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Creating Custom Partners

This document provides instructions for adding a custom NPC to the Partners Basic Mod for The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. The instructions outline how to create a new NPC using an existing Partner NPC as a template, customize the NPC's attributes, inventory, spells, AI packages and face, and place the NPC in the game world. Following these steps allows modders to easily expand the Partners Mod with original custom NPCs of their own design.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
182 views

Creating Custom Partners

This document provides instructions for adding a custom NPC to the Partners Basic Mod for The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. The instructions outline how to create a new NPC using an existing Partner NPC as a template, customize the NPC's attributes, inventory, spells, AI packages and face, and place the NPC in the game world. Following these steps allows modders to easily expand the Partners Mod with original custom NPCs of their own design.

Uploaded by

Tiago_Gomes_8653
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Adding Custom NPC’s to the Partners Basic Mod v.1.

The greatest feature of the Partners Mod is the ability to easily add your own custom designed
NPC's complete with all the dialogue and scripting of the other Partner NPC's in your own custom
Partners Mod. If you have even the crudest familiarity with the editor, you can add more partners easily
and quickly using the same methods. The following are the instructions for creating a customized Partner
NPC in a separate mod:

1. The Partners Mod is now divided into three files: CM Partners.esm, CM Partners.esp, and CM
Partners NPC.esp. This has been done so you can create your own Partners NPC mod quickly
and easily without fear of damaging the existing mod which is safely locked in an esm file. Do
not edit the CM Partners.esp or CM Partners NPC.esp files or make them active in the TES
Construction Set. If you plan using the CM Partners.esp, do not alter, change, or add existing
Partner NPC’s to your own mod. Otherwise, you are free to add the existing Partner NPC’s to
your own mod and change them to your heart’s content. Please follow the rest of these
instructions carefully to create your own separate Partners Mod.
2. Open the TES editor and choose Oblivion.esm, CM Partners.esm, and CM Partners.esp without
making any of them the active file. When you try to launch the editor, a dialogue box will pop up
telling you that you have not made a file active. Click to continue anyway. When the editor has
loaded up, click on the NPC tab and then on the list of NPC’s. Type “D” and the list will scroll
down to the beginning of the NPC’s beginning with the letter D. The Partner NPC’s will be listed
just above this with the prefix “cm”: cmBree, cmRandi, and cmWinden, for example. Bree is a
Stealth character, Randi is a Magic character, and Winden is a Combat character. Choose one of
these depending on the type of character you want to create and double click the NPC ID to
launch the NPC character window. I chose Bree.

3. Choose a new name for your character, type it into the name text box, and then change the NPC
ID to cmName, where name is the one you’ve chosen. I’ve created a new character with the
name Ren, and his ID is cmRen. Now, click OK in the lower left hand corner. A small window
will pop up saying that you have created a new ID for the NPC and asking if you want to create a
new form, i.e. a new NPC.

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4. Answer “Yes”, and the window will close and your new character will appear in the list along
with the other Partner NPC’s. Save the mod by clicking on the little computer disk icon on the
tool bar at the top of the TES editor and choose a new name for your mod, like CM Partners
MyMod.esp. You’ve just created your very own plugin for Oblivion. Your mod includes your
new NPC and now has all the dialogue, topics, and scripting of the Partners Basic Mod. Any new
NPC’s you create or any changes you make to the CM Partners Basic Mod will now be stored in
your own mod and you can even post them on one of the download sites to share with others.
5. Now you’ll want to customize your new character. Double click on the new NPC ID to reopen
the NPC character window. Change the Class, Race, and Sex of your new character as you like.
6. Click on Combat Style, and choose a more appropriate one for your new character. You can
always choose the DEFAULT, if you’re unsure. I tried to include some standard ones to choose
from with “cm” prefix. The Combat Styles can be changed by clicking the Combat Styles item in
the Editor File Window on the left in TES Editor.

