Archeologist

From NetHackWiki
(Redirected from Archaeologist)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Archeologist, also spelled as Archaeologist and abbreviated as Arc, is one of the roles available for a hero in NetHack. Archeologists can be of lawful or neutral alignment, and can be a human, dwarf, or gnome.

According to the guidebook:

Archeologists understand dungeons pretty well; this
enables them to move quickly and sneak up on the local nasties.
They start equipped with the tools for a proper scientific expedition.

Starting equipment

Each Archeologist starts with the following equipment:[1]

The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that it is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate this information.

Per commit 9d910773, Archeologists have an increased 15 chance (13.5% overall) of starting with a magic marker that has 19–23 charges.

Intrinsics

Archeologists gain the following abilities upon reaching the following experience levels:[3]

The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that it is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate this information.

Per commit 075c2832, Archeologists start with searching, gain stealth at XL 5 and gain speed at XL 10.

Attributes

The Archeologist's starting attributes are distributed as follows:[4]

Attributes Strength Dexterity Constitution Intelligence Wisdom Charisma Remaining
Minimum attributes 7 7 7 10 10 7 27
Distribution percentages 20% 10% 20% 20% 20% 10%
Mean w/ standard deviation 12.79±2.15 9.78±1.63 12.50±2.10 15.34±1.86 15.34±1.86 9.51±1.57

Skills

Archeologists have the following skills available to them:[5]

Archeologist skills
Max Skills
Basic
Skilled
Expert

Archeologists start with Basic skill level in whips and pick-axes.

The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that it is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate this information.

The scimitar skill is merged into the saber skill.

Special rules

Archeologists can apply uncursed touchstones as if they were blessed to formally identify any gem.

Archeologists suffer a −1 penalty to alignment record for breaking a historic statue.

Non-chaotic archeologists suffer a −3 penalty to alignment record for digging up a headstone, while chaotic archeologists get a +3 bonus for doing the game.

Rank titles

The status line displays one of the following ranks for the corresponding experience levels:[6]

  • XL 1–2: Digger
  • XL 3–5: Field Worker
  • XL 6–9: Investigator
  • XL 10–13: Exhumer
  • XL 14–17: Excavator
  • XL 18–21: Spelunker
  • XL 22–25: Speleologist
  • XL 26–29: Collector
  • XL 30: Curator

Gods

Main article: Religion

The Archeologist pantheon is based on Central American mythology, specifically the Aztecs.

Quest

Main article: Archeologist quest

The Archeologist's Quest sees them fight The Minion of Huhetotl for The Orb of Detection, an artifact crystal ball. While carried, it confers magic resistance, telepathy and half spell damage, and can be invoked to toggle invisibility on or off.

Strategy

Archeologists are often considered one of the harder roles in NetHack, due to their low average of physical attributes as well as starting equipment that is less useful in combat than that of most other roles. However, smart use of their whip combined their starting speed and stealth can aid survival early on, and they can become powerful in the late game.

Character creation

An Archeologist is likely to target the Gnomish Mines early for gems and better gear; this is risky for a human due to their lack of infravision and predominance of hostile inhabitants. A dwarven Archeologist's HP bonus makes their poor starting armor more bearable, especially with a more peaceful Mines; conversely, while gnomes also have a peaceful Mines, their poor HP makes them generally more prone to death in the early game. However, a dwarf's energy growth penalty can make spellcasting difficult or impossible in the late game.

Archaeologists are restricted in most of the strong one-handed weapon skills, so the deterministic nature of lawful sacrifice gifts can be an advantage: a lawful Archeologist's first gift will be either Grayswandir, or an artifact long sword that unrestricts the skill and allows the use of Excalibur once another long sword is found. In either case, you are guaranteed a strong artifact weapon that can carry you through the game. Neutral sacrifice gifts are less reliable, and while several of them are viable in the long-term, each also has a disadvantage, e.g. Mjollnir and its combination of low base damage and large bonus damage die, or Vorpal Blade and its low damage bonuses on an otherwise-solid base item.

The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that it is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate this information.

