Contract Creation Guide (original by @urben)

On the old HMF @Urben made this really great guide for good contracts. With the release of H3 I guess there will be a lot of new players and a lot of new contracts. It would be a shame if this guide got lost in the archive of the old HMF. So I’m just reposting it here – none of it is my work, it’s all @Urben.






This guide is aiming to help, not to set rules. I try to list arguments for and against certain elements of contracts so you are aware of them and are more able to make well-liked contracts. :slight_smile:


tl;dr

  • Between 2 and 4 targets
  • Mix target types (mobile/static ones, guard/civil ones)
  • As few restrictions/complications as possible
  • No non-optional complications if possible
  • Make sure you can finish it with Silent Assassin without luck
  • The more ways people can achieve Silent Assassin the better

Play Styles

There are different players out there. The more you please, the more liked you contract is. Note though you cannot please all and making it too easy or too hard can result in general criticism.

Speedrunners
  • Speedrunners try to get the best contract score and do that by trying to be as fast as possible. They replay contracts very often.
  • They dislike forced waiting times, like when a target is just impossible to kill and they have nothing to fill that time.
  • They dislike long contracts in general and try to avoid running around too much.
  • They dislike randomness, as this increases the amount of restarts.
Suit Only Players
  • They like to be able to finish a contract with only in their suit
  • They dislike disguise requirements, unless they are all Suit.
  • Additionally some try to do no KO’s. Try to make that possible too if you want to please them.
Specific Kill Players
  • Some like the Fiber Wire, some like sniping, some like other stuff.
  • They dislike kill method requirements, though they can live with having at least some targets who can be killed in any way.
Roleplayers
  • They like to do a lot of additional stuff that is not really needed to finish your contract. Like retrieving ICA gear or suits.
  • They value good briefings and not full Any/Any contracts, as they seem to lack a good setting they can dive into.
  • Contracts that are too restrictive can make it harder for them to play out their plans.
Difficulty Seekers
  • They like hard tasks, sometimes even autofail conditions.
  • They don’t mind investing much time into playing the contract.
Casual Players
  • Many finish contracts without SA rating. Assuming they like to play this way, they dislike autofail conditions. But who can be sure of that?
No-Mastery Players
  • Some like to play your contract with no unlockables, meaning the default start and default gear (ICA19, Coins, Fiberwire).
  • Keeping this style in mind makes it possible for every player to play you contract. Which is good in terms of accessibility. If that is not working in your case you can still favor items that are more commonly unlocked, like H2 gear over H2016 gear.
Testers
  • Testing is not really a style for itself, but every player is a tester at the beginning, who tries to find out the best way to play your contract.
  • Some things make testing harder, like autofail conditions, as they hinder the player to find out what they did wrong.
  • Randomness makes it harder to find a reliable way to play too.
  • The harder a contract is, the longer players are Testers. This can be frustrating for them because they miss a sense of achievement.

Contract Types

Contracts are very often one-of-a-kind compared to other contracts. Still some have a common focus that gives them certain traits and audiences. If you feel lost in te large Hitman maps and still want to create a solid contract, it is worth to read this. Note that these groups are subjective and may be understood differently among players.