7. The Partner NPC’s are set up with PCLevel Offset checked. This setting will automatically cause
the NPC to level up when the Player levels, so that Partners will always keep up with the Player.
You can uncheck this temporarily to uncheck the Auto-calc stats box in the Stats Tab and then
recheck the box. Since you’ve made some changes, you need to do this to cause the stats to be
recalculated for your new race, class, &sex.
8. Partner NPC’s have been made Essential. The box is checked on the lower left hand side. If you
uncheck this, the NPC can be killed. Otherwise, they are only knocked unconscious, and will get
up again. You decide how you want to play.
9. When you are done with the stats, click OK again to close the NPC window and save the mod
again. It’s always a good idea to save your work like this in two stages to avoid trouble. If you
don’t, the next step could cause the editor to crash to desktop, and you’d lose your work and time.

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10. Let’s create a new face for your character. Reopen the NPC character window again, and click
on the Face tab. Click on the Generate button at the bottom center of the window and see how
the face changes. You can do this repeatedly until you get a face that you like. If you get an old
face, you can always use the slider control for Age to make the NPC younger. It might improve
the appearance. Once you find a base face you want, adjust the sliders, and change the hair style
and eyes if you like. Then click on the Face Advanced Tab to make any other adjustments that
you might want. When you are finished, click on the Face Tab again, and press the Save button.
Then click OK to close the window and save the mod again. When you play the mod, you’ll be
able to see how your new NPC looks in game, and you may see some things you want to change.
What you see in the NPC creation window looks different than what you actually see in game.
Sometimes it’s an improvement, sometimes not. Just go back and rework the face again and save
as before if you need to.

11. Time to put the finishing touches on your new character. Reopen the NPC character window and
click the Spells tab. You’ll see the spells that belonged to the character that you used as a base
for your character. You can delete these or use them, whichever you want. I used the Leveled
List spells for a particular class for the NPC’s I created and you can too. These simply add some
random spells that are normally used by this particular class. This way, they will have different
spells in every game you play. Leave your NPC character window open, and click on the
Leveled Spells list in the editor. Type “L” to scroll down to the beginning of the L’s in the list.
Scroll down the list until you find one with your NPC’s class, and drag it and drop into the NPC
character’s Spell List. And you can add a birthsign or other spells in the Spell list by dragging
and dropping.

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12. Now click on the Inventory Tab and delete any unwanted items. Several items you should not
delete because the NPC will need them for some of the animations to play. These are Bread,
Pewter Mug, Ponder Item, any books or apparatus. You can change books if you like, as long as
there is a book available for those characters with a Read AI Package. Now find the armor,
weapons, clothing, and miscellaneous items on the list in the editor, and drag and drop any new
items you need into your character’s inventory. Click OK again and save the mod.
13. Reopen the NPC character window, and click on the AI button. First of all, look at the four boxes
across the top labeled AI Attributes. Be sure to leave Aggression set between 10 and 30. Any
higher, and the NPC’s tend to get into arguments with others which sometimes lead to armed
combat. Responsibility should be 70 or higher to keep your NPC’s from stealing and getting into
big trouble. If you like playing a thief, don’t be too alarmed by this. The scripting is setup so
that when the Player sneaks, Partner NPC’s also sneak, and their Aggression and Responsibility
are both reduced to zero. This way, they won’t attack anything if the Player is sneaking up on
someone or give the alarm if the Player steals something. Don’t forget to come out of sneak
when attacked, so your Partner NPC’s will fight.
14. Now look at the list of all the AI packages assigned to your character and you’ll be able to see
that they are arranged in order of a daily schedule. The last package is a Wander package. Be
sure you always leave this one last, so that the NPC will default to the Wander package if
something happens to stop another package before its time is up. You can use the left and right
arrow keys to move AI Packages up and down in the NPC AI Package List. You can leave these
as they are, or you can delete the ones you don’t want.

