Fallout1 Official Survival Guide PDF
Fallout1 Official Survival Guide PDF
Fallout1 Official Survival Guide PDF
·Detailed Secrets-
customize the
degree of help
you want!
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Publisher
Lynn Zingr af
Editor-in-Chief11
H. Leigh Davis
Ma t
Way brigh
David sing
Licen :~ti~~~i~~~~~~;
Mark eting Man ager
Janet Cado ff
Acquisitions
Debra McBride
Chap ter 3a
Place s to Go •.••. ..••. •••• •••• •. 67
Chap ter 4a
Peop le and Thing s to Meet ••••• ••• 87
Chap ter 5a
Stuff to Get • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • . •1 09
Chap ter 61
Uh, What 'll I Do Now? ••.•• .•••• • 133
Chap ter 7a
Explo ring the Waste s on Only
200 Bottle Caps a Day • • • • • • • • • • . 163
Chap ter Sa
Dang er! Radio active ! •••• •••• •... 201
Chap ter 9a
One Wom an's Path Throu gh
the Dese rt • • . . . • . • • • • • . . . • . • • • • 221
.A..ppend1xa
RATS:
A Light dose only. Almost no contamination at all.
Introduction
Fallout is Interplay's new PC CD-ROM role-playing game that puts you in the role of an
explorer venturing out from your underground shelter on a quest. Decades ago, a
brief, savage nuclear holocaust devastated the surface world; for a long time, the
vaults held their tiny human enclaves safe from the radiation and mutations outside.
You are a member of one of these self-contained communities, a citizen of Vault 13.
For over eighty years, no one in your vault has set foot outside.
Now, though, a critical component of your vault's water purification system has failed.
In four months, your community will be destroyed ... unless you can find a replacement
part and bring it back to Vault Thirteen. The Overseer, the community's leader, sug-
gests that you begin your search at a neighboring vault, somewhere to the east.
But exactly where you go, what you do, and where you search, is entirely up to you ...
Prologue: This section introduces Slim, your guide to the outside world,
and tells you how to use this book. RATS: ' ~~~
----------------
Chapter 1: Who Are You7 This chapter covers everything you need to
know about creating, modifying, and selecting your game character. Those
players who are unfamiliar with role-playing games might want to check
out this section's descriptions of character stats and traits, and see how
they work. RATS: ·~ ~ ~ ~
Chapter 3: Places to Go. This chapter lists the various locations where
the adventure unfolds. There are no major spoilers, but players who prefer
to do their own exploring might want to do it without learning what
they're going to find in a given town. RATS: ·~· <~ ~ ~
Chapter 5: Stuff to Get. Along the way, you'll find lots of stuff you can
pick up and take with you. This section will tell you what's available. It also
describes some of the special places, like trunks and refrigerators, that you
can open and, sometimes, find things in. It also lists the various weapons
you might find. RATS: ··~·· ·,~- ~ ~
Chapter 6: Uh, What'll I Do Now7 For each location and character, this
chapter asks some questions or makes some gentle suggestions, providing
hints about what you ought to be thinking about while you're there. No
game secrets are given away here, but the hints provided will help keep
you from wandering aimlessly about, trying to figure out what to do next.
RATS: '~ ~·· ~ ~
Chapter 7: Exploring the Wastes on Only 200 Bottle Caps a Day. This
chapter takes the various game locations one by one and looks at them in
more detail than Chapter 3. Places of particular importance at each are
described, and any special adventures or dangers are listed. This chapter
also provides maps for all important game locations. Many game secrets
are openly discussed, so don't look here if you want to solve things for
yourself. RATS: "'~·· ·~ ;~ ~
r
Chapter 8: Danger! Radioactive! Look in this chapter only if you want
specific help in plain language. This chapter DOES give the secrets away, so
don't look inside if you'd really rather figure the problems out for your-
self! RATS: ., , / '· /
Appendix: Experience and Perks. This section describes how you can
improve your character during the course of the game, including
Experience Points and the various new skills or Perks you can purchase
along the way. RATS: ~~~
In a very real sense, you are creating the story as you go along.
Obviously, no game guide of this book's thickness could map out all of the possible
paths for you. What it can do is provide a little extra information about the places
you'll see and the characters you'll meet. It is designed so that you can extract exact-
ly what you want, without giving away too much.
If you prefer to play the game all the way through without specific help with the
adventure, Chapter 1: Who Are You? and Chapter 2: Getting Around will tell
you how to create a character and how to maneuver through the world of Fallout
without giving anything away.
Chapter 3: Places to Go, Chapter 4: People and Things to Meet, and Chapter 5:
Stuff to Get all give you some information about the locations, non-player characters,
ment you'll be encountering in the Most of this is basic informa-
of the game's suspense wilL re~to the end.
If you find you need just a little help with something, or if you arrive at a new town
and have no idea about where to go or what to do, consult Chapter 6: Uh, What'll
I Do Now? The hints are presented under each location and character, arranged top
to bottom from vague to specific. Find the heading of the section that's troubling
you and start reading from the top. You might want to cover up the lower tips with
a 3x5 card so that you see only the less-specific clues first, then move down the page
one line at a time until you have just the information you need. If you don't want
more than a nudge, just read the top suggestion or two on each list. If you need
more help, go further down the list.
If you want specific help with specific places or characters, go to Chapter 7:
Exploring the Wastes On Only 200 Bottle Caps a Day. This chapter gives a site-
by-site rundown of each major game location, listing special dangers or adventures
that may be encountered there.
Chapter 8: Danger! Radioactive! If a place or a character has you completely
stumped and you don't mind having the answer given to you, this is where to go.
Just be aware that there are spoilers here. Don't read this section unless you don't
mind having the answers handed to you in plain language.
Chapter 9: One Woman's Path Through the Desert is part story narrative, part
hints and tips. Keep in mind, though, that Fallout is an open-ended role-playing
game, and the chain of events presented here is only one possible of out of a great
many. In fact, each time the computer throws another set of electronic dice, (did I
hit that rad scorpion, or did I hit the cave wall instead?) chances are the outcome
will be different from what is listed here. Use this as a guide, not as an infallible
blueprint. The story presented in this chapter represents one possible approach but
by no means the only one ... or even the best one. The story you are telling in
Fallout, after all, is your own.
And ... don't look here unless you want to learn something about what you're really
up against in this game!
Appendix: Experience and Perks won't be of much use until later in the game
when your character begins accumulating valuable Experience Points. Check here if
you need help deciding how to improve your character.
Finally, here and there throughout this guide you'll see sidebars with a few choice
words from ol' Slim-just some friendly advice from an old guy who lives in the
world of Fallout. Think about that. He's old. That means he's survived out on the sur-
face of the world long enough to get old ... so maybe his advice is worth listening
to, huh? If he can survive up there, so can you!
RATS:
A light dose only. Almost no contamination at all.
Your character is your representative in the game world of Fallout. His or her partic-
ular mix of skills and personality traits, together with the level of each skill, are what
the computer uses to decide how well you accomplish certain tasks-from firing a
hand gun to picking a lock to telling a lie. The character's statistics or stats tell you
and the computer how strong your character is, how much endurance he or she pos-
sesses, how much agility, how much personal charisma, and so on.
Other characters you encounter in the game are called non-player characters or
NPCs. They are the people your character will interact with-by asking them ques-
tions, bartering for equipment, or engaging with them in a firefight. Some may be
induced to join your expedition. Others will provide useful information, while still
ers could be lying t 't o~mber of r~asonS,.~ in the ~
... ·-- -- · -- ---- -·- ·- - ·- ·-
"'
you must make your own judgments about other characters' motives, reasoning, and
intentions.
When beginning a new Fallout game, the first thing you'll be asked to do is either
select or create a new character. This chapter will take you through that process step
by step and let you know what you need to be thinking about as you make your
decisions. The choices you make are important. After all, this is your life we're talk-
ing about here!
Character Creation
For Fun and Profit
When beginning a new game, you have three choices when it comes to getting your
character. You can choose one of three pre-generated characters, Max, Natalia, or
Albert; you can choose one of those three characters and modify their beginning
stats; or you can start your new character from scratch.
To choose or create a character, select NEW GAME from the Main Menu. This will take
you to the Character Selection Screen. There, you can TAKE or MODIFY a pre-existing
character, or CREATE a new one of your own. Press CANCEL to return to the Main Menu.
Pre-Generated Characters
Simplest, of course, is choosing one of the three beginning characters.
Max
Called "Stone" by his friends, Max is the biggest,
strongest, and toughest guy in the Vault.
Unfortunately, he's a little lacking in the brains
department.
Natalia
The granddaughter of a Russian diplomat
who took shelter in Vault 13 at the war's
beginning, Natalia is an extremely bright
and resourceful character. She's also some-
thing of a night person, who gets around
r dark.
Albert
Albert's strength lies in his ability to com-
municate. He's a good negotiator, and
people often believe what he says, no
matter how outrageous it might be. In an
earlier age, he would have been either a
con artist or a lawyer.
Making Your
0-vvn Character For Even
More Fun and Profit
If you want to have a bit more control over your character's stats and abilities, you
can either modify one of the three pre-generated characters, or you can start from
scratch. Either way, before you begin you should have an idea of what the various
stats represent and how they're applied in the game. The following section gives
you all the information you'll need to make an informed choice.
Primary Statistics
These are the initial numbers your character has to work with. They tell the comput-
er how strong your character is, how agile, how smart, and so on; these numbers are
used directly in combat and other activities and are also used to create Derived
Statistics, which are described below.
There are seven Primary Statistics. Each has a value of from 1 to 10 Character Points.
A character who was average in all ways would have 5 Character Points for each
stat. A character can never have a Primary Stat higher than 10 or lower than 1.
STRENGTH
This is a direct measure of your raw, physical strength. A high value lets you carry
more weight, throw more damaging punches, and take more damage before you
die.
PERCEPTION
Did you notice that rad scorpion sneaking up behind you? How about the tip of that
key sticking out of the cushions on that sofa? Perception is applied to all ranged
.~e~~apons' distances. The hi our Per tion, the farther your character can shoot.
values will get: formatiOIII'aboothis
ENDURANCE
This is a measure of your ability to withstand physical exertion and damage. It is
applied directly to your resistance to radiation or poisoning, as well as to your total
number of Hit Points. A high value lets you fight longer and be less likely to die in
combat.
CHARISMA
It's a sad fact of life that people are more likely to listen to you if you look like John
Wayne, and less likely to listen to you if you look like Rodney Dangerfield ... or ol'
Slim. The higher your Charisma, the better able you are to communicate with peo-
ple, the more successful you'll be in negotiations, and the better the deals you'll get
while bargaining. If you want to talk your way out of problems instead of shooting
your way out, make sure you have a high Charisma .
INTELLIGENCE
The higher your Intelligence, the more skills you'll be able to excel in, and the more
choices you'll have when it comes to dialogue. Characters with very low
Intelligence-below 4-will find their dialogue choices in a conversation limited to
things like "Duhh," "Unghh," and "Nuh-uh." You also might find that many of the
non-player characters you encounter tend to treat you like an idiot and would
rather not hold extended conversations with you. Du-u-uhh.
AGILITY
This stat measures your speed and dexterity. It also helps determine how many
things you can do in one combat turn, and whether you or your opponent moves
first. If you want to excel at combat-, thievery-, or sneaking-related skills, you should
boost your Agility as high as possible.
LUCK
This is a wild-card stat, a representation of karma, fate, and whether or not the
Universe is mad at you. It will modify many events. A high Luck factor will give you a
better chance at success in everything you do; low Luck will make you suffer a bit
more from things like falls, broken bones, and unfortunate encounters with rad
scorpions and the like.
- - - - - - - - - - -
1: Very Bad
2: Bad
3: Poor
4: Fair
5: Average
6: Good
7: Very Good
8: Great
9: Excellent
10: Heroic
Your Primary Statistics define you, and you should be aware of your character's
strengths and weaknesses. A character with a Charisma of 2, an Intelligence of 3,
and a Strength of 10 probably shouldn't try to talk his way out of a jam. Picking up
his opponents and throwing them out the window, however, might be perfectly in
character.
Your basic statistics will not improve, usually, through experience or gameplay, so
take note of what you're starting with, and make your plans accordingly!
Derived Statistics
Your Primary Statistics are applied directly to the Derived Statistics below. Check the
following list to see how your decisions about Strength or Agility will affect your
character's chances.
There are 11 Derived Stats affecting various parts of your character's performance.
Hit Points
This stat determines how much damage you can take before ... well, does "Game
Over" mean anything to you? Characters with high Hit Point numbers can survive
longer when faced with radiation poisoning, rad scorpion poisoning, lead poisoning,
or whatever other trauma they might pick up. A low value means you're hurting.
The character's current condition is displayed as current hit points/maximum hit
points, so if you ever notice that your character is at 1/30, you should probably seek
medical help ... fast!
Hit Points are equal to the character's (2 x Endurance)+ Strength+ 15, and an aver-
age character will start with 30. You will gain more hit points as you increase in level.
Armor Class
This represents how good at avoiding being hit in combat you are, not how thick
your skin is! The higher your Armor Class stat, the harder it is for your opponent to
hit you. Your natural Armor Class may be improved by wearing armor as well; you'll
have the chance during the game to buy or otherwise acquire various types of body
armor. (See Chapter 5: Stuff to Get, for a complete list.)
You start out with an Armor Class equal to your Agility, which, for average players,
will be 5. The higher your Agility, the harder you are to hit!
Action Points
How many Action Points your character has will determine how many different
things you can do in one combat turn. The total number of Action Points your char-
acter has remaining after each action is shown by the row of green lights above the
Weapon Bar on the game screen. It takes points to move, points to fire a weapon,
even points just to check your inventory, and obviously you can't do everything
you'd like to all at once! Average characters have 7 Action Points for each round.
Obviously, characters with more points get to complete more activities each combat
round.
The character's Action Points are equal to half his/her Agility (rounded down) plus
five, so if you want more Action Points, build up your Agility. With an Agility of 10,
for instance, you'll get 10 Action Points, enough to fire twice each combat round,
instead of only once. That can be a tremendous advantage in a firefight!
Carry Weight
So you want to lug that shotgun AND the flamethrower AND the rocket launcher
AND all that ammunition, huh? Well, better check your Carry Weight first! This stat
tells you how much, in pounds, you can carry. It's derived from your Strength times
25 pounds PLUS an additional twenty-five pounds, so average characters can lug 150
pounds around on their backs. If you want to carry more, jack up your Strength.
Melee Damage
This stat shows how much EXTRA damage you do to an opponent in hand-to-hand
combat, just because you're a big bruiser. Increase your Strength if you want to do
more damage in unarmed or hand-to-hand combat. Using your fists, a knife, or a
sledgehammer in combat will do a basic amount of damage; the Melee Damage fig-
ure will be added to that to reflect your extra strength. The Melee Damage figure is
calculated by subtracting five from your Strength, with an absolute minimum of one
point. Average characters do 1 point of Melee Damage each time they hit someone.
Damage Resistance
Resistance is futile ... but the higher this number, the more easily you can shrug off
some of the effects of that knee to the groin, or that 10mm slug in the ribs. This stat
is a percentage applied to the damage you take from each incoming attack. If, for
example, you have a Damage Resistance of 10% and you take 20 points of damage
in an attack, you actually lose only 18 points from your hit point total. All characters
start with a base Damage Resistance of 0%. The only way to improve this stat is by
acquiring some additional armor along the way.
Poison Resistance
This figure gives you some natural resistance to poison attacks and represents the
fact that most poison attacks-by those rad scorpions, for instance-are designed to
take down small, cute, fu od animals and not strapping, big hulks like your
racter. Poison Resi r Endurance
characters have 25% Poison Resistance, meaning that if you get hit for 12 points of
poison damage, you'll only lose 9 hit points. You can improve this stat by improving
your Endurance.
Radiation Resistance
Sometimes things on the outside get pretty hot... in more ways than one! This stat
reduces the number of rads you accumulate as you venture through the radiation-
blasted outside environments of Fallout and is calculated by taking your Endurance
times 2%; an average character starts with a Radiation Resistance of 10%.
Sequence
Who does what to whom when, and did you do unto him before he did unto you?
These questions can be vitally important in combat, and a character who is agile and
perceptive will have a distinct advantage in these situations. The higher your
Sequence Stat, the more likely that you'll get the jump on your opponent. The num-
ber is determined by adding your Agility and Perception; average characters will
have a Sequence of 10, so they'll act before an opponent with a Sequence of 9, and
after one with an 11. Increase your Agility and/or Perception to improve the odds
for your character a bit.
Healing Rate
Some people seem to be blessed with the ability to throw off the effects of a cold or
that shotgun wound to the chest with remarkable ease. Others can suffer from a
hangnail and never seem to get better. This stat represents the difference in natural
healing rates between people. If you are wounded in combat or have taken other
damage, you will get back at the end of each day a number of Hit Points equal to
your Healing Rate. The number is calculated by taking 1/3 of your Endurance, with a
minimum of 1. The typical character will repair Hit Point damage at the rate of 1 per
day. If your Endurance is cranked up all the way to 9 or 10, though, you'll recover 3
points per day.
There are two additional wrinkles on this one: if you rest, meaning you do nothing
except sleep, you will repair damage equal to your Healing Rate every three hours,
rather than at the end of the day. Also, you cannot improve your condition above
your maximum number of Hit Points.
Critical Chance
Sometimes you just get lucky. In combat, there's always a chance that your attack
, ; resu xtra damage or cause some jp · ct. The big her your Critical
------------------
Chance, the more likely it is that your attack will cause critical damage. The number
is calculated as the average of your Perception plus your Intelligence, expressed as a
percentage, and is added directly to your base chance of causing critical damage.
Average characters have a Critical Chance of 5%, though you'll improve that to 10%
by bumping your Perception and Intelligence to 10 each.
Tag Skills
Every character has some things he's better at than others. Tag Skills represent these
specializations, given as a percentage. The higher the number, the better your
chances of success. All characters must choose three Tag Skills from the list given
below. Some skills are automatically applied during the game. Certain others-
Stealth, for example-must be deliberately applied.
During the course of the game, you will begin with an immediate 20% in each of
your Tag Skills. Better yet, as you gain Experience, these skills will grow twice as fast
as other skills.
Each character begins with at least some ability in all of the available skills.
Combat Skills
These are the skills directly applicable to various types of combat. They are applied
automatically. For firearms, the higher the number, the easier it is for you to hit your
target, and the longer the range at which you have a chance of hitting.
~ Small Guns: This skill covers the use of pistols, rifles, submachine guns,
and any other one-handed fire-arms you might encounter. Beginning
skill is equal to 35%, plus Agility times 1%. Average characters will
have a Small Gun skill of 40%.
~ Big Guns: This skill covers the use of flamers, miniguns, and other
large, two-handed firearms. Starting Big Gun skill is equal to 10%, plus
Agility times 1%. Average characters start with a skill of 15%.
~ Unarmed: This skill applies to attacks with your bare hands or feet. A
higher number means a better chance of hitting the guy you throw a
punch ng skill levels are fairly high, since this is a
basic determi~ OY..iia~J'l!Jll.lll
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Some Advice F~4m 01' Slim
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Well, I'll tell ya. What character points you got are gonna I
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have a big affect on how ya go about survivin' the Outback, if I
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y'take m'meanin'. Y'meet all kinds out here, I'll tell ya! The I
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big bruisers, all brawn and nothin' upstairs, y'know? Small, I
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quick guys that move like lightnin'. Kids with mpre good I
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looks then common sense. I
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When you're makin' a character, though, the important question I
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isn't so much what stats you're gonna build up, it's what I
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you're gonna give up, 'cause you'll need to 1ose some points in I
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one category before you improve somethin' else. Some guy"s I I
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know like to knock iheir· intelligence and mebee their charis- I
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ma down a point or two in order t'get more strength or I
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endurance. - I
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So what would I choose? Ayuh, this here's how I see it. Fer me, I
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Agility is the most important stat, follered close by I
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Perception and Intelligence. Th' way I see it, a high Agility I
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gives you better odds with all guns, better chances in I
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unarmed combat, a higher sneak percentage, and better I
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chances at stuff like picking locks, stealing things, or I
detecting traps. A high Agility also means the bad guys can't
hit you easily, you're more likely to move first, and you can
ao more during each combat round. T'my way o' thinkin', I'd
rather the bad guy missed me in the first .place, even if that
means I start out with fewer Bit Points. As fer Perception I
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and Int-elligence, havin' high numt:?.e rs there means you'll have I
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more opportunitie·s. You'll see more, understand more, and have I
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more choices in what you want t'say to folks. I
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The question is, then, whatcha gonna give up to get high val- I
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ues in those stats? If'n it was me, I'd shave some off of I
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Strength, Endprance, and Luck, then try like hell not t'get I
· caught in no-win situations where I'm sure to take hits. And
as fer risking bad luck? Well, shoot! If'n you keep it above 3,
then you should be okay.- Sure, you might miss out on some for-
tuitous lucky breaks now and again, but then, I'd rather rely
on skill than on luck any day!
age of your Strength and Agility times 1%. An average character will
have a skill of 45%.
Diplomatic Skills
Speech and barter will be useful for characters who would rather talk than fight.
Both are applied automatically.
~ Speech: How good are you at getting what you need from people?
How likely is it that they'll believe what you say, even when it's a bald-
faced lie? Speech is the skill that applies here. It is calculated by adding
25% to your Charisma times 2%. Typical characters start with a Speech
skill of 35%.
~ Barter: How are you at striking deals and at getting good value for
your money or trade goods? This skill helps lower prices for things you
buy and gets you more money when you sell equipment. The starting
value is determined by adding 20% to your Charisma times 2%. Typical
characters start with a skill of 30%.
Medical Skills
These two skills are useful if you or someone in your party gets hurt.
~ First Aid: This skill lets you cure minor wounds, cuts, and bruises. You
will only be able to use it three times a day, and it will take a while for
the healing effect to be noticed. Active use. Select the skill from the
Interface Bar, then select a target to apply it to (often yourself).
Beginning First Aid skill is determined by adding 30% to the average
of your Percep'fffp and lnte.ll~ence times 1%. Average char
with a 351-.u. . .~(,._..,-,
~ Doctor: This skill allows you to try to heal more serious injuries, includ-
ing more extensive losses of Hit Points and damaged arms or legs. It
will not be effective against poison or radiation damage. You can only
use it three times per day, but you can combine the effort with appli-
cations of First Aid skill. Active use. Select Doctor skill from the list,
then select a target. Crippled limbs add to the time that must pass
before any improvement is seen. The base skill is the average of your
Perception and Intelligence times 1%, plus 15%. Average characters
begin with a 20% skill.
Scientific Skills
These two are active skills, allowing you to select the skill to be used, then apply it
to a specific target that you wish to examine or repair.
~ Repair: Got any duct tape? How about some chewing gum? Once you
know what's wrong with it from your Science skill, Repair skill allows
you to fix it. This can be an extremely valuable skill when most of what
you find out there is broken to begin with. Active use. Select the item
you want to repair. Beginning skill levels are set to your Intelligence
times 1%, plus 20%. Average characters start with 25% skill.
Other Skills
Here are some other useful skills-some automatic, some active.
~ Gambling: This one will help you in games of chance, letting you win
more often. Automatic use. Basic skill is equal to 20%, plus your Luck
times 1%. Average characters start with a 25% skill.
It's a good idea to toggle Sneak off when you don't need it. Some
guards get suspicious of people sneaking around in the open in broad
daylight. The skill works only when you are walking; Sneak is automat-
ically toggled off if you run. Your basic Sneak skill is equal to 25%, plus
your Agility times 1%. Average characters have a 30% skill.
/
~ Steal: This is your chance of walking off with something that doesn't
belong to you without being immediately detected. Even if you are
successful, however, a nearby character might still notice the theft.
Larger objects are more difficult to steal than smaller ones. You can try
stealing directly from another character, but it works better if you
come up behind him so he can't see what you're doing. Active use.
