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Dwarf Fortress

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Slaves to Armok: God of Blood Chapter II: Dwarf Fortress
File:DFLogo.PNG
Developer(s)Tarn Adams
Publisher(s)Bay 12 Games
Designer(s)Tarn Adams
Zach Adams
Platform(s)Windows, Mac OS X, Linux[1]
Release8 August Template:Vgy (initial)
6 September Template:Vgy (current)
Genre(s)City-building game, Roguelike
Mode(s)Single player

Slaves to Armok: God of Blood Chapter II: Dwarf Fortress (Dwarf Fortress for short) is a computer game by Bay 12 Games for Microsoft Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X set in a high fantasy universe that combines aspects of roguelike and city-building games. The title of the game is inspired by its primary focus on the construction, management, and exploration of dwarven fortresses within the game world. Development started in October Template:Vgy,[2] followed by the game's first public release in August Template:Vgy.[3]

History

Dwarf Fortress is the successor to Slaves to Armok: God of Blood, a hack and slash role-playing game by Bay 12 Games.[2][4] Dwarf Fortress discarded God of Blood's 3D graphics in favor of a text user interface and incorporated economic and strategy elements. On-screen displays utilize slightly modified code page 437 characters in 16 different colors implemented as bitmaps, rendered with OpenGL. This makes the game capable of switching to full screen on Vista, unlike pure text-mode programs. The developer states that graphic representation is not a significant focus.

Dwarf Fortress initially supported 2D landscapes only, with X and Y axes corresponding to the four cardinal directions. Later versions added a Z axis – multilayered maps – while retaining two-dimensional graphical representation. This allows for geographic features like hills, mountains, and chasms and player-created features like multilevel fortresses, waterfalls, elaborate deathtraps, and pits.

Dwarf Fortress has garnered a review in the December 2006 issue of PC Gamer UK, an article in Games for Windows and PC Powerplay, mention on the Eurogamer website,[5] the Roguelike of the Year award from ASCII Dreams in 2007, Indy PC game of the year at the 2006 Gamers With Jobs Community Game of the Year Awards, and various interviews including ones for The Escapist, Gamasutra, Gamers with Jobs, GeekNights, and Dubious Quality.

As of August 2009, Dwarf Fortress is under heavy development with features being added constantly.[6] The development website lists "Power Goals" in terms of small story excerpts, which at one point might emerge naturally in the game.[7]

The latest major release was in September 2008; however, since December 2008 an experimental branch, which includes improvements of the graphics engine and Linux support, is available through the game's forum.[1]

Dwarf Fortress' design has lent itself to succession games, also called bloodline games. In a succession game, different players trade a saved game and, one at a time, work together on a single fortress. The player taking his or her turn will usually update the others on their progress, usually via an internet message board.

Gameplay

Prior to play, a world must be generated using the software or downloaded from the developer's website. Each constructed world is unique; events that take place during play will affect subsequent games in the same world. World creation in Dwarf Fortress is elaborate: terrain is generated using fractals, erosion is simulated, then wildlife, towns, and other sites are placed.[2] A specific history is attached to each site; references to these events can be found during gameplay (in artwork and conversations with NPCs), and development's current focus (as of April 2008) is to make world generation wars determine in-game territory distribution and NPC background stories. The entire process can take anywhere from a few seconds to several hours, depending on settings and computer speed. Tarn Adams has added an option for generating significantly smaller worlds (of sizes 257x257 (the default), 129, 65, 33 or 17) for people who do not want to spend longer amounts of time generating a full sized world.[6] With the addition of more advanced world generation parameters in v0.28, it has become possible to generate non-square worlds (such as 129x65) as well as the ability to "paint" the shape of the world (specifying height, temperature, savagery, rainfall, drainage, and volcanism) which has given rise to real-world-inspired world generation parameters.[8]

The game offers two play modes: "Dwarf Fortress" mode, in which the player builds a dwarven settlement, and "Adventurer" mode, in which the player controls a single character in a generally roguelike manner. Only one mode at a time can be actively played in a given game world, although adventurers can visit fortresses built in prior games.

The game difficulty is variable, but its slant towards difficulty is reflected in the game's motto, "Losing is Fun". The first few attempts for newer players can often end in disaster. However, as time progresses, and the user's fortress grows, the game presents fewer late-game challenges.

Dwarf Fortress mode

File:Curses-tileset.gif
Screenshot using default (textual) tileset
File:Mayday-tileset.gif
Screenshot using a graphical tileset

As the player begins Dwarf Fortress mode, they have the ability to select a starting location, which determines the resources and challenges one may encounter on a given map. For example, a player may start on a map that contains a magma pool, which allows the dwarves to smelt and craft metals without requiring fuel resources but occasionally spawns dangerous enemies.

The initial settlement party consists of seven dwarves. The player receives a number of points to spend on settler skills and resources (food, weapons, armor, equipment, etc). Once these decisions have been made, the settlers arrive and await the player's instructions.

