It’s easy to fall down a rabbit hole and spend a lot of time crafting equipment and items inStarfield. That drop leads to a rough landing when you find you don’t have the resources necessary to complete a task. One item that comes up a lot is Adhesive. You’re all but certain to need it eventually, so here is our guide telling you where to get Adhsive inStarfield.

Starfield– where to get Adhesive

Adhesive, which should not be confused with the similar-soundingSealant, can be a bit more difficult to locate because you won’t exactly find it growing on trees.To get Adhesive, purchase it from vendors or find it on benches and tables in outposts or space stations.

When crafting, you often need Adhesive to produce mods for your Spacesuit.For instance, it is a component inEnergy Shielding,Explosive Shielding, andHeavy Shielding. I used it often while upgrading myMantisarmor pieces. Not surprisingly, it also proved useful when researchingSpacesuit Mods 1,Spacesuit Mods 2, andHelmet Mods 2.

Starfield Resource Adhesive

Related:Where to find Sealant inStarfield

Only certain merchants carry Adhesive regularly.I’ve had terrific luck checking withWen Tseng, the merchant who runs theUC Distributionoperation in theCommercial DistrictinNew Atlantis. Other merchants who carry it includeDenisat theUC ExchangeinCydonia,Emerson ShepherdatShepherd’s General StoreinAkila City, andDietrich SieghartatSieghart’s OutfittersinNeon Core.

The above merchants should be enough to keep your supply of Adhesive in good shape. They restock periodically, so you can build up quite a bit of it.If you want to get Adhesive elsewhere, check Civilian Outposts.The merchants that often occupy those places carry Adhesive fairly regularly. Also, make sure to check the junk you find on surfaces when visiting space stations, abandoned mines, and so forth. Sometimes, you might get something good from the refuse.

Starfieldis available to purchase on Steam and the Microsoft Store.

Jason Venter

Jason Venter is a contributing writer for PC Invasion since 2022 who can trace his love for video games back to the Apple IIe port of Mario Bros. in the late 80s. He remains a diehard Nintendo fan to this day and loves JRPGs, adventure games, and platformers in particular, but he still plays games in most genres and on most hardware. After founding indie gaming site HonestGamers in 1998, he served as an editor at Hardcore Gamer Magazine during its entire print run. He has since freelanced for a variety of leading sites including IGN, GameSpot, and Polygon. These days, he spends most of his time writing game guides and entertaining readers with his fantasy novels.