Identification
Any item can be completely identified by reading a scroll of identify. Unfortunately, there won't be enough scrolls for everything you want to identify, so it's helpful to know about other means of identification.
Checking items you have identified
Press \ for a list of items already identified. You can also use the command - to toggle the view to items you have not yet identified.
Pre-identified items
Certain backgrounds or species start with a couple of items identified:
- Deep Dwarves recognize wands of healing.
- Spriggans recognize potions of porridge.
- Vampires recognize potions of blood.
- Assassins recognize potions of poison.
- Healers recognize potions of curing and potions of heal wounds.
- Warpers recognize scrolls of blinking.
- Artificers recognize wands of flame, wands of enslavement, wands of random effects, and scrolls of recharging.
- Wanderers recognize scrolls of teleportation and may start with additional scrolls or potions, which they will also recognize.
Additionally, converting to Ashenzari will identify scrolls of remove curse, scrolls of curse weapon, scrolls of curse armour, and scrolls of curse jewelry, if you haven't already identified them.
Identifying items in shops
Anything bought from a non-antique shop will automatically be identified. This is especially useful for identifying bad items such as scrolls of immolation, rings of hunger, or potions of poison, as all of these are quite cheap and identifying them this way will prevent you from harming yourself by experimenting with them.
Identifying items through use
If the item is a weapon, armour, ring or amulet, you may want to make sure that you can uncurse it (a scroll of remove curse will always work, and scrolls of enchant weapon/armour will uncurse weapons and armour, respectively) before trying to identify it through use. Some weapons and armour appear as shiny, runed, glowing, dyed, embroidered etc., while others are "plain". It's worth noting that while "plain" weapons and armour are never branded, they often have random pluses or minuses: while (0,-1) and the like are common, armour and weapons up to +2 or +3 can be found by testing these items in bulk. Conversely, items with adjectives are almost never +0, but can have bonuses or maluses, and they don't necessarily have brands. Many of them will be cursed: any cursed weapon/armour has 1 chance in 3 of having an adjective. Even marked weapons are still more likely to be (-1, 0) or (+1, -1) than (+2, +3). More exotic descriptors such as "ancient", "humming", or "distressingly furry" indicate artefacts; even when unidentified, they will appear in white in the inventory listing.
Armour
Armour is always fully identified when worn. This includes artefacts. The only risk with wearing un-ID'd non-artefact armour is being stuck by a curse with something suboptimal; there are no harmful armour egos other than ponderousness, which is exceedingly rare and not usually generated cursed. Artefact armour can occasionally be nasty: mutagenic radiation, teleportitis, and negative slaying are all possibilities. You should always have a scroll of remove curse handy when trying on artefact armour.
Weapons
Weapons will reveal any brands (such as "of flaming") when wielded - and all other special properties, too, if it's an artefact. To find their to-hit and to-damage bonuses, however, you need to have some skill with them. If your skill is above a certain value (randomly determined when the weapon is created), the weapon is in your inventory, and you know that it is not cursed (eg: you have already wielded that weapon), the pluses will be revealed.
Note that weapons of distortion can have dangerous effects if wielded while un-identified or unequipping, such as casting the user into the Abyss. The unique monsters Psyche and Sonja are likely to drop weapons of distortion or chaos, and their weapons will be inscribed with their names.
Jewellery
Some amulets and rings auto-identify but many do not. Amulets are generally safer to identify in this way than rings, since only the amulet of inaccuracy is harmful, and it's rarely cursed.
- The amulet of faith will auto-identify when put on if you are worshipping a god, (or if worn when you pray at an altar) but beware as unequipping it will lower your piety by 1/3.
- The amulet of rage, amulet of the gourmand and amulet of guardian spirit all auto-identify when worn - note that the last can be dangerous for spellcasters, as it will drain all your MP when put on or taken off. Don't put on un-ID'd amulets in combat.
- The amulet of stasis and the amulet of clarity both auto-identify when the player resists the corresponding effects.