Select the skill from the skill list on the Interface Bar, then target what
you want to steal on the screen. Beginning Steal skill is equal to 20%,
plus your Agility times 1%. Average characters start with a 25% skill.
~ Traps: How good are you at spotting cunningly concealed traps? For
that matter, can you create a trap to catch someone following you?
This skill is p · 'ly used r disarming traps that your Perc~ti~n
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Slim I
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So, y'wanna know which skills t'focus on as Tag I
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Skills? Well, your first decision has to be based on I
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what kind of character you want to play. If you like I
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gunplay or brawling, obviously you should have a look \
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at your Combat Skills. If you'd rather taik your way I
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outta a bad spot, then maybe you should think about \
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making Speech a Tag Skill. I
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The other thing to· think about is whether your char- I
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acter is good at Agility-related skills, like I
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firearms, or, if. you want to take the intellectual I
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route~ if he's better at things requiring smarts. Tag \
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Skills can help offset a lower basic stat...or raise \
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even higher one that's already good. You can be a generalist or I
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a specialist. Your choice. I
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Me, I like to take my Agility to start with and jack it up as I
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high as I can, whioh gives me an advantage with all of the I
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Combat Skills. Then I like to choose Small Guns as a Tag Skill. I
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Big guns do a lot more damage, of course, but you're probably not \
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going to find any big guns early in the game, and that's when \
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you need to be sure you win your combats with unpleasant crit- I
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ters and two-legged vermin.
Speech is another good Tag Skill, especially .if you sacrificed
some of your Charisma to get a better Strength or Agility. Keep
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in mind that it's almost always better t'talk your way outta \
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Other favorites are First Aid--since you can't always stay outta \
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trouble--Science, and Repair. And Big Guns and Energy Weapons I
become lots more important toward the end of the story, when you
actually find s~me t'play with.
It is amusing, though, to have Unarmed be yoqr Tag Skill when
you start with a character with a Strength of 9 or 10. This char-
acter can really clean house when he has toi You might picture
him in a leather jacket, with mirrored shades and a tendency to
say, "'.'ll be back• in a thick abcenti
uncovered. Usually active use. Select the skill from the list on the
Interface Bar, then target the trap you want to disarm. In some situa-
tions, use will be automatic. Your base skill is determined by multiply-
ing the average of your Perception and your Agility by 1%, then
adding the result to 20%. Average characters begin the game with a
25% skill.
Traits
These are characteristics that help further define your character and add a
little spice along the way. They are entirely optional. Unlike the three Tag
Skills, you don't have to choose any of these at all, or you can decide to
select only one. Each trait carries with it what you might think of as good
news and bad news: each confers an advantage, but there's always a net
loss, as well. Consider carefully whether the advantages you get with any
trait outweigh its disadvantages!
~ Fast Metabolism: Your metabolic rate is twice normal. This allows you
to heal faster, but it also decreases your resistance to poison and radia-
tion. The good news: you have a +2 to your Healing Rate. The bad
news: your radiation and poison resistance start out at 0%.
~ Bruiser: You're big, but a little slow. You don't hit as often and your
Action Point total is lowered, but you hit harder and do more Melee
Damage when you connect. The good news: your strength is increased
by +2 The bad news: you lose 2 Action Points.
~ Small Frame: You're a little guy, or a petite woman. You can't carry as
much, but you're more agile. The good news: you get+ 1 to your
Agility. The bad news: your Carry Weight is only 15 pounds times your
Strength.
~ One Hander: You are very left- or right-handed, which means you're
great with one-handed weapons, but a bit clumsy with two-handed
ones. The good news: you get +20% to hit with one-handed weapons.
The bad news: you get -40% with two-handed weapons. One-Handed
weapons: pistols, knives, rocks and other small weapons. Two-Handed
weapons: spears, hammers, rifles, Big Guns, and shotguns.
~ Finesse: During any type of combat you show tremendous skill and
control, but don't do as much damage when you connect. The good
news: add + 10% to your Critical Chance. The bad nexvs· ~~ ~3~
damage lt5ht~our ~ttacks.
f
~ Kamikaze: When you fight, you don't pay any attention to threats, but 4
you can act faster as a result. The bad news: your Armor Class is low-
ered to whatever you happen to be wearing. In other words, you must
wear armor to even have an armor class. The good news: add +5 to
your Sequence.
~ Heavy Handed: You swing hard and with brutal force, but you're not
necessarily accurate with your attack. As a result, you rarely score criti-
cal hits, but you do cause additional damage. The good news: add +4
Damage Points in any melee combat (hand-to-hand or attacks with
non-ranged weapons like knives). The bad news: any critical hit has-
30% added to the critical hit tables.
~ Fast Shot: You attack faster than most people, but don't take the time
for careful aim. The good news: subtract 1 Action Point from the total
needed to attack with a weapon. (For example, firing a handgun takes
only 4 APs, instead of the usual 5.) The bad news: you cannot perform
targeted shots. This will severely limit your ability to get critical hits
later in the game.
~ Bloody Mess: Why do people around you always seem to die violently?
If the violence meter on the Preferences Screen is turned down, you
will always see the maximum violence for that setting. The good news:
"Oooh, blood! Kewl!" The bad news: "Please! I just had dinner!"
~ Jinxed: Ever had one of those days? Yeah, but every day? Every time
you or a nearby character experience a failure, there is a greater
chance that the failure will become a critical failure-something
unpleasant, like a weapon explodes or you hit the wrong target. The
good news: things keep going badly wrong for other people nearby,
including your opponents. The bad news: they also go wrong for you
and your friends!
~ Good Natured: you're a lover, not a fighter, and you never really liked
guns when you were growing up in the Vault. At the same time, you
studied lots of non-martial arts. As a result, your Combat Skills are
lower, but other skills start off higher. The good news: First Aid,
Doctor, Speech, and Barter all start off with a 20% bonus. The bad
news: Small Guns, Big Guns, Energy Weapons, Unarmed and Melee
Weapons all get a -10% to their starting skill levels.
-------------
~ Chern Reliant: Man, who you been hanging out with back at the Vault?
Don't you know survival demands a clear head and good reflexes? The
bad news: you are more easily addicted to drugs, with twice the nor-
mal chance of addiction. The good news: you recover more quickly
from their bad effects.
~ Night Person: The character is more awake after dark, and he slows
down during the day. The good news: Intelligence and Perception are
modified by+ 1 during the hours of 6:00 P.M. to 6:00A.M. The bad
news: Between 6:00A.M. and 6:00 P.M., Perception and Intelligence
are reduced by 1. Ever had one of those days when you just couldn't
get started? If you gain a level during the night, you will benefit from
the increased Intelligence.
~ Skilled: The good news: The character spends more time improving his
skills than most people, so his starting skills are all +10% and he gets
an additional 5 points per new experience level. The bad news: Not as
many extra abilities. You will only get a Perk every four levels, instead
of every three levels.
~ Gifted: The character has more natural abilities than most people but
hasn't spent as much time practicing. The good news: all stats are
increased by 1. The bad news: All skills are reduced by 10%, and you
receive 5 fewer skill points per level. In combination with Skilled, this
will give you extra stats with the loss of a few Perks.
Other Decisions
You have several more decisions to make to flesh out your character.
Character Age
Use the plus and minus buttons next to the character's age to set the figure to any
age, sixteen through thirty-five. There is little direct bearing on the game, with no
direct penalties or advantages to having an older or younger character.
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Character Sex
Choose your character's sex. The main effect this has on the game is in the appear-
ance of the character on the game screen. Some non-player characters will react or
speak differently to you, depending on whether you're male or female. The choice
also determines whether other characters refer to you as "him" or "her," and in
some instances, your gender will determine whether or not an NPC is romantically
attracted you. To select your character's sex, click on the MALE/FEMALE button to open
a small window, then click on the gender of your choice.
~ SAVE: Select this option to save the current status of your character so
that you can work with it more later. The character will not be avail-
able for a game until you Load it. When the Save Character Screen
appears, type in your character's name and press ENTER or click on DONE.
~ PRINT TO FILE: This option gives you a text version of your character in
the Fallout directory on your computer, which you can then print out
as hard copy. This option does not save you your character for later
editing or play, and there is no way to load a text file version back into
the game. If you want to save your character in a form you can use in
the game, use the SAVE option above.
~ ERASE: This option lets you wipe out a character and start over. The
game will ask l'~U to confirm, and if you say yes the character will be
deleted willa~t to their default settings.
e sure this is what you wantr
Putting It All Together
Now that you have all the basics and know what stats and traits affect what, you're
ready to assemble your character. You can start by modifying one of the pre-gener-
ated characters, or begin fresh with a brand new one.
4. Select your character's Age by clicking on age, then using the plus or
minus buttons.
Barney
This is Arnie's younger brother. He's even bigger and stronger than Arnie ... but he's
also a bit on the slow side, if you know what I mean. Sometime back he picked up
the handle "Barney the Barbarian"-it may have had something to do with the way
he once came through the door at mealtime, forgetting to open it first. This guy is
definitely played for laughs.
S'treng'tha 10
Percep'tiona 5
Endurancea 10
Charismaa 3
In'telligencea 3
Agili'tya 6
Blade
Tanya MacMillen is quick, agile, sharp, and bright, so much so she's picked up the
handle "Blade." She's small-105 pounds soaking wet-but she moves like a cat...
except in combat when she moves more like lightning.
S"treng"ths 4
Percep"tions 7
Endurances 4
Charismas 6
In"telligences 8
Agili"tys 7
Lucks 4
Tag Skillss Small Guns, Speech, Repair.
Trai"tss Small Frame, Gifted
"Lucky''
Frank Charles Luciano, better known as "Lucky," was blessed with holostar good
looks and a charming personality. His reputation as a Don Juan has gotten him in
trouble in the past; rumor has it that the reason he volunteered to leave the Vault
had something to do with the Overseer's daughter. He's got a quick wit and a ready
tongue. Unfortunately, he's never cared much for guns. He does like to gamble,
though, and seems to be as lucky at cards and dice as he is with women.
S"treng"ths 4
Percep"tions 5
Endurances 4
Charismas 9
In"telligences 6
Agili"tys 5
Lucks 7
Tag Skillss Speech, Gambling, Sneak
Trai"tss Good Natured, Gifted
Ready for Action
Congratulations! Your new character is now ready to go forth into the world, armed
with the strength, endurance, agility, and brains you have given him or her. Go to
the Main Menu where you can start a new game, load a previously saved game,
review the introductory movie, look at the credits, or exit back to your normal oper-
ating system.
Good luck!
You now have a character who represents you in the world of Fallout, and you're
ready to have him venture forth in search of the water purifier chip that will save
your community. But ... once you're out there, what do you do? How do you move?
Fight? Communicate? In short, how do you get around?
This chapter covers all of the details of Falloufs Game Interface, as well as giving
you some general hints and tips on how to play the game.
At this point, you'll be looking at the Game Screen. Take some time to examine it,
and check out how it works.
Game Screen
Game View
The upper half of the screen is called the Game View. You can see the surrounding
terrain, and the blue-clad figure representing your character, either male or female.
Move your mouse and watch the cursor. This is how you access objects or direct
movement on the screen. The Game View is where all of the game's action takes
place, and where you'll point and click to take specific actions such as moving, pick-
ing things up, talking to people, shooting opponent NPCs, and so on.
At night or in a cavern, your character illuminates a hex-shaped area at his feet. That
hex, normally invisible, defines the basic unit for measuring distance in Fallout; if
your character can move 8 during a combat round, it's 8 of these hexes that the
number refers to. One hex represents one meter (a little more than a yard) of dis-
tance.
Moving the cursor to the edge of the Game View changes it to a directional arrow.
You can scroll the background by moving that arrow, or by using your keyboard's
arrow keys.
Interface Bar
The lower half of the screen is the Interface Bar. Think of it as the game's control
panel. This is where you can access your inventory, select your current weapon, take
a look at your character's status, select options, and so forth. Note that the cursor
changes when it moves from the Game View to the Interface Bar.
~ Action Points: The number of Action Points you have during a com-
bat round is displayed as a horizontal row of small green lights above
the Active Item Display. These are displayed only during combat. Each
time you expend 1 Action Point, one light switches off, giving you a
way of determining how much more you can do in that turn. During
an opponent's turn, these lights are red.
~ Active Item Display: This display shows your current active item. Left-
click to use the item. Right-click to change modes on the item-an
option available only for weapons. The current mode is shown on the
upper right part of the display. The Action Point cost of using the item in
combat is indicated in the display's lower left corner. If you don't have
enough Action Points remaining, you won't be able to use the item.
Some weapons can make targeted shots. When the shot is properly
lined up, a bull's-eye in the lower right corner will show that you're
ready to fire.
~ Hit Point Counter: This counter shows the number of Hit Points
remaining for your character. If you are healthy, the number will be
white. If you are injured, it will be yellow. If you are close to death, it
will be red. Once your Hit Points reach zero, it's game over and time to
try again.
~ Rounds Left: The line of small green dots down the right side of the
Active Item Display gives you an idea of how close your weapon is to
empty. If the green dots are gone, or there are only a few left at the
bottom, maybe you should right-click on the Active Item Display to
bring up the RELOAD mode and hit it!
Action Cursors
The Action Cursor is the cursor that appears on the Game View. With this and a click
or two of your mouse button, you can make your character move, f ight, talk to peo-
ple, or pick things up.
In the normal Game View, there are three different modes for the Action Cursor:
~ Movement: This gets you around on the Game View screen. It is avail-
able both during normal movement and in combat.
.....
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~ Command: This cursor allows you to take specific
actions, such as examine or handle things, use things,
or talk to NPCs.
Movement Cursor
In Movement Mode, the cursor looks like a small hex and is also known as the hex
cursor. Place the movement cursor where you want your character to go and left-
click. Your character will move to that point by the most direct route. If a red "X"
appears over the cursor, then movement to that point is not possible.
If you want to run, hold down the SHIFT key when you left-click the Movement
Cursor. Your character will run to the indicated spot; note that you can't Sneak while
running.
During combat, you will only be able to move as far as your remaining Action Points
allow you. A number will appear inside the hex cursor; this represents the number of
APs it will take for your character to reach that point. If a red "X" appears over the
cursor, you do not have enough points to reach that spot, or movement is disallowed
for some other reason .
The default cursor is always the hex cursor.
Command Cursor
The Command Cursor allows you to interact with your surroundings. It looks like a
small arrow. Point the arrow at an object and let it rest there a moment. The arrow
will change to one of several action icons. Pausing with the Command Cursor over
an object will also bring up the name of the object on the Display Window on the
Interface Bar. To learn more about it, though, you must Examine it.
To perform the action indicated by the icon, left-click the mouse. If you wish to take
some other action, left-click and hold the mouse button down. A column of avail-
able action icons will appear. Continue to hold the left mouse button down as you
move the mouse to scroll up or down the column. When the action icon you wish to
select is highlighted, release the button. Left-click to take that action.
There are a total of nine available actions possible with the Command Cursor.
Some minor NPCs will have very little to say. Others may let you
engage them in conversation, and are good sources of information
about the town, important characters in the game, or recent events. If
you click on a major NPC, you will go to a Dialogue Screen where
you'll actually hear the character's words.
You can only talk with living, conscious people (not all of whom may
be, strictly speaking, "human") ... and a few computers.
Targeting Cursor
Clicking on the Active Item button on the Interface Bar will activate the Targeting
Cursor. It will also outline any potential targets on the Game View in red, and initi-
ate combat.
Move the cursor over your target of choice. If you cannot possibly hit the target, a
red X will appear. In some cases, a message will appear on the Display Monitor, a
cheery note like: "Target is out of range!" If you can hit the target, a white num-
ber will appear inside the cursor. The number is your chance to hit, modified by
such factors as the range, the available light, your skill with that weapon, and the
target's Armor Class. The higher the number, the better your chance of scoring a
hit; it is possible to get a negative number.
A left-click (once you have your targeting cursor on the target) will fire the
weapon.
Additional Notes on the Inventory Bar
Some of the information found on the Inventory Bar is so extensive, potentially com-
plicated, or important that we've included some additional information below.
Inventory
The Inventory Screen is where you keep track of all the stuff you pick up along the
way. It's also where you go to select what you're going to use.
The Inventory Cursor looks like a hand. Click and drag to move items out of
Inventory to a new location, and release to drop them. If more than one item is
there to move, a special menu will appear, giving you the opportunity to move all,
some, or only one of the items. Identical items can be stacked in Inventory. The num-
ber next to the item shows how many items there are total. With ammunition, the
number shows how many rounds total. When you move ammo, however, each click-
and-drag moves one magazine containing a number of rounds. Clicking and drag-
ging one magazine from Inventory to an empty weapon reloads that weapon.
~ Inventory List: The long, vertical bar on the left side of the screen
shows everything you are carrying, excluding Equipped Items-the
weapons in your hands or the armor you're wearing. You can click and
drag items to change their location on the bar. You can stack identical
items here to save viewing space.
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icon with the Inventory Action Cursor. This displays what's in the con-
tainer, and lets you remove items to DROP them, return them to the
main Inventory, or move them to the Equipped Items area.
The Total Weight line shows how much you're carrying at the moment.
Remember that your character cannot haul more than his or her Carry
Weight.
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STATUS: Click here to view the current status of the adventure.
If there are any hostile creatures on the map, you will not be able to
rest. You must first kill all creatures that would do you harm. If you
haven't, the PIPBoy will tell you so.
~ THINGS TO DO: This keeps track of your assigned tasks. At the begin-
ning, the only note reminds you that you need to find a water purifier
chip. Note that the "days left" line will decrease, day by day, as your
time runs out. Once you return the water-chip, this note will disappear.
51~
The Game View
The Game View shows some portion of the local terrain, be it the tunnels of a cav-
ern, then tents and yurts of a raider camp, or the streets of a shattered city. You can
explore this area by moving your character about, by moving your cursor to the
edge of the Game View until it turns into an arrow, allowing you to scroll the map
in that direction, or you can use your keyboard arrow keys to scroll.
Most of what you see on the Game View is self-explanatory-people, dogs, build-
ings, walls, hideous mutant monsters, and the like. Notice that when your character
walks behind a building or a wall from the Game View's perspective, a part of the
obstruction vanishes so that you can still see your character. This virtual X-ray vision
can be a little confusing sometimes, especially inside a complicated structure with
lots of walls, twists and turns,.but it doesn't take long to get the hang of it. When
F
you click the Movement Cursor inside a building, the roof of the structure becomes
transparent when your character enters, allowing you to see what's going on inside.
There are two ways of leaving a given area on the Game View: Elevators/Ladders
and the Travel Map.
Elevators/Ladders
Certain structures such as underground vaults have several levels connected by eleva-
tors or vertical shafts with ladders. Enter the shaft and right-click the cursor to bring
up the Hand Icon. Right-click to use the elevator, and you will be taken to the next
level.
~ TOWN/WORLD Button: This toggles between the World Map and maps
of the individual cities, towns, or vaults that you may encounter. If
you're in one part of a city or a base and need to reach a different part,
move your character off the Game View to the Exit Grid to reach the
World Map. Next, click the button at the lower right of the World Map,
the one marked TOWN/WORLD. This will take you to a map of the
entire city or installation, with the various available destinations
marked by green triangles. Point and click to go to the new area.
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Dialogue
When you meet another character, you may wish to start a conversation with them.
Left-click to bring up the Command Cursor, then click on the TALK icon. As discussed
earlier, the NPC may have little to say, or he or she might talk your leg off. If the
NPC is willing to hold a conversation with you, the screen will shift to the Dialogue
Screen, where you can read the NPC's statements and select your own reply from
several possible responses. Your choices of replies may be limited if your character's a
few beers short of a full six-pack. Characters with an
Intelligence of less than 4 simply don't have what it
takes to engage in deep or complex conversation.
To access the Barter Interface, click the Barter button on the Dialogue Screen. When
you wish to stop the bartering, click on TALK.
To barter successfully, you must offer the NPC an equal amount or value in goods for
the goods you wish to take. A high Barter Skill will tip the value of the exchange in
your favor; a low Barter Skill means you'll be losing out on most deals, giving more
to get the same thing. The reaction of the NPC to you will also adjust the value of
goods. If the NPC likes you, you will find it easier to Barter.
On the Barter Screen, you will see your Inventory on the left. Click and drag items
that you wish to exchange to the left Barter Table between your Inventory and the
NPC's. Next, move items that you want from the NPC's Inventory to the right Barter
Table. The total cash value of what you offer appears at the bottom of your side of
the table; compare it with the value of the items you are bargaining for. Unless your
Barter Skill is quite high, you'll have to offer more than the goods you are trying to
buy are worth. When you think you're offering a fair deal (or, at least, when you
think you've set up a deal that the NPC will go for) press the OFFER button. The NPC
will respond on his Dialogue Screen. You can remove some of your items from the
left Barter Table to strike a better deal for yourself, or you can offer more if the NPC
didn't like your first offer. You can always press CANCEL to stop the trade and return
to the Dialogue Screen.
If you have goods on your side of the table, and no goods on the NPCs side of the
table, then selecting OFFER will just give your items to the NPC. This is helpful with
NPC party-members.
Remember that you will get a better deal from an NPC if he likes you. Your Barter
Skill and the Barter Skill of the NPC will also affect the final, agreed-upon price.
Combat
While the different modes and actions that take place during combat are described
individually elsewhere, more detailed information is provided here.
Sooner or later, no matter how peaceful your intentions, either someone or some-
thing in the Fallout world will attack you, or you'll decide you must attack some-
thing or someone else. Your reputation in various locations will often depend on
your success in various combats-whether it's wiping out that rad scorpion nest
that's been killing off the villagers' livestock, or taking out those bandit raiders
who've been harassing the caravans. Remember that your reputation in a given local
may be good or bad. Actions have consequences. You can't go around shooting
harmless civilians for no reason and not expect other NPCs to look at you ... differ-
ently. Every two good NPCs that you kill will decrease your reputation by one point.
It takes six dead bad NPCs to increase your reputation by one point.
Combat begins when something attacks you, or you attack something else. It might
start when you move too close to a mutant rat and it bites you, or when you say the
wrong thing to a thug with a bad attitude. The END TURN/END coMBAT buttons will be
exposed at the lower right of..the Interface Bar, and you'll see your Actio oints ·
played as a line of lights above the Active Item Bar-bright green when it's your
turn, red if it's your opponent's. You can also start combat, and stop everyone from
moving, by pressing the A key or clicking on the active item button if you have a
weapon there.
To attack, select your weapon. If the Active Item slot is blank, you will attack with
your hands and feet; if you want to select a specific weapon, go to your Inventory,
or click on the Active Item bar to change to another readied weapon. The cursor will
turn to a small target cross hairs-the Targeting Cursor-that you can move onto
your intended target.
Turns
Combat is resolved in turns, w ith each character moving and attacking in an order
determined by his, her, or its Sequence Number. The higher your Sequence
Number-which is determined by your Agility-the more likely you are to move and
shoot first.
Action Points
How much you get to do when it's your turn-shoot, reload, move, check Inventory-
depends on how many Action Points you have. The following table gives the num-
ber of APs required for various activities possible during combat.
Some weapons have different AP costs. Always look at the AP cost in the lower-left
hand corner of the active weapon button for the actual cost.
Movement
Right-clicking will cycle the cursor through Targeting, Command, and Movement
Modes. In Movement Mode, you will see the Hex Cursor. A white number inside the
r shows how many APs it will take to point. A red X means you
57~
cannot move to the indicated hex, either because it is too far or because the select-
ed hex is blocked-by a rock wall, for instance.
To reserve enough APs to use the currently selected Active Item-a pistol, for exam-
ple-press CTRL when you right-click to move. This is useful for getting as close as
possible to an enemy-in order to get the best possible odds of hitting him or her-
while retaining enough APs to shoot.
You can run by holding down the SHIFT key when you click the mouse button to
move. It makes no difference in combat whether you run or walk.
