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Creating a character in Wasteland is a fairly simple process. All characters are created at the Ranger Center and up to four can be in the party at any given time. To free up space, the player has to delete at least one character from the party to make space. Once deleted, the character cannot be brought back.

The default party consists of Hell Razor, Angela Deth, Thrasher, and Snake Vargas. They have decent skills and the standard equipment, but the player can easily create specialized, better characters on their own. See below for a detailed guide by Per Jorner.

Creating a character[]

Personal data[]

The first step is determining the character's nationality, gender, and giving them a name. Only the gender has any impact on the game and even then, it's only for minor, flavor interactions at two places in the game.

Attributes[]

Choosing attributes is the second step. The game randomly rolls for each of the eight stats. Anything between 10 and 15 is average. Attribute values 16 and above are good. MAXCON is treated differently and can range from 22 to 36. The more, the better.

  • Strength (ST): determines damage in melee combat, can be used to force open doors, containers, and stuck winches. One character should have at least 15 ST.
  • Intelligence (IQ): The most important attribute, bar none. Determines the amount of skill points and which skills can be learned. An IQ of 23 is required to master Energy Weapons, so it should be given priority.
  • Luck (LK): Affects accuracy in close combat and damage in ranged combat in a supplementary fashion. Tested throughout the game quite frequently.
  • Speed (SP): Determines sequence in melee combat. Occasionally tested to avoid hazards.
  • Agility (AGL): Tied to athletic skills and evasion chance. Allows for avoiding traps. Low importance.
  • Dexterity (DEX): Determines accuracy with ranged weapons and success with manual skills, such as pick lock.
  • Charisma (CHR): Negligible usability, usually with ornery NPCs.
  • MAXCON: The amount of punishment a character can withstand.

Skills[]

The crucial element of the character creation process is choosing the right skills for the Rangers. These have certain IQ requirements and vary in usability. See individual articles for more information.

Skill Min IQ Points Attribute Short description Skill ID
Brawling 3 1 Luck Hand-to-hand combat. Higher skill means more attacks per round. 0x01 (1)
Climb 3 1 Agility Climbing above obstacles. 0x02 (2)
Clip pistol 3 1 Dexterity Handling clip pistols like the H&K VP91Z or the Colt M1911A1. 0x03 (3)
Knife fight 3 1 Dexterity Fighting with knives. 0x04 (4)
Pugilism 3 1 Strength Fighting with bare hands. 0x05 (5)
Rifle 3 1 Dexterity Handling rifles like the M19 or the M17 carbine. 0x06 (6)
Swim 3 1 Strength Swimming in rivers, lakes and pools. 0x07 (7)
Knife throw 6 1 Dexterity Throwing knives in combat. 0x08 (8)
Perception 6 1 Intelligence Finding items and spot traps and stuff like that. 0x09 (9)
Assault rifle 9 1 Dexterity Handling automatic rifles like the AK97 or the M1989A1. 0x0a (10)
AT weapon 9 1 Dexterity Handling anti-tank weapons like rockets. 0x0b (11)
SMG 9 1 Dexterity Handling submachine guns like the Uzi Mark 27 or the MAC 17. 0x0c (12)
Acrobat 10 1 Agility Performing acrobatic stunts. 0x0d (13)
Gamble 10 1 Luck Earning money by gambling. 0x0e (14)
Picklock 10 1 Dexterity Opening locked doors and chests and stuff like that. 0x0f (15)
Silent move 10 1 Agility Moving without making noise. 0x10 (16)
Combat shooting 11 1 Speed Mysterious unknown skill only available in the PC version of the game. 0x11 (17)
Confidence 11 1 Charisma Talk your butt out of misery. 0x12 (18)
Sleight of hand 12 1 Dexterity Doing some thief tricks. 0x13 (19)
Demolitions 13 1 Intelligence Handling explosives like grenades in combat. 0x14 (20)
Forgery 13 1 Dexterity Recognizing or creating forged documents. 0x15 (21)
Alarm disarm 14 1 Intelligence Disarming alarm devices. 0x16 (22)
Bureaucracy 14 1 Charisma Talking with bureaucrats. 0x17 (23)
Bomb disarm 15 2 Intelligence Disarming bombs. 0x18 (24)
Medic 15 2 Intelligence Healing injured comrades. 0x19 (25)
Safecrack 15 2 Dexterity Cracking safes and vault-like doors. 0x1a (26)
Cryptology 16 2 Intelligence Decipher encrypted messages. 0x1b (27)
Metallurgy 17 2 Intelligence Earn some money with minerals in the mine shaft. 0x1c (28)

