Roger Warwick

Roger Warwick is a character living at Warwick homestead in 2287.

Background
When the Sole Survivor speaks with Wally or Janey, Roger's children, they say that their father is a lot nicer than he used to be. In fact, Roger is a synth that was built by the Institute. The exact point at which the original Roger Warwick has been replaced is unknown.

He is a key component of the bioscience division's testing of genetically modified seeds on the surface. Terminals located inside the bioscience wing of the Institute indicate that Roger, along with the crops, will be retrieved by the Institute. All evidence of the initiative will be purged, hence implying his family with the rest of the settlers at Warwick homestead will be terminated once the experiments have concluded.

The Sole Survivor may also discover Roger's true identity by encountering Cedric Hopton, who carries Bill's letter, which calls for a mercenary to take the impostor Warwick out for 500 caps.

Appearances
Roger Warwick appears only in Fallout 4.

Bugs

 * If Roger Warwick is killed after obtaining Warwick homestead as a settlement through Building a Better Crop without acquiring Warwick Homestead: Greenskins, it will randomly appear and direct the player to talk to Preston Garvey. After doing so, the quest will remain in the player's Pip-Boy indefinitely.
 * Roger can become stuck in a water tank at the settlement; this will cause him to be unable to be talked to. To fix this, if you've unlocked Warwick homestead as a settlement, you must first build a staircase leading out of the tank, ring a bell, wait an hour, and he should be free. If you haven't unlocked this settlement you can use the console command and teleport Roger Warwick (ID: 00048ba9) to your position.
 * If you do not have Warwick as a settlement you can use power armor to jump inside the tank with him and walk "shove" him towards the broken catwalk. He will pop up out of the water long enough to give you the talk option and trigger the dialogue, therefore unlocking Warwick as a settlement.

Роджер Уорвик