Thursday, October 1, 2009

Oblivion: Roleplaying Guide Chapter 1 Part 5

Part 5 of my Oblivion Roleplaying Guide:

Middle Class

Ok, so now you are a prestigious member of the middle class. This is what you have been saving your money on. This, is the golden class, you can have 75% of the jobs you can think of. Obviously as a member of the middle class you can’t be like the counts and tax the poor and\or the rich for money, but we’ll get to that later. So you can be almost whoever you want to be, and chose whatever job fits your class. You want to be someone who buys lots of items and sells them at double price? Ok. You want to go and massacre entire legions of goblins? Ok. You want to become a prestigious escort for merchant cheapskates and goblin sterminators? Ok. You want to become a beggar that works for the watch that lives in a three story house and is actually the count of a far off city-state in the long lost land of Atmora surrounded by bloodthirsty extinct sload and mutated argonians? I don’t think so, well, you can, but it’s your roleplaying experience that’s being ruined. This chapter is a short one since there is not much to offer. You gain enough money so that you can go adventuring one and a while and do more quests, if you are a freelance merchant (“You want to be someone who buys lots of items and sells them at double price?”) all the better since you go adventuring to towns and that business!

Summary: Middle Class

Job: Blacksmith, Innkeeper, Merchant, Alchemist, Freelance Merchant

Money a Week:

Blacksmith: 280

Middle Class blacksmiths aren’t much richer than the middle class so you might want to go to the richest city (Skingrad) to sell your wares.

Innkeeper: 300

Innkeepers aren’t also much richer but you can also find the in the upper middle class so you should go to Skingrad also like for blacksmiths.

Merchant: 320

Alchemist: 350

Freelance Merchant: 280

The low income is because you can do more adventuring.

No comments:

Post a Comment