v50 Steam/Premium information for editors
  • v50 information can now be added to pages in the main namespace. v0.47 information can still be found in the DF2014 namespace. See here for more details on the new versioning policy.
  • Use this page to report any issues related to the migration.
This notice may be cached—the current version can be found here.

Difference between revisions of "v0.31:Immigration"

From Dwarf Fortress Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(I've even had migrants with "military tactics" skill.)
Line 14: Line 14:
  
 
Migrants each can arrive with a wide collection of (often unrelated) skills, far greater than possible with one of the {{L|starting build|starting 7 dwarves}}, and {{L|experience}} levels as high as Legendary.
 
Migrants each can arrive with a wide collection of (often unrelated) skills, far greater than possible with one of the {{L|starting build|starting 7 dwarves}}, and {{L|experience}} levels as high as Legendary.
Any and all skills might be represented, including obscure military skills (like {{l|blowgunner}}), high levels of one or more {{l|social skill}}s, {{l|crutch walker}}, {{l|concentration}} and others.
+
Any and all skills might be represented, including obscure military skills (like {{l|blowgunner}}), high levels of one or more {{l|social skill}}s, {{l|crutch walker}}, {{l|concentration}} and others. It's even possible to have dwarves with skills that may not be obtainable by other means, like {{l|military tactics}}.
  
 
Immigrants may have high skills in certain {{l|labor|labors}} without actually having them enabled in their labor preferences. This leads to dwarves either doing jobs from an area they are not labeled for or no work at all. For example, an adequate cheese maker (with the cheese making labor turned on) may also have the skill bonecrafting on "high master", albeit turned off in his preferences. The dwarf in question is listed as a bonecrafter on screen and in the {{l|status}} tab, but will only perform the cheese making labor. Individually checking each immigrant for skills and labor preferences is the only workaround so far. But the use of programs such as {{l|utilities|Dwarf Therapist}} can greatly decrease the time taken to check each dwarfs skills.
 
Immigrants may have high skills in certain {{l|labor|labors}} without actually having them enabled in their labor preferences. This leads to dwarves either doing jobs from an area they are not labeled for or no work at all. For example, an adequate cheese maker (with the cheese making labor turned on) may also have the skill bonecrafting on "high master", albeit turned off in his preferences. The dwarf in question is listed as a bonecrafter on screen and in the {{l|status}} tab, but will only perform the cheese making labor. Individually checking each immigrant for skills and labor preferences is the only workaround so far. But the use of programs such as {{l|utilities|Dwarf Therapist}} can greatly decrease the time taken to check each dwarfs skills.

Revision as of 21:07, 12 February 2011

This article is about an older version of DF.

Immigration can occur once per season, and can happen at any time throughout (both early and late season immigrations have been reported)

Smaller migrant waves (2 to 10) seem typical in early seasons, followed by a large wave (low double digits) in the second Spring (one year after embark). Be prepared with adequate Template:L, Template:L, and Template:Ls, among other things. Max wave size reported to date is 28.

Migrants also often bring animals with them. These are often not pets of the migrants, but will always be domestic animals.

Immigrant waves will not exceed the maximum number of dwarves you have specified in d_init.txt, but instead will match up exactly.[Verify] (or, of course, stay below)

It may be the case that the first 2 migrant waves are special and possibly generated out of thin air, like all waves used to be. Even if your parent civilization is extinct, two waves will still show up.

Labor preference bug

Migrants each can arrive with a wide collection of (often unrelated) skills, far greater than possible with one of the Template:L, and Template:L levels as high as Legendary. Any and all skills might be represented, including obscure military skills (like Template:L), high levels of one or more Template:Ls, Template:L, Template:L and others. It's even possible to have dwarves with skills that may not be obtainable by other means, like Template:L.

Immigrants may have high skills in certain Template:L without actually having them enabled in their labor preferences. This leads to dwarves either doing jobs from an area they are not labeled for or no work at all. For example, an adequate cheese maker (with the cheese making labor turned on) may also have the skill bonecrafting on "high master", albeit turned off in his preferences. The dwarf in question is listed as a bonecrafter on screen and in the Template:L tab, but will only perform the cheese making labor. Individually checking each immigrant for skills and labor preferences is the only workaround so far. But the use of programs such as Template:L can greatly decrease the time taken to check each dwarfs skills.

Military Immigrants

Any immigrant, with (apparently) any collection of skills, may also arrive with some Template:Ls, all of the same Template:L level. These appear consistently to be:

  • Armor User
  • Fighter
  • Dodger

...and one of either...

  • Wrestler, Striker, Kicker, or Biter
...or...
  • 1 (or more*) weapon skill
and
  • Shield user

*If more than 1, then the total experience divided between the skills seems to be approximately equal to that of any of the other skills.[Verify]

Worldgen Migrants

In version 0.31.13, migrants can arrive with professions uncommon for Dwarf Fortress mode (such as "Thief", "Merchant", or "Drunk"), and some can even be of other races - it appears to be using existing members of your civilization created during worldgen rather than creating them out of thin air as in previous versions. Such migrants cannot be enlisted in military or assigned labors, but Dwarven ones can still be made into nobles - as they do nothing but drink alcohol, eat food, and sleep, they are oddly ideal candidates.