Difference between revisions of "Crime Overview"
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Several actions in ''Oblivion'' are classified as '''crime''', and will, if witnessed, invoke the punishment of the law via '''guards'''. These actions include: | Several actions in ''Oblivion'' are classified as '''crime''', and will, if witnessed, invoke the punishment of the law via '''guards'''. These actions include: | ||
#Trespassing | #Trespassing |
Revision as of 19:27, 5 June 2008
Several actions in Oblivion are classified as crime, and will, if witnessed, invoke the punishment of the law via guards. These actions include:
- Trespassing
- Entering or remaining in an owned space when you are not permitted to be there
- Picking Pockets
- Removing items directly from an NPC's personal inventory
- Stealing
- Removing items from the owned space of an NPC
- Assault
- Attacking a friendly NPC (defending yourself is not a crime)
- Murder
- Killing a friendly NPC (defending yourself is not a crime)
Guards & Arrest
NPCs whose class is flagged as guard will attempt to arrest the player after a crime is committed. They will give the choice of paying the fine, going to jail, or resisting arrest.
Disposition Modifiers
Witnessing a crime will lower an NPC's disposition toward the criminal. The game settings below determine how the disposition is modified. If the NPC is a victim of a crime the disposition modifier is multiplied by fCrimeDispPersonal.
Fines
Actors caught perpetrating crimes will have a fine added to their total bounty (assuming they are reported to the guards). The game settings below determine the fines for various crimes.