Any/Any contracts
  • The contracts lack all restrictions such as kill and disguise restrictions, commonly they also have no complications
  • They appeal to speedrunners as they can do whatever is possible to be fast
  • The target selection is too different each contract to describe them here, but usually targets are chosen which can either be isolated quickly or offer public kills with SA rating
Routing contracts
  • Routes are understood as the path from start to end of the contract
  • Balanced routes are taking roughly the same time, which makes this contract type appealing to speedrunners additionally to other players
  • The contracts spread targets across the whole map
  • The contract is not restricting starting locations as they don’t enforce a disguise that only one start offers
  • If restrictions are chosen, they don’t limit the number of possible routes but increases them, for example by obtaining common items/disguises that are equally (badly) reachable from all targets or starting locations, which motivates more cross-routing
  • A well working complication is “No Disguise Change” combined with “Any Disguise” for all targets, which makes trespassing a bigger deal (works less well on maps with powerful starting disguises which should be more isolated from the targets in that case)
Puzzle contracts
  • Puzzles contain a certain, unique challenge that are uncommon in other contracts
  • What kind of puzzle that is can’t be really explained here as they differ too much to each other and are usually unique to maps
  • Who they appeal to depends on the puzzle, how it can be solved and in how many ways
  • Puzzles that can be solved quickly in a some different ways and additionally give challenge for slower players should appeal the most players
  • A variation are one-trick contracts which offer only one possible solution that is usually hard to guess, which also means the replay value is low once it is found
Suit Only / SONKO contracts
  • The contract enforces Suit Only and in case of SONKO contracts additionally No KO
  • They can have additional restrictions
  • They are usually harder contracts which are liked by players who follow a more classic way of playstyle, as a bald assassin in a suit doing his job clean and unnoticed
  • They can still appeal more players than these depending on freedom and length
Infiltration contracts
  • The contract usually enforces Suit Only with the targets being in a trespassing or hostile enviroment
  • The contract is often quite hard and leaves little room for mistakes, which is enforced with additional restrictions or complications
Endurance contracts
  • These contracts are so complicated it is expected to take more than 10 mins to be fulfilled while trying to be actually fast
  • They often come with maximum restrictions/difficuilty and some waiting times
  • As much some love them, as much others hate them
Sniper contracts
  • They enforce kills to be done with the sniper rifle, although not always as many accident kills are possible to be done from afar as well
  • Some require to reach a certain sniper nest which makes it sometimes not reasonable to be played as intended when faster solutions are possible
  • They are hard to make as yo have to find targets that are somewhat challenging but still possible to kill and not findable by other NPCs later in the play time
Fiber Wire contracts
  • As it is generally unreasonable to use the fiberwire for kills, contracts can focus on them by enforcing them as the required killing method
  • The unique mechanic to instantly drag them can be underlined with the “Hide All Bodies” complication, although it should still be justified to be used
  • The same contract principle is working with other items like large melee or firearms

Contract Appearance

When someone checks out your contract, it can matter how overwhelming it is. If so, less people play it. And you don’t want that. That is why you should make your contract seem to be as open and easy as possible, even if that is not true actually. The following points can help you at archiving that.

Targets
  • 5 targets can make it seem like a big task to play your contract. To attract more players, try to not make it 5 targets but less.
  • 1 target surely attracts the most people to play your contract. But it is very hard to make a good 1 target contract, which is why you might wait with such things until you got more experienced with contract creation.
  • The targets appear in the order you kill them at creation. Make the most iconic looking target your first one as it will be what sticks. Also group your targets that have the same kill restrictions or look similar. Having an order that is not fitting your intended approach can make it easier to hide the easiest solution for your contract.
  • Choosing known, prominent targets as the first target can be good so players get first ideas how to play it even before the start. Note that designing a contract around this can make it harder to make a good contract.
Kill Restrictions
  • There are no general advices for method or disguise restrictions. Just try to make them as few as possible. Only require these which are really needed for your general concept.
  • If you include many restrictions, try to make them not too different each target so players can focus on playing and not on checking what to pay attention to next.
  • Contracts without restrictions are called Any/Any. They offer the most freedom but can also turn out bland. You can start with them to test what others are able to do with it.
  • Some offer more freedom than others, like unspecific melee or unspecific accident kills. Pistol kills are also usable in many situations. Players know that and could be more eager to try them than they would at more specific conditions.
Complications
  • Try to include only a few complications, if you do at all. Otherwise your contract seems bloated up.
  • Complications without the [optional] tag can scare off players without giving your contract a chance.
  • See below for detailed arguments regarding specific complications.
Briefing/Title
  • Do not keep the default title and briefing!
  • Invest time into a good title/briefing. It is not important for some, but for others. It also shows you invested time into your contract.
  • It doesn’t have to be a long briefing, but include important information, like the location of required items if they are uncommon, or the required exit, if that complication is used.
  • If you have trouble to get below the character limit, you can write a longer text in a textpad and shorten it until it fits.
  • Write your briefing in English without grammar errors if you can.
  • When adding line breaks to your briefing, try to make the briefing readable without having to expand it.
Custom Image
  • You can’t include one ingame, but when posting your contract with a custom screenshot, it can attract more attention, including from IO staff.
  • Also include a screenshot of all target conditions and complications so people see right there it is a potentially good contract.