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15. Open the AI Package window from the Character Topic on the Menu bar at the top of the editor.
All of the Partner AI Packages start with “cm”, so hit the “D” key to scroll the list down, and then
scroll up to find them. You can change them by double clicking a package, altering the settings,
change the ID name, and save with new ID. Do not choose any AI Packages with “Command” in
the name, since these are used with the various menu commands. Only choose AI Packages with
numbers in the name like “cmEat7x1”, which means the NPC will eat at 7 AM for 1 hour. This
type of package is scheduled for a particular time of day and duration. You can double click one
of these, change the time of day and duration, change the numbers in the name to match, and then
save as a new AI package. Drag and drop your new packages you want to add into the NPC’s AI
list. When you are done, click OK, and save the mod.

16. Now let’s place your NPC on the map. To open the area on the map you wish to place your new
NPC, choose any interior you like from the second list from the right at the bottom right side of
the editor. Or choose Tamriel and locate an exterior cell in the list below. Double click on the
cell you want in the list, and when the cell has loaded in the map window above, then click on
your NPC filename and drag it onto the map to the spot you want, and drop it. Your new NPC
will appear floating in space. Just press F to drop him/her in place. You can move him/her
around a bit if you want, but be careful of the elevation. You can press Z while clicking on the
npc, holding, and dragging up or down to change elevation. Save the mod.

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17. Test your new custom NPC in the game to see if he/she actually works. I would suggest you
download and use the Quick Start mod, to skip the beginning tutorial and begin the game just
before you exit the sewers for testing.
18. Congratulations, you’ve just created your first custom Partners NPC in your very own mod. Now
you can create more NPC’s if you like and add them anywhere you want.

Warning - If you add large numbers of NPC’s in any one cell, performance will go down substantially,
since large numbers of NPC’s have already been added to Oblivion. Also, if you try to assemble a large
force of NPC’s there is likely to be a huge hit on frame rate at some point. Combat will also slow
everything down in proportion to the number of combatants.

Caution - Also, you must realize that the more Partners you have in your Party, the more powerful you
will become. If you take a large force with you, the game will cease to be a challenge and you will
become bored. I only take one or two usually; because it is easier to keep track of a small number, they
can carry quite a bit of loot, and they are not terribly overwhelming.

Creating Beast Race NPC’s

There is a problem with creating and placing beast companions in the game world. But it is not due to
anything that I have done. I've changed nothing on the race setups or the graphics. This is a TES
Construction Set bug. It doesn't automatically assign the right skeleton for the Argonian or the Khajitt.
There are two things you can try:
1. The easier method: Once you have set up your Argonian or Khajitt, close its NPC window, and
then reopen it. Now close the window again and save your mod. This should set the proper
skeleton. Now try placing the Argonian in the game world. It should work fine. If not, check the
skeleton listed on the long button on the left lower NPC screen and make sure that
SkeletonBeast.NIF is selected.
2. If for some reason #1 doesn't work, find a likely existing game Argonian, change its name and
ID, click the OK button at the bottom, and when the message box opens, choose "Save as a new
form". Now you'll have to change the AI packages, scripting, and faction to Partner equivalents
(see the instructions below for creating new mods for details on setting up an NPC from scratch).
Creating or Using Hated Races
If you decide to create or use a hated race like the Dremora, either as companions or as the Player, you
will have to do a little extra work in the TESCS, Hated races do have an effect on relationships because
they lower disposition. This can cause NPC’s to not want to talk to the Player, or in extreme cases, even
attack. There are a couple of things you can do. Set the NPC's Aggression to 5. The setting is located at
the top of the AI window. Then he will only attack if someone or something attacks him. That will stop
the attacks, but he still won't talk to you.
Also, you can make him a member of the Player Faction. That will make him like you a lot more, so that
you'll be able to talk to him and get him to join your party. Open the NPC window and click on the
Faction Tab. You'll see the Partners Faction listed there. Now open the Faction window from the top
Menu bar listed under Character. Click anywhere on the list of Factions and type "P", and the list will
scroll down to Partners, and just one or two below it will be the PlayerFaction. Just click on this, hold it,
and drag the PlayerFaction to the NPC Faction window, and release it. Click OK to close both windows,
and save your mod. Your NPC will now be a member of the Player's faction with a boost of 30 in
Disposition. That should make even the most disagreeable, your friend and partner.