Unlike non-combat, you cannot interrupt your movement while in combat. You
should always plan your move very carefully to avoid spending too many APs and
not having enough to attack. It is very embarrassing to move right next to a mutant
and not being able to punch him until after he gets to smash your face in.
Targeted Shots
Making a targeted shot-one aimed at a particular part of your opponent-gives
you the chance of doing more damage to your opponent, though at the cost of a
lower chance to hit. If the weapon can make a targeted shot, right-clicking on the
Active Item Bar will cycle through the various modes to Targeted Shot, when you
will see a small target on the bar's lower right corner.
Left-click on your target to make the shot. A diagram of your target will appear, giv-
ing you the chance to select one particular part of his or her anatomy to shoot at-
the head, say, or a leg. The number beside each selection is your final "to hit"
chance, your original "to hit" number modified by the difficulty of the shot. Your
opponent's head is a much smaller and more difficult target, for instance, than his
whole body.
Targeted shots take longer, adding 1 to the number of APs needed for
that weapon. A targeted shot gives you a better chance at getting a critical hit.
Explosive weapons or burst-fire weapons cannot be used in targeted attacks. Melee
and unarmed attacks can make targeted shots easier than ranged attacks.
Reloading
If your weapon won't fire, even if you have APs enough to do so and you know
you're within range, you may be out of ammo. Check Inventory, where a 0/12 next
to your pistol indicates that you have no rounds left out of a possible twelve. Click
and drag the appropriate ammo down to the Active Weapon Bar and click DONE. You
should see the 0/12 become 12/12, and you can return to combat.
You can also reload by choosing a Reload Action form the Active Item Bar. This
method is faster (2 APs instead of the 4 required for opening Inventory), but you
don't get to select the type of ammo you use.
Throw
Some weapons, like grenades or throwing knives, can be thrown, with a range
based on your character's strength. Move the Targeting Cursor to the desired hex
and left-click to throw. As long as you have an identical thrown weapon in your
Inventory, it will automatically place a new one in your Active Item button.
Hand-to-Hand Combat
You can attack an opponent with your hands and feet, or with melee weapons such
as a knife, if you are in an adjacent hex. As with ranged weapon attacks, a "percent-
age to hit" number appears in the Targeting Cursor if you're close enough, and a
left-click makes the attack.
Damage
A successful attack results in damage to the target, and a loss of Hit Points. The
more HPs lost, the more successful the attack was. When a target's HPs reach 0, the
target is dead.
r
Critical Hits
Every hit against a target carries a small chance of being a critical hit. Some possible
critical hit results include being knocked over and losing a turn, being knocked
unconscious, or doing extra damage. Making a targeted attack increases the chances
of getting a critical hit.
Critical Failures
Every attempted attack also carries with it the chance of a critical failure. The nature
of the failure depends on the weapon, but some possibilities include running out of
ammo, dropping your gun, or having the weapon jam.
Ending Combat
Combat will continue until all opponents are dead, unconscious, or in flight, or until
you get far enough away from all nearby hostiles that the game program allows you
to click the END COMBAT button. If hostiles are too close, a message in the Display
Screen will inform you of that fact.
If combat ends successfully, the END TURN/END COMBAT button will be covered up, and
you return to normal Movement Mode.
A Brief Walkthrough of an
Opening Game
This is a step-by-step description of the first few moves in a new Fallout game, pre-
sented to give the new player a feel for how the Game Interface and Game View
work.
Because of the random nature of events in Fallout, be aware that your experiences
will not exactly parallel those described below.
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Setting Out
As described above, clicking on New Game from the Main Menu will (lead you first to the
Character Selection Screen, then) take you to your first encounter with the Overseer. He'll tell
you what you're looking for, and a brief movie will take you through the airlock. Play begins
at the Game View, with your character standing outside the Vault door.
Use the Hand and Look Icons to examine things around you. Mostly, you'll see nothing but
rocks and cave walls. If you try to open the Vault door, you'll find that it's been sealed. In
fact, it will remain locked for thirty minutes of game time, after which you'll be able to
return if you want to.
Oh, Rats!
As your character moves through the tunnels, you'll soon encounter cave rats-big ones,
about the size of a bulldog, and twice as nasty. If you get too close to one, the game will
shift to Combat Mode. The yellow-and-black-striped door at the lower right of the Game
Interface will open up, and you'll notice that your Movement Cursor will now let you travel
only as far as you have Action Points. The white number on your Hex Cursor shows how
many APs it will take to reach a given spot.
If you haven't already done so, open Inventory by clicking on your Inventory button and
move the pistol and the brass knuckles to your Switch Active Item button. Click on the Active
Item button so that the pistol is in view.
Your Targeting Cursor is now active, and you'll see all available targets-the rats-outlined in
red. Move the Targeting Cursor over the nearest rat, and you'll see a percentage displayed-
your chance to hit the critter. Left-click to take a shot.
On the Game View, your character will aim the weapon and fire. Depending on how good a
shot he or she might be, you'll either hit the rat or the cave wall behind him. Either way, the
result will be shown on your Display Monitor. Unless you did some moving and/or Inventory-
checking first, you'll probably have some APs left. You can either take other actions to use
them up, or click on End Turn. Remember that if you click End Turn with some APs remain-
ing, those APs will help you avoid the enemy's next attack.
Now it's the rat's turn. He'll move, and if he's close enough, he'll try to take a bite out of
your leg. You'll see your character move, trying to duck-and if the rat's teeth sink home,
you'll hec:~r him or her cry out. The Display Monitor will either tell you how much damage
y n, orannounceth• d
When all the rats have moved, it's your turn again. You can take another shot, or you can use
C\1
the Switch Active Item button to take a swing with the brass knucks. Remember, you must be
right next to your target to use a melee weapon. Keep shooting or swinging until the rat is
dead or scuttles off wounded. Keep in mind, though, that other rats nearby have probably
heard the combat and/or smelled the blood and are on the way to join in the fun-sort of like
small, furry, hungry sharks with legs.
If you head straight to the other vault, you may find yourself in the desert near the entrance,
or you might find your journey has been interrupted by a chance encounter.
i her way, your journey is off to a great start!
~·l~•vr ~~~~
63,.
- - - - - - -·
Some General Hints and Tips
Here are some general tips for getting along in the big, real, outside world.
~ Save often- You do not want to go all the way back to the first scene
outside Vault 13 with an inexperienced character every time you die!
~ Listen up- Pay attention to what NPCs tell you. Some characters
you'll meet don't have much useful to say, but others have specific
information and good suggestions about where to go or who to talk
to. Conversations with major NPCs are always important. These are
where critical game information is conveyed to the player.
~ Put it away- Don't forget that you have a drawn weapon in your
hand when you walk into a town. People tend to notice these things.
Some guards will order you to put it away; others might shout "He's
got a gun!" and go for their own. Return your weapon to inventory
when you're not using it.
~ Avoid the long chase- Although each kill counts toward your
Experience Point total, chasing a wounded enemy who is fleeing the
fight is rarely a good idea. Unless they've taken a critical hit that slows
them down, they can usually stay ahead of you ... and you might find
yourself drawn into an ambush.
~ Shoot and loot!- In combat with human adversaries, use the Hand
Icon on dead foes if you get the chance. A left-click will show you the
dead character's Inventory, and you'll have the chance to click and drag
his stuff to your Inventory. This is a great way to pick up new weapons,
extra ammo, and body armor.
~ The most toys wins- As you have the chance, re-equip your charac-
ter as early as possible. He or she will start out with a hand gun and a
few incidentals. As quickly as possible, strip fallen foes of everything
you can carry and barter away what you don't need. Get the best
armor, the best weapons, and the most ammo you can, as quickly as
you can. You're gonna need 'em!
~ Go for the green- Stop at every green circle area on the World Map
you can find. As you're traveling the World Map, keep a sharp lookout
for these regions in newly revealed areas near your line of march.
~ Back to the Vault- If you can't figure out what to do next, try going
back to the Overseer and have a talk with him. Be sure to save the
game before you head back for the Vault; if the Overseer can't help
you, then you can load again and continue without having lost any
time.
The world of Fallout is rich and varied, with lots of different places to go. This chap-
ter lists the various locations in the game where the plot and action unfold. Since
you, the player, have almost complete control over where you go in the Fallout
world, and when, the order of the locations listed here is not necessarily the order in
which you will encounter them.
Vault 13
This is your home vault, the place where you begin the
adventure. It is located near the top center of the
World Map, and has had no contact with the outside
world for over 80 years.
The Vault, arguably, is the most important site in the
game. Its survival is in your hands, and is the whole
reason you are venturing into the outside world. If you
do not return with the water purifier chip within 150
days, the entire community will die of thirst, and the
game will be over. Even then, you only have 500 days
to defeat the mutant army before you Vault is invad-
ed. Most of this time could be spent travelling on the World Map, so try to keep
long trips to a minimum.
Travel Interface
To access the World Map, you must travel through the caverns, going south as far as
possible, then moving down a long, straight passageway to the west. The interface
lies just outside the mouth of the cave. The first time you come this way, the inter-
face is just beyond the cavern mouth. On subsequent visits, you will enter a town
map of the vault first, and be able to choose a destination from there.
Places of Interest
~ Emergency Medical Lab: Where you can get free medical treatment.
Location: Vault 13 Entrance Map.
~ Command and Control Center: You can find the Overseer here if
you need to talk to him again. Location: Vault 13 Level 2.
Characters Encountered
~ The Overseer: (Major NPC) The man in charge of Vault 13. He gives
you your orders, and may provide you with additional information and
hints if you return to the Vault later in the game.
Vault 15 (The
Buried Vault)
This is the "other vault, somewhere to the east"
that the Overseer first tells you about when you
accept your mission . You can reach it by traveling as
far to the east as you can on the World Map, or by
selecting VAULT 1s on the World Map's list of travel
destinations.
Travel Interface
When you arrive at the buried vault, the only evidence of its existence you will see is
a shed with a sewer or manhole entrance inside. You gain entrance to the buried
vault by clicking on the Hand Icon to use the ladder inside the shaft. This will take
, . . to ~o Map, which in turn g to sev I underground levels.
69~
- - - - - - - --- - - -
Places of Interest
f/j Command and Control Center
Characters Encountered
The only NPCs encountered here are a very large number of mutant rats of various
species, some of them quite large and dangerous. Killing them will increase your
Experience Point level, and afford you the opportunity to use up lots of precious
ammunition.
Shady Sands
Shady Sands is a quiet, peaceful village located
about halfway between Vault 13 and Vault 15.
Most players will notice it during their first trek
across the desert, from one vault to the other.
Travel Interface
Players arrive at and depart from Shady Sands at a travel interface north of the main
gate. At that interface, clicking on the Town/World Map will bring up a map of the
town, including Shady Sands proper, the Brahmin Pens, and the Gardens. East Shady
Sands can be reached to the east of Shady Sands map.
Places of Interest
f/j The Guardhouse: A building where the town's guards live. Location:
Shady Sands.
f/j The Town Hall: The building where Aradesh, leader of Shady Sands,
can be found. Location: Shady Sands.
Characters Encountered
f/j Aradesh: (Major NPC) The soft-spoken leader of the Shady Sands com-
munity. He will found i ady Sands proper, in the s
building.{'"~
--I
~ Tandi: (Major NPC) Aradesh's daughter, and the future ruler of Shady
Sands. She may be encountered in Shady Sands, Near the Town Hall.
~ Seth: (Minor NPC) A guard at the front gate. He can tell you about the
town and the neighbors, and will take you to the Rad Scorpion caves.
Rad Scorpion
Caves
The Rad Scorpion caves can only be reached
through dialogue with Seth, the guard at Shady
Sands' front gate. If you tell Seth you want to go
there, he will ask, "Are you sure you want to go to
the Rad Scorpion caves?" If you reply "Yes," you
will find yourself outside the caves.
Travel Interface
Exit from just outside the mouth of the cave back to the Shady Sands Entrance Map.
----- - - - - --------
The Desert
Raider Camp
The raiders' camp is a collection of tents and yurts
surrounding a single large building. A number of
desert raiders, both male and female, are gathered
here. Their leader, Garl Deathhand, can be found
inside the main building.
Travel Interface
Moving to the edge of the Game View will take the player character to a Travel
Interface and the World Map.
Places of Interest
~ The Big House: The large, brick-and-canvas structure surrounded by
tents and warriors' gers. Includes an outer warrior's room, Garl's room,
and three prison cells.
Characters Encountered
~ Garl Deathhand: (Minor NPC) The leader of the Khans.
~ Tandi: (Major NPC) If she has been kidnapped, she will be held in a cell
in the camp.
~ Various Peasants.
Junktovvn
Junktown is a much larger town than
Shady Sands. It includes three separate
maps, the Entrance, Killian's, and the
Casino.
Travel Interface
From the Entrance Map, go north to reach Killian's, or south to return to the World
Map. No exit to east or west.
From Killian's Map, exit north to reach the Casino Map. Exit south to return to the
Entrance Map.
From the Casino Map, exit south or east to return to the Killian's Map.
Places of Interest
~ Doc Morbid's: A doctor's office. Location: Entrance Map.
Characters Encountered
~ Killian Darkwater: (Major NPC) The mayor of Junktown, leader of the
guards who police the town, and the proprietor of Killian's, a General
Store.
~ Gizmo: (Major NPC) The crime boss of Junktown, and owner of the
Casino.
~ Flash and Cougar: (Minor NPCs) Doc Morbid's two mercenary body-
guards.
~ Saul: (Minor NPC) A boxer at the Skum Pit, and Trish's lover.
Travel Interface
Travelers first arriving at the Hub will arrive at the
north end of the Entrance Map.
Places of Interest
~ The Job Post: A place where job offers are posted. Location: Down
Town, near Bob's Iguana Bits.
~ The Maltese Falcon: A bar and flop house. Decker's office can be
reached here by stairs behind the bar. The Crimson Caravan, the sec-
ond largest caravan organized out of the hub, has offices in the same
building. Location: Downtown.
~ The All In One Store, the Armory, the FLC, the Weapon Shop:
Various businesses. Location: Central Downtown.
~ The Water Merchants: The largest of the three main caravans orga-
nized out of the Hub. Location: The Water Merchants' Map.
~ Harold: The old mutant with some interesting stories can be found in
a small building here. Location: Old Town.
Characters Encountered
f/j Sheriff Justin Greene: (Minor NPC) Head of the police forces in the
Hub.
~ Rutger: (Minor NPC) Butch's assistant with the Far Go Traders, and the
real brains of that organization.
f/j Daren Hightower: (Minor NPC) The unpleasant head of the Water
Merchants. He believes he is the chief power in the Hub.
f/j Beth: (Minor NPC) Manager of the Weapons Store, selling ranged
weaponsi£ iti~'s a good j()Ur~:..·""'' .....
~ Kathy: (Minor NPC) Manager of the Armory.
~ Mitch: (Minor NPC) Owner of the Allin One Store. He sells drugs and
medical supplies.
~ Decker: (Major NPC) Head of the Hub Underground, and the true boss
of the Hub. Ruthless, cool, cunning, and deadly, he is not a good man
to cross.
~ Jacob: (Minor NPC) Manager of the Arms Dealer that sells mid- to
high-end weapons and ammunition.
~ Dan: (Minor NPC) A Brahman and cart dealer. Also known as "Dan the
Brahmin Man."
Travel Interface
The player will arrive at the Motel Map. From there a sewer system takes him north to
the Hall of the Dead, then north again to the Water Shed Map. To return to the World
Map, there are Exit Grids on all three of the maps.
Places of Interest
~ The Motel: A ruined motel occupied by ghouls. Also called the Motel
of Doom. Location: The Motel Map.
~ The Hall of the Dead: Set's throne room and headquarters. Location :
The Hall of the Dead Map.
~ Hall of the Dead Sewers: The sewers beneath the Hall of the Dead.
Location: Reached from a sewer access in the building near the Hall of
the Dead, or via the secret passageway behind Set's throne in the Hall
of the Dead.
~ Watershed Sewers: The sewer line from the Hall of the Dead
emerges in a sewer access inside a building on the Watershed Map.
Two other sewer accesses in the street on that map are connected to
one another underground, but not to the rest of the sewer system.
~ The Watershed: The source of water for the Necropolis. Location: The
Watershed Map.
Characters Encountered
~ Set: The ruler of the Necropolis ghouls.
The Brotherhood
of Steel
The Brotherhood of Steel is a semi-religious order
that worships ancient technology. They inhabit a
fortress with an entrance on the surface and four
underground levels. Depending on the player's sta-
tus, he or she may be limited to the entrance. Only
Initiates or people seeking to be Initiates are
79~
allowed into the lower levels. In addition, a character who has become an Initiate
and who then becomes an enemy of the Brotherhood by attacking another member
will find the elevator locked.
Travel Interface
The Entrance Map has a travel interface to the south. Travel between the surface
and the various levels is accomplished using elevators.
Places of Interest
~ Combat Training Hall: A room where combat demonstrations may be
watched. Location: Level 1.
~ Checkout: A room where the player can check out weapons and
equipment. He or she will not be able to enter the storeroom beyond.
Location: Level 1.
~ Council Room: Meeting place for the High Council. Location: Level 4,
off the Hall of Worship.
Characters Encountered
~ Cabbot: (Major NPC) A high-level scribe initiate working at the
entrance as a greeter.
~ Michael: (Minor NPC) A knight who checks out weapons at the supply
room on Level 1.
~ Kyle: (Minor NPC) A knight who can help you repair a suit of power
armor on Level 3.
Travel Interface
The Glow surface map has a Travel Interface on the south side. The underground
base accessed through the crater has six levels, interconnected by elevators.
Places of Interest
~ Level1: Weapons Locker, in the room to the northeast.
~ Level 5: Lab spaces at the south end of the level. This is the main
weapon storage area.
~ Level6:
Characters Encountered
None. All you'll find is radiation and dead bodies. But keep an eye out for traps!
And .. . if you get the power back on, you'd better watch out for sentry robots.
The Military
Base
This is a former military base that is now
used by the super-mutants. There are some
excellent weapons and high-tech goodies
here. The base also hides one of the chief
goals in the adventure.
Travel Interface
The Military Base is divided into five levels. The top three levels are the Mutant
Stronghold. The lower two levels are the Vats. All are accessed by elevators. A travel
grid on the west side of the surface map takes you to the world map.
Places of Interest
~ Robot Storage and Control Room: Robots are stored here, and can
be reprogrammed. Location: The Stronghold, Level 1.
~ Prison Cell #3: A human female is held here, awaiting her turn to be
"dipped" and turned into a mutant. She is the girlfriend of Flip, one of
the mutant guards, who spends a lot of time here. Location: Vats, Level 1.
~ Vat Control Room: The operations center and computers for the Vats.
Normal humans are turned into mutants here. Location: Vats, Level 2.
Characters Encountered
~ The Lieutenant: (Major NPC) This is the Master's right-hand mutant, a
super-mutant of incredible power and intelligence. He seems to enjoy
evil so much.
~ Sarah: (Minor NPC) A prisoner in Cell #3. She was once Flip's lover.
~ A Mr. Handy robot: (Minor NPC) This machine was interrupted on its
cleaning rounds and might help you with a problem.
Places of Interest
~ The Blades: A large gang living near Adytum. They are not what
they seem!
~ Razor: Leader of the Blades. She has a holodisk that proves that all
may not be as it seems.
The Cathedral
This is the headquarters of the Children of the Cathedral. It is located a day or two
south of the Boneyard.
Travel Interface
The travel grid to the world map is located south of the front of the Cathedral. Go
through the door to enter the Cathedral.
Places of Interest
~ Laura's Room: Make your first contact with this Follower spy here.
~ Lasher's Room: You'll need to find him to get to Morpheus.
~ The Cathedral Tower: You'll need a special pass to find the stairs at
the north end of the Cathedral, and the way up to Morpheus's office.
~ The Secret Stairs: You'll need another special pass to reach these
stairs going down behind the Cathedral altar.
Characters Encountered
~ Laura: At first, she seems to be a member of the Children of the
Cathedral. She is, in fact, a spy from the Followers of the Apocalypse. If
you speak with her after talking to Nicole, she will take you to the
door that leads to the Master's Vault.
~ Lasher: (Minor NPC) A rather nasty, short-tempered sort, working for
Morpheus. He has a badge that will let you get to Morpheus without
problems from the Nightkin.
Travel Interface
The Master's lair is reached by the secret stairs in the Cathedral. Travel between lev-
els is by elevator.
Places of Interest
~ The Gibbering Psychics: They have something you might find useful.
Location: Level 1.
~ The Master's Chamber: Sooner or later you must meet him here.
Location: Level 2.
Characters Encountered
~ The Master: This guy is not nice at all. You will need to have an inter-
view with him, however, if you intend to win the game.
This chapter gives a brief description of each of the major characters in the game.
Refer to this section if you need to learn something about the character's psycholo-
gy, goals, or motivations.
At the end of some character sections is a paragraph or two labeled HINTS. These
tell you the best way to deal with the character if you want to avoid combat and
stay on their good side. Some hints may give away some secrets of the adventure,
however. Don't read them if you want to work things out for yourself.
Later in the adventure, you may learn that Tandi has been kidnapped by the Khans,
and you will have the opportunity-should you decide to accept this mission-to res-
cue her.
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Killian Darkwater: One of
the Good Guys
Killian is mayor of Junktown and owner of the
General Store. He is also head of the local guard
force, and a thorn in the side of Gizmo, who would
like to see Killian eliminated. He is tough and
strong, a decent man who hates bullies. Though
not a violent man, he will fight to the death to pro-
tect himself and his town. Knowing that Gizmo is
trying to kill him, he always keeps two guards out-
side the door to his store.
Harry leads a group of mutants in guarding the water shed. Their names are Larry,
Gary, Barry, Terry, and Sally. (Sally does not like his name very much.)
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Butch Harris: Leader of
the Far Go Caravan
Butch Harris may be the leader of one of the Hub's
big three caravans in name, but in fact, he's a fig-
urehead. Butch has big dreams, but he's bitter and
frustrated and also something of a coward.
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"'a! /?e willing- I& J&in f&U in an a'!?'!?au!l a~in'f711Ae
Ma'!?ler.
Laura: Apocalypse Spy
When you first meet Laura-sometime after you've
spoken with Nicole-she will speak and act like one
of the Children of the Cathedral. She is, in fact, a
member of the Followers of the Apocalypse and is
working for Nicole, spying against the Children.
While in the guise of a believer, she is meek, sub-
missive, and quiet; once convinced through a pass-
word that the player was sent by Nicole, she is
bright, sharp, sarcastic, strong, and wary.
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lead d&wn I& IAe Ma<?le/<7 laiu.
Lasher: Second-in-Command
of the Cathedral
Lasher is a short-tempered, nasty individual wearing purple robes. You'll find him in
one of the side rooms of the Cathedral. This character is important on a couple of
counts. He may be persuaded to give you a COC badge that will let you get past the
Nightkin guards upstairs to see Morpheus, and Morpheus can take you to the
r
Master. And, if you prefer to take the more direct and action-oriented route, you
can always kill Lasher, take the badge, and use Lasher's robes as a disguise.
105.,.
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tJfen a ftJvked dtJ&P ytJu wi(( need ftJ tJfen.
Other Characters
Ghouls
These are mutated humans who may or may not attack your character. In general,
they move slowly and are not serious threats, even when hostile, but an attack by a
number at once can cause you problems. Try not to get trapped by several inside a
room with only one door.
Glowing Ones
These are ghouls that have been irradiated so badly they actually glow. You may
find some of these living incandescent bulbs in the sewers beneath the Necropolis,
or in cages, as light sources, in Set's palace. If they get too close to you, you can take
hits from radiation.
Super-Mutants
Big, stupid, and ugly. That pretty much sums up these monsters, once normal
humans who were converted into their present form by being immersed in the
Master's FEV vats. He is creating an army of these creatures to help him take over
the world.
Nightkin
These are super-mutants wearing Stealth Boy units, high-tech stealth devices that
makes them hard to see and hard to hit in combat. The Master employs a number of
these as guards in the Cathedral and in his vault below ground. Give them a wide
berth if you can. They're deadly!
