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MW:Character Creation

Creating your character is the most important decision that you will make before starting, as it affects the entire game.

General ConsiderationsEdit

The factors that you must decide upon are:

  • Your Race and Gender
    • Determines attributes, skill bonuses, and special abilities (such as greater powers, lesser powers, and constant effect characteristics)
  • Your Birthsign
    • Provides special abilities (typically attribute bonuses or greater powers)
  • Your Class—the most complex decision you need to make. You have three options in choosing your class:

There is no one "correct" way to make these decisions about your character. Your choices should be determined by your personal role-playing preferences. Some questions that may influence your choices include the following:

  • What type of combat do you prefer?
  • Do you prefer to charge into dungeons, or explore more slowly and stealthily?
  • Do you like to visit cities regularly for supplies and services, or do you prefer to play a more self-sufficient character?
  • Do you want to play without worrying about character development, or do you want to pay careful attention to every aspect of your character's training?
  • Do you want a character that is strong at the start of the game, or later on?
  • How many hours do you plan to spend playing Morrowind? In other words, is it worth it to you to spend your first 10-20 hours of gameplay focusing on long-term character development? Or would you rather be completely finished playing after 10-20 hours?

Although logic may dictate some decisions, others may be based purely upon preferences about your character's appearance.

The details on this page are generally most relevant for advanced players. Many players will not need to or want to create an optimal character based on every recommendation on this page. If you find this page too long, or if you don't understand or care about some of the rationales, you can safely ignore the advice and create a character based solely upon gut instinct. New players will probably find the game more rewarding if they just quickly create a character so that they can learn their own game-play preferences (for example, to be able to answer the questions listed in the previous paragraph). Any character will be completely adequate for initial gameplay; in the worst case, you can turn down the game's difficulty slider to make up for any mistakes. The nuances discussed on this page will become most important once characters reach high levels (greater than 10-15).

Race and GenderEdit

Race and gender are best determined simultaneously, because both factors influence the starting values of your character's attributes.

Gender is a choice that is likely to be made based upon personal preference (how you like to roleplay or the appearance of your character). Objective considerations are how your character's attributes are modified. Female characters frequently have higher Personality or Willpower and lower Strength or Endurance, but some exceptions exist.

There are ten possible races to choose from: Altmer (or High Elf); Argonian; Bosmer (or Wood Elf); Breton; Dunmer (or Dark Elf); Imperial; Khajiit; Nord; Orc; and Redguard. Personal preference can also play an important role in this decision, since your character's race controls your character's appearance. The objective considerations are:

  • Race determines your character's attributes (which are also modified by gender).
  • Each race/gender combination has a different height, which affects movement speed. See Race summary page for more details.
  • Race provides initial bonuses to your character's skills (all races get a total of +45 in skill bonuses, but distributed among different skills).
  • Each race has certain special abilities, which may be once-per-day greater powers, multiple-use lesser powers and/or constant effect characteristics (e.g., resistances, weaknesses, magicka fortification, water breathing).

Full details on these characteristics are provided on each individual race page; a table summarizing the attributes and skills is provided on the Race summary page.

Most of the races have a combination of attributes, skills and special abilities that make the race naturally suited for certain character types (as detailed under Character Types).

A secondary consideration when choosing your race is that the racial powers and racial constant effects can provide access to spell effects that can then be used to create custom spells or custom enchanted items. Although standard spells providing access to the same spell effects can be bought, some effects are rare and hard to come by:

BirthsignEdit

There are thirteen possible birthsigns, each of which bestows a special ability. There are three main types of birthsigns: those that provide constant-effect Abilities; those that provide powers and spells, which can be used once per day (in the case of greater powers) or cast multiple times per day using the character's Magicka (in the case of lesser powers and spells); those that provide both. The strongest bonuses are accompanied by offsetting weaknesses.

The birthsigns that provide constant effect Abilities are:

Because you do not have to remember to use these constant-effect bonuses, they require the least effort to be made useful. Those that fortify Attributes are most useful early in the game (by using efficient leveling, you can get your two most important attributes to 100 by level 15, whether or not you use a birthsign bonus), while those with other effects are useful throughout the game, even for high-level characters.

The birthsigns that provide Spells and/or Powers are:

These bonuses are most useful if you are likely to remember to use them regularly. If you always forget to take advantage of them (or are afraid to use them in case you might need them later in the day), these birthsigns are relatively ineffective. Most of the powers are most useful early in the game; later in the game, your character can generally learn spells or make potions that are at least as powerful as the greater powers.

