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Editing 40d:Defense guide

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{{Quality|Exceptional}}
 
{{av}}
 
 
<!-- THIS ARTICLE IS GENERAL THEORY, "THINGS TO CONSIDER".  
 
<!-- THIS ARTICLE IS GENERAL THEORY, "THINGS TO CONSIDER".  
 
THERE IS NOT ROOM FOR DETAILS OR SPECIFIC SUGGESTIONS.
 
THERE IS NOT ROOM FOR DETAILS OR SPECIFIC SUGGESTIONS.
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* '''Concentric circles:''' Think redundancy - one wall may not be enough.  With the existence of door-destroying and bow-wielding attackers, double or multiple hard barriers between the inside and the outside is essential to fend off the worst assaults, and if they get inside one barrier it's nice to have another behind that. Sometimes captives will escape their [[cage]]s ''inside'' your fortress. The choke points between the circles are where you build traps and lockable doors, and station troops.
 
* '''Concentric circles:''' Think redundancy - one wall may not be enough.  With the existence of door-destroying and bow-wielding attackers, double or multiple hard barriers between the inside and the outside is essential to fend off the worst assaults, and if they get inside one barrier it's nice to have another behind that. Sometimes captives will escape their [[cage]]s ''inside'' your fortress. The choke points between the circles are where you build traps and lockable doors, and station troops.
  
* '''Assume the worst:''' Build up your defenses ''before'' the enemy shows up - like right now! Plan on being [[siege]]d by scores of [[goblin]] archers, door-breaking [[troll]]s, invisible [[kobold]] master thieves, dive-bombing [[giant eagle]]s, flame-breathing [[fire imp]]s, angry [[elephant]]s, and a [[bronze colossus]] - ''all at once''. Hopefully, you will never have to face that kind of threat, but being ready for anything is the best bet, and, more realistically, when things go wrong (and with dwarves, they will, just believe it) you will have a buffer of defense to fall back on.
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* '''Assume the worst:''' Build up your defenses ''before'' the enemy shows up - like right now! Plan on being [[siege]]d by scores of [[goblin]] archers, door-breaking [[troll]]s, invisible [[kobold]] master thieves, dive-bombing [[giant eagle]]s, flame-breathing [[fire imp]]s, angry [[elephants]], and a [[bronze colossus]] - ''all at once''. Hopefully, you will never have to face that kind of threat, but being ready for anything is the best bet, and, more realistically, when things go wrong (and with dwarfs, they will, just believe it) you will have a buffer of defense to fall back on.
  
 
==Threats==
 
==Threats==
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:*'''Building destroyers'''
 
:*'''Building destroyers'''
::Some creatures have the [BUILDINGDESTROYER] [[creature token|tag]] in their [[Raw file]]. This gives them the fearful capacity of tearing apart your doors and floodgates and almost anything else.
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::Some creatures have the [[BUILDINGDESTROYER]] [[creature tokens|tag]] in their [[Raw file]]. This gives them the fearful capacity of tearing apart your doors and bridges and anything else, only excluding constructions built with the {{k|b}} + {{k|C}} keys.
  
 
:*'''Flying animals'''
 
:*'''Flying animals'''
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A [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moat moat] with a drawbridge is perhaps the simplest defense known to Dwarvenkind, and not a bad start. The [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortifications Fortifications article on Wikipedia] is also a good source of inspiration. But simply shutting the outside world out and allowing invaders to mill about outside your moat is not always a desirable solution. Enemies will still prevent [[caravan]]s and [[migrant]]s from arriving, will kill [[liaison]]s, and prevent any desired outdoor activities.  In addition, Dwarf Fortress players often find it enjoyable to perpetrate mass slaughter of invaders rather than helplessly glare at them from inside their caves.
 
A [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moat moat] with a drawbridge is perhaps the simplest defense known to Dwarvenkind, and not a bad start. The [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortifications Fortifications article on Wikipedia] is also a good source of inspiration. But simply shutting the outside world out and allowing invaders to mill about outside your moat is not always a desirable solution. Enemies will still prevent [[caravan]]s and [[migrant]]s from arriving, will kill [[liaison]]s, and prevent any desired outdoor activities.  In addition, Dwarf Fortress players often find it enjoyable to perpetrate mass slaughter of invaders rather than helplessly glare at them from inside their caves.
  
