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Editing 40d Talk:Jail
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:Okay, so, she's out of jail now. As far as I can tell, her tantrum had interrupted picking up her baby, so the task had never been completed. So when her tantrum was over, she kept trying to complete it, even though there was no more baby to complete it with. Once freed, she walked to the location where the baby was, flashed a red question mark, suddenly became ecstatic and finally went for a drink and a nap. No more message spam! Perhaps I should have just deconstructed her chain, let her do her thing, and then re-jailed her. --Kydo 04:33, 26 December 2009 (UTC) | :Okay, so, she's out of jail now. As far as I can tell, her tantrum had interrupted picking up her baby, so the task had never been completed. So when her tantrum was over, she kept trying to complete it, even though there was no more baby to complete it with. Once freed, she walked to the location where the baby was, flashed a red question mark, suddenly became ecstatic and finally went for a drink and a nap. No more message spam! Perhaps I should have just deconstructed her chain, let her do her thing, and then re-jailed her. --Kydo 04:33, 26 December 2009 (UTC) | ||
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==Prisoners and beds== | ==Prisoners and beds== | ||
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:::Do you know roughly how much of a happiness boost dwarves get when released from jail, in 40d? The current [[thoughts]] article is mainly about the 2d version, and +1000 happiness would make fancy jails completely unnecessary (especially since they don't seem to be able to escape from a cage). But that seems to no longer be the case. Might be helpful to figure out some sort of minimum unhappiness to get prisoners to, so that their "happy to be free" thought takes them back up to at least content. --[[User:Arrkhal|Arrkhal]] 03:37, 30 December 2009 (UTC) | :::Do you know roughly how much of a happiness boost dwarves get when released from jail, in 40d? The current [[thoughts]] article is mainly about the 2d version, and +1000 happiness would make fancy jails completely unnecessary (especially since they don't seem to be able to escape from a cage). But that seems to no longer be the case. Might be helpful to figure out some sort of minimum unhappiness to get prisoners to, so that their "happy to be free" thought takes them back up to at least content. --[[User:Arrkhal|Arrkhal]] 03:37, 30 December 2009 (UTC) | ||
− | ::::I'm not sure on the numbers | + | ::::I'm not sure on the numbers. I do have some knowledge, though. After a pack of wolves ripped through a hunter and the hauler who wanted his shoes, I had a couple of other dwarves become rather unhappy. Being in my prison brought them up to content, (mind you, I did not use any artifacts or masterpieces in my prison, as I didn't have any useful ones yet) and being released kicked them up to being happy. My one dwarf got really screwed up with her baby being killed, and went to being happy from being released, and then when she discovered her baby had not only died, but had also been entombed and rotted away into bones, she skipped up to ecstatic, though why, I have no idea. |
::::On a different note, I also discovered that if I temporarily assign an unhappy dwarf to my prison as his room, he very quickly moves away from the tantrum threshold, faster than being confined after a tantrum in fact, and moving them back to their old room doesn't seem to have any negative effects yet, by what I've seen. --Kydo 05:40, 31 December 2009 (UTC) | ::::On a different note, I also discovered that if I temporarily assign an unhappy dwarf to my prison as his room, he very quickly moves away from the tantrum threshold, faster than being confined after a tantrum in fact, and moving them back to their old room doesn't seem to have any negative effects yet, by what I've seen. --Kydo 05:40, 31 December 2009 (UTC) | ||
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