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Difference between revisions of "Megabeast"

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'''Megabeasts''' are special and very powerful 'boss' [[creature]]s (distinct from, and larger than, [[semi-megabeast]]s) who are created during [[world generation]], each associated with a number of [[sphere]]s. They are named [[historical figure]]s, and the game will [[announcement|announce]] their presence by name.  
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'''Megabeasts''' are special and very powerful "boss" [[creature]]s (distinct from, and larger than, [[semi-megabeast]]s) who are created during [[world generation]], each associated with a number of [[sphere]]s. They are named [[historical figure]]s, and the game will [[announcement|announce]] their presence by name.  
  
 
The megabeast species are the [[dragon]], the [[hydra]], the [[roc]] and the [[bronze colossus]]. [[Forgotten beast]]s and [[titan]]s are procedurally generated megabeasts.
 
The megabeast species are the [[dragon]], the [[hydra]], the [[roc]] and the [[bronze colossus]]. [[Forgotten beast]]s and [[titan]]s are procedurally generated megabeasts.

Revision as of 02:24, 23 December 2020

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

Dwarf head pixel.png  This article or section contains minor spoilers. You may want to avoid reading it.

Megabeasts are special and very powerful "boss" creatures (distinct from, and larger than, semi-megabeasts) who are created during world generation, each associated with a number of spheres. They are named historical figures, and the game will announce their presence by name.

The megabeast species are the dragon, the hydra, the roc and the bronze colossus. Forgotten beasts and titans are procedurally generated megabeasts.

Description

Art by Joujeen

Megabeasts are created systematically during world generation. Newly-generated worlds are populated by initial populations of historical figures, megabeasts among them. The amount of megabeasts created at world generation is random, but based on two factors: the size of the world ("World Size"), and their prevalence ("Number of Beasts"). Megabeasts' presence (or lack thereof) is a major factor in world history. Over time, they will accumulate long kill lists, and the baddest of the bunch will acquire nicknames and god-like associations with their spheres.

Megabeasts are a distinct and serious threat to early development, threatening many a young outpost; but, inevitably, as the world matures, populations rise, and new settlements are founded, they become increasingly harassed. Although megabeasts will come out on top of almost any encounter, enough dice rolls and they will go down, felled by a lucky human or other sapient creature clearing the way for their fellows. The longer the world history, the more megabeasts are confronted and killed off, and the safer the world becomes for civilization. In most worlds, calendar ages go through three stages, the Age of Myth, the Age of Legends, and the Age of Heroes, each with a progressively-higher % of megabeasts killed.

Some megabeasts (namely, all but the bronze colossus and procedurally generated ones) can reproduce during world generation, but such an event is fantastically unlikely, for two reasons: The first is that megabeasts are immensely rare and elusive, and almost never bump into one another. The second is that the starting population of megabeasts is also their population cap, meaning that other megabeasts must die before new ones can be born. Megabeasts will reproduce within players' fortresses if they are lucky enough to cage and train two specimens of opposite sexes.

In world generation, all megabeasts claim and live in a lair, a hunting (or, perhaps, haunting) ground from which they will attack other creatures, both wildlife and civilized settlements. A megabeast sharing its lair with another megabeast of the other gender is also far more likely to reproduce than if the two had been wandering the world. Lairs can and do change, however, sometimes regularly, and older megabeasts have called many a place their home. Also, megabeasts have been found fighting each other, leading to hilarious reports of fireballs and cave ins.

Megabeasts will not attack the player until they have accumulated a minimum wealth of 100,000☼ or a minimum population of 80 dwarves. What megabeasts appear, if any do at all, is influenced by which ones are closest to the player; a dragon with a lair nearby is far more likely to attack than a roc several weeks away. Nonetheless, force-quitting and loading a fortress from a few days before a megabeast attack may result in a different one arriving on the same day, or later, or nothing arriving at all, depending on what has survived world generation.

Megabeast and night creature attacks are handled the same way as caravan/diplomat visits and migrant waves - at the beginning of the season, the game decides that it's going to happen and sets a timer, and the event happens once the timer runs out. Notably, megabeast and night creature events simply choose a random "eligible" (i.e. able to survive in your fortress's biome) creature from anywhere in the world, and make it instantly appear at your doorstep.

After an attack on a settlement in worldgen, megabeasts tend to be worshipped by dwarves, most likely out of fear and the hope that worshiping the megabeast may persuade it to not eat its worshippers (this currently does not work at all). The megabeast is listed as object of worship on the dwarves' relationship screen. This does not change your dwarves' behaviour when confronted with an object of worship, nor the megabeast's behaviour when bumping into its worshippers.


See also

Military and defense
F.A.Q.
Guides
Managing soldiers
Design tips
Invaders