All you’re choosing here is appearance and some (minor) boosts to your starting stats. You’ll also learn new skills - and those skills aren’t class-specific.Īll of which is to say: Character creation feels like you’re making huge, weighty choices, but you’re really not. We’ll go into all of the attributes and stats below, but before we get there, it’s important to understand that none of the choices you make here are really permanent and don’t lock you out of other choices later.Īs you level up, you’ll be able to increase any attribute (and their associated stats - more on this below). Your breed, class, and attributes aren’t permanent Throughout, we’ll give you suggestions for a very simple first character build. In this Biomutant character creation guide, we’ll teach you all about the various attributes and stats you’ll be choosing, explain why you don’t have to worry too much about them, and detail Biomutant’s classes. So early in the game, though, it’s hard to know what to choose. You’ll need to pick a breed, assign attribute points and resistances, and select a class. The FLEMMS 2019 is a nationwide household-based survey and one of the designated statistical activities of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) by virtue of Executive Order 352.Right at the beginning of Biomutant, you’re asked to make a lot of decisions about your character. Additionally, 77.7 percent of Filipinos in the age group 10 to 64 years old had the minimum set of skills/competencies in functional literacy level 3. (Figure 3, and Table 4)Īlso, about half (52.4%) of elementary graduates can read, write, compute, and comprehend.
Moreover, around three-fifths (60.5%) of Filipinos in the age group 10 to 64 years old living in urban areas, and two-fifths (44.3%) of those living in rural areas were in literacy level 4. (Tables 2, and 3)Ībout half (53.4%) of Filipinos in the age group 10 to 64 years old had a literacy level 4, or had completed at least four years of secondary education (that is, at least junior high school completer/high school graduate), and most of them were from the 20 to 24 years old age group (76.7%). Meanwhile, persons who had no grade completed or received early childhood education were reported to have the lowest functional literacy rate of 2.7 percent. 2 This also remained true across all regions. (Figure 2, and Table 1)įilipinos who are at least junior high school completers in the K-12 curriculum or equivalently high school graduates in the old curriculum were reported to have very high functional literacy rates (100.0%). (Figure 1, and Table 1)Īcross regions, the National Capital Region (NCR) and Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) registered the highest (96.5%), and lowest (71.6%) functional literacy rate, respectively. Among age groups, 20 to 24-year-old (96.0%) Filipinos had the highest functional literacy rate in 2019, while those aged 60 to 64 years old (84.8%) had the lowest. Both posted significantly higher rates compared with the proportion of functional literate female (92.0%), and male (88.7%) Filipinos in 2013. In 2019, females posted higher functional literacy rate (92.9%) than males (90.2%). Generally, functional literacy rates among the population 10 to 64 years old across sexes and age groups were higher in 2019 than in 2013. This translates to around 73.0 million out of 79.7 million in the same age group who are considered literate on a functional level. About 91.6 percent Filipinos 10 to 64 years old were functional literate1 in 2019, according to the results of the 2019 Functional Literacy, Education and Mass Media Survey (FLEMMS).