The suit has several jobs at once. It tells people you are there to help. It protects your identity. It keeps you functional for hours. And sometimes it protects you physically. Most new RLSH start with the last one. The ones who stick around usually figure out the first three matter more.
What the Suit Actually Does
Nyght from the Xtreme Justice League discovered something interesting. Without the costume, people saw a big intimidating stranger. With it, they saw someone signaling "I am here to help." The costume gave people permission to approach him. That turned out to be more useful than any armor.
For outreach, bright colors and approachable design make sense. For patrol, more tactical appearance works, but you still need to read as "helper" and not "threat." All black with no distinguishing elements will get you stopped by police.
Three Layer System
Base layer. Moisture wicking compression gear. Comfortable, flexible, available in whatever color you need.
Protective layer. If you use armor, D3O smart material is the standout. Stays soft until impact, then instantly hardens. Thin enough to hide under an outer layer.
Outer layer. Your visual identity. Motorcycle leather works well because it combines durability with built in armor pockets and an intentional look.
Budget Tiers
~$100. Dark athletic clothing, simple face covering, boots you own, flashlight, basic first aid, phone, water. Enough for outreach right now.
~$400 to $500. Compression base, surplus motorcycle guards, quality mask, tactical belt, IFAK, good boots.
~$2,000+. Ballistic vest, D3O inserts, quality jacket, tactical boots, body camera, comms, professional mask.
Mr. Xtreme operated for 20 years out of a van and did more sustained community work than almost anyone. Gear does not equal effectiveness.
Priority Order
Boots first. If you cannot walk comfortably for four hours, nothing else matters. Then identity concealment. Then mobility. Then protection. Aesthetics come last. Test any new setup for a full session. Have someone photograph you at distance under streetlights. Make sure you can reach your phone and first aid kit with gloves on.