources that you have on the beacon’s inventory bar and click on Submit Resources to continue.

Doing this will keep your base safe from spontaneously combusting without your consent. Now, you can focus on making food by a bonfire without your walls crumbling around you.

The Front Spacetime Beacon

Now, you know how Auto-Repair works in The Front. With this piece of knowledge in mind, you can now move on to more advanced ventures. Ventures like getting synthetic substances like polymer.

ALSO READ: The Front: How To Use Blueprints

TAGGED:
Here we have Alexis, he's been gaming ever since the second Famicom came out. Which is probably the reason why he goes back to platformers every now and then. Somewhere down the line he started getting more and more fascinated about looking at maps change colors for three to eight hours straight. If he's not out strategizing and beating the life out of his space bar in that order there's a good chance you can find him playing an FPS or talking someone's ear out about how game balance gets in the way of realism. You can tell that he really likes getting the full experience of whatever he gets his hands on.
Leave a Comment