1of'Y
I I I
RATS:
A moderate contamination hazard. You could
learn things looking here that you'd really
rather not knovv.
There's a lot of neat and useful stuff out there in the Fallout world just waiting for
you to come along and pick it up. Well, okay. Usually it's not quite that simple! This
chapter lists all of the major items you might find, however, and gives you a few
details about them-including their weight (in pounds) and their cost (in bottle
caps). There are six basic types of available weapons and equipment in Fallout:
Weapons, Ammo, Armor, Containers, Drugs, and Miscellaneous.
Good hunting!
Weapons
In Fallout, a weapon is anything that can be used to hurt people. Listed for each
weapon here, besides weight and cost, are how many damage points it can cause,
and-if the weapon can inflict damage at a distance-its range. Some weapons, such
as throwing knives, can inflict damage either at close hand, or at a distance.
Firearms will work only with specific calibers of ammunition; a 10mm pistol CANNOT
fire 9mm ball, or .233 FMJ. The "Maximum Ammo" listing for firearms gives the
number of rounds it can fire before you must reload. Some weapons, such as the
H&K SMG, can fire bursts consisting of several rounds at a time.
111~
Rock: The most basic weapon possible outside of hands and feet.
Weight: 1
Cost: 0
Damage: 1-4
Range {thrown): 15
Brass Knuckles: These fit over your fingers in combat, protecting your hand and
doing extra damage when you connect with a punch in a melee.
Weight: 1
Cost: 40
Damage: 2-5
Club: Essentially a police baton, a short length of hard wood that you can use in a
swing or a thrust to concentrate and focus your power. Adds to the damage when
you connect.
Weight: 3
Cost: 30
Damage: 1-6
Crowbar: A short, solid length of heavy metal, excellent for bashing in skulls.
Weight: 5
Cost: 65
Damage: 3-10
Spear: You'll first encounter spears in the capable hands of nomad raiders like the
Khans. They can be thrown or used in hand-to-hand combat.
Weight: 4
Cost: 80
Damage: 3-10
Range (thrust): 2
Range (thrown): 8
Colt 6520 10mm Pistol: The basic pistol in the Fallout world. It can fire either
armor piercing (AP) or hollow point (JHP) ammo. As with all hand guns, you have to
get close to have a chance of hitting the target.
Weight: 3
Cost: 250
Damage: 5-12
Range: 25
Ammo: lOmm
Maximum Ammo: 12 rounds
113~
Desert Eagle .44: A 20th-century weapon firing a .44 caliber round. A good
weapon with a bit more punch than the standard 10mm hand guns, but it requires
more frequent reloads in a firefight.
Weight: 4
Cost: 800
Damage: 10-16
Ammo: ·44 magnum
Maximum ammo: 8
Range: 25
14mm Pistol: A SIG Sauer 14mm autopistol. A large, single-shot weapon with
exceptionally heavy stopping power.
Weight: 4
Cost: 1100
Damage: 12-22
Ammo: 14mm
Maximum ammo: 6
Range: 24
H&K MP9 Submachine Gun: If you have a chance to grab one of these babies,
take it! On single-shot, it has similar range, accuracy, and stopping power to the
10mm pistol. On full-auto, it sprays 10mm slugs, vastly improving your chance of hit-
ting the target and of doing significant damage with that one attack. Its biggest dis-
advantage is the way it eats up ammunition.
Weight: 5
Cost: 1000
Damage: 5-12 (for each round that hits from a burst of
10 rounds.)
Range: 25 (burst fire: 20)
Ammo: 10mm
Maximum ammo: 30 rounds
Colt Rangemaster/223 Rifle: The basic hunting semiautomatic rifle in the Fallout
World. Fires .223 FMJ ammo, with fair range and accuracy.
Weight: 9
Cost: 1000
Damage: 8-20
Range: 40
Ammo: .223
Maximum ammo: 10 rounds
Assault Rifle: An AK-112 Assault Rifle. An old military model capable of single-shot
or burst fire.
Weight: 7
Cost: 1300
Damage: 8-16 (for each round that hits in a burst of 8)
Ammo: 5mm
Maximum ammo: 24
Range: 45
Range (Burst): 38
Minigun: A Rockwell CZ53 Personal Minigun. A large, man-portable automatic
weapon with rotating barrels that shoots Smm rounds with an extremely high rate
of fire. A deadly and highly effective weapon.
Weight: 28
Cost: 3800
Damage: 7-11 (for each round that hits in a burst of 40)
.Ammo: 5mm
Maximum ammo: 120
Range: 35
Laser Pistol: A Wattz 1000 laser pistol. A hand weapon firing a beam of coherent
light.
Weight: 4
Cost: 1400
Damage: 10-22
Damage type: - laser
Ammo: Small Energy Cell
Maximum ammo: 12
Range: 35
Plasma Pistol: Glock 86 Plasma Pistol. A hand weapon firing a bolt of high-energy
plasma.
Weight: 4
Cost: 2750
Damage: 15-35
Damage Type: Plasma
Ammo: Small Energy Cell
Maximum ammo: 16
Range: 20
Laser Rifle: A Wattz 2000 Laser Rifle. Fires a beam of coherent light.
Weight: 5
Co:>t: 5000
Damage: 25-50
Damage Type: laser
Ammo: Micro Fusion Cell
12
117~
Plasma Rifle: A Winchester Model PG4 Plasma Rifle. An industrial model that fires a
bolt of high-energy plasma.
Weight: 12
Cost: 4000
Damage: 30-65
Damage type: Plasma
Ammo: Micro Fusion Cell
Maximum ammo: 10
Range: 25
Gatling Laser: An H&K L30 Gatling Laser. A high-powered energy weapon with
rotating barrels, firing high-speed pulses of coherent light.
Weight: 24
Cost: 7500
Damage: 20-40 (for each round that hits in a burst of 6)
Damage type: laser
Ammo: Micro Fusion Cell
Maximum ammo: 30
Range: 40
Ammo
Rifles, pistols, and submachine guns all need ammunition. As in the real world, there
are several varieties.
BBs: A package of BBs left over from before the war, used in both the Red Ryder BB
rifle and the Red Ryder LE model.
Caliber: BB
Quantity: 20
Weight: 2
Cost: 20
.223 Full Metal Jacket (FMJ): This is the same ammo used in the late 20th century
by various military rifles, including the M-16. A good, basic, hard-hitting round.
Caliber: .223
Quantity: 50
Weight: 2
Cost: 200
10mm Armor Piercing (AP): A pistol round also used in submachine guns. It has
good penetration but does not do as much damage as a JHP round to the target
when it hits.
Caliber: lOmm
Quantity: 24
Weight: 1
Cost: 100
10mm Jacketed Hollow Point (JHP): Another pistoi/SMG round. The hollow point
causes it to expand when it hits a target, causing more damage than an AP round. If
the target is wearing armor, however, it has poor penetration. Most of the force is
spent before it gets through to the target.
Caliber: lOmm
Quantity: 24
Weight: 1
Cost: 75
.44 Magnum Jacketed Hollow Point (JHP): High-powered ammo for the .44
Desert Eagle.
Caliber: • 44
Quantity: 20
Weight: 1
Cost: 50
.44 Magnum Full Metal Jacket (FMJ): High-powered ammo for the .44 Desert
Eagle.
Caliber: ·44
Quantity: 20
Weight: 1
Cost: 50
14mm Armor Piercing (AP): Armor-piercing rounds for the 14mm SIG-Sauer pistol.
Caliber: 14mm
Quantity: 30
Smm Jacketed Hollow Point (JHP): A brick of small, lightweight ammo for the
Rockwell Minigun or the AK-112 assault rifle.
Caliber: 5mm
Quantity: 50
Weight: l
Cost: 100
Smm Armor Piercing (AP): A brick of small-caliber ammo for the minigun or AK-
112 assault rifle.
Caliber: 5mm
Quantity: 50
Weight: l
Cost: 120
12-Gauge Shotgun Shells: Shells containing a number of steel balls, fired from a
Ill
shotgun.
Caliber: 12-gauge
Quantity: 20
Weight: l
Cost: 225
Rocket AP: A rocket with a smaller explosive warhead but employing a shaped
charge for better penetration of armored targets.
Quantity: l
Weight: 3
Cost: 400
Flamethrower Fuel: A canister containing a highly flammable chemical under pres-
sure, for use with the Flambe flamethrower.
Quantity: 5
Weight: 10
Cost: 250
Small Energy Cell: A small, self-contained energy storage unit for use in energy
weapons.
Caliber: Small Energy Cell
Quantity: 40
Weight: 3
Cost: 400
Micro Fusion Cell: A medium-sized energy production unit, for use in energy
weapons.
Caliber: Micro Fusion Cell
Quantity: 50
Weight: 5
Cost: 1000
Armor
Armor offers relatively lightweight protection against gunfire, shrapnel, and knife
thrusts. There are several varieties. In addition to weight and cost, the armor value-
or AC-for each type of armor is listed.
Leather Jacket: A heavy, black leather jacket. It provides only minimal protection in
a firefight but looks cool.
Weight: 5
Cost: 300
AC: 85
Robes: A set of the purple robes worn by the Children of the Cathedral.
Weight: 10
Cost: 90
AC: 5
Leather Armor: Provides moderate protection, especially in melee combat.
Weight: 8
Cost: 800
AC: 15
Metal Armor: Favored by police and military units. Provides good protection in a
firefight.
Weight: 35
Cost: 1100
AC: 10
Containers
A container is anything you can use to carry or store other stuff in. The larger, less
portable containers like ice chests and foot lockers cannot be bought sold, or
bartered, and have no weight or cost listed for them.
Keep in mind that you may encounter other types of containers in Fallout, such as
boxes and crates, which might hold something of value. Even dead bodies or piles of
old bones might be considered containers of a sort, if they hold some artifact or
weapon of value. Search them whenever you find them!
Bag: A simple bag made from Brahmin hide, for storing up to 20 pounds of ammo
or other loose items.
Weight: 3
Cost: 25
Backpack: Your basic backpack, good for hauling up to 40 pounds of gear. It will
not hold large items like full armor, but it is invaluable for carrying small articles,
like magazines of ammunition.
Weight: 5
Cost: 100
Briefcase: A leather attache case that can hold 10 pounds of gear.
Weight: 5
Cost: 35
Ice Chest: An old-fashioned container originally used to keep beverages cold. In the
world of Fallout, these frequently hold various useful items, from weapons and
ammo to hand grenades or power cells. Check inside every time you get the chance!
Fridge: An old refrigerator. These are frequently used as storage lockers for any-
thing from weapons and ammo to bottled drinks and high explosives. Be sure to
look inside whenever you find one!
Desk: A wooden desk, which may be a hiding place for ammo or weapons, or a
repository for useful records, letters, or other items of interest.
Dresser: A wooden dresser, which may be a hiding place for weapons or other
items.
Drugs
Several drugs are available to help you survive the world of Fallout. Some of them
may be addictive, however, so be warned!
Stimpak: The stimpak is an autoinjector loaded with a variety of healing medica-
tions and stimulants. Injecting yourself or another character will increase your natur-
al healing ability and give you an immediate Hit Point boost.
Weight: 1
Cost: 100
Super Stimpak: Same as the basic stimpak, but with more and stronger drugs. It
boosts your character's Hit Points immediately. Too much is bad for you, however.
Each injection causes a Hit Point loss after a short period of time, reflecting damage
to the character's tissues and to his or her system.
Weight: 1
Cost: 225
RadAway: Used after you have taken radiation damage, this drug will remove some
of the contamination from your system. It takes time for the effects to work. There
is a chance of developing an addiction to this drug.
Weight: 1
Cost: 500
Rad-X: A radiation prophylactic. Use this drug before you enter a radioactive area,
and the total amount of radiation you receive will be reduced. Rad-X increases your
body's natural Radiation Resistance.
Weight: 1
Cost: 300
Mentats: An autoinjector filled with a drug that temporarily boosts your
Intelligence, Perception, and Charisma-with a later temporary loss of those same
stats. There is a chance of addiction to mentats each time you use it.
Weight: 1
Cost: 280
Buffout: Highly advanced steroids. These drugs will temporarily improve your
strength, endurance, and agility, at a cost of a later temporary loss in these stats.
There is also a 25% chance of addiction.
Weight: 1
Cost: 200
Psycho: A drug that temporarily enhances your Agility and Damage Resistance at
the cost of your Intelligence. There is a 20% chance of developing an addiction to
Psycho each time you use it.
Weight: 1
Cost: 400
Miscellaneous
This category includes equipment and supplies that don't neatly fit the above
groups. Some of the items are useful more as sources of income or material for
barter than anything else. Others are vital to winning the game.
Bottle Caps: Bottle caps are the favored currency of the world of Fallout. Many
characters carry bags of caps, which they use as a handy medium of exchange. One
cap= $1.
Weight: 0
Cost: 1
Water Flask: A bottle for carrying water. Prevents suffering from lack of water in
the desert.
Weight: 2
Cost: 25
Rope: A strong, thick rope made of braided Brahmin hair. Useful for scrambling
down otherwise impassable drops.
Size: 1
Cost: 25
Doctor's Bag: The traditional little black bag of all doctors, containing various med-
ical supplies. Using the bag automatically uses the character's Doctor Skill, but with a
higher chance of success. The bag will eventually run out of supplies, rendering it
useless.
Weight: 5
Cost: 300
Dynamite: A high explosive. Set the dynamite where desired, using Traps Skill to
place it correctly. A timer will appear, allowing you to set a time delay before the
detonation.
Weight: 5
Cost: 500
First Aid Kit: Like a doctor's bag, but smaller. Using the kit automatically uses the
character's First Aid Skill with a higher chance of success. After several uses, the sup-
plies inside are used up, and the kit is worthless.
Weight: 2
Cost: 200
Scorpion Tail: The severed tail of a giant rad scorpion, used to manufacture an
antidote to those creatures' poison.
Weight: 20
Cost: 10
Fruit: A strange-looking piece of fruit. It may have some strange effects on you.
Weight: 1
Cost: 10
Iguana Bits: A small piece of roasted meat.
Weight: 1
Cost: 8
Booze: A bottle of hard liquor from the pre-war years. Any year before 2040 is a
good year. It may temporarily affect your perception and awareness.
Weight: 2
Cost: 10
Geiger Counter: Used to detect radiation. Moving the counter to one of your
Active Item slots will provide advance warning if you are about to enter a hot area.
It can also be used to determine your personal radiation count.
Weight: 4
Cost: 650
Stealth Boy: A RobCo Stealth Boy 3001, a personal stealth device that improves
your chances of moving about unseen.
Weight: 3
Cost: 1800
Psychic Nullifier: A strange device, possibly the product of an alien technology. It
blocks telepathic or psychic commands.
Weight: 3
Cost: 1000
Water Chip: The object of your initial quest, a computer control chip for a vault
water purification system.
Weight: 2
Cost: 1
Dog tags: A set of military dog tags, inscribed with the name "Darkwater."
Weight: 0
Cost: 50
Tape Recorder: A small device for recording conversations for later playback.
Weight: 4
Cost: 40
Red COC Badge: A small metal badge used to identify members of the Children of
the Cathedral. It can be used to open certain doors, and may help keep you out of
trouble.
Weight: 1
Cost: 12
Black COC Badge: A small metal badge used to identify members of the Children
of the Cathedral. It can be used to open certain doors, and may help keep you out
of trouble.
Weight: 1
Cost: 400
Motion Sensor: A Wattz Electronics C-U motion sensor, a device for detecting
motion at a distance. Used in connection with your PIPBoy 2000 Automap to display
living creatures in the area. Place the sensor in an Active Item slot, then open the
Auto map.
Weight: 7
Cost: 800
Dean's Electronics: A study book on the general field of electronics. It can improve
your chances of repairing electronic devices.
Weight: 2
Cost: 130
First Aid Book: A manual containing study information on first aid. It can improve
your First Aid Skill.
Weight: 2
Cost: 175
129
Flower: A lovely flower. You may get one from the Children of the Cathedral. Now,
would you care to make a donation?
Weight: 1
Cost: 5
Fuzzy Painting: A very old velvet painting of an unknown 20th century musician. It
may have value for people interested in collecting images of royalty.
Weight: 12
Cost: 300
Key: A metal key to a particular lock. May be found as a number of keys on a ring.
Weight: 0
Cost: 4
Junk: A pile of metal junk parts. Lots of small pieces, nuts, bolts, and wire. Some of
the stuff may have some salvage value.
Weight: 12
Cost: 40
Lockpicks: Using lockpicks automatically applies your lockpick skill, but with a high-
er chance of success. Used to open locked doors.
Weight: 1
Cost: 150
Holodisk: Information storage devices. Use them with your PIPBoy 2000 to read the
data stored on them. There are several disks in different locations. Some are merely
useful, others may be vital to the successful completion of your quest. They include
the following:
FEV Disk: An extremely important holodisk with information about the FEV virus
and mutations.
Weight: 1
Cost: 200
Mutant Transmissions: A disk containing information about the super-mutants.
Weight: 1
Cost: 125
Vree's Experiment Disk: An important disk with information about mutant repro-
duction.
Weight: 1
Cost: 75
There's more-lots more-though this list covers most of the important stuff you're likely to find.
Keep your eyes peeled though. How would you like a power glove for smashing your enemies flat
with one blow? Or a military combat knife that does 3-12 points of damage instead of 1-6? Or a box
of noodles .. . or advanced Tesla Armor that deflects the bolts of energy weapons? Or even a Red
Ryder LE BB gun, which fires ordinary BBs at such high velocity that each does 25 points of damage?
Fallout can become a real scavenger hut-with the fun in the discovery. Good hunting!
RATS:
A moderate contamination hazard. You could learn
things looking here that you'd really rather not know.
This chapter is intended to provide hints, tips, and clues to the Fallout adventurer
and is designed to provide only moderate assistance without giving everything away.
It is divided into sections based on the various locations encountered during the
game, and again according to the particular characters and encounters you are likely
to meet. Beneath each section heading are a series of clues, arranged top to bottom,
from vague to specific. Look up the location or the encounter you are having trou-
ble with and read the first hint or two. If that's not enough, read further down the
list. You might want to use a 3x5 index card to cover up the more specific clues if
you would rather not learn too much.
If, after consulting this chapter, you still can't figure out what's going on, you might
want to have a look at Chapter 7: Exploring the Wastes on Only 200 Bottle
Caps a Day for more specific hints, or Chapter 8: Danger! Radioactive! where
we come right out and tell you what you need to know.
Note that we do not cover all possible sub-adventures and encounters in this section.
We have included those that are most important, however, or those that are likely
to get the player into trouble.
One word of warning. There are as many different ways to play Fallout as there are Fallout
players. In assembling the hints and tips below, we've made some assumptions-such as that
you, the player, are relying more on your wits and communication skills than on gunplay,
that you want to save your home vault ... and that you're fighting on the side of Right and
Justice against the dark forces of Evil that threaten the post-Apocalyptic world. If you decide
to blast your way through Fallout as a berserker child-murderer, join the Khan raiders, help
Gizmo assassinate Killian, and ultimately decide that becoming a mutant and joining the
Unity are really pretty cool career choices, then you're on your own!
Vault 13
~ So ... just why are you here, anyway?
~ The Overseer gave you a suggested direction to search in.
~ Your Vault's water purifier system needs a controller chip to operate. Where
might you expect to find one of those?
~ Later on, if you're having trouble with your quest, you might want to come
back here and have another chat with the Overseer.
Vault 15
~ When you first arrive at your destination, this stretch of desert looks pretty
much like all the rest, doesn't it?
Shady Sands
~ Shady Sands is a nice, quiet town. Not much to do here, it seems.
~ What are their worst problems? Is there anything you can do to help?
~ Talk to Seth, Aradesh, or Tandi to learn about Shady Sands and its troubles.
~ Try checking out the east side of town to learn about their water supply.
~ Shady Sands is not likely to be able to help you with the water purifier chip.
Wells don't need those things.
~ Although you don't have to go, a visit to the Rad Scorpion caves will give you
valuable combat experience. Check 'em out.
~ The Tandi subplot will take you to the Desert Raider camp of the Khans. Check
the Desert Raider hints section if you need help surviving that subplot.
~ Seth will give you some rope in exchange for a knife and a flare.
The Rad Scorpion Cave
~ To get to the Rad Scorpion caves, you will need to talk to Seth, on guard at the
front gate.
~ Not a lot of finesse is possible here. Get as close as you can and let the critters
have it, one at a time. Try to maneuver so that they use up Action Points trying
to get at you.
~ What happens if you use the hand icon on a dead scorpion? Is there anything
of value you can retrieve?
~ Try taking the scorpions' tails and moving them to your inventory.
~ Kill all of the Rad Scorpions in the cave to eliminate the menace to Shady
Sands. This will add 500 Experience Points to your total, along with the points
you win for each individual scorpion you kill.
~ If you tell Garl that you are an explorer, he will order the raiders to kill you .
~ These people are not nice. To join the raiders, you will have to do something
despicable.
~ Instead of joining them, it may be possible to get them to do what you want by
other means.
--------------
~ If a firefight breaks out, don't worry about finishing off wounded raiders who
turn and flee. You can get them later ... if there is a later.
~ If a firefight breaks out, try to get some raiders armed with spears or knives
between you and any raiders using firearms. Sometimes-not always-a raider
will shoot one of his or her comrades by mistake. When this happens, the
raiders may start fighting among themselves, and this will afford you an oppor-
tunity to slip away.
~ To destroy the raider camp, you must kill 75% of the raiders to drive the rest
off. If you kill Garl first, you will only need to kill 50% of the raiders to elimi-
nate them.
~ If you get the opportunity, check around for loot and weapons you can pick
up ... assuming you're not fighting for your life against Garl's raiders.
~ There are weapons and ammo in a refrigerator in Garl's room. Leather jackets,
armor, and various weapons can be taken from dead raiders.
~ If you are here to rescue Tandi, try intimidating Garl, challenging him in one-to-
one combat, or offering him money.
~ It will take $600, not including Barter Skill and adjustments, to get Garl to
release Tandi.
~ If you try sneaking into the cell area to rescue Tandi, you will find her in the
southern most of the two cells. You will need to use your lockpick skill to get
her out.
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Killian
~ Who seems to represent the forces of law and order around here?
~ What is your gut feeling about Killian, about what kind of man he is, after you
talk with him?
Sinthia
~ If Sinthia is attacked while you're in the Crash House, is there anything you
can do?
~ The raider who is holding Sinthia hostage seems confused ... but he is also dan-
gerous. If you attack him or even threaten him, he may attack Sinthia.
~ You will get more Experience Points for this confrontation if you can get the
raider to leave without killing him, and without endangering Sinthia.
~ Try to talk the raider down. Do not get too intense. If you tell him his life is in
danger, he will think you are threatening him and kill Sinthia. Don't directly
refuse him, don't threaten him, and don't tell him what you really think of him.
~ If the raider demands money, you must have at least $100 to offer him. If you
do not, he will think you are lying and kill Sinthia. If you do not have the
money, tell him he can just walk away ... and hope your speech skill is high
enough that he trusts you. Otherwise, tell him he has to trust you, and hope
that he does.
~ If you tell him he can leave peacefully after he demands money, he will up his
demand to $200. If you don't have it, he will think you lied and try to kill Sinthia.
If you have it and give it to him, he will leave peacefully.
~ You have four choices. You can kill the raider, but if you do so Sinthia will hate
you. You can knock him out; Sinthia won't like it, but Killian's guards will
appreciate the help. You can offer him money and the raider will leave peace-
fully. Or you can talk him into trusting you and leaving without hurting the
woman.
The Skulz
~ These guys can be a bit touchy. Don't set them off.
~ Ask Sherry what she plans to do with the rest of her life. If your speech skills
are good enough, she will begin thinking about it. Two days later, she will
leave the gang.
~ After Sherry has left the gang, you can try to convince her to turn against the
Skulz. Tell her they have been hurting people, and she will help you.
