How to Craft Weapons and Gear in The Division
If you've spent any time exploring The Division then you'll have found plenty of weapons and gear scattered around Manhattan, as well as receiving them as mission rewards and purchases from vendors. However, there's another way of getting new items - crafting - which not everyone is familiar with. Crafting can be a great source of new weapons and gear to improve your arsenal, so follow this guide and you'll be building upgrades in no time.
Find blueprints
In order to craft an item, you first need to find a blueprint for it. These are normally acquired by completing side missions, and by highlighting the marker on the map you can see which blueprint you'll receive.
Find materials
The next thing you need for crafting is materials, in the form of Weapon Parts, Tools, Electronics and Fabric. You'll see these marked on the map when you get close to them - normally Fabric and Electronics are found in stores, Tools in garages/workshops, and Weapon Parts in locations such as police stations. You can deconstruct items you don't have equipped to receive materials by selection the appropriate option in the Inventory menu, and there are also Wing Upgrades you can purchase for your Base of Operations that give you a regular supply of materials for collection.
Get crafting
Once you have blueprints and materials, you can use the Crafting Station in your Base of Operations to make some new items. Scroll down the list of items to see their level and the range of damage or armour they'll fall into, as well as how many random bonuses will be assigned to that item. At the bottom of the screen are the Resource Requirements, and if you meet them you can craft the item, which will have stats and bonuses randomly assigned to it. If you're not happy with the outcome you can deconstruct the item, but be aware that you'll only receive back a portion of the original materials.
Material conversion
Materials are ranked in the same way as weapons and gear, with green being standard, blue for specialised and yellow as high-end. At the bottom of the Crafting Station menu you'll find a Material Conversion option, where you can 'trade up' five pieces of a material for one of the next level up, so if you find yourself short on a particular resource then this can help you reach your target.
Check out our other guides:
Sign up to the 12DOVE Newsletter
Weekly digests, tales from the communities you love, and more
Iain originally joined Future in 2012 to write guides for CVG, PSM3, and Xbox World, before moving on to join GamesRadar in 2013 as Guides Editor. His words have also appeared in OPM, OXM, PC Gamer, GamesMaster, and SFX. He is better known to many as ‘Mr Trophy’, due to his slightly unhealthy obsession with amassing intangible PlayStation silverware, and he now has over 600 Platinum pots weighing down the shelves of his virtual award cabinet. He does not care for Xbox Achievements.
Dev behind one of 2024's best indie horror games celebrates 1 million soundtrack streams on Spotify: "I can buy like two hot dogs with the revenue"
Dragon Quest 3 remake producer wants Final Fantasy 6 to get the HD-2D treatment because it has "the highest quality pixel art"
James Gunn says "more than one" potentially R-rated DC projects are currently in the works: "Whatever is worthy of the story"