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Difference between revisions of "Badger"

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(Small creatures are pretty cowardly nowadays.)
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A small mammal (about half the size of a [[dog]]) that travels in groups referred to in the community as "congas", badgers distinguish themselves from the common pack critter that occasionally wanders onto your map by their Prone To Rage feature. This means that badgers will often go berserk and attack adventurers, dwarves, and livestock. This is less of an issue now, because even when enraged, as long as the level of conflict has not escalated to No Quarter, animals smaller than dwarves will usually retreat after receiving even minor injuries.
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'''Badgers''' are small [[creature]]s found in a variety of [[biome]]s, from [[temperate]] [[forest]]s to [[taiga]]s, where they appear in clusters of 4 to 12 individuals. While carnivorous, they are benign and timid by default, but differ from most other creatures due to being prone to rage; a badger has a small chance of randomly flipping out in a furious fit, attacking anything unfortunate enough to be at its vicinity (such as a [[dwarf]]) until it calms down. A peasant attacked by an enraged badger may suffer from nasty bruises and scratches, but they'll often cripple the animal back with a single kick; while infamous in previous versions of the game, badgers today are not life-threatening unless the dwarf in question is a [[Children|child]], since they're only half the size of a [[dog]]. A male badger is called a ''boar'', while females are called ''sows'' and newborns are named ''pups''.
  
Badgers were famous and common enough in 0.31 to be a more-or-less serious problem. Nowadays, there are far less common due to the addition of numerous other animals.
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Badgers can be captured in [[cage]] [[trap]]s and [[Animal trainer|trained]] into cheap exotic [[pet]]s. They give equivalent returns to dogs when [[butcher]]ed, and are fairly easy to hunt or trap due to appearing in large numbers. An enraged badger can serve as a distraction against intruders, but don't expect it to survive a fight against anything bigger than itself.
  
For an adventurer, badgers can serve as a superb sparring partner (much better than other critters like gophers or hoary marmots) in order to gain experience in skills like Shield User and Armor User. See this [[Adventure mode#How do I increase my skills and attributes? (Power-leveling)|FAQ]] section for more details.
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They're not to be confused with the [[honey badger]], which's a different animal.
  
Badgers that are enraged will hunt down common peasant dwarves going about their business on the surface, disrupting early fortress setup procedures as they force a terrified dwarf to run to the edge of the map before being cornered by the badger.
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Some dwarves [[Preferences|like]] badgers for their ''underground communities'' and their ''striped faces''.
 
 
Fortunately, it's still a small and fairly harmless creature due to its size and lack of any notable form of attacks, and a common adult unarmed dwarf will probably cripple it with a single kick (which is not to say that a badger can't get lucky, but it mostly seems to be limited to bruises and scratches).  However, [[children]] are vulnerable to their attacks, especial the young (and hence small) ones.
 
 
 
If you are attacked by aggressive badgers early on while still digging out your fort, consider training some of your dogs to be wardogs - a wardog is more than a match for a badger, and spares you the need to set a valuable soldier dwarf to badger-hunting duty.
 
 
 
[[Honey badger]]s are similar to normal badgers, but found in [[tropical]] and [[desert]] regions rather than [[temperate]] ones. [[Giant badger]]s are far larger, far more [[fun]] versions of badgers. Some dwarves [[preference|admire]] badgers for their ''underground communities'' and their ''striped faces''.
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
File:American Badger Sow.JPG| American Badger (female)
 
File:European Badger.jpg| European Badger
 
</gallery>
 
  
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[[File:Badger-badger.jpg|thumb|center|400px|Admired for their ''striped faces''.]]
  
 
{{D for Dwarf}}
 
{{D for Dwarf}}

Revision as of 15:52, 16 September 2017

Badger
b
Urist likes badgers for their underground communities.
Portrait

No portrait

Biome

Variations

Badger - Badger man - Giant badger

Tamed Attributes
Pet value 25

Template:Tame attrib proc/

Not hunting/war trainable 

Size
Birth: 1,500 cm3
Mid: 7,500 cm3
Max: 15,000 cm3

Age
Adult at: 1
Max age: 10-15
Butchering returns

Food items

Meat 11
Fat 11
Brain 1
Lungs 2
Intestines 1
Liver 1
Tripe 1

Raw materials

Bones 10
Skull 1
Skin Raw hide

Wikipedia article

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

A small mammal with a striped face. It lives in groups and is ferocious in combat.

Badgers are small creatures found in a variety of biomes, from temperate forests to taigas, where they appear in clusters of 4 to 12 individuals. While carnivorous, they are benign and timid by default, but differ from most other creatures due to being prone to rage; a badger has a small chance of randomly flipping out in a furious fit, attacking anything unfortunate enough to be at its vicinity (such as a dwarf) until it calms down. A peasant attacked by an enraged badger may suffer from nasty bruises and scratches, but they'll often cripple the animal back with a single kick; while infamous in previous versions of the game, badgers today are not life-threatening unless the dwarf in question is a child, since they're only half the size of a dog. A male badger is called a boar, while females are called sows and newborns are named pups.

Badgers can be captured in cage traps and trained into cheap exotic pets. They give equivalent returns to dogs when butchered, and are fairly easy to hunt or trap due to appearing in large numbers. An enraged badger can serve as a distraction against intruders, but don't expect it to survive a fight against anything bigger than itself.

They're not to be confused with the honey badger, which's a different animal.

Some dwarves like badgers for their underground communities and their striped faces.

Admired for their striped faces.
D4Dwarf.png This article or section has been rated D for Dwarf. It may include witty humour, not-so-witty humour, bad humour, in-jokes, pop culture references, and references to the Bay12 forums. Don't believe everything you read, and if you miss some of the references, don't worry. It was inevitable.


Here is a lovely quote from Untelligent of the Bay12 forums.

"For ages, the crown of the King of Beasts has rested upon no head, the title long being vacant. Elephants became docile long ago, Carp have shrunk even smaller than they once were and dwarves made less fearful of their terrifying stare, and Giant Cave Spiders had the razor-tips of their fangs filed off.

But now, a new beast, freshly wrought from the blood-forges of Armok himself, has begun its reign of terror over the land. He made it ubiquitous, such that all would know its name. He filled it with fury, such that none would think it harmless. And He granted several of them tremendous size and insatiable anger far beyond that of their normal kin, such that even those who had thought they had mastered them had still more treacherous foes to be slain by.

There is a new King of Beasts, and its name is Badger. Tremble before it."

This may seem to contradict earlier claims of the badger being harmless. This is true, for a single badger or for small groups. Unfortunately, they tend to enter the map in huge "badger storms", swirling masses of highly irritable, lightning quick, sharp-clawed monsters. Any dwarf unlucky enough to be caught alone in a badger storm will soon find themselves being torn to shreds, reduced to a mangled pile of flesh.

..Hands and feet will be severed.