The Outer Worlds 2 eliminates most respec options, forcing players to commit to their skill choices and enhancing the role-playing experience. This design choice makes decisions more impactful, as seen in a labor strike quest where the author's character resorted to violence due to limited skills. By limiting skill points and progression speed, the game encourages focused builds over versatile ones.
In The Outer Worlds 2, players face a key change from many RPGs: no respecing beyond one early opportunity after the opening sequence. Leveling proceeds slowly, granting just two skill points per level across a vast array of options. This setup compels deliberate character creation, as the author discovered while building an outlaw commander skilled in guns, speech, and lockpicking.
During a quest to resolve a labor strike at a facility for Auntie's Choice, the character infiltrated the site and gathered blackmail but failed to negotiate due to insufficient engineering or hacking abilities. "No amount of talking was going to solve this dispute," the author notes, leading to shooting the manager and empowering the workers. This outcome aligned with the character's background, turning a potential frustration into a narrative fit.
The author contrasts this with games like the modern Fallout series, Cyberpunk 2077, and the original The Outer Worlds, where respec options allowed broad skill spreads to explore everything in one playthrough. Such flexibility often diluted role-playing, resulting in characters good at many things but excelling at none. In The Outer Worlds 2, the lack of respec fosters investment; the author convinced low-level enemies to flee and dueled a lecturing villain confidently.
The flaws system reinforces this by tying buffs to consistent behaviors, like a damage boost for frequent reloading without emptying magazines. Companions evolve accordingly—Niles, once a loyal Earth Directorate agent, adopted an outlaw mindset, learning that "large organizations will never have your back, and sometimes the only solution to a problem is a bullet."
This approach, highlighted in GameSpot's Best Of 2025 series, makes even simple actions feel rewarding by tying them to player choices.