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Difference between revisions of "World generation"
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=== History === | === History === | ||
− | Once the world itself has been generated, the process of generating historical events will begin. This can take a very long time for large, heavily populated worlds with very long 2,000 year histories. | + | Once the world itself has been generated, the process of generating historical events will begin. This can take a ''very'' long time for large, heavily populated worlds with very long 2,000 year histories. |
=== Finishing === | === Finishing === |
Revision as of 04:09, 13 August 2016
v50.14 · v0.47.05 This article is about the current version of DF.Note that some content may still need to be updated. |
This feature has one or more outstanding bugs. Please view the Bugs section for details. |
To begin playing Dwarf Fortress, you must first create a world to play in. At the game's main menu, you can choose to either Create New World! or Design New World With Advanced Parameters.
World Generation can take long and may seem like a nuisance, but it is the actual heart of the game. This is where Toady invests most of his time, this is the piece of art that makes Dwarf Fortress unique enough for the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. While you wait for the counter to finish, an entire fantasy world with unique geography, history and even language is created. Entire civilizations rise, wage war, fall, rise again, and fall. Countless characters, each with unique appearance and personality, live their lives, some of them a calm one, some go out and influence history. The world's complexity could rival the works of Tolkien himself. Dwarf Fortress is not only a game, it is a gigantic fantasy world simulator. Fortress and adventure mode allow you to influence a tiny part of that tale and write your own chapter. One chapter in an enormous bookshelf.
This article will cover basic world generation using the first option.
- For information on advanced parameters, see Advanced world generation.
The basic world generation menu looks like this.
Parameters
Each of the parameters is described below.
World size
"This controls the size of the world map" as it says at the bottom of the screen when this option is highlighted. Also at the bottom of the screen is shown the dimensions of the world that will be generated given the currently selected size. Using Basic World Generation, the size options are:
- Pocket (17x17 region tiles)
- Smaller (33x33)
- Small (65x65)
- Medium (129x129)
- Large (257x257)
Setting this to a larger value will cause world generation to take longer, as more events will need to be calculated per step. In v0.40 selecting bigger worlds will reduce the framerate (update speed) of the game in fortress mode. Selecting small or smaller worlds is recommended.
The world size also affects the maximum amount of civilizations, new civilization sites limit and the number of existing forgotten beasts.
Smaller | Small | Medium | Large | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Forgotten beasts | 12 | 27 | 75 | 243 | 867 |
History
"This is the length of pre-generated history." The number of years for the currently selected length will be shown in the lower right. Essentially this means the amount of time that civilizations will have to grow, attack each other, and starve to death before the player can start playing. It also determines the amount of time that megabeasts will have to roam and kill things, get killed, etc. The longer the history, the more historical events will be generated by the time game-play begins.
Setting this parameter to a higher value will cause world generation to take longer as more events need to be determined. Setting it to a very low value is OK, but will reduce the size of civilizations at game start.
Higher values will also increase the number of abandoned (sacked) towns and fortresses which can matter for adventure mode, but doesn't matter that much for fortress mode. Recommend value for worlds you plan to use for adventure mode are Short or Medium.
History will still progress after world generation, concurrently with normal game-play, but this will of course be much slower. Therefore it is recommended to set the history length so that the number of sites, megabeasts, and historical events is roughly what one wants it to be during game-play.
For more information on the history aspect of the game, see Legends and Ages.
Number of civilizations
This controls the number of distinct civilizations exist in a world.
Civilizations are dwarves, humans, goblins, kobolds and elves.
It should be noted that this would refer to different kingdoms of the same races. A smaller number of civilizations ( smaller than 5 - 7) may exclude one or two races from your world but less civilizations will reduce the amount of time history generation takes. Larger numbers of civilizations would increase history generation time and make historical events happen much more often.
The maximum amount of civilizations is affected by the world size. At higher numbers (> 40) humans, kobolds and elves are more frequent than dwarves and goblins.
Smaller | Small | Medium | Large | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Very Low | 3 | 3 | 5 | 10 | 10 |
Low | 4 | 4 | 7 | 20 | 20 |
Medium | 5 | 5 | 10 | 40 | 40 |
High | 7 | 8 | 15 | 80 | 80 |
Very High | 10 | 12 | 20 | 160 | 160 |
Maximum number of sites
This affects the maximum number of new sites such as towns, hamlets, elf retreats, etc. existing civilizations can expand to during world generation combined. New sites increase the maximum amount of members of the civilization founding the site.
High site numbers increase the duration of history generation by a huge amount of time. With very low site numbers only the civilizations home settlements may exist after a few years of history with a high probability of getting eradicated by some event.
