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Difference between revisions of "40d:Weapon"
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Dwarves can only make metal weapons out of [[copper]], [[iron]], [[bronze]], [[bismuth bronze]], [[steel]], [[silver]]or [[adamantine]]. (Short swords can also be made from obsidian, with a [[wood]]en handle.) The rare exception is a [[strange mood]], which can produce a weapon from almost anything (and would fall into the "other" category), and elves, who trade wooden weapons. | Dwarves can only make metal weapons out of [[copper]], [[iron]], [[bronze]], [[bismuth bronze]], [[steel]], [[silver]]or [[adamantine]]. (Short swords can also be made from obsidian, with a [[wood]]en handle.) The rare exception is a [[strange mood]], which can produce a weapon from almost anything (and would fall into the "other" category), and elves, who trade wooden weapons. | ||
− | Actual weapon damage depends partially on the material from which the weapon was forged. | + | Actual weapon damage depends partially on the material from which the weapon was forged, then multiplied by quality (see next section). For example, a copper battle axe does a base 55 damage (110 x 50%), while a steel axe does 146 damage (110 x 133%, etc. |
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Revision as of 21:47, 23 September 2009
Weapons are items that increase the damage dealt by creatures in combat. In fortress mode, after accessing the military screen with m, pressing w gives a list of which weapons you desire your dwarves to use. Dwarves only carry a weapon if their profession requires one: that is, if they are a miner, woodcutter, hunter, or soldier. Dwarves working in other trades will only collect a weapon upon being drafted, which may cause a long walk to collect equipment depending on weapon availability and settings.
Availability
Some types of weapons cannot be used by dwarves in Fortress mode, such as bows, and only 7 can be manufactured. Some can however be used if recovered from enemies or gained by trade, and all can be used in weapon traps just fine.
In Adventure mode, all weapons are usable; an adventurer can become a bowdwarf, or use a human great axe or longsword in one hand despite the fact that he is smaller than the minimum size required to use the axe at all, with both hands or one. It is not clear if there are any penalties associated with using over-sized weapons.
Manufacture
Dwarves with relevant skills can create weapons using an appropriate workshop and raw material. Wooden and bone crossbow bolts and Obsidian short swords can be created at the craftsdwarf's workshop. (Metal) bolts and melee weapons can be created at a metalsmith's forge (or the magma equivalent). Crossbows can be made at a bowyer's workshop. Dwarves can only create weapons they themselves can wield, with the occasional exception of artifacts.
Most weapons can be made of a single bar of iron, silver, copper, bronze, steel, bismuth bronze, or adamantine. (Short swords can also be made from obsidian, with a wooden handle.) The rare exception is a strange mood, which can produce a weapon from almost anything.
The material of crossbows does not affect the damage of fired bolts, although it does affect the damage of the crossbow when it is used as a bludgeon (when striking the opponent with the weapon itself - bolts determine the damage when fired at range).
There are a few enormous weapons that no race can wield, these are only usable when mounted into weapon traps. These are the menacing spike, the large, serrated disc, the spiked ball, enormous corkscrew, and the giant axe blade.
Use in Fortress mode
Upon being drafted, dwarves will get a "pick up equipment" job and go and pick up the assigned weapon and armor. However, there are three labors, when enabled, allow the dwarf to be fully equipped (but not in the military). This can be very useful to quickly defend against an ambush or attack.
- A woodcutter carries a battle axe even as a civilian. If a woodcutter is assigned to use an axe as a weapon he or she will only need get the assigned armor. The caveat is that woodcutters need to be cross-trained as axedwarfs (as wielding an axe requires the axe skill) and if you designate a section of trees for wood-cutting, all your dwarves will rush out to cut them down.
- A miner carries a pick at all times. The drawback is that picks are mediocre weapons (see below) and a miner will still need to equip the desired armor. Because wielding the pick is based on the civilian "mining" skill, miners don't have to train as soldiers to be semi-effective fighters. Picks will only be used as weapons by miners who are holding picks and instructed to fight unarmed.