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Using Custom Faces/Races

1. You will need to download TES4 Plugin Utility, Wrye Bash, or another utility that creates master files,
that is, files with the esm extension. Use the utility to convert Ren’s Beauty esp for example (or another
face/race mod) into an esm file. Let's call it Rens Beauty.esm.
2. Open the TES Construction Set, select Oblivion.esm, CM Partners.esm, Rens Beauty.esm, CM
Partners.esp, and make your custom NPC mod the active file.
3. Change the faces and save.
4. Now convert that Rens Beauty.esm to an esp. Use Wrye Bash to change your mod’s dependency from
the esm to the esp. Then DISABLE the esm and ACTIVATE the esp. Should work now.

Creating New Mods


If you decide to create a new mod using the Partners Mod or change the Partners Quest, Dialogue, and
Scripting, there are some things that you need to be aware of. Click on the large Q icon on the menu bar
and use the Quest list. Select the cmPartnersQuest, and click on the Topics Tab. That's were all the
dialogue is listed for the Partners Mod. Look at the Quest Data Tab. In the middle of the screen is a text
box entitled Quest Conditions. You'll see that there is only one condition for the Partners Quest, and
that's the Partners Faction. The NPC's must be Rank 1 in the Partners Faction. That's what gives each
NPC the Partners Quest and Dialogue. To assign an NPC to the Partners Faction, open the NPC setup
screen, open the Faction screen from the Character menu at the top of the editor, find the Partners Faction
in the list, and drag it into the NPC's Faction Tab. Then change the Rank to 1. Then you assign the
Partners script to the NPC, and you've completed the basic setup for a Partners NPC. It’s fast, it’s easy,
and it works.
Partner NPC’s use the PC Level Offset so that they level along with the Player. Check the PC Level
Offset box and enter -1 for the Offset. Change Calc Min to 1 and Calc Max to 0. They will always be at
least Level 1 but have no maximum set, so they will level up as long as the Player does. You can also add
the Combat Style and drag and drop AI packages from the AI Package screen to the NPC's AI screen. Be
sure to place the WanderNPC AI package last in the AI list. If it's at the end, the NPC will default to the
wander package if it can't decide which AI package comes next. You will need to add the following
items to the NPC's inventory for these AI Packages to work: MiddleClassPewterMug01 for Drunk,
Breadloaf for Eat, any apparatus for Alchemy, PonderItem for Pondering, any book for Read Book, spells
for Practice Magic, and appropriate weapons for Practice Melee or Ranged. See the instructions above if
you need more detailed instructions.
If you change the dialogue and/or topics in the Partners Mod you can end up with doubled entries when
using the mod with other custom NPC mods, depending on how these are setup, combined, etc. I would
suggest that if you want to add or change dialogue for the Partners Mod that you first create a new mod
using CM Partners.esm and CM Partners.esp as base. Be sure and give your new mod a unique name
because you don’t want conflicts with other mods created for the Partners Mod. Once you have your new
mod, create a new quest and a new faction. Use the Partners Quest and dialogue for the basic
companionship requirements for your mod, and your new quest and dialogue for new features, quests,
friendship, romance, etc. that you wish to add. All you'll need to do is assign the NPC's to the new
faction, and they will instantly pick up the new dialogue. If you have to change the scripting, then you'll
just have to alter the Partners Script, but I'd create a copy of the script with a new name, before changing
the script itself, and then you can do anything you need to, and just assign it to the NPC's. This way there
won't be any conflicts with other Partner esp's that you might want to use and all of them will retain the
basic Partners dialogue and scripting. But your mod will have new NPC’s, new features, new quests, and
new dialogue and menu topics, anything you want to customize or add.
Good luck,
Blackie

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