Another consideration with the powers and spells is that these powers provide access to spell effects that can then be used to create custom spells or custom enchanted items. In most cases, standard spells can be bought, providing access to the same spell effects.

The birthsigns that provide both constant effect Abilities and Spells and/or Powers are:

The Lover combines the advantages of both of the other kinds of birthsigns, while The Lord's constant effect Ability is actually a downside.

Standard ClassesEdit

The game comes with twenty-one predefined standard classes, which provide a quick way for players to set up a character. This can be provided immediately, or after responding to a series of questions. Some of the classes focus on a single one of the three specializations; other classes combine elements from two or more specializations. Therefore, it should be possible to find a class to cover most standard styles of game play.

However, none of the standard classes are ideal. For example, there are actually no classes that exactly match the prototype character types presented below for fighters or thieves. Players interested in efficient leveling or otherwise controlling their character's development will not find any suitable standard classes. Custom classes are necessary to provide complete control over the character creation process.

There are 5460 different character combinations without making a custom class. So remember, no pressure! There is a character combination for everybody's needs.

Custom Class SpecializationEdit

There are three schools of skills: Combat, Magic, and Stealth. Each school has seven associated skills—when you select a school to be your class' specialization, all seven skills receive an initial +5 level bonus. (Note: the manual incorrectly states that you get a +10 bonus.) These skills also increase more rapidly than other skills.

Custom Class AttributesEdit

Two attributes can be chosen as custom class attributes, and these attributes each receive an initial +10 bonus.

In general, these attribute bonuses are most useful early in the game; a +10 bonus to two or three attributes is possible each time you level up if you level efficiently, so the initial custom class attribute bonus can be considered equivalent to an initial one level bonus. The maximum value of any attribute is 100, regardless of whether it received any initial bonuses.

Two attributes behave slightly differently, however:

  • Luck can only be increased by +1 each level, so an initial +10 bonus in Luck is more comparable to a ten-level bonus than a one-level bonus. Also, Luck is a particularly useful attribute early in the game, so investing in a Luck bonus can be very advantageous, especially to well-rounded characters.
  • Endurance helps determine your total Health: base health is half of the sum of your Strength and Endurance.. In addition, each time you level up your Health increases by 10% of your Endurance. The Health bonus from each level is not retroactively increased if you later increase your Endurance. Therefore, increasing your Endurance early on is important in giving your character the maximum possible Health.

One attribute that in general should not be chosen for your class attribute is Personality, as it is particularly weak. Of the three skills it governs, two provide no benefit in combat or survival (Mercantile and Speechcraft) and the third (Illusion) is not improved in any way by increased Personality. Only those who plan on roleplaying their character with a strong personality should pick this.

Custom Class SkillsEdit

The most important part of creating a custom class is choosing the seven major skills. These major skills start out at values of 25 instead of 5 (before any racial or specialization bonuses). Major skills also increase more rapidly than other skills (the most rapid advancement is in skills that are both major skills and in the class specialization).

The other aspect of major skills is that advances in major skills determine when your character's level increases. Whenever your major skills have improved by a total of 10 points, your character levels up. This one feature singlehandedly makes character creation difficult: depending upon whether you like to level up quickly or whether you prefer to control your character's level, creating your custom class will be fundamentally different.

A secondary consideration is that starting spells are made available for any magical skill that is chosen to be a major skill. These spells are summarized on the individual skill pages, and also are noted on the Spells page. These spells are in all cases standard spells that can be bought from spell vendors. However, being given them for free saves some money and bother in tracking down spells before you can even start training the skill.

Most Used SkillsEdit

The first step in deciding which skills should be major skills is determining which skills your character is likely to use the most often. (Whether the most-used skills should be major skills or minor skills depends upon your style of play, as discussed in Custom Classes, but in either case identifying the most-used skills is a necessary step). The most-used skills will largely be determined by the overall type of character you choose to play as. Some suggestions on sets of skills are provided in the next section.

Morrowind does not restrict what skills any character can use. Any character can develop any skill to 100 given enough time and effort. Therefore, selecting your character's most-used skills does not imply that the other skills will not or cannot be used. However, the strongest characters will start by focusing on a few skills and developing those skills the most rapidly. For example, a character with 100 in one combat skill (e.g., Axe) will be a much more powerful opponent than one that has developed five different combat skills equally, since each will only have skill levels of 50 at the same point in the game.