- A hunter will equip the armor and weapon assigned to hunt with (Note: this needn't be a crossbow with leather armor). Military dwarves that are deactivated while fully equipped with a weapon and armor and have the hunting labor enabled will keep their weapon and armor equipped. This case is only practical when the surrounding wild animals have been depleted and armor and weapons are plentiful.
Effectiveness
Weapons vary in the amount and type of damage inflicted, according to raw/objects/item_weapon.txtv0.28.181.40d. Blunt weapons like hammers and maces tend to deal large amounts of damage to external body parts, and never get stuck in targets. Slashing or cutting weapons such as axes or swords have a tendency to sever limbs on good hits, but sometimes get stuck in their victims. Piercing weapons such as spears or crossbow bolts have a high chance to deal damage to internal organs, possibly resulting in instant kills, but have the highest chance to get stuck in victims. Weapons that get stuck in their victims cannot be reused until pulled free, which can leave the attacker vulnerable. While stuck, the weapon can be twisted in the wound, possibly causing the victim to pass out from pain.
High "Crit. Boost" is a better chance of causing internal injuries, rather than simply wounding body parts. This is useful against big, hard-to-damage enemies -- piercing weapons like spears will tend to damage their organs, which is usually a faster way to take them out.
Weapon statistics
These have been taken from /raw/objects/item_weapon.txt:
Melee Weapons
Dwarf weapons
In Fortress mode, these are the only weapons dwarves can manufacture themselves.
Name | Damage | Damage Type | Skill Used | Crit. Boost |
---|---|---|---|---|
Battle axe | 110 | Slash | Axe | None |
Crossbow(melee only)† | 70 | Bludgeon | Hammer | None |
Mace | 120 | Bludgeon | Mace | None |
Pick† | 70 | Pierce | Mining | 2 |
Short sword | 100 | Slash | Sword | 1 |
Spear | 100 | Pierce | Spear | 2 |
War hammer | 120 | Bludgeon | Hammer | None |
Other weapons
(Note - dwarves can not use these in fortress mode unless marked with an *)
Name | Damage | Damage Type | Skill Used | Crit. Boost |
---|---|---|---|---|
Blowgun† (melee) | 20 | Bludgeon | Sword | None |
Bow† (melee) | 40 | Bludgeon | Sword | None |
Large dagger | 70 | Slash | Dagger | 1 |
Flail | 130 | Bludgeon | Mace | None |
Great axe‡ | 150 | Slash | Axe | None |
Halberd‡ | 140 | Slash | Axe | None |
Long sword* † | 120 | Slash | Sword | 1 |
Maul‡ | 160 | Bludgeon | Hammer | None |
Morningstar* | 120 | Bludgeon | Mace | None |
Pike‡ | 120 | Pierce | Mace | 2 |
Scimitar* | 100 | Slash | Sword | 1 |
Scourge | 30 | Gore | Whip/Lasher | None |
Two-handed sword‡ | 140 | Slash | Sword | 1 |
Whip† | 20 | Gore | Whip/Lasher | None |
† Dwarves wield weapon two-handed (set number of weapons to 2 in fort mode (v-p-s-m))
‡ Dwarves cannot wield weapon (too large)
* Can be worn in fortress mode
Missile ammunition statistics
These have been taken from /raw/objects/item_ammo.txt:
Name | Damage | Damage Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Arrow | 100 | Pierce | Invaders' weapon |
Blowdart | 10 | Pierce | Invaders' weapon |
Bolt | 100 | Pierce | Dwarf & Invaders' weapon |
Trap weapon statistics
(See Trap Weapon)
Damage calculation
Weapons and traps do one of four types of damage, the type of damage influences what type of critical hits it can inflict. Damage is reduced by the targets armor and toughness.
Type | Criticals | Weapons and Traps | |
---|---|---|---|
Slash | Sever Limbs | axe, sword, dagger, giant axe blade, serrated disc | |
Pierce | Organ damage | pike, pick, spear, bolt, arrow, blowdart, enormous corkscrew, menacing spike, spiked ball | |
Bludgeon | Break bones | war hammer, mace, unloaded crossbow or bow or blowgun, maul, flail, morningstar, fist, stone-fall trap | |
Gore | Heavy Bleeding and Pain(?) | whip, Scourge | |
Burn | Extreme Pain | Special Creature Tokens(Attack) | |
Heat | Ignition of target | Special Creature Tokens(Attack) | |
Cold | Freezing/Frostbite | Special Creature Tokens(Attack) |
Material damage modifiers
Dwarves can only make metal weapons out of copper, iron, bronze, bismuth bronze, steel, silveror adamantine. (Short swords can also be made from obsidian, with a wooden handle.) The rare exception is a strange mood, which can produce a weapon from almost anything (and would fall into the "other" category), and elves, who trade wooden weapons.
