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Difference between revisions of "40d:Statue"

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(→‎Statues versus mechanisms: According to gem, decorations are just as value-efficient as windows.)
(Deleted decoration point, mechanisms can be decorated too in my experience, both statue and mechanisms counts as finished goods.)
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To build high-quality levers and gear assemblies, you will need to make high-quality mechanisms, which requires a [[mechanic]] instead of a [[mason]].  By using the techniques detailed in ore-based statues, above, you can make very high-value mechanisms out of ore.  (Unfortunately, this technique cannot be used to make [[magma-safe]] mechanisms, as ores have a different melting point from bars.)
 
To build high-quality levers and gear assemblies, you will need to make high-quality mechanisms, which requires a [[mechanic]] instead of a [[mason]].  By using the techniques detailed in ore-based statues, above, you can make very high-value mechanisms out of ore.  (Unfortunately, this technique cannot be used to make [[magma-safe]] mechanisms, as ores have a different melting point from bars.)
 
A strong argument in favor of statues, however, is that they can be [[decorate]]d.  Thus the potential per-tile value of a statue is much higher than that of a mechanism-based construction.
 
  
 
{{buildings}}
 
{{buildings}}
 
[[Category:Furniture]]
 
[[Category:Furniture]]

Revision as of 06:12, 13 December 2008

Statues are buildings which can be built from the build menu under statue. They can be made using one stone at the mason's workshop, one bag of sand at a glass furnace, or three bars of metal of the same type at a metalsmith's forge (via the blacksmithing labor).

Statues have a base value of 25, compared to 10 for all other types of furniture. This makes them a good choice for raising the value of room -- to create a legendary dining room, for instance, or to meet nobles' requirements for rooms of a certain value. The final value of a statue can vary greatly depending on its quality and material; a no-quality regular stone statue is worth only 25☼, whereas a masterpiece platinum statue is worth 12,000☼.

You can create a sculpture garden from a statue's query menu. Dwarves will spend time at a statue garden appreciating the statues (which generates a happy thought) and may even organize parties there. For the purposes of building appreciation, it is the quality of the statue, not its overall value, that is important: a masterpiece stone statue will generate a happier thought than a base-quality platinum one.

Be careful when placing statues, because dwarves cannot move through the same square they occupy. (This will also prevent dwarves from smoothing or engraving the floor underneath a statue.) A poorly placed statue can potentially seal off parts of your fortress.

Ore-based statues

It is more efficient to make statues from raw ore instead of from smelted bars (for instance, native gold instead of gold bars). Ore is treated as a type of stone, and making a statue out of it only requires one unit of ore at a mason's workshop, versus three bars at a metalsmith's forge. A statue made from ore still has the same value as one made from metal bars, and it is easier to get a high-skill mason than a high-skill blacksmith, further increasing the value of ore-based statues.

By default, ore is reserved for use for smelting. To lift this restriction, press z, then go to "stone" and enable (make green) whichever ore(s) you wish to use. To get your mason to use the ore, it must be the nearest type of stone to the mason's workshop. This technique can also be used to make high-value ore-based stone crafts at a craftsdwarf's workshop.

Note that stones and metals preferences are seperate. It's possible for a dwarf to have a fondness for native aluminum but be unimpressed by the metal, and likewise a dwarf who prefers the metal won't be especially satisfied by a statue carved from the ore.

Statues versus mechanisms

As an alternative to building statues to increase a room's value, you can use mechanism-based structures such as gear assemblies and levers, which have a base value of 30, versus 25 for statues. An additional advantage is that these structures, unlike statues, do not block the passage of dwarves. And levers are useful for, you know, controlling stuff.

To build high-quality levers and gear assemblies, you will need to make high-quality mechanisms, which requires a mechanic instead of a mason. By using the techniques detailed in ore-based statues, above, you can make very high-value mechanisms out of ore. (Unfortunately, this technique cannot be used to make magma-safe mechanisms, as ores have a different melting point from bars.)


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