Starlight berries

Starlight berries are a consumable item in Fallout 76.

Characteristics
Starlight berries are yellow berries harvested from the starlight creeper bush. They can be consumed raw to satisfy a small amount of hunger with a medium dose of radiation and chance of disease, or can be cooked for additional benefits.

When affected by a blast zone, starlight berries will turn into kiloton creeper which can be harvested for raw cobalt flux.

Locations
Starlight berries can be harvested from starlight creeper plants. Unlike other plants that are guaranteed to always have harvestable fruit, starlight creeper only has a 35% chance of having starlight berries to harvest.
 * Eighteen plants can be found in The Deep:
 * Thirteen around the Chinese base.
 * Five next to the western entrance to the caves.
 * Twelve can be found around Black Mountain Ordnance Works:
 * Two nearby the inaccessible TNT dome #4, along the road.
 * Five north from the ruins.
 * One northeast from the ruins.
 * Two east from the ruins.
 * One southwest from the ruins.
 * One west from the ruins.
 * Five can be found in the Vault-Tec Agricultural Research Center basement (as loose items).
 * Three can be found due west of the Charleston landfill where the road and rail line meet. There is an unmarked trailer at that location with the plants under a tree.
 * Two can be found in a farm field near the I59 and I61 intersection. The farm's location is on the image of a house on the main map.
 * Two can be found west of Gauley Mine, across the train tracks.
 * Two can be found at the isolated cabin.
 * Two can be found at the intersection of I95 and I91, which is east of Bolton Greens: one at the utility pole at the south-east corner of the intersection, and one at the first utility pole west of the intersection. A third plant can be found at the base of the fourth utility pole when walking south from the intersection.

Behind the scenes
The starlight creeper is a mutated form of the real-world plant Parthenocissus quinquefolia (Virginia creeper).