  • Offensive melee skills, that directly disable enemies at close range: Axe: Blunt Weapon; Hand-to-hand; Long Blade; Short Blade. The evasion behaviour and long range attacks of enemies such as Mages make the Speed attribute desirable for melee characters.
  • Offensive ranged skills, that disable enemies from a distance: Destruction; Marksman.
  • Defensive skills, that prevent damage from enemies: Light Armor; Heavy Armor; Block. Alteration's Shield spells and Mysticism Reflect and Absorb spells can be used at the same time as or in lieu of light or heavy armor.
  • Restoration spells can be either a replacement for or merely an addition to damage prevention; however, such healing spells are not cheaper than Potions of Healing if the player uses Potions of Sorcery to cast them, unless they are spells that heal over time.
    • Evading attacks is the penultimate damage reduction: a missed attack equals no damage at all. Morrowind is quite generous to the player with the range of enemy melee attacks; the animation of attacks and the actual distance within which enemies can do damage are closely synchronized, so dodging attacks is an option for the casual player. The Speed attribute, and to a lesser extent the Athletics skill increase movement speed, and Acrobatics increases the height and distance of jumps; both aid in dodging attacks.
    • The ultimate damage prevention is to not be attacked in the first place: Conjuration spells summon creatures to take damage instead of you, and the Illusion effect of Invisibility ensures that enemies can only attack the summoned creature. A character of a given Conjuration level will summon creatures that are weaker than a character of the same level of combat skills, so this approach requires patience and preparation.

There are some other game abilities where there are two different skills that can be used to provide that ability; it is worthwhile to choose which skill your character will rely on.

  • Opening locks: lockpicking or Open spells (Alteration) can both be used.
    • If you (the player, not the character) are good at the lockpicking mini-game, it is possible to open even Very Hard locks from the start of the game.
    • Open spells do not require mastery of any mini-games, but the level of lock you can open is strictly controlled by your Alteration skill.
    • Open spells do not work underwater, so being able to fall back on lockpicking is necessary in a small number of cases.
    • At level 10 and above, the player can obtain the Skeleton Key, at which point lockpicking skills are not required at all, other than to speed up the lockpicking process. The player can decide whether this removes challenge from their game or not.
  • Increasing NPCs' dispositions: Speechcraft or Charm spells (Illusion) can both be used.
    • Speechcraft is overall a less useful skill than others, as the maximum disposition available via Speechcraft is limited. There are no additional effects outside of maxing disposition and changing NPC behaviour. Many alternatives and enhancements are available, notably Illusion's Charm, Command and Frenzy spells.
    • Illusion, by contrast, also has combat (e.g. Paralyze) and stealth (e.g. Chameleon) effects. Its spells affecting NPC behaviour can be tailored with spell-making to fit the requirements of the situation.

Controllable SkillsEdit

Another factor in selecting skills is whether or not it is easy to control when and where your character uses a skill. In particular if you are interested in efficient leveling, it is important to not accidentally level up because your character is forced to use a skill.

Some skills that you typically can not control the use of are:

  • Acrobatics: You gain acrobatics experience particularly quickly if you fall down a slope or need to jump down a level.
  • Athletics: Athletics experience is gained whenever you run, so it tends to go up continuously.
  • Restoration: Even for characters who don't rely upon spells for healing, there can be times when you will really need to cast a restore health spell.

Skills that are not used in combat (in other words, that you will not need to count on for character survival) are typically easier to control. For most characters, easy to control skills will include:

Block can even be considered easy to control, because if necessary you can always opt to fight without blocking.

In the case of magic skills, you can use spell effects of schools you'd rather not level by creating custom spells. For example, a Restore Health 3 points for 5 seconds spell would normally train the Restoration skill. However, if you add a Shield 35% for 5 seconds effect, it becomes an Alteration spell and no longer gives Restoration experience, because the Shield effect has a higher base cost. This will at least double the base cost of the spell, and often raise it past a skill breakpoint (in this case, it turns a Novice Restoration spell into an Apprentice Alteration one), but it's one way to heal yourself in the field if you run out of potions.

