Eyebot (Fallout 76)

Eyebots, alternatively stylized as EyeBots, are robots found in Appalachia.

Characteristics
Eyebots are seldom hostile. They occasionally attack hostile creatures, and some Eyebots might reveal certain locations as they fly by. They can be easily defeated in battle. Eyebots are capable of carrying out a variety of other tasks as well, as seen with Rover. EyeBombs are equally flimsy, but will explode on proximity or upon taking damage.

Eyebomb
Red-painted Eyebots that explode on death or when approached. They are summoned during the Encryptid event to assist the imposter Sheepsquatch.

Arktos Pharma Eyebot
An Arktos Pharma variant.

Blood Eagle Eyebot
An Eyebot that has been reprogrammed by the Blood Eagles, encountered in the Watoga Underground.

Campus security Eyebot
An Eyebot variant with a police paint encountered at Vault Tec university

Eyebot guard
Guard of the traveling vendor bot Responder during the Wandering Responder Protectron Merchant random encounter.

Watoga Eyebot
Eyebots with the Watoga emblem painted on their hull. Encountered around Watoga.

Comrade Eyebot
A Chinese red colored variant at Camp McClintock only during the quest Live Fire Training Exercise.

Responder Eyebot
Deactivated units are located at Morgantown Airport. Also met in the Morse Code Eyebot and Responders Eyebot random encounters.

Whitespring Eyebot
An Eyebot found at the the Whitespring Resort.

Locations

 * 98 NAR Regional
 * Prickett's Fort
 * Torrance House
 * Watoga
 * Camp McClintock
 * A random encounter can be seen with an Eyebot playing flute music and three rats are following along.

Named Eyebots

 * Rover - An Eyebot belonging to the Free States who is involved in the Always Vigilant quest.
 * Preacher Levenson - A randomly encountered Eyebot, in Eyebot Evangelist.
 * JES-2R - A trouble-making Eyebot that starts the Mischief Night event.

Behind the scenes
The Eyebot resembles the Sputnik-era satellites, predominately the Sputnik 1, an artificial Earth satellite launched by the Soviet Union in 1957.