Target Selection

There are many kinds of NPCs that affect how your contract is, even before restrictions for their death. A general advice is to make the player not run too far to their first target. That is especially true on maps with only one starting location.

Mobile Targets
  • PRO: They give your contract variation and potentially multiple ways to play your contract.
  • CON: If not chosen carefully they can interrupt the “flow” of your contract, meaning players getting to them might be forced to wait for their opportunity. To counter this pick targets that can be somewhat easily lured away in many situations. Another way is to make them Any Method so players can improvise more easily.
Static Targets
  • PRO: They can be more easily included into approaches without having to worry for time.
  • CON: They offer a smaller number of possible kills, which can make them boring.
Public Targets
  • PRO: Killing them with SA rating can give your contract more challenge.
  • CON: The more difficult they are or the longer it takes to be lured away, the more tedious your contract can turn out. Especially if you don’t allow accident kills.
Widespread Targets
  • PRO: Targets far away from each other can make routing more interesting and diverse.
  • PRO: The player is encouraged to try long-range kills like sniping or using explosions to only get there once.
  • PRO: They make choosing different starting locations a nice thing to experiment with.
Closely positioned Targets
  • PRO: It can be fun to organize kills and their aftermaths when you are able to jump forth and back and contain the situations.
  • CON: Randomness can ruin this effect once panic spreads.
  • CON: Contracts like these can turn out very short, which makes them fall behind other contracts.
Guard Targets
  • PRO: Guards are easy to be lured. They investigate trouble, take away weapons and are the ones within NPC groups who investigate nearby noises. This makes the contract more versatile.
  • CON: Guards provide powerful disguises that can make things easier than you want them to be.
  • CON: Checkpoint guards and main mission target bodyguards have different behavior and are way harder to be lured away. Better don’t pick them unless you know what you are doing.
Civil Targets
  • PRO: They are harder to be lured away compared to guards. This can make your contract a little harder.
  • CON: In extreme cases, like when stationary in broad public, they make very bad targets.
  • PRO: They provide less helpful disguises if they do at all, which less likely ruins your ideas. This is always true with female targets.
  • CON: They react more random on panics than guards, though you should not include panics into your ideas anyway.
Main Mission Targets
  • PRO: They are well known and very mobile. They also fit well as first targets to give your contract an interesting appearance.
  • PRO: They work very well as open targets, as they were designed as such.
  • PRO: They react without randomness on panics as they often have lock-down routes.
  • CON: If restricted too much, they can generate long waiting times, since they have long routes. Take into account they have several additional lures and react on distant actions to counter that. Like Rico Delgado reacts on the village band to play.
  • CON: Not every one of them is easily included into plays without too much trouble.
Mixture of the above
  • PRO: You can combine multiple kinds of targets. That usually is a great idea if you can make them fit to each other without degrading their individual benefits.

Complications

Complications make your contracts more tricky. Use them thoughtfully or else you overly restrict your contracts beyond what is really needed.

They should not be used to make your contract generally harder, but because you know quite well at which points in your contract these complications result in a nice twist.

Don’t be encouraged to add complications just because there are more arguments here which praise them. They don’t have the same weight and if in question you should not add them anyway.

:warning: Non-optional complications are not giving your contract more depth, they only make it harder to complete it. There is a large group of players disliking them, so consider to never use them until you got better at contract creation.

