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Editing Emotion
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[[File:emotions_preview2.png|right]]Certain circumstances can evoke a wide range of '''emotions''', both negative and positive, affecting dwarves' [[stress]] levels. Emotional reactions can result from immediate experience, or from revisiting a long-term memory, and are affected by dwarves' [[personalities]] and values, resulting in different reactions to the same circumstances. Recent emotions experienced by dwarves (listed along with their circumstance pairs) are listed in the [[Thoughts and Preferences]] screen. | [[File:emotions_preview2.png|right]]Certain circumstances can evoke a wide range of '''emotions''', both negative and positive, affecting dwarves' [[stress]] levels. Emotional reactions can result from immediate experience, or from revisiting a long-term memory, and are affected by dwarves' [[personalities]] and values, resulting in different reactions to the same circumstances. Recent emotions experienced by dwarves (listed along with their circumstance pairs) are listed in the [[Thoughts and Preferences]] screen. | ||
− | Different [[thoughts]] can have different "strength", denoting the effect the emotion has on a dwarf's stress levels (negative numbers reduce stress, while positive numbers increase it) and depends on time elapsed and dwarven personality. This thought strength is then divided by the 'Divider' numbers given in the table. The | + | Different [[thoughts]] can have different "strength", denoting the effect the emotion has on a dwarf's stress levels (negative numbers reduce stress, while positive numbers increase it) and depends on time elapsed and dwarven personality. This thought strength is then divided by the 'Divider' numbers given in the table. The strength is loosely color-coded, with positive thoughts being in blue or green and strong negative thoughts being in red or yellow. Brown thoughts are mildly to moderately negative, and purple and grey ones are pretty much neutral. |
: Note that positive thoughts have a ''negative'' number, as they ''reduce'' stress. Numbers closer to 1 or -1 have the strongest effect on stress. | : Note that positive thoughts have a ''negative'' number, as they ''reduce'' stress. Numbers closer to 1 or -1 have the strongest effect on stress. |