The base item of Demonbane is a mace, meaning that a lawful Archeologist is not guaranteed to unrestrict the long sword skill with their first gift.

Per commit e8212743, there is only a 130 chance of a non-Knight receiving Excalibur by dipping.

Early game

The early game must be played cautiously, like the Tourist and Healer: an Archeologist's starting resources don't contribute as much to survival as those of most other roles, so the Archeologist is more reliant on finding items.

Objectives

The advantages of the Mines mean that it should be pursued before Sokoban, though continuing to Mines' End is very risky; although the luckstone and random tools can be useful to you, monster generation is difficult enough that you're not likely to survive as you are. Make sure to complete it eventually, though.

The starting touchstone can make the first few floors of the Mines very profitable, while the starting pick-axe can be used to dig out gold, gems, and vaults in the early levels, and dig down through floors. You can then multiply your wealth it via credit cloning using the starting sack, making buying protection from Minetown doable even if you gain a few levels on the way; if you do attempt a protection racket and make it to Minetown at level 1, you should be able to buy several points of protection.

Sokoban can be a good choice for the next destination afterward to exercise if because you can use your starting pickaxe to break boulders if need be, and your sack can store the food and items that are plentiful there. It's also good for exercising your low starting strength.

Luck is very important early in the game, so save at least one cheap gem to throw to a co-aligned unicorn - an identified precious gem gives a +5 boost to luck, which may be worth doing even before you find a luckstone.

Invisibility is a highly desirable property to pair with stealth and speed for avoiding monsters: A fast, invisible opponent is hard to chase down, and stealth can help gradually clear out treasure zoos and throne rooms without waking most of the sleeping denizens - be mindful of pets waking them up instead!

Weapons

Both the starting bullwhip and pick-axe are roughly equally poor as weapons, but only the latter allows you to gain skill in preparation for wielding a dwarvish mattock later, making it the preferable choice. If you want to use the bullwhip for its +2 enchantment bonus, be aware of which monsters are thick-skinned; the bullwhip is impotent against them. The bullwhip can be used to disarm weapon-wielding monsters, although it's generally faster just to kill them outright.

Archeologists suffer from a lack of good ranged weapon options; boomerangs are rare and have an unwieldy flight path, rocks are heavy and very weak even with a sling, and daggers and darts are limited to Basic skill, so you can't multishot them. The aklys is probably the best early-game option; you can pick one up easily in the Mines, advance its skill to Skilled for a substantial to-hit bonus, and it usually returns to your hand, so you only need to carry one or two rather than a heavy stack of rocks or daggers.

Mid game

Objectives

Archeologists should have poison resistance by the time they attempt the Quest, which is full of poisonous snakes. The starting tinning kit is very helpful, allowing you to safely eat poisonous corpses for the chance of the intrinsic.

The locate level of the contains three altars, one of each alignment; this guarantees a co-aligned altar may be a good place to wait and sacrifice monsters if you haven't found an artifact weapon yet.

Archeologists planning to use The Orb of Detection as a source of magic resistance should have a reliable backup source, such as Magicbane, gray dragon scale mail or a cloak of magic resistance, in case the Wizard of Yendor steals it or else the player decides to stash it to prevent theft.

Weapons

Because you start with low physical stats and melee penalties, acquiring an artifact weapon is a central concern. It's not a bad idea to camp on an altar you find and sacrifice for a gift. Archeologists have good artifact weapon possibilities, such as Grayswandir, Mjollnir, Vorpal Blade, and Magicbane. Lawful players can also dip for Excalibur if they find a long sword (though it will not be unrestricted unless you have had another long sword gifted to you).

Dwarvish mattocks and silver sabers are good non-artifact weapons, and one or the other should be trained to Expert. If you are planning to get Grayswandir or at least two-weapon with a silver saber, you should begin training saber skill as soon as you find one. The watch captain in Minetown often carries one, so consider getting a pet to kill him for it. If you disarm him with your whip, it will anger him but not the other guards. Remember that if you only plan to use a saber while dual-wielding, you don't need to advance the saber skill past Basic, as Skilled two-weapon combat is unreachable for Archeologists.