- The amulet of warding will auto-identify when an attack from a summoned monster is deterred.
This leaves the amulet of resist corrosion, the amulet of resist mutation, the amulet of conservation, and the aforementioned amulet of inaccuracy to be identified.
As for rings, they can be more dangerous than amulets, but many will auto-identify for you.
- These rings all auto-identify when put on: ring of flight, ring of teleportation, ring of invisibility, ring of magical power, ring of regeneration, ring of wizardry, ring of fire, ring of ice and most of the "stat rings": ring of protection, ring of evasion, ring of strength, ring of dexterity, and ring of intelligence.
- The ring of see invisible will identify if worn when a creature attempts to turn invisible, or if putting it on reveals a hitherto unseen invisible creature.
- The ring of sustain abilities will identify if worn when it protects you from stat drain.
- The ring of teleport control can be identified by teleporting or blinking.
- The ring of teleportation and the negative versions of "stat rings" are usually cursed.
- The ring of sustenance and the ring of hunger will auto-identify when your hunger status changes. Rings of hunger are always cursed. If a ring is cursed and does not auto-identify it should be removed with a scroll of remove curse as soon as possible, since there is a very good chance that it's a ring of hunger.
This leaves the following rings to be identified normally:
- The rings of resistance (poison, fire, cold, negative energy, and magic protection) can produce revealing messages when they protect you from something, though it is only unambiguous if you have no other source of the resistance to the resisted element. Usually it is best to simply use an identify scroll on those rings that don't identify through other means; for the resistance rings, though, it is possible to use a safe source of the element to be resisted. Generally a self-targeted low-level spell will do; potions of poison can be used to test for poison resistance, though be sure to be at full health in a safe area first.
- Rings of slaying must be identified with a scroll.
Artefact jewellery will reveal any properties that would auto-identify when worn; for example, a ring with +5 Int and rElec will reveal the Int bonus but not the resistance when worn. As such, you'll often need to use scrolls of identify to fully identify them. Artefact jewellery that is partially identified will be inscribed as such.
Scrolls
Most scrolls, but not all, will auto-identify when read. Reading one of these scrolls will always identify it:
- Scroll of acquirement
- Scroll of blinking
- Scroll of enchant weapon
- Scroll of fear
- Scroll of fog
- Scroll of holy word
- Scroll of immolation
- Scroll of magic mapping
- Scroll of noise
- Scroll of random uselessness
- Scroll of silence
- Scroll of summoning (unless in a cramped or crowded place where the monsters couldn't be created)
- Scroll of teleportation
- Scroll of torment
- Scroll of vorpalize weapon
- Scroll of vulnerability
Reading one of these scrolls will ask for an item to use it on:
- Scroll of enchant armour (identified if used on a piece of armour and the enchantment succeeds)
- Scroll of identify (identified if used on an unidentified item)
- Scroll of recharging (identified if used on a wand or rod)
The following scrolls may identify, based on certain conditions:
- Scroll of amnesia (if you have at least one spell memorized)
- Scroll of curse armour (if wearing at least one uncursed piece of armour)
- Scroll of curse jewellery (if wearing at least one piece of uncursed jewellery)
- Scroll of curse weapon (if wielding an uncursed weapon)
- Scroll of remove curse (if you are wearing at least one cursed item)
For best results when read-IDing scrolls, be sure that you:
- Are on an unexplored level, standing on stairs leading to a clear level (to retreat if it's a teleportation, noise, or another harmful scroll, and to make the most out of magic mapping)
- Test the most numerous unknown scrolls you have first (to make it more probable to discover the more common identify, teleportation, curse, and remove curse scrolls first and to avoid wasting more valuable scrolls)
- Don't have any allies nearby (to not offend them and possibly your deity with fear, immolation, torment, or holy word)
- Wield the best uncursed weapon you have (to identify curse weapon and benefit from weapon enchantment scrolls)
- Are carrying an unidentified piece of armour and an unidentified wand, even if it's just the number of charges (best chance to correctly use identify, enchant armour or recharge). Note that on an unsuccessful reading of one of these scrolls, the game will auto-inscribe the type of scroll with the item it was tested with. This makes it easy to rule out possibilities!