Starting gear[]

Once the Ranger is accepted into the party, they come equipped with either a VP91Z 9mm Pistol or a M1911A1 .45 Pistol, 8 clips of matching ammunition (9mm or .45), a rope, canteen, crowbar, knife, hand mirror, and a matchbox.

Creating a good character[]

Excerpt from The Nearly Ultimate Wasteland Guide

OK, first of all delete those pre-defined characters. They've got lousy stats and you don't want to go through the game with characters made by someone else anyway. Here's some stuff to think about:

  • Sex doesn't affect your stats or anything else of a technical nature. There are two places in the game where sex matters, and none is even remotely significant. Nationality doesn't do anything as far as anyone knows.
  • You need about 10 skill points for the basic skill assortment. Every character should then have 5-8 points for specialization if they started out with IQ 15-18.
  • It's not worth it to buy more than 2 levels in a skill, and in fact for most skills there's little reason to buy more than 1. They will go up anyway as you use them, and in many non-combat situations you can keep trying until you succeed.
  • Initial MAXCON ranges from 22 to 36. You can use it as a deciding factor if you roll stats that are OK but not great.
  • After you start playing you can only acquire new skills at a library, and the first one is in Needles. That's quite a bit into the game, so choose wisely at the start.
  • You get to keep any unspent skill points left over from character creation.
  • You don't have to start with four characters, but there's no particular reason not to. If you're going through the whole game with only two or three characters, a high starting IQ is even more important.
  • In theory you can play through the game with a single character, providing you recruit Vax at the very end for some quick hacking assistance. IQ 16-17 will be enough for the initial skill array if you forgo some marginal skills. *Carrying capacity will be one of your greatest worries, but at least you don't have to invest in medical skills...
  • It might be a good idea to make notes of which character has which skills, both for character creation (so you don't accidentally duplicate a skill) and for convenience during play.
  • Every skill is associated with an attribute, e.g. to be really good at Gamble it's even more important to have a high Luck. In fact there are often attribute checks accompanying passive skill checks, for instance there might be slightly harder AGL and LK checks complementing a Silent move check; I generally won't mention these.
  • If you think rolling for stats is the most boring thing imaginable, don't sweat it. You can probably finish the game with quite sucky attributes (except maybe IQ) as long as you get the right skills and equipment.
  • Except for which type of pistol you get, starting equipment does not depend on chance or skills.
There's a way to get more guns and ammo at the start of the game, but it's something of a cheat. Just trade all equipment to one of your characters, enter the Ranger Center, delete the others and create new ones. They'll have new weapons, and you can then repeat the process. If you're playing the PC version you can even set up a macro to this effect.

Attributes[]

  • Strength (ST): Affects close combat damage, but not carrying capacity. Can be used to kick in doors and break open containers. You'll want one character with ST 15 or so, otherwise not a priority.
  • Intelligence (IQ): You need this for initial skill points, 15-18. You shouldn't accept any lower than that since you'll want to raise it to 23 eventually.
  • Luck (LK): Is checked in many different situations. A high LK lets you hit more often in close combat and do more damage in ranged combat.
  • Speed (SP): Affects order of attack in close combat, and is also used to avoid the odd hazard. A mêlée party will want average rather than abysmal Speed.
  • Agility (AGL): Used for athletic skills, and may also affect evasion in combat. Helps you avoid things like traps and pineapples. Not a very important stat.
  • Dexterity (DEX): Affects shooting, so a medium to good DEX is preferable. Used for things like picking locks.
  • Charisma (CHR): Can be used in a few places to minimal effect. Helps a little with contrary NPCs, which is not important at all.

