About this mod
DC Fenway Munitions adds a brand-new gun and ammunition factory to Diamond City. Fully integrated into the world, this facility produces weapons and ammo to support the city's defense and trade.
- Requirements
- Permissions and credits
but where does it all come from?
Precombines have not been touched.
DC Fenway Munitions finally provides a lore-friendly answer by adding a fully functional gun and ammunition factory to Diamond City. This mod expands the city with a believable industrial site that produces weapons, ammo, and power systems for local defense and trade.
More than just a static location, Fenway Munitions features a dedicated vendor who sells a wide variety of weapons and ammunition, as well as shipment-based crafting kits. While Bethesda often locks key items behind perks like Science!, this mod offers alternative for those less book smart. After all, the player isn't the only smart person left in the world—so now, with the right caps, you can buy and deploy advanced tech without needing high-end perks.
These shipments allow you to build essential settlement defenses and infrastructure without requiring perks or raw components. Instead, you're paying for pre-packaged industrial kits, just like a real scavenger-turned-settler might.
Available shipments include:
- Machinegun Turret
- Heavy Machinegun Turret
- Heavy Laser Turret
- Fusion Generator
With DC Fenway Munitions, Diamond City feels more alive, more complete, and more connected to the world it helps arm. It’s not just a location mod—it’s the missing piece of the Commonwealth’s wartime economy.
Design Philosophy & Location Choice
When choosing a location for DC Fenway Munitions, I focused on maintaining immersion and respecting the existing world layout. I selected the empty area next to Kellogg’s house, as it always felt too bare and underutilized—perfect for an addition that would make sense both visually and narratively.
To stay true to the setting, I researched the real-world layout of Fenway Park and compared it with the in-game geography. I found that this section roughly matches the area between Gate A and Gate D (27 Jersey St, Boston, Google Maps), under the bleachers—an area that, in real life, includes food courts and slanted-roof structures built beneath the stadium seating. I’ve never been to Fenway Park myself, so I pieced together what I could from online videos and images.
That real-world reference helped me design a structure that feels like a natural extension of the stadium’s original architecture. I incorporated existing Diamond City textures and structural elements to maintain a cohesive visual style, aiming to make the factory feel like it was built into a pre-existing space—something that could have realistically existed before the war.