Spellcasting

As you progress through the game and level up, spellcasting becomes more of an option. Your high starting intelligence makes you good at reading spellbooks without needing to bless them. You can become proficient in several spell schools, meaning that you can become competent at casting many low-level spells. However, armor usually remains more important than spells through the early and mid game. Don't ditch good metal armor in favor of spellcasting until you're confident you can survive without it.

Late game

Weapons

For Archeologists, the best strategy is to find a good artifact weapon, enchant it up, and stick with it through the rest of the game. Two-weaponing is reliable because your experience level and Luck at this point completely cancel out the the −7 to-hit penalty.

The best artifact weapon for you is Grayswandir, which does double damage and silver damage. It is one of the few artifact weapons you can advance to Expert. The neutral artifact weapons for Archeologists are quite good as well, but Grayswandir is so excellent that you might want to consider wishing for it even if you're neutral.

Spellcasting

In the mid-game and beyond, you may want to advance divination spells to Skilled for casting magic mapping, which is your special spell and can be greatly useful in Gehennom. Detect treasure and detect unseen are also nice to have, and identify is always useful. Don't advance them to Expert unless you really need your failure rates to be lower.

Since most of your useful spells are utility spells, it isn't necessary to avoid metal armor. However, if you're otherwise lacking in ranged attacks, being able to cast magic missile reliably may be more important than a few AC points.

History

The Archeologist first appears in Hack 1.0 as the Speleologist - NetHack 1.3d gives the role its current name, presumably to make room for selecting the Samurai role using S, and converts the former name to one of its rank titles.

Origin

Archaeology (or archeology) is the study of human activity through the recovery and analysis of material culture, with the "archaeological record" consisting of artifacts, architecture, biofacts or ecofacts, sites, and cultural landscapes. Derived from Greek, the term archaeology means "the study of ancient history". Archaeology can be considered both a social science and a branch of the humanities; it is usually considered an independent academic discipline, but may also be classified as part of anthropology, history or geography.

Archaeologists study human prehistory and history, from the development of the first stone tools at Lomekwi in East Africa 3.3 million years ago up until recent decades - it is distinct from palaeontology, which is the study of fossil remains. Archaeology has various goals, which range from understanding culture history to reconstructing past lifeways to documenting and explaining changes in human societies through time. The discipline involves surveying, excavation, and eventually analysis of data collected, to learn more about the past, making it reliant on cross-disciplinary research.

The Archeologist role and starting equipment are based on 1954 film Secret of the Incas, whose main character Harry Steele (Charlton Heston) is an explorer of ancient ruins - this image of the archeologist adventurer was further popularized by 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark, which marked the debut of Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford), a character inspired by Secret of the Incas that wore similar clothing and additionally carried an army bag and trusty bullwhip with him.

Variants

Main article: Itlachiayaque

The Itlachiayaque patch replaces the Archeologist quest artifact while preserving some of its properties, and is implemented in several variants.

SLASH'EM

Main article: Archeologist/SLASH'EM

In SLASH'EM, Archeologists are given a few additional items, including a spellbook in order to take advantage of their good starting intelligence, and also gain an additional method of identifying items.

UnNetHack

UnNetHack allows Archeologists to safely enchant a fedora past +5 up to +7, and they gain a +2 bonus to Luck when wearing one.

FIQHack

In FIQHack, archeologists get a +10 bonus to the base searching rate.[7]

Encyclopedia entry

Archeology is the search for fact, not truth. [...] So forget any ideas you've got about lost cities, exotic travel, and digging up the world. We do not follow maps to buried treasure, and X never, ever, marks the spot.

[ Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade ]

References

This page is based on a spoiler by Dylan O'Donnell. The original license is:

Redistribution, copying, and editing of these spoilers, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  1. The original contributors to any spoiler must continue to be credited.
  2. Any modifications to the spoiler must be acknowledged and credited.

This page may need to be updated for the current version of NetHack.

It may contain text specific to NetHack 3.6.1. Information on this page may be out of date.

Editors: After reviewing this page and making necessary edits, please change the {{nethack-361}} tag to the current version's tag or {{noversion}} as appropriate.