For an overview of naughty nightwear, see naughty nightwear. |
“I had two of these things specially made for us in Virginia by The Tailor. He's a master at this stuff. I know you and your chick will love it.”— Lug-Nut, Lag-Bolt's note
Naughty nightwear is a set of leopard print pajamas found during the unmarked quest Grady's Package in Fallout 3.
Background[]
Lug-Nut had two of these specially made in Virginia by "The Tailor," according to Lag-Bolt's note. Its counterpart clothing is the all-nighter nightwear.
Locations[]
Main article: Grady's Package
This unmarked quest is centered around the naughty nightwear item and it can be found in Marigold station, in a safe.
Notes[]
- In the Pip-Boy status screen the effect is listed as "Naughty Nightspeech".
- Naughty nightwear can be repaired using various pre-War outfits and merc outfits including pre-War hats.
Behind the scenes[]
The Naughty Nightwear and its associated quest were created by quest designer Alan Nanes.[Non-game 1]
Bugs[]
- all-nighter nightwear, however, displays an accurate world model, leopard-skin and all. It also shows on the clothing "nightware". [verified] The naughty nightwear's world model is bugged; when dropped, it looks identical to the sexy sleepwear. The
- Lug-Nut, if you drop the nightwear before talking to him, he still thinks you have it. Furthermore, if you "give" it to him, he'll spawn his own 100% condition copy before running off. Killing him will get you two copies of the nightwear. [verified] When you are accosted by
- When handing in the naughty nightwear to Ronald in Girdershade, if you managed to exploit the Lug-Nut "drop" bug previously, you cannot hand in the quest with two instances of the naughty nightwear on you. Simply drop one and then talk to Ronald to complete the quest. [verified]
- Luck and Speech, the increase in Luck is not reflected in any skills. [verified] Although the naughty nightwear does raise
Gallery[]
See also[]
References[]
Non-game
- ↑ Meet the Devs of Skyrim Q&A:
Alan Nanes: "I frequently add "easter eggs" to the game... but they usually don't stand out so much as to ruin the setting. Those are fun. Some good examples are the Ring of the Oceanborn in the Shivering Isles or the Naughty Nightware mini-quest in Fallout 3."