Training SkillsEdit

If you plan to use training to increase skills (although remember that at most five skill training sessions can be used per level), you may also want to take into account how easy it is to obtain training in various skills. The Trainers page lists who the trainers are for each skill, but note that some of the trainers have bugs that limit their availability. For training past skill level 70, only one master trainer is available in each skill, and a mini-quest must be completed for each (some of which are more taxing than others).

Character TypesEdit

Corresponding to the three specializations, there are three prototypes for character roleplaying: fighter; mage; and thief. The most important difference between these three character types is the style of combat, but there are also some secondary differences generally associated with each of these characters. This section provides some guidelines on key characteristics of each of these prototypes, and recommendations for the races, birthsigns, and classes that are best aligned with each one. These recommendations are intended primarily as guidelines for players starting out - as you play the game you are likely to develop personal preferences that differ from these guidelines.

However, you do not need to choose a character that strictly falls into one of these three categories. Most people will want to create a hybrid character that combines aspects of the various prototypes.

FighterEdit

The fighter relies upon melee combat to attack enemies, and prefers to charge into face-to-face combat. The fighter expects to receive a lot of damage in combat, and relies upon high health, full armor, and blocking skills to survive the damage.

Races

All three of the following races provide good combat-related greater powers, good Strength and Endurance, and many combat-related skill bonuses.

  • Nord: Frost Damage and Shield are good but conservative greater powers.
  • Orc: Berserk is an aggressive greater power, with great bonuses but also some drawbacks.
  • Redguard: Adrenaline Rush provides multiple bonuses without any drawbacks.
Birthsigns
  • Warrior: +10 Strength and +10 Endurance are useful to any fighter.
  • Lover: Lover's Kiss provides a very useful paralyze ability.
  • Atronach: The 50% Spell Absorption effect basically renders impotent half the spells cast against you. Very handy when rushing towards mages to break their frail bodies. The stunted magicka isn't as major of an impediment as it is on any more magically inclined class.
  • Lord: Provides a powerful healing spell which can be used multiple times; this is very useful in combat situations. If you're not handy with magic, it will take a very long time before you have the ability to cast an equivalent healing spell.
  • Lady: The Fortify Endurance and Willpower are very useful, and the increased health is great especially at early levels.
  • Ritual: Mara's Gift can prove highly useful, especially due to a fighter's weak self-healing capability. Blessed Word is decent for crowd control in a pinch.
Standard Classes
Attributes
  • Strength: Maximize damage dealt with melee weapons. Provides enough Encumbrance to be able to carry a full suit of heavy armor.
  • Endurance: Maximizes Health so you can survive enemy attacks. Also improves Fatigue.
Skills
  • Blade or Blunt: Choose one of these two as your primary weapon for attack. Most characters will only need to specialize in one.
  • Heavy Armor: A full suit of heavy armor provides the maximum armor rating and also provides the most durable armor (it will break down less quickly during combat, and therefore provide the maximum armor rating for longer).
  • Block: Extra defense.
  • Armorer: Your weapons and armor will sustain major damage; being able to repair them in the field is vital.
  • Restoration: Even with armor and blocking, you will be taking a lot of damage. You might as well put to use what Magicka you have to heal yourself.

MageEdit

The mage relies upon magical attacks. Because armor negatively affects spell efficiency, the archetypal mage will not wear any armor. Instead, the mage will try to avoid the center of combat, use decoys to detract attention, and generally avoid taking any damage.

Races
  • Breton: enhanced Magicka; good Intelligence and Willpower; good magical skill bonuses.
  • Altmer: enhanced Magicka; good Intelligence and Willpower; good magical skill bonuses. Compared to the Breton, the Altmer has better Magicka balanced by more weaknesses, making it the less conservative choice.
  • Dunmer: Summon Ancestral Guardian Greater Power; moderate Intelligence; some magical skill bonuses. Not the best choice for a pure mage, but can be good for more well-rounded mages.
  • Argonian: Female Argonians start off with good Intelligence and both genders have a bonus in some of the magic skills such as Mysticism(+5) and Illusion(+5).
Birthsigns
Standard Classes


Attributes
  • Intelligence: Maximize Magicka, enabling more powerful spells and more back-to-back spells.
  • Willpower: Maximize Magicka regeneration rate, enabling more spells to be cast in a short period of time (not very valuable for players born under the Atronach birthsign, as their Magicka won't self-regenerate).
Skills
  • Destruction: The primary attack skill for a mage.
  • Conjuration: Summon monsters to distract your enemies, deal additional harm, and prevent them from attacking you.
  • Alteration: Shield spells provide a replacement for armor; open spells and feather spells are also valuable to compensate for mage weaknesses.
  • Illusion: An often overlooked school, illusion provides many alternatives to direct attack upon enemies.
  • Mysticism: Spell Absorption and Reflect Spell are alternative ways to replace armor

ThiefEdit

The thief relies upon sneak attacks and avoids face-to-face combat as much as possible. Sniping from hidden corners - often using a poisoned bow - is a primary means of attack.