Gizmo
~ To get evidence against Gizmo, you need to use a tape recorder or a wire given
to you by Killian, then get Gizmo to talk about killing him.
~ To use the bug, have it in your Active Items Inventory. Click to bring it up on
your Interface Bar, click to bring up a yellow target cursor, and click that on
Gizmo's desk. To use the tape recorder, bring it up on the Interface Bar and
click on usE.
~ With either (or both) the tape recorder running or the bug planted, talk to
Gizmo. Offer to kill Killian, and draw Gizmo out until he agrees. Ask why he
wants Killian dead. He will want proof that Killian is dead and demand that
you bring him Killian's dog tags. Agree to this.
~ Back at Killian's, he will play back the confession and thank you for your help.
You will have the opportunity to help Lars, Killian's assistant, attack Gizmo.
Find Lars near the guard house and tell him you want to help. You'll find your-
self confronting Gizmo with Lars and of Killian. Once Gizmo is dead, try going
back to his place to search his body and desk!
14~
Doc Morbid
~ Doc Morbid can heal you of radiation poisoning or other problems, if you have
the money to pay him.
~ Be sure you do have enough to pay him, or you and Morbid won't be seeing
eye to eye.
~ There's more to Doc Morbid and his clinic than at first meets the eye.
~ This is an interesting subplot that could lead to your finding some good
weapons and equipment.
~ To find Doc Morbid's secret, you will have to get past his two mercenary hench-
men, Flash and Cougar. Both are armed with shotguns.
~ You may be able to get past them with a combination of threat and bravado.
Try telling Flash that he'll be needing the Doc's services for personal reasons.
This requires a high Speech Skill ... and it's harder to get away with it if the
player character is female.
~ In the basement is another of Morbid's people. His name is Gretch, and he's
armed with a submachine gun.
~ If you're caught down there, you'll probably have to fight your way out.
~ Do not agree to having the Doc "take something from you."
In General
~ Talk to everyone you can .
~ A number of other subplot adventures can be had here. Talk to the other peo-
ple in the Crash House, in the Scum Pit, and in the street.
~ Keep an eye out for characters you might want to hire as companions. Even a
dog might provide a useful ally in later encounters.
~ Buy, find, or steal the best weapons you can manage. Try buying and selling
other equipment, recovered loot, found junk, or whatever to get enough
money to buy or barter better weapons.
~ Gretch, Doc Morbid's assistant, has a submachine gun. If you can kill him and get
that weapon, you'll be in great shape for later encounters!
The Hub
~ Talk to everyone possible and learn everything you can.
~ What can be responsible for the vanishing caravans?
~ Talk to Martha to hear what gossip she has to share.
~ Talk to old Harold, the mutant. He's been around for a long time, and has seen
an awful lot.
~ Check the job postings downtown (in front of Bob's Iguana Bits) to find work.
~ If you talk to the right people, it's possible for you to arrange for water ship-
ments to your Vault. This won't solve the Vault's water problems permanently,
but it will delay the end while you work on finding that control chip.
~ A large number of subplot adventures can be had in the Hub. Some will give
you money or a chance at new weapons, some are dangerous, all will give you
Experience Points ... assuming you survive. Among the many possibilities, a few
of the more important include: go to work for Decker; blackmail Bob; join the
Thieves' Guild; rescue a Brotherhood initiate; join a caravan as a guard; or kill
the Deathclaw.
Decker
~ Decker is a dangerous man. Be careful around him.
~ You must find the house occupied by Daren Hightower and kill them. Do it
without alerting the police patrols outside!
~ The second job Decker will ask you to perform-after you have successfully car-
ried out the first-is to assassinate Jain, in the building belonging to the
Children of the Cathedral.
~ If you join a caravan as a guard, stay with it until the end of the run. If you
abandon the caravan, you will have trouble getting the same work again later.
You can, however, join a caravan as guard out to the Brotherhood or some
other destination and quit the job there.
~ If you join a caravan as a guard, be prepared for trouble. Make sure you 're
well-armed and have plenty of ammo.
Deathclaw Cavern
~ Talking to Butch Harris, Beth, and finally Harold will give you access to the
Deathclaw cave. It is not necessary to face the Deathclaw, but killing it will give
you a lot of Experience Points.
~ Be sure you're well armed with the best weapons you can find, and have plenty
of ammo!
~ If possible, see if you can recruit allies in the Hub first. If you hired people to
join you earlier in the game, they will be useful here.
~ If you have acquired dynamite along the way, try sneaking up on the
Deathclaw, setting the timer, and dropping a charge of high explosives next to
him, then sneaking away before it detonates. This can weaken the monster
enough to give you a better chance of killing it.
~ Once the beast is dead, is there anything in the cave of use to you?
~ Cabbot, the greeter on guard outside, will tell you where to go and what to
do. Your destination will be added to your list of travel possibilities on the
World Map.
~ You must travel to The Glow, far to the south, find your way in, and find an
artifact that you will then return to the Brotherhood.
~ If you have trouble completing this task, check the hints listed under The Glow.
~ Once you complete the quest, you will be accepted into the Brotherhood. This
is an excellent opportunity to learn a great deal, as well as to acquire some use-
ful weapons and equipment.
~ If you have not already done so, you may be asked to return to the Hub and free
a member of the Brotherhood being held in Old Town. See the hints for Rescuing
an Initiate under the hints for The Hub in this chapter, if you need help.
~ When people ask you to run chores, do them. You may be rewarded. If you
abuse their trust, however, you will suffer for it.
~ Talus may be able to authorize combat armor and weapons for you.
~ It is possible to get a suit of powered armor. Kyle will require a systolic motiva-
tor to repair the armor.
~ If you want the Brotherhood's help against the Master, warn them about the
impending mutant invasion.
~ After you return from The Glow, see Vree. If she likes you, she will give you a
holodisk about the FEV virus. This is critical to one means of winning the game.
~ The Brotherhood can provide you with a small army to attack either the mili-
tary base or the Master's lair. Which shall it be?
~ Talk to Maxson after you have scouted the military base to recruit your army.
The Glovv
~ As soon as you arrive on this screen, you'll take hits from the radiation. Use
Rad-X to protect yourself, and Rad-away to eliminate the effects of the original
contamination.
~ To avoid hits from new radiation, stop just before you reach The Glow, take
!fiellli~~~ tlllffrtome Rad-X, the proceed.
147~
~ From the surface, The Glow isn't much more than a hole in the ground. How do
you get in?
~ Once inside, search carefully. There are some key items to winning the game here.
~ When you find what the Brotherhood is looking for, you'll be notified.
~ Try checking the bodies on the first level.
~ There are clues to what's going on on a lower level.
~ Look for large, broken flask or container. Can you find anything else there of
interest?
~ Check the computers you find. Only the ones with flashing lights are working,
and deserving of your attention.
~ You will need to repair the generators to restore power to the blue elevator.
~ There are numerous weapons and special equipment available here. Grab
everything you can. But watch out for traps!
~ There are traps in the rooms with grids on the floors. There are also traps else-
where, though, on ordinary floors. Use your traps skill to avoid them.
~ Once power is restored, you'll find yourself facing sentry robots programmed to
stop intruders. Watch yourself!
~ The elevators require color-coded pass keys to get past their security defenses.
Use the passes on the elevator doors to get in without being shocked.
~ Search every body you can find for the necessary pass keys.
~ The yellow key is on Level 1. The red key is on Level 2. The blue key is on Level 4.
~ Look for holodisks with useful information. They may be in lockers, on bodies,
or elsewhere.
Necropolis
Getting to Set
~ Your first encounter in the Necropolis will probably be at the Motel of Doom.
~ You need to find a way to reach other parts of the city ...
~ ... without being seen. Can you find a way to do this?
~ Once you find the sewers, try heading in a generally northerly direction. Keep
an eye out for ladders, though they'll be hard to see in the dark!
Ready... Set...
~ Set rules the ghouls in the Necropolis ... or, at least, so he thinks.
~ To get on Set's good side, you may have to perform a little chore for him.
~ The sewer leading to the water shed map is connected to the sewer that
brought you here from the motel.
~ Go back to the sewers, and look for a passageway leading north. It will eventu-
ally bring you to a short, new section of underground passageway, and a lad-
der leading up into a building on the water shed map.
The Water Shed
~ You are looking for the place where water is purified and distributed for the
Necropolis.
~ Look for the long building in the northeast corner of the map. The entrance is
in the northernmost part of the building.
~ You will find Harry here ... wielding a big, mean-looking gun.
~ If you have a decent weapon by this time, like an SMG, you might be able to
get the drop on Harry. If your character is female, use your feminine wiles, and
tell him you want to give him "a little smack." This will give you an initial
advantage over the poor guy.
~ If you've already defeated the Master at this point, Harry and his friends may
be so afraid of you that they will run away.
~ You may be able to talk your way past Harry. Try telling him you are not a nor-
mal, and when he wonders what you are, tell him you're a ghoul. This will con-
fuse him long enough to let you slip past. You have thirty seconds to leave
before he decides to attack.
~ If you find yourself in a firefight with Harry, remember several key points: he
has three large friends nearby, one of whom is armed with a flamer, in a room
off the passageway on the east side of the room, and they will come when a
firefight begins; if you can get his friends between Harry and you, they will
provide cover and may be hit by Harry's laser rifle fire. Your best hope here is
superior firepower.
~ Don't even try getting into a firefight with these guys with anything less than
an SMG ... and even that's a real long shot!
~ Superior firepower is going to be hard to come by. Harry has a laser rifle, and
one of his friends has a flamer. Try using grenades you picked up in the Hub to
whittle Harry down a bit before you start shooting it out.
~ Stay clear of the guy with the flamer! The weapon is short-ranged, but deadly!
~ Try getting them to follow you outside and through the alleys behind the small,
square building south of the watershed. You might be able to cut them down
by sniping and throwing grenades.
~ You might also try eliminating the two super-mutant guards outside the water-
shed first. One is in the street, the other in the small, square building. Then
you'll only have four to face once you meet Harry ... not six!
~ Be sure to get those weapons! A laser rifle and a flamer are among the best
firearms you can pack, at least at this point in the game, and you're soon going
to need something better than an SMG!
~ Once you've eliminated Harry and his friends, make your way to the far end of
the building.
~ There is a manhole cover in the small room in the southeast corner of the build-
ing. Go down two levels to reach the Necropolis Vault.
~ The Necropolis Vault is to the north of the underground chamber two levels
beneath the water shed. Find the elevator.
~ When a message tells you you've easily removed the water chip, you have what
you came for!
~ Removing the water chip stops the flow of water throughout the Necropolis.
Most of the ghouls are harmless. Do you want them all to die of thirst?
~ You must repair the water pumps in the water shed to restore the flow of
water to the Necropolis.
Novv What?
~ Once you have the all-important water chip, you'd better get back to Vault 13
as quickly as you can. Time is precious!
~ After you interrupt the water supply for the ghouls, Set is no longer your
friend. Stay clear of him!
~ Back at the Vault, the Overseer may suggest another course of action.
~ You have won the first part of the game, but you have also uncovered a num-
ber of clues to bigger and darker dangers threatening your people and home.
You will not have won the game until you have ended those threats.
~ Take stock of all you have seen and learned. Consider the following questions:
~ Where do the super-mutants, like the ones guarding the water shed in the
Necropolis, come from? What is their agenda?
~ Did you hear Harry, the super-mutant, say something about taking you to "the
Lou?" Who might that be?
~ The Deathclaw was not responsible for the missing caravans. Who or what is?
~ By now, you've learned of the location of other sites to the south, places like
"The Glow" and "the Boneyard." Your new quest will take you there.
~ If you have not yet visited the Brotherhood, you should do so. You will learn more
there, and through the adventures you will have getting them to accept you.
~ Places you must yet visit include The Glow and the Brotherhood (if you haven't
already), the Military Base, the Cathedral, and the Master's Vault. Other places
you may visit, though it is not absolutely necessary that you do so, are the
Followers of the Apocalypse, the Gun Runners, Adytum, and the headquarters
of a gang called the Blades.
~ At this point, your two primary goals-which you must achieve to win the
game-are the destruction of the Vats beneath the Military Base, and the
destruction of the Master in his vault. The various other locations may provide
clues, weapons, information, allies, or characters who can help you achieve
these goals.
Invasion!
~ A clock is running. You started it when you entered the Necropolis. Thirty days
after the super-mutants guarding the water shed are killed or driven off-
assuming the Master is still alive-the Master's army of super-mutants will
invade the Necropolis and kill Set and all of his ghouls. A countdown is also
proceeding toward the Master's discovery of your home Vault, which has the
raw materials he needs to build his mutant super-army ... normal humans.
~ If the super-mutants invade Vault 13, the game ends. You lose.
The LA Boneyard
Adytum and the Blades
~ The Boneyard, also called "the Angels' Boneyard," is the far-flung rubble of a
destroyed city ... Los Angeles. There are numerous locations of interest within
this area.
~ Jon Zimmerman, the leader in Adytum, will ask you to avenge his son by killing
the leader of the Blades.
~ The Blades are tough. If you attack them or their leader, you will find them
very hard to kill!
~ The leader of the Blades has a holodisk that proves who really killed
Zimmerman's son.
153,.
~ The Regulators hold Adytum in the grip of a vicious dictatorship. They are
responsible for the murder.
~ The Blades will liberate Adytum, if they can get weapons from the Gunrunners.
~ The Gunrunners will provide weapons, if the Deathclaw infestation in the large
building between the Blades' HQ and the Gunrunners' place can be eliminated.
~ In the basement beneath the infested building are Deathclaw eggs ... and the
Deathclaw mother. Both the eggs and the mother must be destroyed to elimi-
nate the infestation. Don't go in there unless you've very well heeled!
~ If you clear out the Deathclaws, kill the Deathclaw Momma, and destroy the
eggs, the Gunrunners will give you weapons and ammo in gratitude. After
Adytum is liberated, they will leave their old HQ, and you may find valuable
weapons left behind there.
~ They believe in peace ... but are sworn enemies of the Children of the
Cathedral. They will fight for what they believe in.
~ Nicole is the Followers' leader. You will get good information from her.
~ Nicole can tell you something about the Cathedral, the Children, and a spy the
Followers have inside.
~ She will ask you to scout the Cathedral, and tell you how to contact the spy.
~ If Nicole likes you, she will offer you the free use of the Followers' base. There
are valuable supplies available in some of those lockers.
~ She may offer to send some of the Followers with you as a "diversion" to the
Cathedral. If fighting breaks out, they will attack the Children and help you
capture the place. When you leave the Cathedral, they return to Nicole.
The Cathedral
~ The Cathedral is an enormous building located in the heart of the LA Boneyard.
It is the center of worship for the Children of the Cathedral.
~ When you scout the Cathedral, you may encounter three characters of impor-
tance: Laura, the Follower spy; Lasher, and Morpheus, the leader of the
Children.
~ Laura will not help you unless you have first seen Nicole.
~ Lasher can give you a badge that will let you see Morpheus, and Morpheus can
take you to see the Master.
~ If you haven't guessed the fact by now, the Children are bad guys, in the service
of the Master. Morpheus is one of the Master's important henchmen and can
take you to him.
~ To find Morpheus, find the stairs behind the altar and go up. Be careful, though.
A couple of Nightkin are on guard up there. You will need the passkey from
Lasher to get past them ... or a great deal of skill and luck.
~ The stairs are behind a door east of the altar. The door can be opened by Laura
or with a red COC key from Lasher. In a room at the top of the tower, on Level 4,
you can find Morpheus.
~ Also behind the red-pass door is another door which requires a black passkey to
enter. The stairs beyond lead down to a room with a bookcase. Behind the book-
case is a secret passage leading to the Master's lair.
~ The black passkey can be taken from Morpheus. You can also try picking the
locks or using explosives to get in.
~ The Nightkin are powerful and well-armed super-mutants wearing Stealth Boy
units, which make them difficult to see and hard to hit in combat. They will not
attack you if you have the black passkey, the red passkey, or are wearing purple
robes, but cannot be armed.
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II
~ You have several options. You can get Laura to show you the way to the
Master. You can talk Lasher into giving you a pass, finding Morpheus, and get-
ting him to take you to see the Master, or you can kill Lasher, take what you
need, and find Morpheus.
~ If you are respectful to Morpheus and don't challenge or insult him, you can
ask questions of him and be allowed to leave. If you tell him that you are from
a vault, you will shake him enough to convince him to take you before the
Master.
~ Do not plan on meeting the Master until you are ready. You will either have to
defeat him in battle, find your way to a nuclear weapon and set it off, or give
the Master a holodisk containing information about the FEV virus which will
cause him to self-destruct. If you elect to attack him, the Brotherhood of Steel or
other allies may be able to help.
~ You may get information on the location of the Vats at the Brotherhood. You
might also be taken there if you are captured by Jain or Harry earlier in the
game, or you may find it in the course of your explorations on the World Map.
~ If you go to the Vats and destroy them first, you can acquire information there
about the Master. You can also acquire a key to a nuclear weapon in the
Master's basement-one of several ways of taking him out.
~ If you take on the Master first, you can learn about the Vats from the super-
computers inside the Master's fortress, or from Set in the Necropolis if you visit
him after killing the Master.
The Military Base
The Entrance
~ To penetrate the Military Base you will have to get past the guards on the sur-
face, or kill them.
~ If an alarm is given, more guards will appear from inside the mountain. An
alarm will be given if you do not succeed in killing a super-mutant within two
seconds.
~ If you try to talk your way past the guards, try claiming that you are a mutant
on a special mission. If they believe you, you can continue on your way.
~ You will need a code to open the door to the base. One of the super-mutant
guards has the code.
~ If possible, steal a radio from one of the mutants, or kill him and take it.
~ You can use the radio to trick the mutants. When Command asks for your sta-
tus, try telling them that you are under attack. If they ask for your coordinates,
tell them "four miles, south-southwest." If they ask your purpose, tell them
your name is Fred and that you were dazed in a fall. Any of these responses
should result in some of the mutants being drawn away from their posts.
~ You can also try orchestrating an attack against the base by your allies, which
will cause a serious diversion. Or you could use explosives on one part of the
fence to try to draw off the guards.
~ You will have to kill or knock out the mutant outside the security door in the
mountain. That guard has a security code, which you need to open the door.
He will not leave with the other mutants if you trick them.
~ The internal corridors are protected by force fields, robots, and, of course,
super-mutants. If the base has been alerted, the force fields will be active.
~ The force fields are controlled from the Computer Control Room.
~ There are two types of force field. One Type-amber in color-will be up all the
time. Another type-light green-will come on if there is an alert.
~ You can pass through the amber fields, though you may take electrical damage
doing so.
~ Go through slowly. Bump into the field, take the hit, then move forward. That
should get you through. Don't walk through a field if you are close to death.
~ Try using your Repair Skill on the force field control panel near any door blocked
by a green field. You might be able to drop the force field for a short time.
~ Your best bet is to try to slip into the base without setting off an alert. This
will allow you to reach the force field control room, the elevators, and other
key areas.
~ If you have been able to acquire a Stealth Boy unit, it will help you sneak
unseen through the corridors of the base.
~ You can control the force fields by hacking the computers in the Control Room,
or by using the radios.
~ You can hack the computers in the Control Room by using your Science Skill. A
successful attempt will let you play a computer card game as a trap door to let
you break into the system. A successful hack will let you turn off all or some of
the force fields.
~ If you want to control the force fields by radio, you will need two radios. They
can be taken from dead super-mutants, or found in supply lockers on the base.
~ To use the radios, use one radio on the force field computer. If you are
successful, a message will tell you that you have linked into the force
field computer. You can then use the second radio that you kept to
toggle the force fields on and off, as needed.
~ You can use a computer in this area to hack into the robots' control
network and reprogram them.
~ If you are successful in hacking into the robot network, you can change
some of the robots' programming. They are already set to TARGET
INTRUDER, meaning you. You can change this so that they will target
everything including each other, or all living things, or only mutants, or
only attackers. You can also disable some aspects of their operation,
such as their sensors.
~ To get the robots to target only mutants, set "Pest Control" to "Large
living pests." To have them target nothing, set Pest Control to "no
pests," to set targeting to TARGET NONE. To have them target every-
thing (including you, but also including each other) set Pest Control to
"all pests."
~ The Armory on the Second Level of the Stronghold has some useful
weapons, including a minigun. It is heavily guarded, however, and
requires either an electronic lockpick, or explosives (either three packs
of dynamite or two of plastic explosives) to break inside.
~ On the upper level of the Vats is a trapped corridor called the Security
Corridor. Like Loxley's Gauntlet in the Hub, this passageway is covered
by traps and alarms. You will need to use your Traps Skill step by step
to get through without setting off an alarm. Trap elements include
warnings, lasers, plasma rifles, explosive hexes, and lines of monofila-
ment stretched across the hall just above the floor. Unlike Loxley's
Gauntlet, however, these are deadly.
~ Two elevators lead down to the lowest level. The east elevator, howev-
er, is out of order. Try the one to the west, near the prison cells.
~ The first time you approach this room, you may hear VanHagan, a rep-
resentative from the Children's Cathedral, giving the Lieutenant a
report which indicates that the Master has discovered a new Vault...
yours!
~ If you are captured and brought to the Lieutenant, it's pretty much up for
you. The Lieutenant will torture you. If you resist, you will be killed. If
you yield, you will become a super-mutant and your Vault will be over-
run. Game over! You lose!
~ The Lieutenant is armed with a Gatling laser. His death will irritate the
other super-mutants.
~ Your goal is to destroy the Vats on the lowest level of the facility. You
can get into the Vats control room by reprogramming a Mr. Handy
robot and having it finish its cleaning rounds. The Lieutenant has an
encryption key in his locker that will enable you to hack the vat con-
trol computer and see what each command code will do.
~ If you can kill the Lieutenant, get the Nuclear Arming Key in his posses-
sion. It could be useful later, if you haven't yet destroyed the Master.
You can also Sneak in and loot the locker in the northwest corner of
this room to steal the key.
~ When you reach the Vats Control Room, destroy the vats either by
using your Science Skill on the computer there, or by placing explosives
on the computer console.
~ If you hack the Vat computer, you will see a list of program com-
mands-each a gibberish of letters and numbers. Selecting any of
these will result in the destruction of the base. The problem is, some
blow it up faster than others ... and one blows it immediately! If you
have good Intelligence and Science skills, there will be an option to
hack the code numbers, otherwise you will have to use the
Lieutenant's encryption key.
~ A force field control in the Vats Control Room will shut down all force
fields in the facility, allowing you to make a hasty exit before the place
blows.
~ If you have been able to find a Stealth Boy, which renders you translu-
cent, your chances of slipping unseen through the Master's Vault are
improved.
~ You can kill the Master in combat-extremely difficult, but not impossi-
ble-or you can find a nuclear weapon in his Vault and set it to
explode ... or you can give the Master the FEV holodisk Vree gave you.
~ The higher your Perception, the worse the Corridor's effects will be,
with damage to your Intelligence and Perception. The effects will be
much worse if your character has the Child Killer or Berserker tags or a
negative reputation.
~ If you were able to get a Psychic Nullifier, the Corridor of Revulsion's effects will
be greatly lessened. A Psychic Nullifier can be found in the mad psychics' room,
on Level 2.The Mental Block Perk will also do the same. You can drink booze to
lower your Perception and evade the nasty effects of the Corridor.
~ The mad psychics can be talked into giving you a Nullifier. If you can't do this,
then you will have to Steal it from them, or kill one of them and loot it.
~ Your best bet in dealing with the Master is to give him the FEV holodisk. It con-
tains information proving that his efforts are futile, that his super-mutants are
sterile and will not be able to renew the Earth.
~ Another good, if risky, way to end the Master's ambitions is to use nuclear
weaponry.
~ If you can reach the Reactor Control Room in the lowest level of the Vault, you
will need to pick the lock on the door and deal with two guards before reaching
a nuclear warhead.