Skills[]

The numbers within parentheses below represent the IQ needed to learn the skill and the basic cost of the skill respectively.

Skills that every character should have:

  • Brawling (LK/3/1): The primary hand-to-hand skill which you need in case you run out of ammo at the wrong time. Buy 2 levels, because it will double your number of attacks (you can imagine that this makes a difference), and you'll want to use this early on.
  • Climb (AGL/3/1): A cheap convenience. Though only one character really needs it to get you past obstacles, you can raise it for free later, which is gratifying.
  • Swim (ST/3/1): See Climb.
  • Perception (IQ/6/1): Useful for finding many things, such as land mines.
  • Assault rifle (DEX/9/1): Used for the best low-tech weapons.
  • AT weapon (DEX/9/1): Good to have in case you must blast off a rocket.
  • Energy weapon (DEX/23/3): For all weapons powered by Power packs.

Skills that two or more characters need:

  • Medic (IQ/15/2): Put this on two characters for healing early on. Getting 2 from the beginning is not worth the cost.
  • Doctor (IQ/21/3): Get this for everyone that lacks a well-developed Medic skill to be on the safe side later in the game, especially if you play with four or fewer characters.

Skills that only one character needs:

  • Picklock (DEX/10/1): Used to open many doors.
  • Silent move (AGL/10/1): Put this on the lead character.
  • Demolitions (IQ/13/1): Used when throwing Grenades, so load all of those on one character if you're not selling them. This is not used for opening doors.
  • Bomb disarm (IQ/15/2): You might want to put 2 here because the consequences of a failure can be aggravating. That's 6 skill points, so you need an IQ 16-18 character for this.
  • Safecrack (DEX/15/2): Used in a few places.
  • Helicopter pilot (DEX/19/3): You don't really need this.
  • Toaster repair (IQ/20/3): Used very late in the game.
  • Electronics (IQ/20/3): No very significant use unless you play a smaller than usual party. Metal Maniac has this.
  • Clone tech (IQ/22/3): See Helicopter pilot.

Mostly pointless weapon skills:

  • Clip pistol (DEX/3/1): Bad idea, Brawling is much better early on.
  • Knife fight (DEX/3/1): Don't know why you'd want to fight with knives.
  • Pugilism (ST/3/1): Brawling is much more powerful and you need that anyway to get multiple attacks.
  • Rifle (DEX/3/1): Can easily be bypassed in the weapon progression.
  • Knife throw (DEX/6/1): See Knife fight.
  • SMG (DEX/9/1): See Rifle.

Skills which have no significant or exclusive applications:

  • Acrobat (AGL/10/1): Not useless, but marginal as long as you have Climb.
  • Gamble (LK/10/1): You don't need extra money, and there are no quest applications.
  • Confidence (CHR/11/1): Very marginal social skill.
  • Sleight of hand (DEX/12/1): A rubbish skill.
  • Forgery (DEX/13/1): See Sleight of hand.
  • Alarm disarm (IQ/14/1): See Sleight of hand.
  • Bureaucracy (CHR/14/1): See Confidence.
  • Cryptology (IQ/16/2): Used once, a pure convenience.
  • Metallurgy (IQ/17/2): Only good for some decidedly minor cash and random encounter changes in the Mine Shaft.
  • Cyborg tech (IQ/24/3): See Cryptology.

Weird skills:

  • Combat shooting (SP/11/1): This skill only appears in the PC version and can only be learned during character creation. Most likely it doesn't serve any function in the game whatsoever.
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