Races
Birthsigns
  • Thief: +10 Agility is very useful for thieves; the +10 Luck and +10 Speed are added attractions.
  • Shadow: Invisibility greater power.
  • Steed: Extra speed is highly useful.
Standard Classes
Attributes
  • Agility: Maximize damage from bow and arrow; maximize your ability to sneak and lockpick
  • Speed: Makes it easier to keep out of melee range when attacking with a bow and arrow, also good for diving in quickly with melee attacks and then getting out of range before your enemy can retaliate.
Skills
  • Sneak: The primary skill for avoiding combat, getting sneak attack bonuses, and generally being undetected.
  • Marksman: Generally the primary combat skill for thieves, allowing targets to be killed from a distance.
  • Blade: You probably won't be able to get by on just Marksman in some cases, particularly with faster opponents and in close quarters, so it's good to have a melee attack handy. Short blades - such as daggers - are very fast, and melee strikes receive a better sneak attack bonus than a bow.
  • Alchemy: Create powerful poisons to increase the potency of your attacks.
  • Light Armor: Light armor is the traditional armor type for thieves. However, the primary disadvantage of heavy armor is its weight (heavy boots are also a disadvantage for low-level sneaking); if your character is strong enough, heavy armor can also be a good choice.
  • Security: Break into houses and other places with loot. (Alteration, providing Open spells, can be considered as an alternative).
  • Illusion: Invisibility/Chameleon will help you remain unseen, and Command/Calm/Demoralize spells will keep you out of face-to-face combat.
  • Mysticism: Although often overlooked by thieves, Detect Life goes with Sneak like bread and butter, and Telekinesis can be used to move owned items out of NPC sight for safe stealing.

Hybrid TypesEdit

Most characters will not fall strictly into one of the above three archetypes. In some cases a few skills from one specialization will be added amongst another, but a more extensive merging of different specializations can be done.

Rather than expend Magicka by using spells to directly attack an opponent, you can cast spells to augment your melee-fighting skills in a variety of ways.

  • Restoration spells can absorb someone's skill in Blunt, Blade, or Hand to Hand, which enhances your own combat damage while weakening theirs.
  • Destruction spells can make an opponent more vulnerable to elemental or poisoned attacks delivered by an enchanted melee weapon, shortening the melee battle. The defining principle is to use your magic skills to make your 'good' melee skills even greater, rather than switching back-and-forth between two merely 'good' specializations.

A mage who makes him/herself more resilient through the use of Armor and Endurance can stand toe-to-toe with an enemy and deliver spells cast at Touch range instead of a standoff distance. Spells that are Cast on Touch rather than Cast on Target are more Magicka-efficient.

  • A spell of similar power can be cast more often in one barrage, since it drains less Magicka per cast,
  • Or you can use a more powerful touch spell at the same Magicka cost of a ranged spell.
  • The additional defense afforded by a shield requires such a player to wield a one-handed weapon, even if they do not intend to use that weapon as a primary method of attack. As a result, such a weapon can be used to increase the effectiveness of the mage's magical attack, by being enchanted with something like Absorb Magicka or Weakness to Magic. Again, the player uses the skills of one specialization to make the skills and powers of another specialization even greater, rather than having two independent specializations compete for your attention.

A fighter can also benefit from stealth. Opening battles with a sneak attack conserves resources that might be needed later in the dungeon, such as potions. Or the ability to steal weapons from enemies to decrease their ability to fight effectively.

Stealth characters can benefit from magic as well.

  • 10% Chameleon makes a poor sneak better and a good sneak almost undetectable.
  • Open locks under the nose of guards with a ranged Open Lock spell.
  • Chasing off heavy guards with an area effect Demoralize spell, getting you in undetected.
  • Telekinesis lets you snatch items in plain view simply by moving them where they can't be seen to be picked up.
  • Frenzy spells can create diversions, either making guards fight one another, or citizens attack each other forcing guards to intervene and leave their post.

