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Crossbow

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This article is about the current version of DF.
Note that some content may still need to be updated.

Sketch by Leonardo da Vinci, c. 1500
See Weapon for a general overview of weapons and related information.

Crossbows are the only native ranged weapon available to dwarves (although one can also acquire blowguns and bows through trading, or looting of failed sieges). While more difficult to set up than melee weapons, crossbows have the distinct advantage of allowing dwarves to fight at range, often killing enemies before they can enter melee distance. They are thus an excellent support weapon, especially if you have already filled out your meat shields melee squad(s).

Production

Still has shaky aim.
Art by Kirill Nedorosol

Crossbows can be made from a variety of materials, be they wood, bone or metal, which has no effect on accuracy or damage. The quality of a crossbow influences its accuracy (along with the skill of the marksdwarf), while the quality and material of the bolts influences the damage done on a successful hit.

Material Skill Workshop Consumed
metal1 weaponsmith metalsmith's forge 1 bar
(ammo ×25) weaponsmith metalsmith's forge 1 bar
wood2 bowyer bowyer's workshop 1 log
(ammo ×25) wood crafter craftsdwarf's workshop 1 log
bone bowyer bowyer's workshop 1 bone
off stack
(ammo ×5) bone carver craftsdwarf's workshop 1 bone

Notes:

1) All materials perform equally well as a ranged weapon. However, if an enemy closes into melee range with a marksdwarf, they will use their crossbow as a hammer. For this reason, you may want to make your military crossbows out of a metal*, and leave the bone/wood crossbows for hunters or wall defenders.
(* For blunt-force weapons (including crossbows in melee): Steel and Silver(!) seem to be slightly preferable, but Iron, Bronze (including Bismuth Bronze), and Copper are all a very close second. All are vastly superior to wood or bone.)
Similarly, metal bolts are far superior to wood/bone, with (in order) Steel, Iron, Bronze/Bismuth Bronze, and Copper being preferred, with Silver a distant last.
2) For similar reasons, denser woods are proportionally preferable to lighter ones for both crossbows and ammo.

Ranged combat

Crossbows shoot bolts as their ammunition, and marksdwarves will engage targets up to 20 tiles distant, provided they have a clear line of sight to them. Z-levels up or down count equally against the distance when measuring this range, subtracting from the total x-/y-axis distance, so shooting from a high wall or tower effectively reduces that 20-tile maximum. Bolts may miss the target and fly a bit further than intended, potentially striking another foe, but never a friendly.

The material that the crossbows are made of is irrelevant to ranged combat (but see melee combat). Only the quality of the crossbow[Verify] and skill of the marksdwarf determine accuracy, whereas the quality and material* of the bolts determine the damage delivered. If you have a skilled bowyer and are confident your fortress design and/or melee soldiers can keep your marksdwarves safe from enemy engagements, then easily-produced, high-quality wooden or bone crossbows will be just as accurate and deadly as metal crossbows.

(* metal being better than bone being better than wood. See also superior metal for comments on different metal bolts vs. different metal armor.)

As can be expected, targets that are stationary are much easier to hit than those that are moving. Since marksdwarves can drop targets at range, they do a much better job taking down fleeing thieves and retreating goblin ambushes that your regular soldiers might not be able to catch.

Melee combat

Nonetheless, marksdwarves that are approached by enemies will engage in melee combat with them, using the butt of their crossbows like hammers. Because of this it is useful to cross-train your dwarves with hammering skill, so that they will be better able to stand their ground in a fight, but a marksdwarf fighting a similarly armed and armored enemy with a melee weapon will usually lose either way. Focusing their training in defensive skills such as Blocking and Dodging is much more convenient, since it lets them at least hold off the enemy long enough to give a soldier more suited for melee combat a chance to surprise the enemy and dispatch them quickly.

The denser the material, the more damage a crossbow butt-strike will do in melee combat. Metal, specifically copper with its SOLID_DENSITY of 8930, performs the best and feather tree wood the worst.

Logistics

Crossbows require bolts and a quiver to fire, otherwise crossbows are used as hammers. Bolts are typically carried in quivers, which can be made of leather from leatherworking, obtained from caravans, or as goblinite.

When shot, one of two things will happen: either the bolt will shatter on impact with the ground or the target, or it will stay whole and, when all's said and done, be retrievable. This is a bit difficult, however, as shot bolts are automatically forbidden by default; in the orders screen, under [F]orbid, you can change it so that shot ammunition is automatically claimed. Otherwise, the easiest way to reclaim spent ammunition is to find them in the stocks screen and unforbid them.

Military barracks for marksdwarves require archery targets for training. Bolts will be a constant demand from a training marksdwarf squad, though you can just create a large stock of wooden bolts for training purposes and reserve metal bolts for actual combat use.

Hunting

Hunters use crossbows when hunting; migrant hunters automatically arrive with a free crossbow and a small number of bolts, and hunters will automatically pick one up from your ammunition stockpile when they go hunting, as well as the necessary quiver and bolts. Hunters have a special section in the military screen, from which you can modify their ammunition allotment. Disabling the hunting labor will cause them to drop their weapon and equipment at the nearest applicable stockpile, and is absolutely necessary if you have embarked in a particularly fun location. Hunters usually give up on hunting if they run out of carried ammunition.

Forging and Melting

  • Metal crossbows cost one metal bar to forge, or three adamantine wafers.
  • When a non-adamantine metal crossbow is melted down, it will return 0.9 metal bars, for an efficiency of 90%.
  • When an adamantine crossbow is melted down, it will produce 0.9 wafers, for an efficiency of 30%

Bugs

  • If squad is assigned multiple ammo types, dwarves with "individual choice ranged" carry wrong ammoBug:1374. (Fixed in 0.42.03?)

See Also

Crossbowman
Archery

"Crossbow" in other Languages Books-aj.svg aj ashton 01.svg
Dwarven: metul-egdoth
Elven: arifi-ramí
Goblin: sakor-uneg
Human: om-ethro
Ranged and ammunition
Blowgun and blowdart · Bow and arrow · Crossbow and bolt
Blunt
Edged (slashing)
Edged (piercing)
Dagger · Morningstar · Pick · Pike · Spear
See also: Attack types