Removes the annoying high pitched squeak from power armor walking sounds.
Permissions and credits
Credits and distribution permission
Other user's assetsAll the assets in this file belong to the author, or are from free-to-use modder's resources
Upload permissionYou can upload this file to other sites but you must credit me as the creator of the file
Modification permissionYou are allowed to modify my files and release bug fixes or improve on the features so long as you credit me as the original creator
Conversion permissionYou can convert this file to work with other games as long as you credit me as the creator of the file
Asset use permissionYou are allowed to use the assets in this file without permission as long as you credit me
Asset use permission in mods/files that are being soldYou are not allowed to use assets from this file in any mods/files that are being sold, for money, on Steam Workshop or other platforms
Asset use permission in mods/files that earn donation pointsYou are allowed to earn Donation Points for your mods if they use my assets
Author notes
This author has not provided any additional notes regarding file permissions
File credits
This author has not credited anyone else in this file
Donation Points system
Please log in to find out whether this mod is receiving Donation Points
This mod removes the high pitched squeaks (> 10 kHz) from power armor walking sounds. Saves your sanity, especially when playing without music! Please note: Removes only the squeaks, power armors still make lots of creaking and stomping noises! If this bothers you, lower footstep volume in settings.
Installation: - Extract "OiledPowerArmor.ba2" to your Data folder - Add "OiledPowerArmor.ba2" to your "sResourceArchive2List=" in Fallout76Custom.ini
If this is the first mod you install, you need to create Fallout76Custom.ini in "<Documents>\My Games\Fallout 76" with the following content: [Archive] sResourceArchive2List=OiledPowerArmor.ba2
This mod only changes the audio files with the squeaking noise present, please notify me if you find one I missed. I applied a low pass cutoff at 10kHz, which might cause a minor loss of fidelity, but imo way more pleasant than constant squeaking.