Time Limit
  • PRO: Use it if you want that the intended, fast solution be the only way to achieve SA.
  • PRO: Create your contract with the mission timer turned on. Do no exit immediately but at a nice number, usually with 0 or 30 seconds after the minute count. That gives the complication a less random look. Better wait for another 30 seconds than making the limit too tight.
  • PRO: Time limits can encourage people to do speedruns who never did that before. Competitions with other people’s time can be addicting and so they can stick to your contract in the same way.
  • CON: It will hinder everyone else to get SA who use slower strats, it is more inclusive to say a better time score is enough to reward those who did what you wanted them to do.
  • CON: If you just want to use it to generate time pressure, you will only succeed at these players who are slow enough to get into problems, but still fast enough to be able to overcome it. Most players will have either no trouble or no chance.
Required Exit
  • PRO: If you offer multiple routes as a solution, but one route is much faster because of an exit, you can balance these routes by forcing another exit.
  • PRO: Can be used for immersion reasons.
  • PRO: It can be used to make a fast exit impossible. That can make it harder to leave bodies out in the open.
  • PRO: It can force a tricky exfiltration if you force no disguise change after an infiltration. Note that this can result in an overly hard contract.
  • PRO: Some exits need items or can be destroyed. This can be a good puzzle element. Try to place the targets near the exit or needed item.
  • CON: They generate bottle necks and greatly restrict possible routes. So don’t use it without good reasons.
  • CON: It can be confusing what to do if you use Easter Egg exits. Be fair and at least give strong hints in the briefing or don’t use them.
Targets Only
  • CON: Even without this, the player loses SA at non-target kills. There is no practical use for it.
  • PRO: You can add it for immersion reasons.
Do Not Get Spotted
  • PRO: Targets are allowed to spot you. If you want that to void SA, add this complication.
No Recordings
  • CON: Players already have to deal with recordings to get SA. There is no practical use to add it.
  • PRO: You can add it for immersion reasons.
No Bodies Found
  • PRO: Targets are allowed to see bodies in certain cases. To disallow this, add this complication.
  • PRO: Non-targets are allowed to see bodies in certain cases. To disallow this, add this complication. Does not work on bodies from accident or poison kills.
Hide All Bodies
  • PRO: It has a great impact on how to play your contract and can turn out to be a good puzzle element.
  • CON: It becomes a great issue the more targets or minimum KO’s your contract requires.
  • CON: If added as non-optional, players cannot exit before fulfilling it. This is an issue for casual players.
No Disguise Changes
  • PRO: It has a great impact on how to play your contract and can turn out to be a good puzzle element.
  • PRO: On maps without starting locations as guards, this complication results in a civil-disguise-only.
  • PRO: Utilizing big parts of the map plus Any-Disguise are good situations to add this. It makes the starting location selection more important.
Headshots Only
  • PRO: Some techniques make use of shooting NPCs in a non-lethal way. With this complication you disallow this.
  • PRO: It can be used to make Sniping approaches harder. But note that not always when a lethal hit is possible, the head is visible too. So it can happen that this complication makes some skilled shots impossible.
  • CON: Automatic weapons or shotguns will be useless for players. If the kill restriction allows them, consider to not use this complication.
Perfect Shooter
  • PRO: Can be added to stop bullet distractions, shooting explosive items and cameras and causing panic with loud shots.
  • CON: Since it is affecting many aspects, using it to stop one specific thing should be justified as really needed.
No Pacifications
  • PRO: It can be a big puzzle element to make KO’s impossible, as non-targets are harder to deal with. Like with emetic poison or carrying away items. Which is a “Time-Limit”-light complication, as that is not keeping them away forever.
  • PRO: If there are no free guard disguises, the player needs to stay in civil clothes when combined with a Suit restriction.
  • PRO: It can be a “No Disguise Changes”-light complication, as the player can only use starting disguises, free disguises and the ones from dead targets.