For this, you will need a more complicated defense than a passive ditch and walls.  One common method of defense is to build a walled structure above the entrance to your fortress, stationing Marksdwarves on the second floor overlooking the drawbridge-entrance. Another is to engineer a very long but narrow entrance, at the end of which are [[Ballista |ballista]]e waiting to unload at unfortunate monsters in the field of fire.  The variations are infinite.
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For this, you will need a more complicated defense than a passive ditch and walls.  One common method of defense is to build a walled structure above the entrance to your fortress, stationing Marksdwarves on the second floor overlooking the drawbridge-entrance. Another is to engineer a very long but narrow entrance, at the end of which are [[Ballista | ballista]]e waiting to unload at unfortunate monsters in the field of fire.  The variations are infinite.
  
 
===Physical layout===
 
===Physical layout===
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=====Terrain=====
 
=====Terrain=====
:The lay of the land can be your friend, but the way of the dwarf is to shape the land as needed.  Removing slopes can create safe, private terraces and valley walls that prevent all access.  Chasms and rivers (not brooks!) create hard barriers, but an open chasm or magma vent can be a source of dangerous creatures.  Small hills can serve as vantage points for archers (yours or theirs!), but if carved with stairs leading up from within, they can be quick strategic strongpoints.  Narrow valleys can become chokepoints for entrances, where your marksdwarves can overlook any who come and go.  Augmented by constructions below, the terrain becomes your first option for defense.
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:The lay of the land can be your friend, but the way of the dwarf is to shape the land as needed.  Removing slopes can create safe, private terraces and valley walls that prevent all access.  Chasms and rivers (not brooks!) create hard barriers, but an open chasm or magma vent can be a source of dangerous creatures.  Small hills can serve as vantage points for archers (yours or theirs!), but if carved with stairs leading up from within, they can be quick strategic strongpoints.  Narrow valleys can become chokepoints for entrances, where your marksdwarfs can overlook any who come and go.  Augmented by constructions below, the terrain becomes your first option for defense.
  
 
:Some players take quite a while before initially unpausing the game to look around and think about the terrain, planning their fortress entrance and envisioning basic defenses.
 
:Some players take quite a while before initially unpausing the game to look around and think about the terrain, planning their fortress entrance and envisioning basic defenses.
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:[[Fortification]]s are the marksdwarf's friend. They do not allow passage, but allow hand-held missile weapons to pass through, and are often placed on top of walls for tactical advantage.  Projectiles have a chance of being blocked, based on the firer's skill and distance to the fortification. There's no chance of the missile being blocked if the firer is adjacent to the fortification, with increasing chances as any distance increases.  Keep your marksdwarves close and keep enemies away - if an enemy archer can walk up to your fortifications, now they're adjacent too, and the fortifications will have zero effect.  Build fortified firing platforms above ground level and put a nice wide moat between the wall and the enemy.  Fortifications have no effect on [[siege engine]]s.
 
:[[Fortification]]s are the marksdwarf's friend. They do not allow passage, but allow hand-held missile weapons to pass through, and are often placed on top of walls for tactical advantage.  Projectiles have a chance of being blocked, based on the firer's skill and distance to the fortification. There's no chance of the missile being blocked if the firer is adjacent to the fortification, with increasing chances as any distance increases.  Keep your marksdwarves close and keep enemies away - if an enemy archer can walk up to your fortifications, now they're adjacent too, and the fortifications will have zero effect.  Build fortified firing platforms above ground level and put a nice wide moat between the wall and the enemy.  Fortifications have no effect on [[siege engine]]s.
  
:Like Fortifications, Vertical [[Bars]] and Wall [[Grate]]s will also allow projectiles to fire through them while impeding units' movement, but these constructions provide no defense - the missile fire works both ways equally.  Unlike Fortifications, Bars and Grates may be connected to a [[Lever]], and opened or closed remotely - thus, they are good for forming a portcullis.
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:Like Fortifications, Vertical [[Bars]] and Wall [[Grate | Grates]] will also allow projectiles to fire through them while impeding units' movement, but these constructions provide no defense - the missile fire works both ways equally.  Unlike Fortifications, Bars and Grates may be connected to a [[Lever]], and opened or closed remotely - thus, they are good for forming a portcullis.
  