~ If you have the Arming Key from the Lieutenant, you can use this on the com-
puter to arm the warhead. Otherwise, you can try using your Science or
Lockpick Skills on the computer. Either way, a successful attempt will result in
the warhead exploding in four minutes.
As in Chapter 3: Places To Go, this chapter lists each major site encountered in
Fallout. It gives specific and detailed information on each site, however, and may
give away some of the suspense of the game. Look here only if you are having trou-
ble getting out of the place alive.
Vault 13
The player character must return with the water purifier chip before Day 150. He or
she will begin receiving warnings in the game on Day 40, and the warnings will
become more urgent after Day 80. The player can delay the disaster by traveling to
the Hub and arranging for water caravans to travel to the Vault. If the caravans are
stopped, the countdown to the death of Vault 13 picks up where it left off.
2
1. Vault Door
2. Exit grid to world map
1. Elevator
2. Library
3. Operations center
(Overseer)
1. Elevator
~ Airlock: Brightly lit accessway from the entrance to the Vault's interior.
You may be able to find some flares in a compartment on the west
wall. These will be replenished once every thirty days.
---------------------------
~ Emergency Medical Lab: The player can be healed here for free and
can receive treatment for radiation poisoning. Two containers on the
west wall each hold two stimpaks. These will be replenished after
three days. The Overseer can be found here.
~ Lockers: Some lockers off the main passageway have useful supplies-
including water flasks. One of these in your Inventory will keep you
from taking hits from dehydration in the desert.
~ C&C: The Command and Control Center is occupied during the day and
empty at night.
~ Operations Security: A guard is always on duty here. If you can get a
good reaction from him or her, you might get access to the Vault's
weapons locker.
The Invasion
Unless other events brought about by the player character intervene, the Vault will
be invaded by an army of super-mutants on Day 250 of the adventure. This will end
the game.
Special Dangers
~ Attacking anyone inside Vault 13 makes you an ENEMY (Vault) and
subject to attack.
~ Watch your time! If you don't return to Vault 13 within 120 days of the
game's beginning-or somewhat longer if you arrange for water cara-
vans first-you lose!
Vault 15
This vault is here to make the player think about what to do next, and to provide
the opportunity to rack up some kills and increase his Experience Point total.
Special Locations
~ The locations in Vault 15 are much the same as in Vault 13.
Special Dangers
~ If you ar• •Jil~~~Stls in Vault lS, you:
2
---4
Shady Sands
Shady Sands provides the player with his first real challenges and forces him to think
about what he must do next. If he talks to the right people, he will learn about the
raiders, Junktown, and the Rad Scorpions. Destroying the Rad Scorpions makes the
people grateful and gives the player Experience Points.
Special Adventures
~ The player can get Seth to take him to the Rad Scorpion caves. Killing
all of the scorpions will add considerably to the character's Experience
Point total.
~ Two day after destroying the Rad Scorpion caves, go talk to Aradesh
again. The player will learn that Tandi has been kidnapped by raiders.
You will enormously increase both your prestige in Shady Sands and
your Experience Point totals if you can track her to the raider camp
3fll.,..l!@l,u rescue her.
3
HBHGarden
Special Points
~ Talk to lan-the mercenary in a black leather jacket in the guard's
house. Ask him about other places in the area, and he will tell you
about Junktown and the Hub. These sites will then be accessible on the
world map.
~ Talk to Seth at the front gate. He has a rope that you will need later.
Offer him a knife and a flare, and take the rope. Alternatively, there is
a rope in the garden shack in east Shady Sands.
~ Talk to Katrina at the gate and ask her all the available questioons.
You will get 250 XP for learning about the world.
~ If you give the antidote to Jarvis, you will receive 400 XP for curing
him.
~ If you have an Intelligence of four or greater, and a Science skill of
40% or more, you can tell Curtis, the farmer, how to use crop rotation
to improve their fields. You will get 500 XP for this. Curtis is out stand-
ing in his field.
Special Dangers
~ If the player begins shooting NPCs, other Shady Sands dwellers will
attack. If he kills someone, he will receive an ENEMY (Shady Sands) dis-
advantage.
You will win 60 Experience Points for each Rad Scorpion you kill. You will receive 500
Experience Points for killing all of the scorpions in the cave.
The Desert Raider Camp
n The player can find lots of valuable
gear here, including weapons, money, and armor.
He can also rescue Tandi from captivity, which will
greatly increase his prestige with the people
of Shady Sands.
Special Adventures
~ You will have the opportunity to
rescue Tandi, the daughter of the
leader of Shady Sands. To trigger
this subplot, you must destroy the
1. Garl's HQ []
2. Tandi's Cell rad scorpion threat and leave Shady
Sands for two or more days, then
Desert Raider Camp return and talk to Aradesh.
~ There is a chance that you will be mistaken for the ghost of Garl's
father. This can only happen if your luck is 9 or 10 (and then only hap-
pens half of the time) and you are male. The Raiders will avoid
you[md]this makes rescuing Tandi or stealing from the Raiders much
easier. Don't talk to Garl if this happens.
~ You have the opportunity to wipe out the raiders, which will greatly
improve your status with the inhabitants of Shady Sands. Do this after
rescuing Tandi for maximum experience points.
Special Points
~ The refrigerator in Garl's room in the main building contains a shot-
gun, shotgun ammo, and some dynamite.
~ The cooler in Garl's room is normally empty, but if the player is cap-
tured, his weapons and gear will be kept here.
~ When you have the chance, check (use the Hand Icon) the bodies of
raiders you kill! You will be able to relieve them of armor, weapons,
and other useful goodies.
~ There are several ways to win Tandi's freedom. You can challenge Garl
and beat him in hand-to-hand combat. You can intimidate him in a
verbal confrontation or offer him $600 {plus Barter Skill and reaction
adjustments) in money or trade goods. You can sneak in and pick the
lock to her cell, then try to sneak out of the camp. Or you can wipe
out all of the raiders.
~ The raiders will be destroyed if you kill 75% of them. If you manage to
kill Garl, the raiders will flee after you have killed only half of them.
Special Dangers
~ The player will have the opportunity to impress the raiders and join
them, but he will have to murder two peasant women in Garl's room
to "prove" himself. This will increase his standing with the raiders and
other lowlifes but hurt his reputation in Shady Sands and elsewhere.
Junktovvn
Junktown is an important stop for the player. There are weapons to be found or
bought here, adventures to become involved in, allies to win, and information to
discover. Here you will learn about the Necropolis, the vanishing caravans, and the
Deathclaw.
o ce
1. Exit Grid to Killian's! 5
Crash House 4
2. casino
3. Gizmo's Office
4. Skum Pitt
,.-..---. 8.
[JJ 6
5. Exit Grid to World Map
6. Boxing Ring
~· PlaFRoom
Killian
2
1. Exit Grid to Entrance Map
2. Oarkwater's (General Store)
3. The Crash House
4. Store Room (Skulz HQ)
Junktown, Casino 5. fxit grid to cnlliino
Junktown, Killian's
Special Adventures
~ The player can rescue Sinthia from a crazed raider who is holding her
hostage.
~ The player can help the local guard force against the Skulz.
~ The player can uncover some unsavory information about Doc Morbid
in his basement lab.
~ The player can help Saul keep his relationship with Trish by giving him
good advice.
Special Points
~ The first time you enter Killian's, a gunman will try to assassinate
Killian Darkwater. If you attack the gunman, Killian will thank you and
ask for your nea.,.IOat
~ By helping Killian Darkwater get evidence against Gizmo, you will get
your pick of weapons at his shop, and ammo to go with it.
~ The Children of the Cathedral will infiltrate Junktown well before the
invasion. They will set up a doctor's office in Junktown 80 days after
the start of the adventure. The Children of the Cathedral will provide
the player with some important information.
~ If you can rescue Sinthia from the crazed raider without resorting to
violence, you will get 1,000 Experience Points. If you can rescue Sinthia
without violence and without putting her life in danger, you get 1,250
Experience Points. If you rescue her by killing or beating up the raider,
Sinthia will not be happy with you, but Killian's guards will congratu-
late you on your victory.
~ Doc Morbid has a side business in body parts. His underground lab has
evidence of this grisly trade, as well as a safe locker containing money,
ammo, and a doctor's bag, but it is protected by an explosive trap.
~ With gambling skill, you might be able to win some money at the
Casino, either at the slot machines or playing 21.
Special Dangers
~ When you enter the town, be sure to put away any weapons you may
be carrying. Killian's guards will react negatively to you carrying
weapons openly, and if you don't obey their orders, you may be
attacked.
~ If you kill Killian for any reason, your reputation with most people in
Junktown will become bad.
The Hub
The Hub will take the player much closer to
Entral"'{~
D.CJ the solution of the game's unfolding myster-
I:!J co
1
ies. There are many more characters to meet
IIIII I [? here than in Junktown, though there are not
00!7 ]:J
the story's puzzles.
~~ Water Merchants
Hub IIIII
Garden IIIII
1. Exit Grid
II
L...
-
~~~,~~r
I
I
1. txit grid to d o w , q 1. Exit grid to downtown
2. Children of the 2. Daren Hightower's House
cathedral Hospital 3. living Room
3 . Water Merchant> 4. Kitchen
4 . ~ecret uour S. Spare Room
6. Bedroom
Hub, the water merchants 7. Closet (Locked Chest)
Brotherh===-&Jood
Prisoner
X
Harold--E[]
Special Adventures
~ You can convince Dan not to be so
tough on Billy.
~ You can get a job from Demeter working as a guard on the Crimson
Caravan.
·ng caraYaB$.
~ You can see Kane in the Maltese Falcon. He will take you to Decker,
who will offer you a job.
~ Decker, the leader of the Underground, will hire you for two special
jobs. Both involve assassination.
~ Harold, the old mutant, can lead you to the cave of the Deathclaw.
Killing this beast will enhance your reputation and earn you Experience
Points.
~ You can attempt to join the Thieves' Circle. Loxley will ask you to steal
a necklace from a merchant in the Heights to prove yourself. Return
the necklace to Loxley, and he will give you $3,000.
~ You can rescue an Initiate from the Brotherhood of Steel who is being
held in a cell near Harold's shack. Decker's thugs are torturing him for
information about the Brotherhood. He will be a good source of infor-
mation about the Brotherhood.
Special Points
~ Butch Harris, the boss of Far-Go Traders, is not too bright, but he's a
good source of information. He can give you the location of places like
The Glow and the Necropolis. Talk to him about the Deathclaw, and
then talk to Beth and to Harold in order to reach this creature's cave.
~ Beth, the proprietor of the Weapon Shop, is a gossip who will bend the
player's ear with all sorts of information. Some of it is worth pursuing.
~ If you need money, Lorenzo at the Friendly Lending Company, will loan
you from 200 to 1,000 Hub Bucks at an exorbitant daily interest. He
will make up to three loans at a time to you. Be warned, however. This
is a loan sharking operation, and if you fail to pay, you will be
attacked. Lorenzo is also a source of information and may give you an
in with Decker.
~ You can attempt to sneak into the FLC at night and pick the lock on
the safe. You will have to get past guards both inside and outside.
~ If the player character is male and indicates an interest in Keri Lee at
the Crimson Caravan Company, she may have a romantic liaison with
him, after which she will give him some strength, perception, and dex-
terity drug packs.
~ If you get into the building used by the Children of the Cathedral, a
locked storeroom there contains a lot of equipment and loot, including
various drugs, food, robes, and a couple of Geiger counters. You will
have to get past a guard.
Special Dangers
~ If the player has killed someone or is an escaped prisoner, and the
police capture him, he will be killed. In any other case, if the player is
knocked unconscious, he will end up in prison.
~ If you hire on with a caravan and then abandon your post, you will get
a bad reputation with the caravan's owners.
~ If the player goes to the Cathedral to talk to Jain, the High Priestess,
Jain will try to turn him or her over to a super-mutant "counselor"
who will take the player to "the Vats." The player will be given a
choice between death and the Vats. If he or she chooses the Vats or
cannot escape the super-mutant, the player becomes a super-mutant,
andtheg;amt;c-
•
~~
Necropolis
The Necropolis is filled with ghoul-like
mutants under the command of a chief ghoul
named Set. Set, in turn, is controlled by the
Master and his army of super-mutants. Set is
under orders to capture any pure humans he
finds-such as the player character-and turn
4
them over to the Master.
3
L ~ -t,A~W"-""'~'
the Dead Sewers
2. Hall of the Dead
3. Set's Throne
J 4. Secret Passage
J
IL
Necropolis, Hall of the Dead
1. Exit qrid to World Map
2. Office
3. Access to Motel Sewers 5
Children Harry
of the Cathedral
EJ
Larry
down to Necropolis vault
4. Ladder up to Street level 2
of Watershed map
5. Broken Pump Parts
(for fixing pump in Watershed)
Watershed sewers
-,
J
[13/1
1. Access to Ha II of the Dead Sewers
2. Access to Water Shed Sewers
3. Water Shed
4. Access to Necropolis Vault
5. Children of the Cathedral Hospital
Watershed
1. Elevator
Special Adventures
~ Set will offer the player a job. He wants to destroy the super-mutants
guarding the Watershed.
Special Points
~ Ghoul guards may have orders to capture pure humans. Most ordinary
ghouls, however, will not bother humans unless they are attacked first.
Some will be good sources of information .
~ A secret door lies behind Set's throne in the Hall of the Dead . A hidden
corridor leads to his nearby room, where another secret door exists.
Traps cover the secret doors. There is also an access to the under-
ground sewers through this corridor.
~ Garret's room, also in the Hall of the Dead, has a locked refrigerator.
Inside is a shotgun, ammo, flares, and soft drink bottles. The player's
reward will be drawn from here if he performs Set's job. The higher his
reputation with Set, the more he has impressed him, the more he will
receive as a reward .
~ Parts needed to repair the water pumps in the watershed can be found
in the ghoul underground, in the sewers beneath the Hall of the Dead.
~ The player can repair the water pumps in the northeast corner of the
watershed, restoring water to the Necropolis.
Special Dangers
~ If the player does not find the water chip and take it back to Vault 13,
his home community will d will end.
~ If the player takes the water chip and does not repair the water pump,
the Necropolis will die within about one week.
~ Beware the Glowing Ones. They are radioactive, and close combat can
result in the player receiving radiation damage as well as ordinary
combat hits.
~ A family of giant rats living in the Necropolis Vault medical lab are also
radioactive, glowing slightly. Their bite can cause radiation damage.
~ The ghouls under Set believe that they control the Necropolis. The real
power, however, lies with the super-mutants and their mysterious
Master.
~ If the player accepts Set's offer of a job, he or she may still be attacked
by Set's ghouls, since his control over the creatures is not perfect. If the
player is captured, Set will order the human killed.
~ As soon as you enter the Necropolis, you will set a timer that will begin
counting off the days until the Master learns the location of Vault 13.
Even if you save the Vault by finding the water purifier chip, sooner or
later the Vault will be invaded by the super-mutants, and the game
will be over.
Special Adventures
~ The player will be sent on a quest to recover an artifact in order to
prove his or h~ worthiness to join the Brotherhood. You will have to
travelto t~
3
fiTi
I
4
I
Elevator to ~urtace
2. Elevator to Levels 2-4
3. StUft!fUOIII
4. Checkout
5. Combat training
1. Elevator
1. Elevator to levels 1-4 2. Hall of Worship
2. Master Scribe's Room 3. Council Room
3. Knights' Workroom 4. Elder's Room
~ Talus may send the player on a quest to find out what happened to a
missing Brotherhood scout. The scout is being held prisoner by merce-
naries in the Old Town section of the Hub.
~ You can help Brother Michael with his romantic interest in Brother
Lara. He may give the player some grenades in gratitude.
Special Points
~ If the player views combat demonstrations in the Combat Training Hall,
he or she may receive extra skill points in Melee or Unarmed Combat.
How many points depends on how much of the demonstration the
player watches.
~ If you successfully lie to Brother Michael, telling him first that "Bob"
sent you to get a new weapon, and then that "those girls downstairs"
put you up to it, he may give you three pulse grenades, useful against
robots.
~ You can run an errand for Michael by taking three pulse grenades to
Brother Sophia. If you carry out the task, he will give you a SIG-Sauer
pistol.
~ Brother Jennifer might be able to tell the player about who's who
within the Brotherhood. If the player is male, she may develop quite a
crush on him.
~ Talus may give you authorization to check weapons and armor out
from Michael.
~ Master Scribe Vree can give the player a holodisk describing the FEV
virus and its effects. This disk provides the player with one good means
of defeating the Master at the end of the game. Giving Vree's disk to
the Master convinces him that he has failed in his bid to create a new
world.
Special Dangers
~ Don't pick a fight with Rhombus! If you draw a weapon on him, he will
use his gatling laser and kill you on the spot.
~ Getting caught stealing from Rhombus is a bad idea. The second time
you attempt some thievery, they will most likely kick you out, or even
attempt to kill you.
The Glovv
This used to be a top-secret military facility where some rather unpleasant
bioweapon research was being conducted. During the war the surface facility took a
direct hit from a nuclear weapon, and the crater is still highly radioactive ... hence,
the name.
If you have a rope, you can attach it to the steel beam on the crater rim, and lower
yourself inside the first level. Further exploration will lead the player deeper and
deeper into the underground reaches of the old base. There are six underground
levels, and the crater breached only the top two.
Here, the player will be able to uncover certain secrets about the cause of the war
and the origin of the mutants. There are also weapons and other equipment to be
found here. Be careful, though. The Glow can only be approached by characters who
are suitably protected from the high radiation here, and there are other dangers as
well.
Special Adventures
~ You must visit The Glow to find the holodisk that will gain you admit-
tance to the Brotherhood. This is vital to winning the game, if you
wish to defeat the Master by giving him the FEV disk from Vree.
185,.
NOTE: There is no Automap available for "The Glow"
surface entrance. It's easy to render, however:
3 -~2
1. Crater
2. Crater Rim
3. Steel beam projecting
into crater, rope required
for descent.
l Glow, Level 1
Supplies
Glow, Level 2
tlevator
2
Wall
Locker
Ldryt:
Stash
of
Weap
Glow, Level4
Robots
X
Power X
Generator
[
1. Elevator: Blue Passkey Required
2. Elevator: Red Passkey Required
~· Level6
Special Points
~ You will find the Brotherhood disk on a body on Level 1.
~ The same body has a yellow security pass key that gives you access to
an elevator connecting the top three levels.
~ A body in the corner of the northeast room on Level 2 has a red pass.
This will let you use a red security elevator on Level 3, connecting
Levels 3, 4, and 6.
~ A body in the southwest room on Level 4 has a blue pass that will give
you access to a blue security elevator, connecting Levels 4, 5, and 6.
The blue elevator is not working currently.
~ On Level 6, you may be able to repair a generator and restore power
to the lights and the blue elevator.
~ Use every working computer you can find, applying your Science Skill
to make it work. You can learn a lot here about the FEV virus and the
super-mutants.
~ Check all lockers, storage areas, and rooms. There is a wealth of
weapons and special equipment to be found here. Be especially alert
for energy weapons (lasers and plasma guns), Small Energy Cells, Micro
Fusion Cells, grenades, and explosives.
~ A charred body on Level 2 has some dynamite and plastic explosives.
Special Dangers
~ Radiation is the big one here. You will take radiation hits as soon as you
arrive at the
surface crater. The only way to avoid damage is to take Rad-X, which
will increase your Radiation Resistance to 50% for the first 24 hours,
then drop it to 25% for the next 24 hours. You can stop before reaching
The Glow and take your pills, to avoid that initial hit. Radiation damage
can be healed by Rad Away, or by a visit to a doctor. You should not
read a book, use the Doctor Skill, or any other lengthy use of time.
~ Keep an eye out for booby traps throughout The Glow. Your Traps Skill
will detect and disarm them. Be especially suspicious of security areas
with steel-grid floors ... but there are traps on some other floors as
well. The elevators will give you a shock if you try to open them with-
out the appropriate pass key.
~ When you restore power by repairing the generators, you will revive a
number of sentry robots, which will proceed to attack intruders ...
meaning you.
,
The Angel s Boneyard
The Angel's Boneyard is a vast sea of ruins-the wreckage of what once was the
metropolis of Los Angeles. It includes a number of sites, all of potential interest.
The various locations include:
B
3 2
1 L Nicole
4
[_!_; r:J 2
.....I
[1J C] Katja
n ...m 7
-] 1. Exit grid to Blade 's HQ
2. Exit Grid to World Map
Followers' HQ
1. Entrance
2. Exit grid to Blade's Map
3. Exit grid to World Map
4 . Entrance down to Taylor 's Store
5. Zimmerman
6. Smitty
7. M iles
8. Entrance down to Bedroom
9. Entrance down to Mushroom Cave
Adytum
..L
F.,
3
I
r 2
I
1j L"=-::H
2
Nest
2.
3.
I Razor
D
B
1.
~] G 1. Warehouse
2. Mote
.., 3.
4.
Bridge
Exit Grid to Nest
~
I
4. Gunrunners' warehouse
1. Exit Grid to Followers Map
2. Exit Grid to World Map
3. Exit Grid to Nest
4. Exit Grid to Adytum
Blades' HQ
Special Adventures 4'
~ You can try helping Jon Zimmerman, in Adytum, avenge his son by
killing the leader of the Blades. This is not recommended!
~ Alternatively, help the Blades liberate Adytum. To help them, you must
clear the Deathclaw infestation-including Momma and her eggs, in
the basement-from the deserted area between the Gunrunners and
the Blades' HQ.
~ Help the Gunrunners, and they will give you a choice of weapons and
high-tech armor. You can also pick some good weapons up when they
leave their base, after Adytum's liberation.
Special Points
~ You should make contact with Nicole and the Followers of the
Apocalypse. She will be your link to Laura, a spy inside the Cathedral.
Special Dangers
~ The Blades are tough, and very hard to kill. Don't start a fight with
them unless you have a clear line of retreat.
19119
The Military Base
This is the super-mutant stronghold, a former military base ruled over by the
Lieutenant, a highly intelligent super-mutant who is the Master's second-in-com-
mand. This is the source of the attacks that have been destroying caravans out of
the Hub. Pure humans are captured to be "dipped" in the Vats in the lowest level of
the facility, transforming them into super-mutants. The rest are killed .
.
1. Exit Grid to Entrance Map
2. Force Field Controls
3. Robot Control Center
4. Elevator
1. Elevatur
1. Elevator L. tlevator (Inoperative)
2. Armory 3. Robot Repair Center
4. The Lieutenant
Base (Stronghold), Level 2 5. Vat Control Room
6. The Vats
Vats, Level 2
1. Elevator
2. Security Corridor
3. Prison Cells
4. Elevator
s. Elevator (Inoperative)
Vats, Level 1
Special Adventures
~ If you can reach the computer control room on Level 1 of the Stronghold,
you will have the opportunity to hack into the Master's network and
reprogram his robots. You can also reset the controls for the force field
barriers throughout the base. A pair of radios can be used to toggle the
fields on and off.
~ A computer in the Vats Control room will let you turn off all force fields
permanently.
~ A computer in the Vats Control Room will also cause an explosion that will
destroy the Vats. You can also place explosives on the Vat Computer, which
will have the same effect. Destroying the Vats is one of the goals of the
game.
~ If you can kill the Lieutenant. you can take from his body a key that will
arm a nuclear weapon in the basement room of the Master's Lair.
Special Points
~ The Armory on Level 2 of the Stronghold contains a number of weapons,
including laser rifles and laser pistols, one minigun, and some ammo and
power cells.
~ If you can reprogram the robots, you can get them to target one another
or even to attack the super-mutants instead of you. Reprogramming a
Mr. Handy on the lower Vat level and having it continue its cleaning
chores will help you get to the Vat Control Room.
~ EMP grenades are the weapon of choice against robots. They don't affect
living creatures, but they pay havoc with a robot's electronic circuitry!
~ Blowing up the Vats will reward the player with 5,000 Experience Points.
~ Killing the Lieutenant will reward the player with 7,500 Experience
Points.