Intended Strategies

  • Every contract has to be doable with SA rating. Play your contract multiple times before spreading it.
  • Give the player some freedom to play differently than you want them to play. A good outcome is when your solution results in a better score than others you can imagine. See it as a good thing if you are proven otherwise.
  • Intended strats should not contain random elements. If they do, they should only exists in the beginning, so there is no bad luck ruining a lengthy run.
  • If intended strats contain waiting times (happens often at drowning or consumed poison kill requirements), give the player work to do in between, like getting a needed disguise or item. Or give the player freedom to do something completely different.
  • You don’t need an intended strat if you think the individual targets for themselves are interesting enough, or the possible routes between them.
  • If you make a very open Any/Any contract, start from a Suit start and try to get a good flow with your targets while keeping on your suit. It is very possible that other strats, like these which use disguises, happen to fit into it as well.
  • Your intended strat should be at least 1:30mins long, but not longer than 4:30mins. That is a good time span of medium times. If you expect strats to exist that are easily shorter than yours, it can be much longer. In any way it is good to test how long your idea takes to be executed.
  • Wildly specific solutions are almost guaranteed to not to be guessed by players. So better don’t do that. If there are very hard aspects to guess, hint on them in your briefing.
  • The poison syringe or propane flasks are usually last-resorts if all fails. Don’t have this as the intended strat of your contract unless it has an interesting twist that stands out.
  • Long lures should also work without planting coins. If they don’t, better don’t make that an element of your intended strat.

META: This guide is a very early version. I hope for much input to make it better, more complete and not too bloated up. I probably also have many typos in here now, I appreciate you pointing them out too.

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Great thread, well done for saving it :+1:

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Thanks :smiley:

I originally planned to do that once we get an impression how the mode changed, but as a moderator I can change this here anyway.

Happy creating. :grinning_face_with_smiling_eyes:

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:flushed:

Do we know there are going to be changes?

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No and tbh we better expect nothing. :stuck_out_tongue:

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Ngl, for a brief moment I did get my hopes up :pensive:

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I don’t expect a lot of changes. But there’s hope that we have finally the option to delete our own contracts. I also hope that there’s a new option in Melee kills. Not just close combat or thrown weapon but any possibility. But that’s a discussion for another topic. Maybe «Wishlist for H3».

Might have to make that topic tomorrow. We’ll see :smile:

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Still a great Guide and I can agree on everything, even though I don’t play Contracts anymore, most of this can also be applied to my ET Mods, who I try to always change up aka not having the same objectives like “Kill X and Y” two times in a row. I usually set on Puzzle and Infiltration Contracts. My fourth Season 1 ET, Dr. Mario Connor for Example is right next to the Lab Starting Location, you can use, so he’s obviously not alone, so the Challenge is to pick him out of the Room or empty it out.

I also do found intrest in Sniper Contracts recently. Every Target from my third Season 2 ET for Example can be eliminated from a single Roof, even though it of course takes time.

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How do I play these ET Mods? Do I have to download something? Or just be in offline mode?

Yes. You have download the ET Contracts of my first Season from Nexus Mods and put File in Zip in Runtime, naming it chunk0patch and the next following Number from what you have already installed. If you haven’t installed any Mods before, the last patch should end with a 4.

You’ll also need to update your Package Definition in order for any Mods to work, if you haven’t installed any before or the Game had an Update. The Package Definition Mod is also on Nexus.

For the Season 2 ET’s you’ll need Atampy 26’s Mod Explorer, where you can also download my Mods. Those just need to be installed, enabled and deployed before launching the Game, in Offline Mode.

I hope you sort of were able to follow me, if not, don’t hesitate to ask.

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Here’s to another year of instantly killing that one guy on The Final Test. Oh, and some other contracts too I guess.

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Very excited to be getting back into contracts mode with the new game. It’s been too long.

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I’m toying around with an idea for a contract and not really sure if it’s worth it. Maybe some of you could help me out:
The contract is to kill Helmut Kruger as the Vampire Magician. Not sure yet if I should specify a kill method. The fun part about this contract:

  1. You could start near Helmut, pacify him and place a breaching charge next to him. Run up to the disguise, kill Helmut, get back to a more convenient disguise and exit.
  2. You could start in the room with the Vampire-Disguise, work your way down to Helmut (maybe even with the muffin-trick straight to the park where your target is), kill Helmut and exit via the Helicopter.