 
=====Doors (& Hatches)=====
 
=====Doors (& Hatches)=====
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=====Floodgates=====
 
=====Floodgates=====
:[[Floodgate]]s, alone or in a line, may be used as removable walls, since they need no support and disappear when "opened" remotely, although using a wide drawbridge will be much more economical in terms of [[Mechanism]]s. (Be aware that [[Megabeast]]s can batter down both raised floodgates and drawbridges, and ''any object'' can prevent a floodgate from closing again, even a single, stray crossbow bolt or confused animal.)
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:[[Floodgate|Floodgates]], alone or in a line, may be used as removable walls, since they need no support and disappear when "opened" remotely, although using a wide drawbridge will be much more economical in terms of [[Mechanism]]s. (Be aware that Megabeasts can batter down both raised floodgates and drawbridges, and ''any object'' can prevent a floodgate from closing again, even a single, stray crossbow bolt or confused animal.)
  
:A floodgate can be used just like a door, with two differences: A floodgate can be placed next to another floodgate, unlike a door, which needs to be adjacent to a wall. A floodgate is closed by default, and can only be opened with a lever. Be careful not to trap your dwarves.
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:A floodgate can be used just like a door, with two differences: A floodgate can be placed next to another floodgate, unlike a door, which needs to be adjacent to a wall. A floodgate is closed by default, and can only be opened with a lever. Be careful not to trap your dwarves.  
  
 
=====Moats=====
 
=====Moats=====
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====Remote control====
 
====Remote control====
 
:*'''Barriers'''
 
:*'''Barriers'''
::If you link a [[lever]] to a door, hatch cover or floodgate, it becomes impossible for your dwarves to open and close it normally. Pulling the lever is the only way to open it. This keeps your dwarves locked in as well as keeping enemies out. (It's unknown if [[thieves]] can bypass a closed door once it's linked to a lever or pressure plate.)  There is often a frustrating delay between ordering a lever pulled and when a dwarf pulls it, and another shorter one between pulling the lever and the barrier responding.
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::If you link a [[lever]] to a door, hatch cover or floodgate, it becomes impossible for your dwarves to open and close it normally. Pulling the lever is the only way to open it. This keeps your dwarves locked in as well as keeping enemies out. (It's unknown if thieves can bypass a closed door once it's linked to a lever or pressure plate.)  There is often a frustrating delay between ordering a lever pulled and when a dwarf pulls it, and another shorter one between between pulling the lever and the barrier responding.
  
 
::Any item or creature in an open barrier at the moment it tries to close will not only prevent that barrier from closing, but that "close" signal will be lost.  Any lever will have to be pulled twice more - to reset to "open", and then to (try to) close again.  This is not the case with drawbridges, which crush anything and everything below them when they close.
 
::Any item or creature in an open barrier at the moment it tries to close will not only prevent that barrier from closing, but that "close" signal will be lost.  Any lever will have to be pulled twice more - to reset to "open", and then to (try to) close again.  This is not the case with drawbridges, which crush anything and everything below them when they close.
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A [[sparring|trained]], [[weapon|armed]], and [[armor]]ed [[military]] is the only way to bring the fight to the enemy.  Building defenses to keep them safe is easy - keeping military ready and in position is the tricky part.  
 
A [[sparring|trained]], [[weapon|armed]], and [[armor]]ed [[military]] is the only way to bring the fight to the enemy.  Building defenses to keep them safe is easy - keeping military ready and in position is the tricky part.  
  
A sufficiently large military can be used as a reactive force to rescue ambushed dwarves and safeguard the passage of caravans through unknown dangers, or even to sally out and meet a sieging force ''mano a mano''.  The disadvantages are many - soldiers must physically move to the conflict zone which may be many screens away from the nearest entrance to your fortress, by which point dwarven lives may have already been lost.  And while squad organization may make ordering a large army easier, a squad commander who is sleeping, eating, or drinking prevents his entire squad from responding.  At best, an army should be considered supplemental for defending dwarves outside your fortress.See [[military design]] for different options.
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A sufficiently large military can be used as a reactive force to rescue ambushed dwarves and safeguard the passage of caravans thru unknown dangers, or even to sally out and meet a sieging force ''mano a mano''.  The disadvantages are many - soldiers must physically move to the conflict zone which may be many screens away from the nearest entrance to your fortress, by which point dwarven lives may have already been lost.  And while squad organization may make ordering a large army easier, a squad commander who is sleeping, eating, or drinking prevents his entire squad from responding.  At best, an army should be considered supplemental for defending dwarves outside your fortress.See [[military design]] for different options.
  
