Summary
- Several RPGs offer full control over party creation, from picking races to creating custom abilities for strategic gameplay.
- Games like Wasteland 3, Icewind Dale, and Dragon's Dogma allow players to build synergistic teams or thematic squads.
- Custom party creation in RPGs like Pillars of Eternity and Dragon Quest 9 offers a balance of narrative depth and strategic gameplay.
One of the biggest draws of role-playing games, especially for fans of classic tabletop systems, is the experience of adventuring with a party. In most computer RPGs, players meet and recruit a colorful cast of companions along the way, each with their own personalities, backstories, and builds.
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These RPGs give players the freedom to level up party squadmates to their liking, shaping unique builds for several characters at once.
But not every player wants to rely on premade allies. For those who have a very specific party fantasy in mind, whether it’s a perfectly min-maxed team or a thematic squad with matching outfits, only full control will do. Fortunately, several RPGs embrace this philosophy, allowing players to create their companions entirely from scratch.
8 Wasteland 3 - Custom Rangers
A Range Of Choice For The Ideal Squad
Wasteland 3
- Released
- August 28, 2020
- ESRB
- m
- Genre(s)
- RPG, Strategy
In Wasteland 3's post-apocalyptic Colorado, it's just about impossible to survive without a solid squad of rangers as backup. Rangers are available for recruitment at their HQ, and while there is a fine set of pre-made faces to choose from, players are also able to build their own as they did for their avatar in character creation.
This flexibility means players can fine-tune their squad for synergy, roleplay a thematic crew (like a band of deadly snipers or loudmouthed brawlers), or just min-max their numbers for an overpowered group to match their own overpowered ranger's build to take on the snowy apocalypse.
7 Temple of Elemental Evil - Party Creation
Forming The Perfect Quintet Before Taking On The Temple
The Temple of Elemental Evil
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- September 16, 2003
- Developer(s)
- Troika Games
- Publisher(s)
- Atari
- Genre(s)
- RPG, Tactical
Right from the start of The Temple of Elemental Evil, before making their descent into the legendary dungeon, players are given full control over a party of up to five adventurers, including their race, class, skills, feats, and personality tendencies. The player can choose from preset adventurers or go to town creating their perfect quintet. The only constraint is that each party member must follow the party's alignment.
However, this makes sense from a group cohesion and narrative perspective. The Temple of Elemental Evil may not be the most polished CRPG ever made, or even Fallout creator Tim Cain's greatest work. However, there is still a lot to love about this wonderfully faithful Dungeons & Dragons adaptation, and when it comes to letting players build a party from scratch, it absolutely delivers.
6 Guild Wars - Mercenaries
Tyria's Greatest Adventurers Come With Some Familiar Faces
Guild Wars
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- April 28, 2005
- ESRB
- T // Use of Alcohol, Violence
- Genre(s)
- RPG
When it first released, Guild Wars' deck-building, buildcraft-first gameplay, and cross-class (or profession) combination already gave its players unparalleled control over the way they played. After the "Nightfall" campaign, players were able to assign skills and builds directly to special AI-controlled party members called heroes, each with preset models, professions, and backstories.
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"Mercenaries" took this one step further by allowing players to make their own characters recruitable Heroes. Once the player speaks to a Mercenary Registrar, their alts can take a copy of that character out into the world. This takes a little work to set up, but it gives players full control over their name, appearance, and armor, and most importantly, profession, which potentially leads to some extraordinarily overpowered team builds, especially for teams of mesmer mercenaries.
5 Pillars Of Eternity - Tavern-Dwelling Adventurers
A Powerful Alternative For Those More Interested In Strategy Than Story
Pillars of Eternity
- Released
- March 26, 2015
- ESRB
- M For Mature 17+ due to Blood, Sexual Themes, Strong Language, Violence
- Genre(s)
- RPG
While Pillars of Eternity offers a memorable cast of story-driven companions, it also gives players the option to bypass them entirely for a lone-wolf playthrough, or alternatively, hire custom-built adventurers at any inn (for a fee). These hirelings are blank slates with no backstories, no banter, and no chance for romance, but full control over class, stats, abilities, and roles.
