v50 Steam/Premium information for editors
- v50 information can now be added to pages in the main namespace. v0.47 information can still be found in the DF2014 namespace. See here for more details on the new versioning policy.
- Use this page to report any issues related to the migration.
This notice may be cached—the current version can be found here.
Difference between revisions of "DF2014 Talk:Butcher"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Added note about possible source of depression ~~~~) |
(Do slaughtered animals count as kills?) |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | == Negative thoughts == | ||
I think that butchering gives negative thoughts to some dwarves. It made my full time butcher depressed after a year or two. | I think that butchering gives negative thoughts to some dwarves. It made my full time butcher depressed after a year or two. | ||
Here is a screenshot of her thoughts https://i.imgur.com/xowobYp.png | Here is a screenshot of her thoughts https://i.imgur.com/xowobYp.png | ||
− | I am not certain of this, but I think it warrants some research. Her depression could have been caused by other factors, although she is the only one in my fort who is suffering this much; her depression keeps reoccurring. | + | I am not certain of this, but I think it warrants some research. Her depression could have been caused by other factors, although she is the only one in my fort who is suffering this much; her depression keeps reoccurring.<small>– [[template:unsigned|unsigned]] comment by [[User:81.111.102.79|81.111.102.79]]</small> |
+ | |||
+ | :Seeing dead bodies can cause negative thoughts, though thanks to recent balancing those thoughts are less common. The actual act of butchering a critter can also cause bad thoughts if the butcher highly values nature--yours dislikes nature and receives happy thoughts instead. But most of her negative thoughts shown are unrelated (cave adaption, miasma, and unmet [[needs]]). Dwarves' individual [[DF2014:Personality#Facets|personalities]] affect how they handle stress, and your butcher suffered a personality-changing-event in 91 that increased her anxiety propensity. It's likely she would be similarly anxious performing other jobs, though if she were particularly valuable you might be able to preserve her sanity for a while by removing stressors (no more sunlight, corpses, arguments, etc.) and keeping her needs met. Realistically, in the current version personality-changing-events will eventually make every dwarf susceptible to moderate amounts of stress. You can expel problematic dwarves, or draft them into a squad and send them to seize an enemy site. Either way, you'll get fresh migrants who have somehow avoided the twin travesties of sun and rain for their entire existence up to this point, ready to work hard for a few years before they too succumb to stress and must be sent away.--[[User:Loci|Loci]] ([[User talk:Loci|talk]]) 21:15, 24 January 2019 (UTC) | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Do slaughtered animals count as kills? == | ||
+ | Does anyone know if slaughtered animals count as kills? Do butchers have a ridiculous kill count? --[[User:Lurker|Lurker]] ([[User talk:Lurker|talk]]) 03:00, 13 June 2021 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 03:00, 13 June 2021
Negative thoughts[edit]
I think that butchering gives negative thoughts to some dwarves. It made my full time butcher depressed after a year or two.
Here is a screenshot of her thoughts https://i.imgur.com/xowobYp.png
I am not certain of this, but I think it warrants some research. Her depression could have been caused by other factors, although she is the only one in my fort who is suffering this much; her depression keeps reoccurring.– unsigned comment by 81.111.102.79
- Seeing dead bodies can cause negative thoughts, though thanks to recent balancing those thoughts are less common. The actual act of butchering a critter can also cause bad thoughts if the butcher highly values nature--yours dislikes nature and receives happy thoughts instead. But most of her negative thoughts shown are unrelated (cave adaption, miasma, and unmet needs). Dwarves' individual personalities affect how they handle stress, and your butcher suffered a personality-changing-event in 91 that increased her anxiety propensity. It's likely she would be similarly anxious performing other jobs, though if she were particularly valuable you might be able to preserve her sanity for a while by removing stressors (no more sunlight, corpses, arguments, etc.) and keeping her needs met. Realistically, in the current version personality-changing-events will eventually make every dwarf susceptible to moderate amounts of stress. You can expel problematic dwarves, or draft them into a squad and send them to seize an enemy site. Either way, you'll get fresh migrants who have somehow avoided the twin travesties of sun and rain for their entire existence up to this point, ready to work hard for a few years before they too succumb to stress and must be sent away.--Loci (talk) 21:15, 24 January 2019 (UTC)
Do slaughtered animals count as kills?[edit]
Does anyone know if slaughtered animals count as kills? Do butchers have a ridiculous kill count? --Lurker (talk) 03:00, 13 June 2021 (UTC)