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Editing 40d:Cheating

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Savescumming refers to the practice of regularly backing up your saves so you can revert to one if your fortress crumbles to the last. This can be toggled to be done automatically in the init file, so some might not consider this to be cheating.
 
Savescumming refers to the practice of regularly backing up your saves so you can revert to one if your fortress crumbles to the last. This can be toggled to be done automatically in the init file, so some might not consider this to be cheating.
  
Another method to save scum is open up task manager (ctrl+alt+delete) and open the Processes tab, and then selecting dwarfort.exe and clicking on end task. This will cause Dwarf Fortress to close, reverting to the last saved game.
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Another method to save scum is open up task manager (ctrl+alt+delete) and open the Processes tab, and then selecting dwarfort.exe and clicking on end task. This will cause Dwarf Fortress to close, reverting to the last saved game. Whenever you do this, be sure to delete the contents of the "data/save/current" folder, otherwise the next time you Save you could end up corrupting your world.
  
 
On Linux, since the game binary (named dwarfort.exe) is launched via a script wrapper (named df), simply closing the launched script does not work as the actual game will continue to run. However, closing dwarfort.exe is possible in a number of ways:
 
On Linux, since the game binary (named dwarfort.exe) is launched via a script wrapper (named df), simply closing the launched script does not work as the actual game will continue to run. However, closing dwarfort.exe is possible in a number of ways:

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