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It's possible that the roc is the one who attacks as soon as it sees active military, and the military then retaliate. I trained a roc for hunting and attached it to the squad leader, and followed it as it went to attend to its new master. It passed twenty dwarves with no incident, but as soon as it spotted the (active) squad leader down the hallway, it turned and bit the head off the nearest dwarf. |
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Maybe with a blinded dwarf in activate military you can make sure roc sees military and attacks first and not vice versa. |
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Daris
2015-08-20 11:38
reporter
~0032978
Last edited: 2015-08-20 11:43
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I have no blind dwarves. Is there a way to create one?
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A captured/trained dragon displays the same behavior. |
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The rocs also mix it up with human caravan guards. |
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For an experiment, I introduced my military to the magma and pastured one of the rocs outside the fort's entryway. Civilians were passing by all the time, collecting wood and whatnot. Then a unicorn stopped by, and the roc went postal on it. One of the dwarves gave me a cancellation, "interrupted by stray roc" (not interrupted by combat), but the only combat in the log was the roc vs. the unicorn. The roc later returned to the fort and got caught again in the pasture, and did not make an attempt to attack the civilians.
I don't know how to interpret this. It's as though there is incomplete loyalty between the roc and the dwarves, so that the dwarves see the roc as hostile, and vice versa, but only under certain circumstances. If the roc is attacking something, the dwarves view it as hostile even if it is not attacking a member of the fort. Active military and the roc are for some reason always enemies. I thought it would be awesome to have a pack of domesticated megabeasts, but the rocs are far more trouble than they are worth. They are only good for a small trickle of high-value and high-maintenance eggs, and the promise of epic amounts of valuable food in 15 years. The war dogs are more valuable in fortress defense. |
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