 
===Animals===
 
===Animals===
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===Siege engines===
 
===Siege engines===
 
{{main|Siege engine}}
 
{{main|Siege engine}}
Siege engines take some planning to use effectively, and have a range of about 100 tiles compared to a crossbow's 20 or so.  Both catapults and ballistae can be very deadly, but both have their drawbacks -- they take time to reload and can only hit targets at the same z-level, and they are woefully inaccurate in the hands of unskilled operators or when loaded with low-quality bolts. Furthermore, they're manned by civilians, who will abandon their posts should the enemy get too close. See [[siege weapon]] for more on the ballistas and catapult.
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Siege engines take some planning to use effectively, and have a range of about 100 tiles compared to a crossbow's 20 or so.  Both catapults and ballistae can be very deadly, but both have their drawbacks.  The most important factors are 1) they do not have a fast rate of fire, 2) that, unlike [[crossbow]]s, both can only fire at targets on the same [[z-level]], and 3) that they are manned by civilians who will flee if any enemy gets too close. (See [[siege weapon]] for full information and suggestions.)
  
 
==Considerations==
 
==Considerations==
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===Surface jobs===
 
===Surface jobs===
There are many times when dwarves want to work on the surface. [[Wood cutting]], [[gathering plants]], [[hunting]], [[fishing]], [[mining]] exposed [[vein]]s or gems, building defenses or other structures, [[grower|growing]] above-ground [[crop]]s, [[Health care|helping wounded comrades]] or recovering dropped items are only the most likely.  Often they are alone and vulnerable to [[creature|wild beasts]] or [[ambush]]es.
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There are many times when dwarfs want to work on the surface. [[Wood cutting]], [[gathering plants]], [[hunting]], [[fishing]], [[mining]] exposed [[vein]]s or gems, building defenses or other structures, [[grower|growing]] above-ground [[crop]]s, [[Health care|helping wounded comrades]] or recovering dropped items are only the most likely.  Often they are alone and vulnerable to [[creature|wild beasts]] or [[ambush]]es.
  
 
You can try to wall in huge areas of the map, possibly with drawbridge gates that can open for Caravans, but the larger the area the vaster the project, the further your dwarves will be from existing defenses, and another example of dwarves working above ground.  
 
You can try to wall in huge areas of the map, possibly with drawbridge gates that can open for Caravans, but the larger the area the vaster the project, the further your dwarves will be from existing defenses, and another example of dwarves working above ground.  
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===Trade depot & caravans===
 
===Trade depot & caravans===
Factoring in a 3-tile wide access to the [[trade depot]] adds a layer of complexity. Letting merchants in while keeping enemies out requires a careful balance. The merchants can reveal ambushes and thieves like any other creature, and they can arrive in the middle of a [[siege]]. If they do, they can be slaughtered before reaching your doors, and that hurts you, (as well as possibly causing your civilian dwarves to want to go running out and collect their dropped items.)  Consider sending heavily armoured escorts when expecting a caravan.
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Factoring in a 3-tile wide access to the [[trade depot]] adds a layer of complexity. Letting merchants in while keeping enemies out requires a careful balance. The merchants can reveal ambushes and thieves like any other creature, and they can arrive in the middle of a [[siege]]. If they do, they can be slaughtered before reaching your doors, and that hurts you, (as well as possibly causing your civilian dwarfs to want to go running out and collect their dropped items.)  Consider sending heavily armoured escorts when expecting a caravan.
  
 
Only [[wagon]]s need a three tile wide path to the depot, so the [[elves]] and some of the dwarven and human merchants can still get through if it's only 1-tile wide. You will possibly want to build the depot underground, so civilian dwarves can access the depot and goods. Wagons can't use stairs, so you need a three-tile [[ramp]], unless you can dig into the face of a cliff.
 