This hybrid approach strikes a fine balance of being able to dive deep into narrative, or treating the game more like a hardline tactical RPG, constructing a party purely around synergy and strategy. Many players end up blending the two, keeping a few story companions while filling out the roster with custom recruits built for specific roles.
4 Dragon Quest 9 - Party Planning
Breaking JRPG Tradition But Going Back To Tabletop Basics
Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- July 15, 2009
- ESRB
- t
- Developer(s)
- Level 5, Square Enix
- Publisher(s)
- Nintendo
- Engine
- unity
- Multiplayer
- Local Multiplayer
- Franchise
- Dragon Quest
- Genre(s)
- JRPG
Dragon Quest 9 breaks from tradition by placing full party creation squarely in the player’s hands. Aside from the silent protagonist, there are no default companions to meet or recruit. Instead, players visit a local inn early in the game and assemble their entire team from scratch, choosing the adventurer’s appearance, class, and name one by one.
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This gives the game a distinctly personal flavor. The warrior is exactly who the player wants them to be (dressed like a clown if they so wish) and specced to round out the team as needed. It might lack the emotional interactions of traditional JRPG party members, but Dragon Quest 9's custom hero system offers a refreshingly modular approach.
3 Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord - Party Creation
Making Dungeon Crawling Parties From Scratch
Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- September 15, 2023
- ESRB
- t
- Genre(s)
- RPG
The Wizardry series, dating all the way back to the early '80s, helped define what party-based RPGs would become (especially in Japanese role-playing games). Thanks to the remake of the original, Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord, newcomers can experience the original dungeon crawler computer game for themselves with modern quality-of-life features. Before stepping into a dungeon, the player is tasked with building every single member of their adventuring party from scratch.
That includes rolling stats, picking races and classes, and assembling a balanced (or deliberately chaotic) squad of their own creation. However, given the game's notorious difficulty, there is certainly a wide breadth to make the wrong choice. While later entries layered in more complex systems and lore, the core party-creation feature remained intact until the final entry, Wizardry 8.
2 Icewind Dale - Party Creation
A Marching Band Of Faithful Followers
Icewind Dale Enhanced Edition
Display card community and brand rating widget Display card open critics widget Display card main info widget- Released
- October 30, 2014
- ESRB
- t
- Genre(s)
- RPG
The design philosophy of cRPGs, when it came to companions and party members in the genre's first golden age, seemed to fall into one of two camps: those interested in the tactical combat side of things and those interested in bespoke, character-driven storytelling. Icewind Dale falls into the former category, as players are expected to fill out their entire team during character creation.
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At the beginning of the game, players create up to six custom characters, choosing everything from class and stats to alignment and appearance. Icewind Dale is less about meeting quirky strangers on the road and more about building a team that plays well together or tells a story of the player's making.
1 Dragon's Dogma - Pawns
Custom Companions, Echoed Across Worlds
Dragon's Dogma
- Released
- May 22, 2012
- ESRB
- M For Mature 17+ due to Blood and Gore, Partial Nudity, Suggestive Themes, Violence
- Genre(s)
- Action RPG
Dragon’s Dogma introduces a unique take on player-created companions through its "Pawn" system, a central feature that blends customization, world-building, and online connectivity. Early in the game, the player creates a single pawn companion to travel with, leveling up alongside their Arisen. Everything, from the myopic details of their appearance to their vocation and behavioral tendencies, is set by the player.
Once created, this custom companion can be recruited by other players online, gaining knowledge, items, and experience while away. In turn, the player can hire other players’ pawns to fill out their party. Each carries memories of quests and monsters they've encountered in other worlds.