

It's the specific location of the wooden bridge in Sanctuary (known as North Bridge), as well as the Minute Man Statue. Sanctuary Hills is located at Minute Man National Historical Park, Concord, MA. It's a game after all and real world map hasn't been just transferred to it. The way i think it has been probably done is that bethesda took Warner's Pond and placed it a bit closer to concord. So much for general directions on the map, but what you found looks like it's in game counterpart of course, but as i stated above, not where it actually is. Also note where Lexington on the real world map is, then you will see, why i can't agree that Warner's Pond has been implemented on its original location. Adittionally i think where Skylanes Flight 1981 icon appears, would be near where Laurence G Hanscom Field in the ral world is (Bethesda didn't want more airfields?). If we would rely on map icons, for Concord it looks like it's exactly where google places Concord and that would be in the same general direction (South-Southeast) from sanctuary hills, if we place it somewhere off lowell rd. This location is not so far from Minute Man National Historical Park - North Bridge and as we know Minute Man/Minutemen appear in the game. I would suggest it is somewhere on Lowell Rd, the in game sanctuary hills road is probably made up. Thoughts? Also anyone with a better idea of where it may be. Warner's Pond - where it'd be in game if it were in game.įallout 4 map showing the two lakes and Sanctuary Hills: Using Lake Cochituate as a Latitude guide and Lake Quannapowitt as a Longitude guide, Warner's Pond fits almost perfectly for where Sanctuary Hills should be at while still maintaining the appearance of the area you've come to know. And looking at the area with Google Earth shows there isn't much housing just lots of vegetation. The best match I have found that looks visually similar from an overhead view is Warner's Pond which even has the little island in the center. I've been trying to determine Sanctuary Hills's real world location and it's proving a little. And while sites like Facebook have all-encompassing userbases, its many layers of targeting options mean advertisers could simply opt to target millennial males with an interest in comic books, for example, into their ad buys.Forums: Index > Fallout 4 general discussion > Sanctuary Hills real world location? The same too could likely be said of Reddit - which is an investor in Imgur and is also a platform where many Imgur photos go viral - which notches up far more visits: 234 million uniques in December. So whether it's that video games now make more money than movies, or if you look at all the recent blockbusters and how they're all populated with movies about science fiction, fantasy, dinosaurs, superheroes - and now we have Dr Who merchandise on sale at Target, which years ago would have been unheard of." What used to be seen as being on the fringe is now becoming incredibly popular. These are people who are into video games, science, technology, movies, and internet culture in general. Patrizi describes the audience: "These aren't necessarily people who are really excited and into sports, or golf, or boating. Imgur's go-to-market strategy is that it's not like other platforms. The sell to advertisers is "geek culture at massive scale." They are pleading at Old Spice not to stop their ad campaigns - these are the people who go out of their way to block ads and here they are saying: 'Please, give us more ads!'" Imgur's big sell to advertisers: "Geek culture at massive scale" Patrizi said: "If you look at the comments, there are people who are literally begging for more. The cost for a Promoted Post (so far, Imgur's only ad format) varies, depending on the advertiser's overall commitment, but Promoted Posts tend to reach a CPM (cost per mille/thousand views) of between $30 and $40. Imgur only began testing ads in 2015, but they've somewhat surprisingly gone down a storm with its user base, 70 to 80% of which are males between the age of 18-to-34-years-old - the exact demographic that is usually cynical of advertising and are the biggest users of ad blockers. Steve Patrizi, Imgur's vice president of marketing and revenue, told Business Insider how 2016 is setting up to be a big year for the company as advertisers begin to realize the platform's ability to help them overcome the rise of ad blocking and its ability to tap into the increasing popularity of "geek culture." "If you look at the comments, there are people who are literally begging for more " More than 900 billion images were viewed on Imgur in 2015 alone and now the site is talking up its scale and its unique proposition to advertisers as it looks to convert those views into serious revenue.