Only [[wagon]]s need a three tile wide path to the depot, so the [[elves]] and some of the dwarven and human merchants can still get through if it's only 1-tile wide. You will possibly want to build the depot underground, so civilian dwarves can access the depot and goods. Wagons can't use stairs, so you need a three-tile [[ramp]], unless you can dig into the face of a cliff.
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===Levers===
 
===Levers===
Be careful where you place the [[lever]]s controlling your various entrances, traps and other defenses. Or any lever at all, for that matter. Make sure they are either central or close to locations of idle dwarves, or both - near a [[meeting area]] or bedrooms of [[noble]] is often a good plan.  Make sure that the entire path to each lever is [[underground]] or your dwarves might be unable to reach them if told to "stay underground" (test this during peacetime!) Try putting all your defense-related levers in a single room, perhaps down a staircase from your meeting area, and put a door (or hatch) on the entrance(s). Then you can lock your lever-puller inside to ensure rapid response time.  
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Be careful where you place the [[lever]]s controlling your various entrances, traps and other defenses. Or any lever at all, for that matter. Make sure they are either central or close to locations of idle dwarfs, or both - near a [[meeting area]] or bedrooms of [[nobles]] is often a good plan.  Make sure that the entire path to each lever is [[underground]] or your dwarves might be unable to reach them if told to "stay underground" (test this during peacetime!) Try putting all your defense-related levers in a single room, perhaps down a staircase from your meeting area, and put a door (or hatch) on the entrance(s). Then you can lock your lever-puller inside to ensure rapid response time.  
  
Another solution to the problem of rapid response time is to make your lever room double as a [[Screw pump|pump]] room.  Pumping is a good way to build up your dwarves' [[attribute]]s regardless of whether the pump is doing work or not.  If you want a dedicated lever operator or three, turn off all their labors except pumping, and set the pumps up so that they can be operated exclusively by your dedicated lever operators.  Rotate these positions every so often so the attribute gain will be distributed among multiple dwarves.
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Another solution to the problem of rapid response time is to make your lever room double as a [[Screw pump|pump]] room.  Pumping is a good way to build up your dwarves' [[Attribute|attributes]] regardless of whether the pump is doing work or not.  If you want a dedicated lever operator or three, turn off all their labors except pumping, and set the pumps up so that they can be operated exclusively by your dedicated lever operators.  Rotate these positions every so often so the attribute gain will be distributed among multiple dwarves.
  
For the truly ambitious, the lever room could be spread over multiple levels, and the pumps could work together to power one or more artificial [[waterfall]]s.  (Waterfalls work well in this case because their operation is not fortress-critical, and your dwarves like the mist they produce.)
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For the truly ambitious, the lever room could be spread over multiple levels, and the pumps could work together to power one or more artificial [[Waterfall|waterfalls]].  (Waterfalls work well in this case because their operation is not fortress-critical, and your dwarves like the mist they produce.)
  
 
Use [[Notes]] to label each lever and attached device and trap clearly - if you come back to a game after a week and can't remember your levers, they are useless (or, worse, dangerous!)  Color code your levers with different color [[stone]] if that works for you.
 
Use [[Notes]] to label each lever and attached device and trap clearly - if you come back to a game after a week and can't remember your levers, they are useless (or, worse, dangerous!)  Color code your levers with different color [[stone]] if that works for you.
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Defense starts before the game does, at embark when you're choosing your location, your dwarves' starting skill mixes, and your starting equipment and supplies.  If you expect trouble (an evil biome, perhaps), then it can be crucial to bring at least one axe.  Picks make decent weapons, and a dwarf with the proper mix of [[ambusher]] skill starts with a [[Ambusher#Free equipment|free equipment]] - a suit of [[leather armor]], a [[crossbow]] and several dozen steel [[bolt]]s.  A supply of wood means you don't have to chop trees for a while, and similarly a few simple stone (a few [[bauxite]]?) allows you to make immediate workshops even before your miner has swung her pick.  While an untrained dwarf can usually wrestle most small and medium beasts, one unarmored (semi-)military dwarf with an axe or crossbow can be a big edge against most early threats.
 
Defense starts before the game does, at embark when you're choosing your location, your dwarves' starting skill mixes, and your starting equipment and supplies.  If you expect trouble (an evil biome, perhaps), then it can be crucial to bring at least one axe.  Picks make decent weapons, and a dwarf with the proper mix of [[ambusher]] skill starts with a [[Ambusher#Free equipment|free equipment]] - a suit of [[leather armor]], a [[crossbow]] and several dozen steel [[bolt]]s.  A supply of wood means you don't have to chop trees for a while, and similarly a few simple stone (a few [[bauxite]]?) allows you to make immediate workshops even before your miner has swung her pick.  While an untrained dwarf can usually wrestle most small and medium beasts, one unarmored (semi-)military dwarf with an axe or crossbow can be a big edge against most early threats.
  