For the brave, be sure that you have a cursed item equipped (to identify remove curse). Not infrequently this may be one that was just cursed by a curse armour/weapon/jewellery scroll, if you are identifying a number of scrolls at once.
Conditions can be adjusted as your knowledge improves. For example, once you've discovered scrolls of remove curse, cursing your weapon with a scroll of curse weapon is no problem at all. Some of the less common scrolls are very valuable and therefore it is not wasteful to use a scroll of identify on single scrolls that have been single for some time (e.g. vorpalise weapon).
Identifying scrolls is all about balance. On the one hand, you shouldn't waste scrolls of identify out of sheer curiosity, but on the other, it's massively annoying to die on level 3 with several scrolls of teleportation, fear, or blinking in your inventory. When read-identifying scrolls, watch out for the following detrimental effects:
- The scrolls of immolation and torment both cause serious HP damage, though torment is never directly lethal. Scrolls of holy word cause similar damage to undead or demonic characters.
- If you have any allies in sight, reading a scroll of fear, immolation, or torment (or holy word, for undead/demonic allies) is liable to cause them to turn on you. On top of that, some gods get angry if you harm your allies.
- Your armour, weapon, or jewelry may become cursed, though scrolls of remove curse are fairly common.
- Scrolls of random uselessness may produce friendly butterflies, which can be troublesome for characters worshiping a god who dislikes the death of allies.
Potions
All potions auto-identify when quaffed, but some (for example potions of poison and decay) are seriously harmful. It may be sensible to wait until you have larger potion stacks before trying them, so that you are more likely to discover the potion of curing, which is the most common potion and will cure poisoning and rotting. This also reduces the chance of wasting a potion of cure mutation. The potion of blood is always red, and it will auto identify when it turns into a potion of coagulated blood after a while. Note that wearing an amulet of resist mutation or having poison resistance will not interfere with identifying the corresponding potions, but will protect from their effects.
A second way to identify potions is to witness monsters quaffing them. You'll have to note the effect the potion has on the monster; once you've seen it, the appropriate potion type will be marked as "tried by monster" and it can be inscribed with its identity depending on the effects you saw.
Note that potions of porridge are almost always described as a "gluggy white" or "gluggy brown" potion.
It is not cowardice to avoid quaff-IDing potions entirely. Scrolls of identify are common enough that using them on every unidentified potion you find is not unreasonable.
Wands
Wands usually auto-identify when zapped at a monster which does not resist them, but until you have a fairly high Evocations skill, the only way to determine the number of charges in a wand is to use a scroll of identify.
The best way to identify wands is by zapping at a monster who is at least one square away from you, close to a rock wall, yet without the shot being perpendicular to the wall. This will ensure that if the wand is a fireball you will not be hit by the blast, if the wand is digging it will become identified due to digging the wall, and if the wand is lightning it will not hurt you by bouncing back at you. Wands should be tested on weak monsters in case they are hastened or turned invisible. If the game tells you "nothing happens" and the enemy is uninjured, it's a wand of healing.
Another method is to zap the wands at a section of wall. If this fails attempt to use it on yourself. This can use more charges, but is slightly safer and does not require a monster to be present. In fact, you should make sure that there aren't any nearby monsters, since a wand of confusion or a wand of enslavement will cause you to confuse yourself.
History
Prior to 0.10, scrolls of enchant weapon, scrolls of fear, scrolls of holy word, scrolls of torment, and scrolls of vorpalise weapon would only identify when read if they affected something.
Prior to 0.8, wield-IDing magical staves would only work if the spellcaster's skills exceeded a certain value, much like with weapons now.
Prior to 0.6 and the removal of the Divinations school of magic, you could also identify items using the Identify spell.