Actual weapon damage depends partially on the material from which the weapon was forged, then multiplied by quality (see next section). For example, a copper battle axe does a base 55 damage (110 x 50%), while a steel axe does 146 damage (110 x 133%, etc.
Material | Damage % |
---|---|
Adamantine | 500 |
Steel and Obsidian† | 133 |
Iron | 100 |
Bronze and Bismuth bronze | 75 |
Copper | 66 |
All other materials† (wood, silver, glass, etc.) | 50 |
† This value could not be verified from the raws. It is believed to still be accurate but use at your own risk. |
Item quality
Toady has stated that quality increases its protection (or damage, in the case of weapons), namely, "Quality has a huge effect on damage and damage reduction... Exceptional is almost double damage/damage block."
- Item Name : Basic crafted weapon - x1.0 damage
- -Item Name- : Well-Crafted weapon - x1.2 damage
- +Item Name+ : Finely Crafted weapon - x1.4 damage
- *Item Name* : Superior Quality weapon - x1.6 damage
- ≡Item Name≡ : Exceptional weapon - x1.8 damage
- ☼Item Name☼ : Masterful weapon - x2.0 damage
Quality/Material equivalence
This table shows the (rough) equivalent multiplier for a given material and quality combination. The exact values have been rounded to the nearest 1/10th to save space on the chart.
Material | .5 | .6 | .7 | .8 | .9 | 1.0 | 1.1 | 1.2 | 1.3 | 1.4 | 1.5 | 1.6 | 1.7 | 1.8 | 1.9 | 2.0 | 2.1 | 2.2 | 2.3 | 2.4 | 2.5 | 2.6 | 2.7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Other1 | Ø | - | + | * | ≡ | ☼ | |||||||||||||||||
Copper | Ø | - | + | * | ≡ | ☼ | |||||||||||||||||
Bronze2 | Ø | - | + | * | ≡ | ☼ | |||||||||||||||||
Iron | Ø | - | + | * | ≡ | ☼ | |||||||||||||||||
Steel3 | Ø | - | + | * | ≡ | ☼ |
- Notes:
- 1) includes bone, silver, wood, glass, and any other material not listed (except obsidian3). The net effect of non-standard "other" materials on artifact weapons is not known.
- 2) includes bismuth bronze
- 3) Currentlyv0.28.181.40d, obsidian has the same modifiers as steel.
So at a glance we can see that even a no-quality steel item is the equivalent to the best copper item possible, and that no copper item will ever be as good as a +fine iron+ one. (It is not known whether artifact quality items have additional modifiers above and beyond "masterpiece" level.)
Adamantine items start at a multiplier of 5.00 for no-quality items, and sky-rocket from there.
Damage Formula
Toady One recently revealed the actual damage formula for normal hits. This formula is in effect until the next version comes out, at which point there will be a new one.
[prone]{standing} 2*( RND(DMG*QLT*MAT/10) + RND(STR) + {berserk} RND(4) + {charging} RND(5) +RND(DMBL*2) + {bigger} RND(DIFFSIZE) - {smaller} DIFFSIZE - RND(TOU*2) - [berserk] RND(4) )
- RND(X) = random number from 0 to X
- DMG = weapon damage
- QLT = weapon quality modifier
- MAT = material modifier
- STR = strength level of attacker
- DMBL = damblock of defender
- DIFFSIZE = size difference between attack and defender
- TOU = toughness level of defender
- {xxx} = if attacker is xxx, then apply the following
- [xxx] = if defender is xxx, then apply the following
Skill modifiers and armor values also apply into the formula. Criticals are not included in the formula.
See Also: