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Master The Outer Worlds 2's unique flaw system with our complete guide. Learn how every flaw works, which ones to accept, and how to turn character weaknesses into powerful advantages.
Here’s something I absolutely love about The Outer Worlds 2: the game literally rewards you for playing badly. Seriously. While most RPGs punish your mistakes, Obsidian decided to flip the script and turn your gameplay quirks into permanent character traits. It’s brilliant, frustrating, and weirdly addictive all at once.
The flaw system works like this: play a certain way long enough, and the game notices. Stand too close to exploding robots? Boom—you develop a fear of automechanicals. Can’t stop stealing everything that isn’t nailed down? Congratulations, you’re now a kleptomaniac. The game then offers you a permanent debuff in exchange for an equally permanent buff that usually complements your playstyle.
Here’s the kicker: accepting flaws isn’t mandatory, but refusing them means missing out on some genuinely powerful bonuses. It’s a risk-reward calculation you’ll need to make throughout your entire playthrough.
I’ve tested every single one of these during multiple playthroughs, so let me break down exactly what each flaw does and how you’ll accidentally unlock it.

Anger Mismanagement
Dependent
Reckless Leadership
Technophobia
Treacherous
Consumerism
Drug Addiction
Gluttony
Hermit
Kleptomania
Profligate Spender
Wasteful
Bad Knees
Easily Startled
N-Radiated
Sungazer
Bibliomania
Dangerously Curious
Easily Distracted
Flawed
Foot-in-Mouth Syndrome
Compulsive Liar
Energy Hog
Luddite
Overprepared
Snobbish
Teetotaler
Tunnel Vision
After extensive testing, these are the flaws that consistently provide more benefit than drawback:
This is my personal favorite and it’s incredibly easy to game the system. The 50% magazine boost is phenomenal for crowd control situations, and you can completely avoid the damage penalty by developing one simple habit: reload after every engagement.
Pro tip: Bind reload to an easily accessible key and make it muscle memory. I reload after literally every kill, which means I’ve never once triggered the damage reduction penalty.
Best for: Any gun-focused build, especially automatic weapons and shotguns
Here’s what makes this flaw brilliant: your companions are aggressive by default. They charge into combat whether you want them to or not. So if you’re playing any ranged build, you’re already letting them engage first anyway.
The math works out beautifully: you lose 10% base damage but gain 25% against enemies your companions hit. That’s a net +15% damage increase for playing exactly how the game already encourages you to play.
Pro tip: Pair this with companions who have AOE damage abilities. Let them soften up groups, then clean up from range.
Best for: Ranged weapon builds, tactical players, anyone using guns over melee
Double XP from hacking terminals is absurdly good for leveling speed. The Outer Worlds 2 is packed with terminals, computers, and locked systems everywhere you look. If you’re someone who hacks everything anyway (and you should be), this flaw turns your exploration into an XP farm.
The bypass shunt cost increase sounds scary until you realize these items are:
I’ve never once run out of bypass shunts in any playthrough, even with this flaw active.
Pro tip: Check out our complete guide to farming Mag Picks and Bypass Shunts to never worry about resources.
Best for: Exploration-focused players, tech-savvy builds, anyone maxing stealth/tech skills
If you bought the Premium Edition, this is literally a free 15% discount on everything with minimal downside. You’ll earn plenty of bits through quests and exploration, so the 10% selling reduction barely matters.
The discount becomes increasingly valuable as you progress because endgame gear costs thousands of bits. Saving 15% on a 5,000-bit weapon is 750 bits back in your pocket.
Pro tip: Combine this with the Profligate Spender flaw for maximum economic efficiency (if you can handle the early-game money restriction).
Best for: Anyone who bought Premium Edition (duh), shopping enthusiasts, endgame gear collectors
Not every flaw is created equal. These are the ones that will actively make your playthrough worse:
100% weapon spread increase means you literally cannot aim properly anymore. The health regeneration doesn’t come close to compensating for being unable to hit anything. I genuinely cannot think of a build where this is worth accepting.
Automatic stealing sounds hilarious (and it is, briefly) until you realize you’re:
Losing the ability to break down items removes a core game mechanic for basically no benefit. The increased material costs just add insult to injury.
Making noise while crouching defeats the entire purpose of crouching. Speed increase doesn’t matter if every enemy within 10 meters hears you coming.

The key to mastering flaws is accepting ones that complement your existing playstyle rather than forcing you to adapt. Here’s how to think strategically:
Accept Treacherous early and build around it. The massive sneak attack damage boost defines your entire combat approach. Avoid Bad Knees and Easily Startled.
Recommended reading: Our complete traits tier list helps you synergize traits with flaws.
Bibliomania gives you that extra health pool. Pair it with Dependent if you’re using companions as additional aggro management.
Overprepared is non-negotiable. Add Dependent for damage boosts and Wasteful if you’re burning through ammo.
Dangerously Curious for XP farming, Easily Distracted for extra skill points to spread around.
Anger Mismanagement if you dodge instead of blocking. Avoid Tunnel Vision unless you’re absolutely certain you’ll only use melee.
If you’re going for 100% completion, you’ll need to unlock the “Flawed Hero” achievement by accepting three flaws in a single playthrough. Here’s my recommended trio:
This combination provides tangible benefits without crippling any particular playstyle. You’ll also want to check our complete achievement and trophy guide for optimal unlock strategies.
Timing Matters: You can refuse flaws when they’re offered and they’ll pop up again later. Don’t feel pressured to accept immediately.
Build Flexibility: Some flaws lock you into specific playstyles. Accept these early if you’re committed, but save flexible flaws for later when you understand your build better.
Companion Synergy: Several flaws interact with companion mechanics. Learn how each companion fights before accepting companion-related flaws. Our complete companions guide covers their combat styles in detail.
Level Scaling: Flaws that grant XP bonuses (Dangerously Curious, Foot-in-Mouth Syndrome) are more valuable early-game. Check our max level cap guide to plan your progression.
Difficulty Considerations: Higher difficulties make defensive flaws more punishing. Consider your difficulty setting before accepting health-reducing flaws like Treacherous.
Nope. Flaws are permanent for that playthrough. Choose carefully.
There’s no hard limit, but you’ll typically see 5-8 flaw opportunities per playthrough depending on your playstyle.
Most don’t, but Compulsive Liar directly affects dialogue choices and can alter quest outcomes.
Only if you’re confident in handling every subsequent flaw. The extra perk points are valuable, but mandatory acceptance can wreck specialized builds.
Nothing bad. You’ll miss out on bonuses but won’t be penalized.
After multiple playthroughs, here’s my approach: I treat flaws like character development opportunities. Each flaw I accept tells a story about how my character plays and what mistakes they’ve made.
My current playthrough character is a paranoid hacker (Dangerously Curious) who relies heavily on companions (Dependent) and has excellent trigger discipline (Overprepared). These flaws don’t just provide mechanical benefits—they create a coherent character identity that informs my roleplaying decisions.
That’s what makes The Outer Worlds 2’s flaw system genius: it turns your gameplay mistakes into narrative elements while rewarding you mechanically. It’s reactive character development that most RPGs only dream of achieving.
Getting Started:
Character Building:
Combat & Survival:
Key Choices:
The flaw system in The Outer Worlds 2 represents some of the most interesting character progression I’ve seen in modern RPGs. It rewards experimentation, punishes one-dimensional gameplay, and creates emergent storytelling through mechanics.
Don’t be afraid to accept flaws—they’re designed to enhance your experience, not ruin it. The best playthroughs embrace character imperfection and build around it creatively.
Now get out there and develop some character-defining neuroses. Your flawed hero awaits.