For most starts, unless your embark location is very close to a [[chasm]] mouth or open [[magma vent]], or you are starting in an [[evil]] biome ''(and that is only recommended for experienced players, so why are you reading this?)'', there should be no serious immediate threats.  Unless you are at [[war]] with a civilization (visible on the pre-embark screen), sieges and ambushes don't start until you've created some wealth, the first winter at the earliest.  So wild animals are your only concern, predators that might prey on lone dwarves and thieving animals that will target your valuables.
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For most starts, unless your embark location is very close to a [[chasm]] mouth or open [[magma vent]], or you are starting in an [[evil]] biome ''(and that is only recommended for experienced players, so why are you reading this?)'', there should be no serious immediate threats.  Unless you are at [[war]] with a civilization (visible on the pre-embark screen), sieges and ambushes don't start until you've created some wealth, the first winter at the earliest.  So wild animals are your only concern, predators that might prey on lone dwarfs and thieving animals that will target your valuables.
  
 
====Striking the earth====
 
====Striking the earth====
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One of your first priorities is to get things underground or otherwise secure, to prevent rot but also to prevent theft.  Carving out a channel/moat, or removing the slopes to a hill, or building a wall, or a combination of those will work fine, but better if you don't have an unwanted entrance to wall up later.  Soil is very fast to dig out, and just as strong against enemies, but may not be desirable for a later, mature fortress.  Balance convenience against your long-range plans and visible threats.  
 
One of your first priorities is to get things underground or otherwise secure, to prevent rot but also to prevent theft.  Carving out a channel/moat, or removing the slopes to a hill, or building a wall, or a combination of those will work fine, but better if you don't have an unwanted entrance to wall up later.  Soil is very fast to dig out, and just as strong against enemies, but may not be desirable for a later, mature fortress.  Balance convenience against your long-range plans and visible threats.  
  
Consider and plan the entrance to your fortress - perhaps a ramp leading down, or a tunnel into the side of a hill or cliff.  A long, narrow entrance (a valley and/or tunnel) allows you to control it, with archers, with traps, with a siege engine at the end.  It gives you time to prepare your military.  However, it also means that your dwarves will have to walk that entire distance every time they enter and leave your fortress, and be that much further from help should they need it.  Entrances vary from a few tiles to a many dozen.  Start with something smaller for now, but plan on how to develop the entrance you want later.
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Consider and plan the entrance to your fortress - perhaps a ramp leading down, or a tunnel into the side of a hill or cliff.  A long, narrow entrance (a valley and/or tunnel) allows you to control it, with archers, with traps, with a siege engine at the end.  It gives you time to prepare your military.  However, it also means that your dwarfs will have to walk that entire distance every time they enter and leave your fortress, and be that much further from help should they need it.  Entrances vary from a few tiles to a many dozen.  Start with something smaller for now, but plan on how to develop the entrance you want later.
  
 
An L-bend, or several, or drops in z-level may provide better security, or a firing platform for siege engines and/or archers.  Many complex traps involve several levels beneath the entrance (for drainage of liquids or other diabolical purposes.)  Using some of the principles above, it might look something like this...
 
An L-bend, or several, or drops in z-level may provide better security, or a firing platform for siege engines and/or archers.  Many complex traps involve several levels beneath the entrance (for drainage of liquids or other diabolical purposes.)  Using some of the principles above, it might look something like this...
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====It's mine!====
 
====It's mine!====
Consider how you will secure your valuables, your entrance, and any land you want to claim as "dwarf only" - by channeling, removing the slopes from nearby hills, maybe walls?  At first, consider including at least enough above-ground terrain for any [[farm plot]]s and [[meeting area]]s.  This could perhaps be as small as a 5x5 walled enclosure, or be multiple compounds, but some players aim at claiming (most of) the entire map.  Any barrier limits your dwarves, but keeps enemies out until you have your fortress up and running at a basic level and are prepared to respond properly.  Due to thieves' ability to get past locked doors, and a caravan needing a path that's 3-wide, you won't be able to create a hard "gate" that you can open and shut until you have a [[mechanic's workshop]] and some [[mechanism]]s for levers, to link to a [[drawbridge]].
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Consider how you will secure your valuables, your entrance, and any land you want to claim as "dwarf only" - by channeling, removing the slopes from nearby hills, maybe walls?  At first, consider including at least enough above-ground terrain for any [[farm plot]]s and [[meeting area]]s.  This could perhaps be as small as a 5x5 walled enclosure, or be multiple compounds, but some players aim at claiming (most of) the entire map.  Any barrier limits your dwarfs, but keeps enemies out until you have your fortress up and running at a basic level and are prepared to respond properly.  Due to thieves' ability to get past locked doors, and a caravan needing a path that's 3-wide, you won't be able to create a hard "gate" that you can open and shut until you have a [[mechanic's workshop]] and some [[mechanism]]s for levers, to link to a [[drawbridge]].
  