Character DevelopmentEdit

Your character creation choices will have an influence throughout the entire game. This section summarizes some of the different points in the game at which your initial character creation will make a difference.

Initial StrengthsEdit

Your character creation choices obviously have an immediate effect upon the starting values of your character's skills. Skills that you choose as a major skill will start at Apprentice level (with any Apprentice level mastery perks) instead of Novice level. Your ability to perform those skills will be noticeably better. By combining racial bonuses and specialization bonuses, it is possible to start some major skills at 40, so relatively little training will be necessary to reach Journeyman level and acquire the Journeyman level mastery perk.

LevelingEdit

As you use your major skills, those skills will improve and contribute towards leveling up your character. If you choose major skills that you use a lot, your character will rapidly increase in level. On the other hand, if you choose major skills that you rarely use (or can control the use of), your character will increase more slowly in level. This choice between fast leveling and slow leveling represents a choice between two fundamentally different ways of playing the game.

Maximum Character LevelEdit

There is a maximum character level which is directly determined by the initial values of your major skills. Once your major skills all reach 100, you reach your final level; no more increases are possible (with the exception of some rare exploits, such as the skill bonuses conferred by the Oghma Infinium). Character Creation Tools can be used to determine your character's maximum level.

To maximize your character's final level, you want to avoid any initial skill bonuses to your major skills: make sure that all specialization skills are minor skills, and make sure that racial bonuses all apply to minor skills. In other words, make your major skills all start with a value of 25 (you can actually allow one of the seven major skills to start at 30 without decreasing your maximum level). In that case, your character's maximum level will be 53. At the other extreme, if all skill bonuses are applied to your major skills, your character's maximum level will be 45.

Some ways to increase your character's maximum level include:

  • Going to jail and losing skill points in major skills (one in three or lower chance) allows your character to train those skills again and gain extra levels.
  • Get quest skill bonuses "quest reward" skill point bonuses when your skill is already at 100. The reward will make your skill go over 100; although this has no effect in most formulas (e.g., damage calculation), you will get extra "level" points. For instance, with the Oghma Infinium, you can get up to 3 (!) extra levelups, if you choose skills that are all major skills.
  • Using a skill that you have already leveled up to 100, make yourself a spell that drains that effect by 100 for 1 second on self. Find any trainers with that skill, cast your new spell, and have them train your character. This can theoretically be used to level any skill up to 200 using a master trainer. However, you may find this difficult to do unless you are only focused on it because you can only train 5 times in a single level.

On the other hand, you may reach an earlier maximum level if you are able to get all eight attributes to 100 before reaching the skill-based maximum level. Once your attributes are all maximized, no more level-ups will occur. On the PC, a workaround is to use the Console to decrease one of your attributes, for example by entering modpca personality -1. If you can anticipate that this is going to occur, a more general workaround is to avoid +5 attribute bonuses on the last couple attributes that need to be increased (e.g., Personality). Or, if you are playing with the Shivering Isles expansion, you can allow addiction to felldew drain seven of your attributes by 10 to 15 levels, giving you additional level-up opportunities.

For many players, the character's maximum level will not be a significant factor. Level 45 is easily high enough to maximize all the leveled lists used in the game; leveled lists top out in the mid-20's. Also, a level 45 maxed-out character is almost as strong as a level 53 maxed-out character; the main differences will be total Health and potentially the character's Luck attribute. In short, there are only inconsequential benefits associated with being able to increase your character's maximum level from 45 to 53. Other notable levels are 35, at which point all leveled items will be at their maximum; and 22, at which every item in the game is available.

Custom ClassesEdit

Most Used Skills as Major SkillsEdit

The most obvious way to set up a custom class is to set the major skills to be your character's most used skills. This is how the developers intended classes to be designed, based on the descriptions of the standard classes. The official game guide also proposes custom classes based on this assumption.

There are several advantages to choosing major skills that are frequently used:

  • Those skills start at Apprentice level, and can even be at nearly Journeyman level
  • Your character will rapidly gain experience in those skills, and will quickly acquire access to the higher skill perks
  • Your character will level up more rapidly, gaining access to higher health, better equipment, more gold, and all the other bonuses that come with leveling
  • Leveling up occurs without any special effort

The major disadvantage of this approach is that the character may level too quickly, especially if the bulk of your major skills do not directly improve your combat skills. Since monsters and enemies get harder as your level increases, custom classes that improve non-combat skills may find that monsters begin to outpace their characters. For example, a character with an ever-increasing Blade and Heavy Armor skill will have little problem with stronger monsters, but a character with an ever-increasing Alchemy and Sneak skill will inevitably find monsters who require stronger combat skills than they have. On the other hand such a character could undoubtedly use non-combat approaches to many such situations.