One route is very safe to play but takes a lot of time as there isn’t an exit near the disguise. The other route is very speedrunner-friendly but has a lot of dangerous situations.
What I’m not sure of: Would this contract be too easy? Too complicated? Or just boring?

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I would say make the contract no matter what. Making a contract and deciding you don’t like it doesn’t hurt anyone. I’ve made plenty of contracts that never saw the light of day because after some play testing I decided they weren’t good. And there’s even some I’ve post that are really pretty meh. So just go for it

My only thoughts specifically on your contract would be that I don’t think option 1) is as easy as you think, or option 2) as hard as you think.

  1. if you start by Helmut you still have to do a fair bit of work to set up a SA remote kill, it’s not as easy as a quick item drop and run (rip electrophone). Not to mention that any disguise starting near Kruger doesn’t have easy access to the attic (unless you get suit and invite). So getting up to the vampire disguise isn’t much easier than the reverse. Plus the added time of having to go to the attic and back to an edit

  2. Starting near the vampire disguise means you can pick it up and head straight to Helmut/helicopter, the target and the exit in one. Eliminating Helmut is already illegal so doing it in a hostile suit doesn’t make things that much harder. And getting there isn’t a huge concern with the number of exterior climbing points in Paris. You also don’t have to worry too much about Helmut’s body as you leave straight after killing him

Personally I would always go for option 2 as it doesn’t have enough drawbacks to make me think of option 1 but :man_shrugging: It is quite hard making contracts that offer multiple avenues of approach where all the avenues seem equally appealing

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Hmmm… So maybe I should chose a different target. Near the kitchen exit or the main exit. Would complicate things a bit.

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@Urben awesome study on the contract creation guide which is true and I agree with the analysis, I will try to follow these rules strictly on my next contract creation :grinning:

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This guide is awesome and helpful for new creators that want to get others to play their contracts, personally, I just took criticism from other players and it helped me improving what I make, but I find a very important aspect of contract creation missing here…

PLAYTESTING
Playtesting is one of the most important aspects of contracts creation, playtesting is making sure every single aspect of your contract works correctly and consistently.

"How do I playtest my contract?"

Simple, you publish the same exact contract, without the briefing you planned, and with the title “Test”, as in “This is just a playtest contract”, if players want to try the unfinished version of your contract then they can go ahead, nothing wrong with it, just that if it’s not the final product then there is no reason they should criticize the contract, as it’s just for testing.

"What might actually be wrong with my contract if I don't playtest it?"

Well, a lot. Maybe that absurd shot you managed to pull off only worked that one time? Maybe that other guard is usually the one that checks the distraction? Maybe most of the time a random NPC looks at me while I’m drowning that NPC? You can’t know.

I don’t want to be mean and use someone contract as a bad example but I’m going to do it anyway, this is just a perfect demonstration on what not to do.


In the featured contract “Only Daffodils” there is this guard you are supposed to kill with a Sniper, and for some reason, for most of the distraction range, the other guard is the one getting distracted and checking that out, this is the result of no playtesting, because if the creator would check it multiple times, he’d prolly find out that the other guard should have been the target, and that this mistake could’ve been avoided.

"Oh Switcher, so you say that I can't make a good contract without making a test version prior to that?"

Of course not, because just like you, accidents happen (I’m Evil), but on a more serious note, yes, you can make good contract without testing, but it would benefit you as a creator and the players that play it if you’d test it first, personally, even the most simple Any/Any contract I test first to see if I enjoy it enough so I feel confident publishing it, no one is forcing you to make test versions, not making test versions doesn’t make you a bad creator, but it would benefit you as a creator that wants more people to play his contracts.

@Urben @djsojus

I’d be glad if this would be added as a side note :blush:

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