Crafting
Crafting items and upgrades during downtime requires several things.
Workspaces
A usable workspace requires several components.
All of the above must be scavenged, bought or looted in uptime at an event. The game team will provide opportunities to find what you need, but they will not guarantee success and they will not hand stuff out for free. You will need to complete missions or hand out a lot of cash to get what you need. It may also take multiple events to piece everything together.
Blueprints
These will appear as loot on memory sticks. Once installed on a computer in a workspace they can be used by anyone with access to that workspace. The memory stick with the blueprint(s) must be handed back to a ref and you must tell them where you intend to store the blueprints. You can install them in multiple places.
The other option is to create your own blueprints by researching them
Skills
Skill | Covers |
---|---|
Gunsmithing | Guns, parts, scopes, automated turrets, base defenses |
Armoursmithing | Armour, upgrades and new properties for armour, base defenses |
Lockpicking | Security systems, lockboxes |
Demolitions | Grenades, bombs, shaped charges, rockets |
Chemistry | Synthesising compounds, making drugs |
Mathematics | Writing computer code |
Surgery | Not much use to build anything, but vital to install devices in a human subject |
Cybersurgery | As per surgery, but specifically for devices wired into the nervous system and brain |
Electronics | Any electronic devices |
Nanotechnology | Very small devices, anything using nanites as part of the device |
A small number of crafting projects may require multiple skills, for example Electronics to build a device and Mathematics for the operating system to run it. These skills could come from multiple characters working together, or from the same character.
Materials
The vast majority of crafting recipes have a cost in credits. This is to represent the time and effort required to scrounge up the necessary materials to feed into the printers. These might not be actual credits spent at the Bar, it might be food bought as a favour to other people who found what you need, or the cash you spent to stay alive while out hunting for scrap. How you choose to roleplay out the credit cost is up to you.
A small number of crafting projects may require a very specific part that cannot be duplicated with existing knowledge. In these instances the character can try to create a blueprint for the part, request a mission to acquire said part, or put up a bounty in the Bar for it.