Turning this up is advised for adventure mode games.
The total amount of sites is affected by the selected world size.
Smaller | Small | Medium | Large | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Very Low | 4 | 17 | 66 | 260 | 375 |
Low | 13 | 51 | 198 | 780 | 1125 |
Medium | 18 | 68 | 264 | 1040 | 1500 |
High | 27 | 102 | 396 | 1560 | 2000 |
Very High | 36 | 136 | 528 | 2000 | 2000 |
Number of beasts
This controls the number of megabeasts such as dragons, titans, etc., that exist at the beginning of the world. They can later die (get killed) due to historical events, so the longer the history the more likely some of these will die.
The number of beasts does not appear to impact how often your fortress will be attacked by beasts in fortress mode. In adventure mode it means it will be easier to find more megabeasts. If set very low then you may actually run out of beasts during a game.
Since beasts can attack civilizations, more beasts may reduce the population of the world a little bit.
The total amount of beasts is affected by the selected world size.
Smaller | Small | Medium | Large | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Very Low | 0 / 1 / 0 | 0 / 1 / 0 | 2 / 4 / 1 | 9 / 18 / 4 | 37 / 75 / 16 |
Low | 0 / 1 / 0 | 0 / 1 / 0 | 3 / 6 / 2 | 13 / 27 / 6 | 56 / 112 / 24 |
Medium | 1 / 2 / 1 | 1 / 2 / 1 | 4 / 9 / 3 | 18 / 37 / 9 | 75 / 150 / 33 |
High | 1 / 3 / 1 | 1 / 3 / 1 | 6 / 13 / 4 | 27 / 55 / 13 | 112 / 225 / 49 |
Very High | 2 / 4 / 2 | 2 / 4 / 2 | 8 / 18 / 6 | 36 / 74 / 18 | 150 / 300 / 66 |
- Read numbers as: Megabeasts // Semi-megabeasts // Titans
Natural savagery
Increasing this value increases the number of savage biomes in the world. In short, this means that more areas are likely to have aggressive animals which may try to kill dwarves immediately upon embark and attack adventurers more often while traveling.
New players may want to just leave this at the Medium setting (which isn't that hard) or set it lower. Turn this up to make the game more fun.
Mineral occurrence
This is a rather important parameter for fortress mode. Sparse means that many areas will only have one or two types of metal ore, if any, which can be very annoying to people until the economy is fully implemented and other metals can more easily be obtained via trade. New players should probably turn this up to Frequent.
More details: Mineral Scarcity
In adventure mode this can impact the types of metals that civilizations have access to, which can affect the types of items that are available in shops. Therefore it may not be a bad idea to turn this up for worlds in which you plan to play adventure mode games.
The generation process
Once you're satisfied with your parameter selections, hit y to proceed.
The screen will show something like this:
The name of the world will be random in basic world generation mode.
Rejections
You may notice that during various phases of the world generation process worlds will be rejected, leading to the rejection count going up and the process starting over. This happens because certain factors such as number of mountain tiles can't be determined ahead of time by the generation process. Instead worlds are generated with parameters which are likely to produce worlds that can support a required number of mountains, and are then checked to make sure they meet the criteria. For example, the random generation of the topography of the land may result in too few high elevation areas to place mountains.
In practice you don't need to worry about this for basic world generation because the preset hidden values that determine acceptable criteria are designed to decrease the chance of rejections, but certain combinations of basic parameters (especially with very large worlds) may make it harder for the process to generate "acceptable" worlds. Basically what this amounts to is that world generation will just take longer for certain parameter selections that are more difficult for the generator to satisfy.
History
Once the world itself has been generated, the process of generating historical events will begin. This can take a very long time for large, heavily populated worlds with very long 2,000 year histories.
Finishing
Once everything is complete, you can take a look around using the directional keys. (Using Shift+directional key will make this faster.) If you find yourself confused about what all the characters actually mean, you are not alone. Check out the Map legend. At this point you can either abort the process or hit Enter to save the world to disk.
Unfortunately the post-generation-process viewer doesn't give you a way to view much information about the world, so unless you really hate the look of the map or something you probably want to just save the world and load it up in Legends mode to view more information.
Getting more advanced
At first you will probably be satisfied with basic world generation, but later you may find that you want to create worlds with specific more extreme conditions. Check out the documentation on Advanced world generation for help with this.
Bugs
Eastereggs
- On the 86th rejected world an error report will appear with four options, this is in reference to the term "86ing" something, which is defined in the Urban Dictionary as "To remove, end usage, or take something out or away." [1]
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