~ Killing the super-mutant Flip will reward the player with 3,000 Experience
Points.
II 'Ill m I
r
~ The weapons locker in the Lieutenant's Room has some extremely use-
ful equipment-a gatling laser, Micro Fusion Cells, and a StealthBoy
unit.
Special Dangers
~ If you are captured, you will be brought before the Lieutenant on Level
1 of the Vats. If you resist, you will be killed. If you yield, you will be
turned into a super-mutant and lose the game.
~ Once you cause an overload in the reactor system for the Vats (by
accessing a computer in the Vat Control Room) you will have only a
short time in which to get out of the base. How long depends on
which coded command you choose. Choose wisley!
The Cathedral 3
This is the operational headquarters for the
Children. By now, the player will have learned
that the Children of the Cathedral are in fact
working for the Master. Their immediate head is
the dark figure known as Morpheus.
2
Special Adventures
~ Morpheus, the leader of the
Children of the Cathedral, can be
used to get to the Master. You must
kill the Master to win the game.
1. Exit grid to Front of building
2. Aitar
3. Locked door to underground vault (Black Pass)
4. locked door to stairs going up (Red Pass)
Level3
1. Stairs up/down
2. Stairs down
Level4
Morpheus
Special Points
~ Morpheus is the key to reaching the Master. He possesses a black
badge that opens the doorway leading down to the Master's Vault.
With careful handling, and by convincing him that you have informa-
tion about your Vault which the Master must have, he can be persuad-
ed to take you before this dread creature.
~ If you can kill Morpheus, you can steal his black badge.
~ Lasher possesses a red key that will let you reach Morpheus and/or the
door leading to the Master's Vault. If you kill him, you can also get the
purple robes that will let you move unchallenged through the Master's
domain.
~ A number of Nightkin guard Morpheus upstairs. If you can kill them,
you can take their StealthBoy units, devices that will give you a better
chance of slipping undetected past the Master's forces. They also pos-
sess some awesome firepower!
Special Dangers
~ If the player at any time leaves the Cathedral after talking to
Morpheus, he or she will be attacked by several thugs who bring
greetings from Morpheus.
1. Elevator
2. Prisoners
1. Stairs down from Cathedral 3. Gibbering Psychics
2. Secret Door behind Book Shelves
3. Caverns
4. Vault Entrance Master's Vault, Level 2
5. Elevator down to Lair
- - - - - - - - - - -
1. Elevator
2. Elevator down to Level 4
3. Operations
4. Corridor of Revulsion
5. The Master
Special Adventures
~ This is the payoff, the head villain, the Boss. Cap this guy and you've
won the game.
Special Points
~ Once again, the Children's robe, like the one you might have taken off
of Lasher's body, will get you through the Master's Vault unnoticed-
usually. A StealthBoy, if you got one from the Military Base or a
Nightkin, can also come in real handy here.
~ The Corridor of Revulsion will cause some problems for characters with
high Intelligence and Perception. These effects can be reduced consid-
erably by carrying a Psychic Nullifier in your Inventory. A Psychic
Nullifier can be found in the mad psychic's room on the upper level of
the Vats.
Special Dangers
~ Oh, come on! You're about to face the biggest, baddest boss in the
game-and you want to know about special dangers?
~ The Master possesses two gatling lasers built into his body. He is bril-
liant, capricious, and insane, and one wrong word can end in the play-
er's death or forceful conversion to the ranks of the mutant army.
~ If you fight the Master, you will also have to face the Horde ... a large
group of super-mutants that will rush to join you in battle. They will
attack from the rear, coming up through the Corridor of Revulsion.
They are armed with a variety of weapons.
~ Whether you choose to set off the nuclear weapon or use the holodisk
to talk the Master into destroying himself, you will have a limited
amount of time to get out of the Master's Lair, through the cavern
outside, up the stairs to the Cathedral, through the Cathedral, and out
at last to the travel grid across the street. If you don't make it, you'll
die with the Master, so for Pete's sake don't stop on the way to play
with strangers!
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RATS:
You're glowing. Extreme contamination of game
suspense.
This chapter gives it all away .. . what happens at each site, and why. Read this chapter only if
you don't mind having the major secrets of Fallout described in detail.
Locations in Fallout
The following places and plot points are where most of the action takes place in Fallout. If
you're wondering what's supposed to happen in a given spot, or why you should risk your
neck in there, check it out on the list below.
Vault 13 is where you start the adventure . A chip controlling the water purification machinery
has failed, and in four months, the water here will be too foul to drink. Your whole purpose
in the game is to save Vault 13.
Once you leave the Vault, the entrance will seal automatically and cannot open for one day.
Secrets
~ You can return here occasionally to get some medical supplies-stimpaks and
the like. You can also return the Vault 13 to talk to the Overseer if you're
undecided what to do next. Be sure to save your game first before returning
for advice; that way, you can pick up the game where you left off later, with-
out having lost any time.
Vault 15 is located some distance east of your starting point. The Overseer suggests that you
might begin your search there. In fact, there's not much to find there except mutant pig rats,
great'er mole rats, and other unpleasant vermin.
Rating: Unimportant
The Point: Since most players encounter this vault early in their adventure, the location pro-
vides some challenges for them to sharpen their skills against... larger, meaner varmints than
the cave rats back home, and a chance to try manipulating things (using the Hand Icon) like
the sewer entrance, computers, and an elevator. Also, players are liable to stumble across the
village of Shady Sands while traveling from Vault 13 to Vault 15.
Secrets:
~ The only way in is through a sewer hole in a small shed in the desert. You'll
have to use the Hand Icon to gain access.
Shady Sands
Description: A small, desert village. Sites include the town itself and the garden and Brahmin
pens to the east.
Shady Sands is a small, quiet village in the desert between Vault 13 and Vault 15. Its leader is
Aradesh, and here the player will have his first chance to interact with non-player characters.
There is a doctor in town-Razlo-who can heal the player character's wounds, if necessary, and
a leather-jacketed man named ian whom you can recruit to join your quest if you have the
money. Talking to the right people, especially Aradesh and his daughter Tandi, will provide
important information about the world.
Point: Shady Sands provides the setting and motivation for several relatively easy starting
adventures, including destroying the rad scorpion nest and rescuing Tandi from kidnappers.
These adventures will help the player sharpen his skills and will also gain him the beginnings
of a reputation. Here he will have to decide how to treat the locals-with politeness and
respect, or with arrogance and gunfire. He can make some valuable allies here if he can win
the townspeople to his side.
Secrets
~ Be sure to barter with Seth for his rope. Offer him a knife and a flare for the
deal. The rope is vitally necessary later in the game to enter Level 2 of Vault
15. Later in the game, you will need a rope to enter the crater known as The
Glow.
~ If you return to talk to Aradesh two days after destroying the Rad Scorpion
threat, he will ask you to save Tandi, his daughter, from desert raiders. This
subplot adventure will give the player experience points, a good reputation,
and a fair amount of loot-money, weapons, and armor-taken from the
raiders' bodies or the bookshelf, desk, and fridge in Garl's room .
Wiping out the scorpions inside will let you test your combat skills and impress the people of
Shady Sands. Seth, the guard at Shady Sands' front gate, will take you here if you ask him. It
is not necessary to go here to win the game, but the experience can be valuable. Careful,
though. Those scorpions can kill you with the poison-laden stingers on their tails.
Rating: Unimportant
Point: Killing rad scorpions will give the player experience points and help him sharpen up his
combat skills.
Secrets
~ When you kill a scorpion, use the Hand Icon on the corpse. You will be able to click
and drag on the scorpion's tail, placing it in your Inventory. Later, you can give
these tails to Doc Razlo in Shady Sands, and he will prepare an antivenin ... which
will be especially useful if you took damage from the scorpions in the battle.
Desert Raider Camp
Description: A camp in the desert not far from Shady Sands inhabited by a nomad warrior
clan known as the Khans. They are led by a warrior chief named Garl.
The Khans are a constant nuisance to nearby towns like Shady Sands. While the player does
not need to investigate the camp, it does offer a chance of learning something about the sur-
rounding area and provides the player with a good source of enemies to overcome ... and the
resultant loot and Experience Points. The subplot involving the kidnapping of Tandi, Aradesh's
daughter, is resolved here and can also gain the player points and an enhanced reputation.
Use caution, however. The nomads are easily angered, and it's not wise to challenge them on
their home turf without careful preparation.
Size: Small
Rating: Unimportant
Point: The Raiders are generic bad guys for the player to negotiate with or fight. There are
Experience Points to be won, and loot to be taken.
Secrets
~ The safest way to rescue Tandi is to offer Garl a ransom. He will accept 600
caps (modified for your Barter Skill and Garl's reaction to you) for her release.
Do not attempt to fight the raiders unless you are well-armed and, ideally,
have an ally or two. You might consider hiring the mercenary you will
encounter in the Shady Sands guard quarters.
~ Consider returning for this subplot adventure after you've been to Junktown
and picked up a submachine gun from Gretch. It's long odds against you
indeed if you try to take on Garl's bad boys and girls with nothing but a pistol!
Junktown
Description: A town-larger than Shady Sands-with several important sites, including a gen-
eral store, a hotel called the Crash Pad, and a casino run by a thug named Gizmo.
Junktown is an important stop on the player's itinerary. Here, he can get weapons, armor,
equipment, and recruits for his band. The player can learn about the Necropolis, the disap-
pearing caravans, and the Deathclaw here, and he can pick up some important allies.
Size: Medium
Rating: Important
Point: Junktown is an important plot point that will set the character on the right path and
prepare him for what's happening next.
Secrets
~ Doc Morbid has a sideline in used body parts in the basement of his clinic. An
interesting subplot can have the player taking Morbid and his henchmen
down. One of the henchmen, Gretch, has a submachine gun, which will be a
far better weapon for the player than a pistol or shotgun.
~ Doc Morbid has a safe in his lab. Inside is money, ammunition, and a doctor's
bag. The safe is protected by a booby trap; if you fail to pick the safe's lock
three times in a row, the trap will explode and destroy the contents. Use your
Traps skill to detect the trap, then use it again to disarm it.
~ The trick to rescuing Sinthia is to offer the raider $100, or talk him down with-
out threatening him.
~ You may be able to acquire an unexpected ally in town . Try wearing leather
jacket when you help a man who is trying to get into a building but can't
because a dog is keeping him out. If you can get the dog to follow you, you
will have a companion in your travel. .. and an ally who will attack your oppo-
nents in combat. You can also feed him an iguana-on-a-stick.
The Hub
Description: A large trading settlement.
The Hub is a large and important trading settlement based in a town relatively untouched by
the war. Caravans of various goods travel between here and LA, Junktown, Shady Sands, and
even the Brotherhood of Steel. The player will meet a number of important characters here,
learn some important information, and set off on several important adventures from here.
Centrally located to a number of other important sites, the Hub could easily serve as a base of
operations.
Size: Large
Point: The Hub is a good place for the player to take stock of his current position and decide
what to do and where to go next. Like the hub of a wheel, the Hub gives access, through
numerous spokes, to a large number of locations and adventures throughout the surrounding
area, many of which are vital to the game's successful resolution . It can serve as a base of
operations for the player, as well as a source of supplies and weapons. The various subplots
provide the player with a great deal of experience, and the jobs he can take here will earn
him money. If he signs on as a bodyguard for a caravan, he will be able to reach important
sites such as the Brotherhood of Steel or Adytum, and he will probably pick up some useful
combat experience and loot along the way. Finally, some encounters-especially the encounter
with Harold, the old mutant-will let the player acquire some extremely useful information.
Secrets
A number of interesting subplots can be opened and run here, including "jobs" for Decker,
joining the Thieves' Guild, blackmailing Bob, and either robbing or taking out a loan from
Lorenzo.
~ A deal can be struck with the Water Merchants, providing for water shipments
to the Vault. While this will not solve the water problem, it will delay the end
long enough to allow the player additional time to find the water chip. It will
also increase the chances that the Master will discover and invade your Vault.
~ Bob is getting human body parts from Doc Morbid in Junktown and selling
them as Iguana Bits (tastes just like chicken). It may be possible to blackmail
him.
~ Borrowing money from Lorenzo is probably a bad idea. Stealing from Lorenzo
is better, though difficult. You will need to get past his two mercenary guards
outside, either by killing them quietly or doing some very good sneaking. A
third guard is inside. Deal with him, and if you can pick the lock on the inside
door, you'll be able to get several thousand caps.
~ If you want to have Kane take you to see Decker, do not claim (or admit) to
being a member of the Thieves' Circle. If he asks you what kind of work you're
looking for, tell him, "Anything. If it pays well, I'll do it." You might also be
able to get in if you say that Lorenzo sent you. If this isn't true, he might still
believe you.
~ If you kill Jain, the High Priestess, at Decker's orders, Decker and his people will
be killed shortly thereafter by the Children of the Cathedral in a retaliatory
strike. If you kill her even without Decker's orders, Kane will give you 1,000
caps in gratitude.
Size: Small
Rating: Unimportant
Point: Killing the Deathclaw will give the player still more Experience Points and will also
make him a hero in the Hub. The caves will also give the player a hint about what might have
happened during the war. Finally, the caravans will continue to disappear, letting everyone
know that the Deathclaw was not responsible and that a monster of another kind is abroad.
Secrets
~ To open the way to the Deathclaw, talk to Butch Harris at the Far-Go Traders
and ask about the vanishing caravans ... then talk to Beth at the weapons shop
about the Deathclaw, and finally, at her suggestion, talk to Harold in Old
Town .
~ The dead body of a super-mutant in the cave contains a disk, called the
Mutant Transmissions Disk. It contains information about the war and the
appearance of the super-mutants.
The Brotherhood is extremely close-knit and suspicious of outsiders, and getting at all close to
them is difficult. If you can open channels with them, however, they can provide a wealth of
information vital to the further development of the story, including the location of the Vats,
something of the history of the war, and a story about something called " the Forgotten
Base." The player will also be able to obtain some radiation chems here, vital if he is to
explore The Glow.
Size: Small
Rating: Important
Point: The Brotherhood provides crucial information, including the location of the Vats. Vree
can give the player a holodisk with which he can defeat the Master at the end of the game. It
is also affords an excellent opportunity for the player to improve his skills and to acquire new
and better weapons.
Secrets
~ To join the Brotherhood, the player must go to The Glow and retrieve the
Brotherhood holodisk from a body on the upper level of that facility.
Once a military base, there is nothing left on the surface but a radioactive crater. If the player
can reach the underground levels, he will find a holographic disk which is the artifact Cabbot
at the Brotherhood of Steel told him to find. If the player retrieves that disk, he will be admit-
ted to the Brotherhood. Also present is a research laboratory with a large, broken flask or
glass container. The deadly FEV virus was contained here until the nuclear strike, when it was
accidentally released. The virus is responsible for the mutation that creates the super-mutants.
Also available on these levels are some of the most powerful weapons and armor available in
the game. In addition, information gathered here will tell the player what caused the
Apocalypse and let him learn the truth about of the mutations.
Size: Large
The Point: Key information must be gathered here. The disk, found on a dead body on the
upper level, will let the player join the Brotherhood, where key weapons and information can
be acquired. Computers and holodisk recorders can be accessed to learn a great deal of back-
ground information. And finally, this is a good opportunity to stock up on the really heavy
arms and armor for the big push to the story's climax.
Secrets
~ To enter The Glow, the player must have ropes acquired by barter from Seth
early in the game, at Shady Sands, or elsewhere along the way. Use the rope
on the steel beam on the west edge of the crater.
~ There are numerous secrets to be uncovered in The Glow. Check every comput-
er, every level, every room, every body. Be alert for color-coded pass keys with
which to operate the elevators, for holodisks that contain useful information,
and, of course, for weapons and energy cells.
~ The holodisk that will admit you to the Brotherhood is on a body on Level 1.
~ A yellow pass that operates the yellow elevator is found on a body on Level 1.
~ A red pass that operates the red elevator to Levels 3, 4, and 6 can be found on
a body in the northeast room on Level 2.
~ A blue pass for the blue elevator to Levels 4, 5, and 6 can be found on a body
in the room in the southwest corner of Level 4.
209~
~ The generators in the Operations Center on Level 6 can be repaired to restore
power to the blue elevator and the lights.
Each of these sites introduce subplots that can spill over to other sites. The Followers can give
you access to a spy inside the Cathedral and can provide you with allies for an attack on the
COC. The Gunrunners are a good source of high-end weapons. Momma Deathclaw provides a
chance-a dangerous one-for building up your Experience Points before your last big push.
None of this is absolutely vital to the successful completion of the game, but the various sub-
plots can keep you busy here for a long time!
Size: Each individual site is small. Collectively, they cover a large area.
Rating: Unimportant
Point: These areas provide the player with recruits and allies, new weapons and equipment,
Experience Points, and a chance to rest and recuperate before the last big battles.
Secrets
~ There is a Followers spy inside the Cathedral named Laura. She can only be
approached if you first contact Nicole, the head of the Followers. Nicole will
tell you how to contact Laura, using the code phrase "Red Rider."
~ Jon Zimmerman, in Adytum, will ask you to avenge the death of his son by
killing the leader of the Blades. In fact, the Adytum Regulators killed
Zimmerman's son, and the Blades are innocent.
~ Warning! The Blades look like ordinary people, but they are tough, extremely
hard to kill. Don't pick a fight with these people unless you want a real battle
on your hands!
~ Instead, you can help the Blades free Adytum from the tyranny of the
Regulators. To do this, you must enter the game map east of the Blades' HQ
and west of the Gunrunners' warehouse and eliminate all of the Deathclaws
you find there ... including the mother Deathclaw and her eggs in the base-
ment level of the large room. This allows the Gunrunners to arm the Blades
for their attack on Adytum.
~ Fans of the movie Aliens will know what to expect. If you don't kill Momma,
more Deathclawswill appear every time you return to this map.
F
~ If you wipe out the Deathclaw infestation, the Gunrunners will reward you by
letting you choose a weapon or some good armor from their stock or you can
arm the Blades. You can also return to their old location after Adytum is liber-
ated and pick up whatever they left behind.
The Cathedral
Description: A huge and gloomy cathedral controlled now by the Children of the Cathedral.
The Cathedral is the headquarters of the notorious Children, who, in fact, are servants of the
Master. Morpheus, the head of the Children of the Cathedral, is one of the Master's most
important officers.
Size: Small
Point: The Cathedral provides the player with his sole access to the Master and is, therefore,
vital to the successful completion of the game. It also offers a chance to rack up some more
Experience Points by killing Lasher and Morpheus, as well as some weapons, equipment, and a
purple robe that you can use later as a disguise.
Secrets
~ The Followers spy inside the Cathedral is named Laura, and she can only be
approached if you first contact Nicole, the head of the Followers. She has a red
pass key to the door behind the altar and can get you in to see Morpheus.
~ Lasher has a red pass key also. If you kill him, you can get the key and his
robes, which are very useful as a disguise later on. You can also talk him into
giving you the key.
~ If you can kill Morpheus, you can get his black pass key, which gives you access
to the secret door leading to the Master's Vault. If you do not contact Laura,
you will have to either kill Morpheus and take the key, or talk him into taking
you to the Master.
~ The secret passage leading to the Master, which can only be accessed by the
black pass key, is hidden behind a bookcase in a room behind the altar.
~ The secret passage leading to the Master, which can only be accessed by the
black pass key, is hidden behind a bookcase in a room behind the altar. There is
a hidden Nightkin in the corner, armed with a really big gun. If you are not
wearing robes, or have one of the COC badges, then you will be attacked as
soon as you walk in the room.
---------------------
This is the headquarters of the Master, the mutant human-computer hybrid who plans to
turn all pure-strain humans into an army of super-mutants, with which he intends to conquer
the world. He once was human but was transformed into what he is now through exposure
to the FEV virus.
Size: Small
Point: Though you must also destroy the Vats, the central point of the game is to penetrate
this vault and kill the Master.
Secrets
~ One level down from the entrance to the vault is a room to the northwest
containing several gibbering, obviously insane psychics. A psychic nullifier,
taken from the psychics, can be used to protect the player from the effects of
the Corridor of Revulsion.
~ The Master can be destroyed in any one of three different ways: Give him the
holodisk from Vree; go to the basement and use the Lieutenant's arming key
or your Science Skill on the bomb controls; or kill the Master in combat. If you
choose the third course, it is best if you attack with a number of allies, if you
use the most powerful weapons you can muster-Gatling lasers or miniguns
are best-and if you wear a StealthBoy unit to make it difficult for the Master
to use his Perception to acquire you as a target. You should make targeted
shots to increase your chance of doing some serious damage.
~ If you elect to use the nuke in the basement, you will need to slip through a
room filled with super-mutants to find a hidden switch and turn off a protec-
tive force field in front of the elevator. You will then need to kill two heavily
armed guards outside the room where the bomb is kept.
~ Once you've set the bomb or destroyed the Master, you have about four min-
utes. Run! Remember that every turn in combat is a waste of five seconds.
From this base, the super-mutants launch their raids against passing caravans. The "
,n meaning pure huma~~ red*'~ all other~ ~r~ ki
pt in cells until they aridf to the Vats for their metamo
super-mutant base is a serious danger to all surrounding communities, as well as the caravans.
The player will have to destroy this base to eliminate the threat.
Size: Medium
Rating: Vitally important
Point: This is one of the two key locations vital to winning the game. Destroying the Vats and
the Master both are necessary for achieving a complete victory in Fallout. Eliminating the
Lieutenant and the Vats also let the player accumulate a lot of Experience Points and acquire
numerous good weapons and equipment.
Secrets
~ The Lieutenant has his headquarters on the lowest level of the Vats.
~ Robots on the Military Base upper level can be reprogrammed to fire on one
another or on super-mutants, while a Mr. Handy robot on the lowest level of
the Vats can be reprogrammed to continue its cleaning duties, which can help
the player enter the Vat Control Room.
~ A conversation between the Lieutenant and Van Hagan reveals that the Master
knows about Vault 13 and will soon take steps to capture the pure-strain
humans there.
~ A great many useful weapons and items of equipment can be acquired in the
base and Vats levels; radios can be used to confuse the super-mutants and to
turn force fields off, while StealthBoy units can make the player all but invisi-
ble.
~ There is a nuclear arming key in the locker beside the Lieutenant that you will
need if you decide to destroy the Master by setting off the bomb in his basement.
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The World of Fallout
• • Presented here is a map of the world of Fallout, showing the rela-
tive locations of each site. On foot, you'll be able to travel across
I
the terrain at the rate of roughly one square per day ... a bit slower
J
' L N
in the mountains, and a bit faster in the cities .
u
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•
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' ' Fallout: A Quick and
• •• L
·-·
'
MAP OF TME WOIILD
OF
J- -- -- Dirty Walkthrough
fALLOUT The following section provides an extremely brief and unadorned
walkthrough of the entire story line of Fallout. Note, first of all,
TN
1. Leave Vault 13 and proceed to Shady Sands, in the desert between Vault 13
and Vault 15.
2. See Aradesh, and talk to Seth at the front gate. Get Seth to take you to the
Rad Scorpion caves and kill the Rad Scorpions. Return to Shady Sands and give
the tails to Dr. Razlo. Take the antidote if you need to heal poison damage
after the fight Barter a knife and a flare for a rope from Seth. Talk to the
mercenary in the guard house, in order to learn the location of Junktown and
the Hub.
3. Go to Junktown. Go to Doc Morbid's and sneak, talk, or fight your way past
Cougar and Flash, the two mercenary guards. Find the secret lab in the base-
ment and explore it, taking what you can. When Gretch finds you, kill him and
take his subm · e gun. Kill Doc Morbid if he finds you, or if you enter his Ia
while he is present. Use your Traps skill and Lockpick skill to open the locker and
take what you can. Sell some of your excess loot for bottle caps, but keep the
SMG.
