Nuka-Cherry (Fallout 4)

Nuka-Cherry is a variant of Nuka-Cola and a soft drink featured in Fallout 4.

Background
Nuka-Cherry was originally the product of Merle Haverston, branded as Merle's Very Cherry Soda, prior to being acquired by the Nuka-Cola Corporation. After acquiring the patent, Nuka-Cola Corp. rebranded it as Nuka-Cherry, and changed the flavor profile to that of a Nuka-Cola and cherry mixture along with adding coloring to boost its visual appeal to consumers.

Sometime before the Great War, The Nuka-Cola Corporation introduced their own cherry-flavored soft drink, branded simply as Nuka-Cola Cherry. However, unlike the Nuka-Cherry beverages distributed in the Boston area, this other cherry-flavored soda proved highly unsuccessful.

Characteristics
Nuka-Cherry shares the same look as the other bottles of Nuka-Cola but adds a bright red color to it and a cherry flavoring. According to the Fallout Tactics lore, Nuka-Cherry, or Cherry Nuka-Cola, was very unpopular and a failure of a soft drink due to its taste. This is contradicted by loading screens describing it as having "instant success."

Compared to the standard Nuka-Cola, Nuka Cherry can be viewed as an upgrade: providing better healing and a larger Action Point boost while giving the same amount of Radiation.

Locations

 * 3 can be found in the Dugout Inn
 * 3 can be found in Kellogg's house in the hidden room.
 * 3 can be found inside the Super Duper Mart.
 * 3 can be found on the ground in Secret Vault 81.
 * 1 can be found in the roof office of Longneck Lukowski's Cannery behind a Novice locked door.
 * 1 can be found in the first house on the right when coming down the path from Vault 111 in Sanctuary Hills.
 * 1 can be found in a shopping cart east of Concord, behind the Museum of Freedom.
 * 1 can be found on the kitchen table in the Nakano residence.
 * 5 can be found throughout the Nuka-Cola bottling plant.

Behind the scenes
The story of its introduction, rejection and replacement by Classic Nuka-Cola mimics that of the real-life New Coke campaign. In reality however, New Coke initially received generally positive reactions in terms of taste, but the iconic status of the old formula produced a strong backlash reaction that pressured executives into changing it back.