 
====Inside vs. outside====
 
====Inside vs. outside====
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If you want to breed monkeys for skin, bone and meat, or amuse yourself with live goblins, a row or five of cage traps at the very entrance of your fort would be a good start. Leave room for this when you place your stone traps - killing the monkeys first won't allow live monkeys to be caged. (You still get the meat & etc from those corpses, just not breeding stock.)
 
If you want to breed monkeys for skin, bone and meat, or amuse yourself with live goblins, a row or five of cage traps at the very entrance of your fort would be a good start. Leave room for this when you place your stone traps - killing the monkeys first won't allow live monkeys to be caged. (You still get the meat & etc from those corpses, just not breeding stock.)
  
As your dwarves creates weapons, as you trade for them, or (later) as you gather those of your fallen enemies, [[weapon trap]]s will become attractive. There is no hard rule or formula for all this - be creative.
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As your dwarfs creates weapons, as you trade for them, or (later) as you gather those of your fallen enemies, [[weapon trap]]s will become attractive. There is no hard rule or formula for all this - be creative.
  
 
====Complex traps====
 
====Complex traps====
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====Military====
 
====Military====
To start, you will probably have few if any full-time military standing guard over your dwarves - there is just too much to do at first, and serious threats are (hopefully) several seasons away.  If you are going to make weapons and armor, have stockpiles near where your draftees work and rest, perhaps near an entrance/exit, but not so close that it might get over-run before your dwarves can equip.  Eventually you might have perhaps a quarter (or more or less) of your dwarves as full-time military, and they'll need a barracks where they will sleep and practice, archery ranges if that's their weapon of choice, and quick, safe routes to their battle stations or patrol areas.  When to begin a full-time military presence is personal choice and influenced by your game situation, but plan on eventually having them live and practice near where they will be fighting as much as possible. See [[Military design]] for a more complete discussion on planning and deploying military and militia.
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To start, you will probably have few if any full-time military standing guard over your dwarfs - there is just too much to do at first, and serious threats are (hopefully) several seasons away.  If you are going to make weapons and armor, have stockpiles near where your draftees work and rest, perhaps near an entrance/exit, but not so close that it might get over-run before your dwarfs can equip.  Eventually you might have perhaps a quarter (or more or less) of your dwarfs as full-time military, and they'll need a barracks where they will sleep and practice, archery ranges if that's their weapon of choice, and quick, safe routes to their battle stations or patrol areas.  When to begin a full-time military presence is personal choice and influenced by your game situation, but plan on eventually having them live and practice near where they will be fighting as much as possible. See [[Military design]] for a more complete discussion on planning and deploying military and militia.
  
 
==Different philosophies==
 
==Different philosophies==
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It's not hard to create an acre of traps that, realistically, simply no threats can survive.  If you want to pursue a megaproject (that is not a defensive trap) in peace and security, this may be a good plan.  However, if you look forward to the military end of things, then you want to allow, or at least be able to invite combat at your choosing.  New players are recommended to use the hall-of-traps entryway, at least to start. Many experienced players challenge themselves by limiting their use of simple traps, or other voluntary handicaps.  It's all about what you think is [[fun]].
 
It's not hard to create an acre of traps that, realistically, simply no threats can survive.  If you want to pursue a megaproject (that is not a defensive trap) in peace and security, this may be a good plan.  However, if you look forward to the military end of things, then you want to allow, or at least be able to invite combat at your choosing.  New players are recommended to use the hall-of-traps entryway, at least to start. Many experienced players challenge themselves by limiting their use of simple traps, or other voluntary handicaps.  It's all about what you think is [[fun]].
  
== See also ==
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----
*[[Siege engine]]
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'''See also:
*[[Siege]]
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:*[[Siege engine]]
 +
:*[[Siege]]
 +
:*
  
{{Category|Guides}}
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[[Category:Guides]]
{{Category|Fortress defense| }}
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[[Category:Fortress defense| ]]
{{Category|Design}}
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[[Category:World]]
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[[Category:Design]]

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