View Issue Details
ID | Project | Category | View Status | Date Submitted | Last Update |
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0004326 | Dwarf Fortress | Creatures | public | 2011-03-25 02:37 | 2011-03-25 05:52 |
Reporter | Neoskel | Assigned To | Toady One | ||
Priority | normal | Severity | minor | Reproducibility | N/A |
Status | resolved | Resolution | fixed | ||
Product Version | 0.31.22 | ||||
Fixed in Version | 0.31.23 | ||||
Summary | 0004326: Some 'Giant' creatures aren't very big at all. | ||||
Description | So if i'm not wrong, [CHANGE_BODY_SIZE_PERC:1000] should increase the size of the creature by 10000%, thus 10 times the original size. This makes the giant platypus and giant penguin max size 20000 and 40000 respectively. These are both smaller than a dwarf (max size 60000), in fact the Giant Platypus is the size of a kobold. A far cry from "A huge monster". The other new giant critters (Panda, Capybara, Badger and Moose) are all fairly large (max sizes 650000, 450000, 150000 and 2625000 respectively.) The Gigantic Panda is bigger than a Cow, the Giant Capybara is between a Mule and Horse in size, the Giant Badger is bigger than a Reindeer and the Giant Moose is somewhat smaller than a Rhinoceros. These seem alright, but still may not be as intended. I pitted the different giant critters against a dwarf in the testing arena and the dwarf easily killed the giant platypus and penguin but was easily killed by everything else. | ||||
Steps To Reproduce | Look in the Raws and do a little math. Pit the critters against dwarves in testing arena. | ||||
Tags | No tags attached. | ||||
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I'm aware of this, but we haven't settled on a coherent system there yet. They can either all be the same size, say, which is the weirdest ecosystem-wise, or they can be uniformly amplified, which leaves some small giants, or any mix. The use of the word "huge" in some of the descriptions is misleading though. |
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There is a problem in this regard related to forgotten beasts. I never know how big a FB is. A giant ant can be anything the size of a small dog or the size of a mountain, for instance. |
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I'm going to go with (8x + 200000^2/(x+200000))*100/x %, so the giant creatures will start out as grizzly bear sized vermin and plateau at being roughly doubled in all dimensions for the larger beasts. Yeah, it doesn't communicate size very well in the descriptions, in general. |
Date Modified | Username | Field | Change |
---|---|---|---|
2011-03-25 02:37 | Neoskel | New Issue | |
2011-03-25 03:05 | Toady One | Note Added: 0016561 | |
2011-03-25 03:05 | Toady One | Assigned To | => Toady One |
2011-03-25 03:05 | Toady One | Status | new => acknowledged |
2011-03-25 05:41 | thvaz | Note Added: 0016564 | |
2011-03-25 05:52 | Toady One | Note Added: 0016566 | |
2011-03-25 05:52 | Toady One | Status | acknowledged => resolved |
2011-03-25 05:52 | Toady One | Fixed in Version | => 0.Upcoming |
2011-03-25 05:52 | Toady One | Resolution | open => fixed |