4. Talk to Killian and help him thwart the assassination attempt. Take the assas-
sin's hunting rifle. Agree to help Killian against Gizmo. Go to Gizmo's, use the
bug on the desk or use the tape recorder, and get Gizmo to hire you to assassi-
nate Killian. Return to Killian and reveal Gizmo's plot. Take your reward, then
go find Lars near the front gate and volunteer to help him against Gizmo. Kill
Gizmo. Barter some of the loot you've acquired so far, such as the assassin's pis-
tol, for bottle caps. Go back to Gizmo's and check the bodies and the lockers in
the bedrooms for loot.
5. Go to the Crash Pad. Take a room from Marcelles. When a raider tries to hold
Sinthia hostage, talk him down or pay him 100 caps, if you've got them. Play
out other subplots, such as the Skulz and Trish, to improve your Speech and
Combat skills and to increase your reputation.
6. Leave Junktown and travel to the Hub. Talk to all of the people you can and
learn what you can, especially Butch Harris at the Far-Go Traders, Beth at the
Weapons Store, and Harold, the old mutant in Old Town. Ask about the
Necropolis, if you have the chance, to get that city's location on your Travel
Map. Visit Butch Harris and sign on with a Caravan as a guard on a run to the
Brotherhood of Steel. While you're waiting for the caravan, spend the time
completing various subplots, including Loxley and the Gauntlet, Bob and the
Iguana-On-A-Stick concession; and, if you feel up to it, try breaking into
Lorenzo's and stealing the contents of his safe. Use your Traps skill to get past
the booby traps, both in the Gauntlet and at Lorenzo's Friendly Loan Company.
Meet with the Water Merchants and arrange for water shipments to the Vault,
but remember that each caravan going to your home Vault will bring closer
the day the Master discovers its location. Use the money you earn, blackmail,
or steal to buy the best weapons you can, including explosives and hand
grenades, if possible.
7. If you feel ready for the challenge, talk to Harold again and get the location of
the Deathclaw cave. Kill the Deathclaw, using explosives and the best weapons
you can muster, and retrieve the holodisk from the super-mutant skeleton.
8. When the day comes to join the caravan, do so. If you are attacked along the
way, use your newly acquired firepower to kill the raiders, then check all of
the bodies for weapons, ammo, money, and armor.
10. Go to the Necropolis. Avoid the ghouls at the motel by going down a manhole
in the street, and follow the sewer in a generally northerly direction. Find the
Ghoulish Underground, a safe haven. Talk to one of the ghouls and get the
equipment you will need to repair the water pumps. Travel east, then north,
and find another secret door to a passageway to the east. Make your way
through a rat trap, turn north, and find a large room with many bodies in it.
Search the bodies to find a plasma pistol.
11. Return to the main passageway and go north to a ladder going up, which
brings you out inside a long, narrow secret passage inside the Hall and just
behind the throne of the Ghoul king . Use your Traps Skill to get past a booby-
trapped secret door into Set's private quarters, and steal what you can from
the room. Be careful of traps! Emerge from the room into the main hall and
approach Set, the Ghoul king.
12. Talk to Set. Be respectful and ask what you can do for him, when you get the
opportunity. Accept his offer of a job to give the super-mutants at the water
shed a "dirt-nap." Leave the Hall, and find the sewers going north, either by
returning to the secret passageway behind Set's throne or by going to the
building at the southeast corner of the map and f inding a sewer access in the
southeast room. Emerge inside a building south of the water shed .
13. Enter the water shed and confront Harry, a super-mutant with a chain gun.
You can confuse him by claiming to be a ghoul, and slip past him and his
friends who are in a nearby room, or you can engage him in combat. Killing
him without being killed yourself will be tough . Use your best weapons-espe-
cially your SMG set to burst fire-and explosives, if you can. Try killing the two
super-mutants outside the watershed first to cut down the odds. Try using
grenades to cut Harry down to size, and try leading him and the others into
the alley between the watershed and the small, square building, stopping to
fire when you get the chance. Take Harry's laser rifle and Barry's flamer. Check
the bookcases in Harry's room for loot.
14. Follow the passageway through the building, past the water pumps and up to
a tiny room in the southeast corner, where a manhole leads down. Go down
the ladders two levels and emerge in a cave outside an underground vault. Go
into the vault, find the elevator, and go down to the second level. Go to the
command center where you see the lights of operational computers, use the
computers, and retrieve the water purifier chip. Retrace your steps; if you
slipped past the super-mutants before, you will have to move quickly to get
past them a second time, since there is only one door to the building . If the
mutants are dead, take the time to check bookcases and other possible hiding
places for more weapons, ammo, and equipment. Use the equ ipment from the
underground to repair the water pumps in the watershed .
15. Return to Set and claim your reward . Leave immediately for Vault 13 and give
the Overseer the water chip.
16. Set out now for The Glow. Take Rad-X along, if you've been able to pick some
up, to counteract the radiation. If you haven't found any Rad-X, try going first
to the Boneyard, and make your way to the Followers' Hang-out. There's some
Rad-X in one of the lockers on the west side of the building. Stop before you
reach The Glow and take the pills to lessen the harmful effects of the radiation
when you first arrive at the crater. Use the rope from Shady Sands on the steel
beam and descend into the crater. Search the bodies on the top level. One will
give you the message that you have found what you need for the
Brotherhood. Go through the entire base. Check every body, and operate every
computer. Learn everything you can about the FEV virus, the war, the mutants,
and anything else you can turn up. A yellow pass can be found on Level 1, a
red pass on Level 3, and a blue pass on Level 4. You'll need these to operate
the various elevators in the facility. Check armories and storage closets for
weapons. Use your Traps skill everywhere to warn of possible booby traps.
17. Return to the Brotherhood. Give them the Brotherhood disk to become a
Brotherhood initiate. Stay with the Brotherhood for a time, talking to every-
one you can and learning everything possible. Talk to Vree and warn her about
the Master and the coming invasion. Receive from her the FEV disk w ith which
you will be able to defeat the Master. If you have not already done so, accept
the mission to return to the Hub and free the Brotherhood initiate being held
in Old Town .
18. Spend time at both the Hub and with the Brotherhood, improving your skills
and acquiring weapons and equipment. When you are ready, head south to
the Angel's Boneyard.
19. Depending on how you want to play out the end of the game, spend time in
the Boneyard, acquiring information and/or members for your party. If you
plan a military attack against the Children of the Cathedral, find Nicole at the
Followers' HQ and enlist her help. Agree to her suggestion that the Followers
can provide a "diversion." When you get to the Cathedral, a number of
Follower scouts will be on hand to help you out.
20. Go to the Cathedral. If you go alone, scout the place out. Find and kill Lasher
in a room in the northwest corner, and take a red pass and his purple robes. If
you go with some of the Followers, they will attack the Children when you
attack Lasher. Wipe out all of the COC chanters and mercenaries on the main
level, but don't attack the forces in the tower. Try slipping upstairs in disguise,
find Morpheus on Level 4, kill him, and take his black pass. You may wish at
this point to scout the Master's Lair. Wear Lasher's robes as a disguise. Use the
black pass to open the door behind the altar, and find stairs going down. Fin
the secret door behind a bookcase without dust-or slip through when a pur-
ple-robed messenger comes out. Make your way through a cave to a vault
door guarded by super-mutants. When they challenge you, tell them you're on
a mission for the Master, and they will let you pass.
21. If you scout the Master's Lair now, do not try to challenge the Master yet.
However, find a locker next to an elevator on the lower level in the northwest
corner, in a guard room filled with super mutants. There should be a
StealthBoy inside the locker. Take it! It will help you penetrate the military
base-your next objective .
22. Go north to the Military Base, which is located approximately two weeks'
march west of Vault 13. If you plan a military attack, stop at the Brotherhood
HQ on the way and see if you can recruit troops to help you out.
23. At the Military Base you can use your army of allies to divert the super-
mutants, or you can create a diversion of your own with explosives on the
fence perimeter. Or don your purple robes, or a StealthBoy, and try walking
right past them. One way or another, kill or trick the super-mutants on guard
in the enclosed area, and kill the super-mutant standing by the door in the
cliff. Searching him will give you access to the code that opens the door. Take
his radio, as well as another radio from one of the other dead mutants, if
available. If you can only find one radio, you will need to search inside the
base to find a second.
24. Slip inside the base using the purple robes as a disguise, or using the
Stealth Boy to sneak past the guards. Make your way to the Force Field Control
Panel on the east side of the first level. If the base is not on alert, some pas-
sages will be blocked by amber-colored force fields that you can move
through-slowly-after taking some hits. If the base is on alert after your
attack outside, some passageways will be blocked by green force fields, which
are impenetrable. One computer-the one on the left-should present you
with a message indicating that it is a field control computer. Use your Science
Skill on this computer repeatedly, until you gain access by playing a game of
Hearts. Use one of your radios on the console, then use the other radio. You
will find yourself able to toggle the green force fields on or off, as needed.
25. Make your way to the robot control computer, also on the first level, hack
your way in using your Science Skill , and reprogram the robots. If no alert has
been given, try setting them to "no pests" so that they will not fire at any tar-
gets, including you . If the alert has been given, or if you would like now to
sow confusion throughout the base, try setting them to "large pests," which
will have them attacking the super-mutants.
26. Take the main elevator down to the Vats, Level 1. Use your Traps Skill to make
your way through the Security Corridor. Go to Security Elevator A and take it
down to the Vats, Level 2. Go to the outside of the Lieutenant's room and lis-
ten in as VanHagan tells the Lieutenant that the Master has discovered a new
source of pure-strain humans-Vault 13. Kill the Lieutenant, using the heaviest
firepower you have. Be sure to search his body and take whatever you find ...
especially a nuclear arming key.
27. Find and repair a Mr. Handy robot. Program it to continue its cleaning detail,
and follow it as it opens the force field to the Vats Control Room. You can
either use the Vats computer to destroy the Vats, or you can place a charge of
explosives on the control panel. Give yourself six minutes to make good your
escape. If you try hacking your way into the system, use the option to continue
hacking to get a detailed explanation of the codes. If you don't have an option
for more hacking, your Intelligence or Science skill is not good enough. Use the
explosives instead. Either way, leave as quickly as you can. Escape by taking the
Exit Grid outside the base entrance. Don't hang around to watch the fire-
works!
28. With the Vats destroyed, return to the Cathedral again. You should still be
wearing your robes as a disguise. If you haven't done so, find Morpheus at the
top of the tower-up the stairs behind the red-pass door-and kill him, taking
the black pass. If you've already scouted the Master's Lair, you know the drill.
Return to the lair, taking the most powerful weapons you have. A rocket
launcher, with lots of rockets, is a good choice.
29. Go to the underground vault and go inside. Take the main elevator to the first
level. Find the room of gibbering psychics in the northwest. Talk a psychic into
lowering the force field and giving you a psychic nullifier unit.
30. Take the main elevator down to the second level. Go through operations and
up the Corridor of Revulsion. The psychic nullifier should minimize the corri-
dor's effects on you. If you couldn't get a nullifier, keep pushing ahead, taking
hits.
31. Meet the Master at last. Engage him in dialogue, give him Vree's holodisk, and
let him realize that all of his work has been in vain. Exit the base quickly as the
Master spectacularly self-destructs. Alternatively, you can make your way past
the waiting super-mutants in their quarters and take the reactor elevator
down to the reactor level. Kill the guards, then use the nuclear key taken from
the Lieutenant to arm the bomb you find there. Set it to explode in six min-
utes, and then get out before all hell breaks loose!
Now go back and try again, but this time, see if you can find another path that will get you
a~·- 'ous conclusion!
--------- -
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Experience
The longer your character survives in the world of Fallout, the more experience he
will accumulate. Each time he or she succeeds at a task or wins a battle, the charac-
ter will receive a number of Experience Points, or XPs. When you have enough XPs,
your character will gain a level, winning certain advantages.
Almost everything you do in Fallout will add to your Experience Point total. For
example, killing a mutant rat or giant scorpion will give you 60 points; wiping out all
of the rad scorpions in the cave near Shady Sands will give you 500 XPs. Using your
skills can also increase your experience point total. For example, if you successfully
Steal from an NPC, you will gain a number of XPs based on the difficultly of the
Steal (the more you steal, the more XPs you get). First Aid, Doctor, Lockpick, Traps,
and Steal will all give you a small amount of XPs when you successfully use the skill.
If you are very close to going up a level, then you might keep this in mind.
Reaching each new level requires a certain number of XPs, with each level a little
harder than the last to reach.
Levels #of XPss Titles
1 0 Vault Dweller
2 1,000 Vault Scion
3 3,000 Vault Veteran
4 6,000 Vault Elite
5 10,000 Wanderer
6 15,000 Desert Wanderer
7 21,000 Wanderer of the Wastes
8 28,000 Elite Wanderer
9 36,000 Strider
10 45,000 Desert Strider
11 55,000 Strider of the Wastes
12 66,000 Strider Elite
13 78,000 Vault Hero
14 91,000 Wandering Hero
15 105,000 Striding Hero
16 120 000 ~ero of the Deser~
r
17 136,000 Hero of the Wastes
18 153,000 Hero of the Glowing Lands
19 171,000 Paragon
20 190,000 Living Legend
21 210,000 Last, Best Hope of Humanity
~ For each level, additional Skill Points, equal to 5 plus your Intelligence
times 2.
There are Traits and Perks that will modify these numbers.
The new Skill Points can be used to "buy" additional skill percentage points. For
each Skill Point you can increase a normal skill by 1%, or you can increase a Tag Skill
by 2%. To increase your skills, go to the Character Screen, where the current number
of Skill Points is listed. You can increase any skill to a maximum of 200%. Spend
them all in one place, or spread your available points among many Skills. It's your
choice!
J
Experie nce
The longer your character survives in the world of Fallout, the more experience he
will accumulate. Each time he or she succeeds at a task or wins a battle, the charac-
ter will receive a number of Experience Points, or XPs. When you have enough XPs,
your character will gain a level, winning certain advantages.
Almost everything you do in Fallout will add to your Experience Point total. For
example, killing a mutant rat or giant scorpion will give you 60 points; wiping out all
of the rad scorpions in the cave near Shady Sands will give you 500 XPs. Using your
skills can also increase your experience point total. For example, if you successfully
Steal from an NPC, you will gain a number of XPs based on the difficultly of the
Steal (the more you steal, the more XPs you get). First Aid, Doctor, Lockpick, Traps,
and Steal will all give you a small amount of XPs when you successfully use the skill.
If you are very close to going up a level, then you might keep this in mind.
Reaching each new level requires a certain number of XPs, with each level a little
harder than the last to reach.
Level a #of XPBI Title a
l 0 Vault Dweller
2 1,000 Vault Scion
3 3,000 Vault Veteran
4 6,000 Vault Elite
5 10,000 Wanderer
6 15,000 Desert Wanderer
7 21,000 Wanderer of the Wastes
8 28,000 Elite Wanderer
9 36,000 Strider
10 45,000 Desert Strider
ll 55,000 Strider of the Wastes
12 66,000 Strider Elite
13 78,000 Vault Hero
14 91,000 Wandering Hero
15 105,000 Striding Hero
16 120,000 Hero of the Deaer~
Better Criticals: Your chance of getting a Critical Hit does not go up, but the hits
you do get are more damaging. This adds +20% to the critical hit tables, almost
ensuring that you will do a better than average critical hit, and increasing the
chances you will get the best criticals.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements : Perception: 6; Luck: 6; Agility: 4
When Available: Level 9
Bonus Hand-to-Hand Attacks: You can punch faster. Each hand-to-hand attacks
costs 1 AP less to perform.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements : Agility: 5
When Available: Level 6
Bonus Movement: For each new level of Bonus Movement you get 2 APs per com-
bat turn that can only be used for movement. With three levels of this Perk, for
instance, you could move six free hexes during a firefight.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements : Agility: 5
When Available: Level 6
Bonus Ranged Damage: With each level of this Perk, you get 2 additional points
of damage with each ranged weapon hit.
Number of Ranks: 2
Requirements : Agility: 6; Luck: 6
When Available: Level 6
Bonus Rate of Fire: You're becoming a bit faster on the trigger. Each ranged
weapon costs 1 AP less to fire.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements : Agility: 7; Intelligence : 6; Perception: 4
When Available: Level 9
The Perks you are offered are based on your character's skills and stats. Some Perks
can be selected several times, improving that Perk's rank. Perks have requirements;
Awareness, for example, requires a Perception of at least 5. Most are not available
before a certain minimum level.
Finally, you do not have to take a new Perk when it is offered, but if you wait until
the next time you are granted a Perk, you will not be offered two. You should
accept Perks when they are offered.
Below is a list of available Perks. Listed for each is the number of times you can
receive that Perk (ranks), a list of any requirements your character must have before
that Perk becomes available, and what level of experience your character must have
before the Perk is offered.
Action Boy: Each level of Action Boy gives you an additional AP in each Combat Turn.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Agilit y : 5
When Available: Level 12
Animal Friend: Animals will not attack characters or friends of characters with this
Perk, unless they are attacked first.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements: Intelligence: 5; Outdoorsman: 25%
When Available: Level 9
Awareness: You are better able to notice small details. Awareness will show the
exact hit points remaining and the type of weapon carried when you Examine a
creature.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements: Perception: 5
When Available: Level 3
Fortune Finder: You have a particular talent for finding money. The amount of
money you find in random encounters is doubled.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: Luck: 8
When Available: Level 6
Friendly Foe: In combat, friendly characters are outlined in green instead of red,
making it a bit easier to tell friend from foe. A red outline, however, does not neces-
sarily mean the NPC is hostile.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: Perception: 4
When Available: Level 6
Ghost: You are very good at sneaking around at night. Your Sneak Skill is increased
by 20% in the dark.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: Sneak: 60%
When Available: Level 6
Healer: You've got the healing touch. Each increase in rank adds 2 to 5 more Hit
Points replaced when using First Aid or Doctor skills.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Perception: 7; Agility: 6; Intelligence: 5;
First Aid: 40%
When Available: Level 3
Heave Ho: With each rank increase, you get a +2 increase in Strength for determin-
ing the max range of thrown weapons only.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: None
When Available: Level 6
Lifegiver: With each additional increase in rank, you receive 4 additional Hit Points
for each level of this Perk.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Endurance: 4
When Available: Level 12
Master Thief: You receive an increase of 5% to Sneak, Lockpick, Steal, and Traps.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: None
~~~-.available: Level 12
Dodger: You are less likely to be hit in combat. Each rank adds +3% to your Armor
Class.
Number of Ranks: 2
Requirements: Agility: 4
When Available: Level 9
Earlier Sequence: Your Sequence is increased by +2, making it more likely that you
will move first in combat.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Perception: 6
When Available: Level 3
Educated: Each level adds +2 Skill Points when you gain a new Experience Level.
Your Skill Point Levels increase more quickly, a particular advantage earlier in the
game.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Intelligence: 6
When Available: Level 6
Empathy: You can pick up a lot about people when you talk to them. Each time
you open the Dialogue Screen, you will see their reaction to you.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements: Perception: 71 Intelligence: 5
When Available: Level 6
Explorer: During your travels, you have a greater chance of encountering special
locations or people.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements: None
When Available: Level 9
Faster Healing: For each increase in rank you get a +1 on your Healing rate.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirement: Endurance: 6
When Available: Level 3
Flower Child: You are 50% less likely to become addicted to drugs. Withdrawal
after addiction lasts only half as long.
Number of Ranks: l
r
Night Vision: You can see better in the dark. Each new rank of this Perk will reduce
the overall darkness on the screen by 10%.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Perception: 6
When Available: Level 3
Pathfinder: You are able to find the best and shortest route when traveling. Travel
time on the World Map is reduced by 25% for each increase in Rank.
Number of Ranks: 2
Requirements: Endurance: 6; Outdoorsman: 40%
When Available: Level 6
Pickpocket: You can ignore size and facing modifiers when using your Steal skill
against another NPC.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements: Agility: 8; Steal: 80%
When Available: Level 9
Presence: You have that certain ... something. The initial reaction of another charac-
ter is improved by 10% for each level of the Perk.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Charisma: 6
When Available: Level 3
Quick Pockets: You're better able to store your gear while traveling. For each
increase in Rank, it costs 1 AP less to access your Inventory.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Agility: 5
When Available: Level 3
Rad Resistance: Improves your ability to resist radiation and helps you overcome its
effects more easily. Each level improves your Radiation Resistance by 10%.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Endurance 6, Intelligence 4
When Available: Level 6
Master Trader: You're especially skilled at bartering. You receive a 25% discount
when purchasing items from a store or another trader.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: Charisma: 7; Barter: 60%
When Available: Level 9
Medic: This Perk adds 20% to your First Aid and Doctor Skills.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: None
When Available: Level 12
Mental Block: You are able to tune out mental interference. This is only useful in
one of the final levels of the game.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: None
When Available: Level 15
More Criticals: You are more likely to cause a Critical Hit in combat. Each increase
in Rank adds 5% to your chance of getting a Critical Hit.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Luck: 6
When Available: Level 6
Mr. Fixit: This Perk adds 20% to your Science and Repair skills.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: none
When Available: Level 12
Mutate!: You've been outside the shelter of your Vault for too long, and the radia-
tion is starting to affect you. One of your Traits changes into something else.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: None
When Available: Level 9
Mysterious Stranger: From time to time, a Mysterious Stranger will appear out of
nowhere to help you. He does not appear again if he is killed in combat.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: Luck: 7
When Available: Level 6
~1
'
Smooth Talker: Each level of this Perk increases your Intelligence by 1, for purposes of
dialogue with other characters only.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Intelligence: 4
When Available:' Level 3
Snake Eater:. This Perk increases your resistance to all poison by 25%.
Number of Ranks : 1
Requirement s : Endurance: 3
When Available: Level 6
Sniper: Head shot! Your ability to hit targets at long range and cause critical hits is
improved. With luck, any succes'sful hit in combat is upgraded to a critical hit.
Number of Ran.k s: 1
Requirements: Agilit y : 8; Perception: 8; Small Guns: 80%
When Available: Level 18
Speaker: You are good at using your speech skills. This Perk immediately increases
your Speech and Barter skills by 20%.
Number of Ranks: 1
Requirements: None
When Available: Level 12
Strong Back: This Perk allows you to carry 50 pounds extra of equipment, over and
above that allowed by your Strength.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements: Strength: 6; Endurance: 6
When Available: Level 3
Survivalist: You've gotten very good at surviving in the wilderness. Each level of
this Perk adds 20% to your Outdoorsman skill level.
Number of Rank s: 3
Requirements: Endurance: 6; Intelligence: 6; Outdoorsman: 40%
When Available: Level 3
Swift Learner: This is a good Perk to acquire early in the game. Each level adds 5%
to your Experience Points as you acquire them.
Number of Ranks : 3
Requirements: Intelligence: 4
When Available: Level 3
.~
.,.--:--- - . --- . -
Ranger: You are better able to slip undetected through the desert. Your chance of a
random hostile encounter is decreased.
Number of Ranks: 3
Requirements : Perception: 6
When Available: Level 6
Scout: You can see further on the World Map, increasing the area of your explo-
rations by one square in each direction.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements : Perception: 8
When Available: Level 3
Scrounger: You are better able to find useful items in unlikely places. The amount
of ammo you find at any given location is doubled.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements : Perception: 8
When Available: Level 9
Sharpshooter: You are very good at hitting targets at greater distances. Each level
of this Perk gives you a +2 bonus to your Perception for the purpose of determining
range modifiers.
Number of Ranks: 2
Requirements : Perception: 7, Intelligence : 6
When Available: Level 6
Silent Death: While using Sneak skill, if you attack another character from the
back, your hand-to-hand damage to that character will be doubled.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements : Agility: 10, Sneak: 80%
When Available: Level 18
Silent Running: This Perk allows you to run while remaining in Sneak mode.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements : Agility: 6, Sneak: 50%
When Available: Level 6
Slayer: You are truly deadly at hand-to-hand combat. All of your hits are automati-
cally upgraded to critical hits.
Number of Ranks: l
Requirements : Agility: 8, Strength: 8, Unarmed Combat: 80%
When Available: Level 18