Least Used Skills as Major SkillsEdit

Gaining the maximum attribute bonus from each level is a sure way of maintaining a powerful character in a game where all monsters become more powerful as your character gains levels, rather than a few powerful monsters being located somewhere that can be avoided until the character is ready to face them. In order to stay stronger than the monsters, it is necessary to level at will, rather than by accident; this can be expedited by intentionally avoiding picking major skills that are uncontrollably leveled, such as Athletics, and choosing instead those for which there are substitutes. For example, even Blade can be a 'Least Used Skill', because an Axe or other Blunt weapon can be used instead to avoid level-up. The skills most likely to level up out of control, gaining the tenth Major skill increase before the ten Major/Minor increases in each of the attributes of choice, are the afore-mentioned Athletics, and Restoration. Mercantile is effectively uncontrollable in Morrowind (it levels, albeit slowly, whenever the player makes a transaction, where in Morrowind it only did so when the player modified the buying or selling price). Major skills that are crucial to the completion of quests can require being ready with a substitute, e.g., Alteration unlocking spells can be used instead of Security, to get past locks that block critical paths in quests or irreplaceable loot, and Charm spells, bribing, or scrolls can be used instead of Speechcraft, when quests require sweet-talking a NPC, or taking time out from quests to level up. For more on the importance of gaining maximum attribute bonuses and the means to achieve them, (see Leveling, particularly the section The Leveling Problem).

Drawbacks of this strategy include: it is time consuming at low levels (although this is to be weighed against the savings in time of easier fights at higher level), and your character's key survival skills all start at novice level, making for a steeper learning curve (to be weighed against the benefits of an easier mid- and late-game).

One Major Skill for each AttributeEdit

Another strategy used to design a custom class is to choose one and only one major skill that is governed by each of the seven attributes (other than luck, which governs no skills). This enables maximum control over the attribute bonuses that you gain each level; it minimizes over-leveling of skills, as part of the ten major skills leveled can always be in a desired attribute or attributes.

Some compromises need to be made between this strategy and Least Used Skills as Major Skills, in its strictest definition. Many characters will have three most used skills that are all governed by the same attribute. For example, fighters are likely to rely on all three endurance skills (armorer, block, and heavy armor). Mages are likely to rely on all three willpower skills (alteration, destruction, and restoration). However, if Least Used skills are defined as Optional skills, then it can be seen that, for example, NPC smiths can be used to repair armor, dodging backwards can be used to avoid enemy blows (which incidentally is a 100% damage reduction), and light armor leveled concurrently can be used if leveling heavy armor is not desired. These are not, of course, the most optional of skills, nor preferred options; the point is that it is only having to level a particular Major skill that leads to uncontrolled character leveling, not the fact that the player might use it.

  • One option is to choose the least important of the three skills and make that a major skill. That one skill is likely to dictate when your character levels up, at least for the first few turns, but leveling will still be relatively slow and controllable.
  • Another option is to keep all the most used skills as minor skills, and instead choose two major skills associated with an attribute, such as personality, that less often comes into play.
    • The disadvantage in this case is that because 2/3 of the available skills for that attribute are major ones, obtaining +5 attribute bonuses for the doubled-up attribute are more likely to interfere with, or be interfered with by, gaining the full attribute bonuses of other major skills.
    • For example, if both Mercantile and Speechcraft are chosen as major skills, to get +5 bonuses in Personality requires one major skill point in Mercantile or Speechcraft for every point less than ten in Illusion. Every point in Mercantile and Speechcraft is, in turn, preventing a point in other, more crucial major skills. This is not likely to be a problem in itself, but it can exacerbate other problems. For example, a player with Athletics, Restoration, and their preferred weapon as major skills can all too easily get three points in each. If the player also has Sneak and Marksman as majors, then to get a +5 Agility bonus, they would then be stuck with having to get nine points in Security, which might well be impossible without getting a point in Athletics, Restoration, or the weapon skill first.

Skills vs Attributes: which is more important?Edit

ConclusionEdit

ToolsEdit