REPCONN Headquarters

Contains many hacking and lockpicking tasks. The main purpose of lockpicking and science in this location is to obtain security clearance so that the many defensive robots do not become hostile. There are several safes as well, most of which can be opened with either Science or Lockpicking. The hardest of which are two very hard hacking terminals and one very hard locked door. The first very hard locked door and very hard terminal can be bypassed by playing your way through the entire building carefully. Behind them lays the unique weapon Q-35 Matter Modulator.

Exterior
Outside the building, there are 4-5 friendly Maintenance Robots.

First floor
Upon entering the building, the player will find 4-5 Fiend corpses and a number of Maintenance Robots. The area has several locked doors and safes. The most notable is the Very Hard-Locked door that leads to the unique Plasma Rifle.

Third floor
In order to remain protected from the robots, you must possess a 7 or higher luck which allows you to guess the password (which is Ice Cream). The printed off third floor security badge and third floor pass key in the Bos suitcase do NOT work.


 * You also visit during the quest Still in the Dark for the BoS to find the missing patrol. The missing patrol can be found dead on the third floor. You can find their T-51b Power Armor and the chairman's skeleton with a suitcase containing a general pass key and 200 Pre-war Money. The pass key can be used to access the very hard door that leads to the Q-35 Matter Modulator. That way, even characters with lower lockpick skill can access this unique Plasma Rifle.

Notable loot

 * Two copies of Nikola Tesla and You are found hidden away here as well. One is next to a locked terminal on a desk (second floor) and another in the room with the unique Plasma Rifle (Q-35 Matter Modulator), on top of the safe behind a Very Hard locked door (first floor)
 * Sunset Sarsaparilla star bottle caps
 * Big Book of Science in a hard locked room in the gift shop (first floor)
 * Q-35 Matter Modulator: A unique [Plasma Rifle]].
 * There is an unlocked door leading south from the solar system display. Up the stairs Jenny Millet's Security Keycard can be found on a console by a skeleton. The card unlocks the door on the right as soon as the player enters the building. It also allows the player to pass the Mobile Facial Recognition Scanner security check (greeting you as Mrs. Millet). Interestingly, it makes the same sound as caps when picked up.
 * A large amount of Micro-fusion Cells on the first floor behind a locked door.

Related quests

 * Still in the Dark
 * ED-E My Love

Appearances
REPCONN Headquarters appears only in Fallout: New Vegas.

Bugs
The safe on the first floor after entering can be opened twice. Open first on the door (pre-war money and a couple caps) then exit the safe and try to open the safe by aiming cross-hairs on the top panel of the safe and you can pick it again to find more caps.

Sometimes you will be unable to pick up the Q-35 Matter Modulator as it will be stuck due to glitch. Try throwing grenades or dynamite around it until you can pick it up.

Also, occasionally Facial Recognition Modules will follow you from the top floor to the second floor, and stay on that floor, forcing you to either flee the second floor until your luck is 7, or to fight the Sentry Robots. Presumably they can also follow you to the main floor.

There is a terminal on the first floor in pristine condition that is turned off however the green light emitted by on operational terminal is still seen around the terminal.

If you activate the terminal on the top floor that deactivates the Robots after you have killed all of them. The Robots no matter how you killed them have the option of being spoken to. Instead of talking to them shoot them and earn additional exp.

Behind the scenes
The lucky password of "Ice Cream" is a reference to Michael Larson; a contestant on the game show "Press Your Luck" who won over $100,000. He was an Ice Cream Truck driver. The irony is that Larson wasn't lucky at all; he'd memorized the computer's supposedly random number generation pattern.