A variety of tasks can be performed in the game. Some are basic, such as mining, woodcutting, metalsmithing, masonry, farming, and cooking. Others are more esoteric, such as soapmaking, fish-cleaning, engraving, and gem cutting. A given dwarf's "career" will generally center on the skill practiced most. Many of the skills require special buildings, known as workshops, to be constructed.

The player influences newly-arrived dwarves through the designation of work areas and subsequent job creation, but the player cannot directly control a dwarf. For example, designating an area for wood-cutting creates one "chop down tree" job for each tree encompassed, which a dwarf with the proper job activated will carry out. If a wood stockpile is created, a "haul lumber to stockpile" job forms whenever there is a spare log and available room in the stockpile. Any dwarf may be designated to perform a job; however, higher skill in a given job may improve rate (such as with mining) or quality (in the case of crafting) of performance.

As they excavate their mountain, dwarves will have to fashion living space, produce food (typically involving farming and irrigation), obtain water and alcohol, and build workshops to generate valuable trade goods. They will also encounter hostile creatures against whom they must defend, which generally leads to military organization. As the fortress grows, more dwarves will arrive, providing additional labor and opportunities for job specialization.

As the game proceeds, players can encounter foreign traders, dwarven nobles who place demands on the populace, goblin sieges, maniacal dwarven artisans, and a variety of other special events.

The game models the dwarves and the world in extreme detail; for example, during combat, a dwarf can sustain varying degrees of injuries (broken, mangled, etc) to many body parts and even internal organs. Item base material, quality of workmanship, dye and decorations are all registered and taken into account. According to their experiences (having a friend die, being served low quality food, being disturbed by noise while sleeping, etc.) dwarves can become happy or sad, even angry and finally driven insane; they build social relationships, marry a sufficiently compatible dwarf and have children, or organize parties. Each dwarf also has its own unique personality, likes, and dislikes that will affect how the dwarf reacts to specific situations. An example of this is that a dwarf who likes the material gold will get a happy thought from seeing or owning a golden item, or a dwarf who is quick to anger will be more likely to tantrum and get into fist fights. In addition, dwarves can obtain personality traits through experiences such as seeing a great deal of death, which will decrease the unhappiness received from the death of friends. Gravity is simulated; an elaborate fluid system[2] is responsible for river flows.

Adventurer mode

In "Adventurer mode", the player controls an individual dwarf, human, or elf. There is no goal apart from survival. Players may either receive quests to kill monsters, which provide no specific reward, or wander freely and slaughter local fauna. Gameplay is fairly minimal; "Fortress mode" has received the bulk of the developer's attention.

"Adventurer mode" also allows the player to explore parts and history of the current game world otherwise not accessible in "Dwarf Fortress mode".

Adventurers are assigned several combat-related skills: shield use, armor use, ambushing, wrestling, swimming, and any of several weapon skills. Initial skill selection wholly determines starting gear, but equipment is available for purchase from stores in human towns. The player can also assemble a party of adventurers by asking townsfolk to join the lead character.

Legends Mode

Legends mode is less of a traditional gameplay mode than it is a way of reading through a world's vast history. Options can be set, when creating a world, to either discover its history manually during adventurer mode, or have all of the history automatically revealed upon world creation.

Legends Mode features various historical maps, such as historical civilization expansion maps, entity listings (starting with powerful creatures like dragons, then deities that various in-game characters worship), cities that civilizations have created, religions, and then each age's events. If an age has any particularly interesting features, such as the sudden rise of a powerful civilization, or a powerful demon or monster, the age will be named accordingly, eg. "The age of the Hydra and Demon", or "The age of Elves". If there is no particularly salient events for an age, most worlds will default to one of the three standard ages: the Age of Myth, the Age of Legends, and the Age of Heroes.

Development

Dwarf Fortress has been praised for offering so much depth and gameplay, despite only one programmer developing the game. Tarn Adams, "ToadyOne" on the forums, is the programming half of his and his brother Zachary's company, Bay 12 Games. Though the game is currently in its alpha stage, many of the core elements are already in place, or at least have the basic foundations already laid down. Much of the development for the game is done through user suggestions, stories written by players and Zachary Adams, as well as a series of overarching goals, called arcs.

Arcs

Adams has stated that the development of Dwarf Fortress will proceed across several arcs. These series of goals and priorities are all grouped together under a similar subject, and are named thus. For example, the current arc being developed is the Army Arc, which takes focus on the various features of the game related to the military and war. While the Army Arc is the main focus, the Presentation Arc and the Caravan Arc are also in development. The arcs themselves help provide guidance in development, but are by no means written in stone. Adams has been known to delay certain features, or add in popular user requested features, despite their not falling under the current arc upon which he is working. He has also stated he's not going to stick to just one arc at a time anymore as to avoid grinding at the same old month after month without a release.

The Arcs themselves are all based on a lengthy list of requirements and development goals, falling under the following categories: Core Components, Priority/Required, Bloats, and Power Goals. Adams has made these lists available to the public.[9]

The most recent developments have included an update of the materials system and creature body definitions to become more realistic so that hitting someone with an iron hammer actually hits someone like an iron hammer.

Reception

Several reviews praise Dwarf Fortress for its deep and rich content and gameplay.[2][10][11][12] Some of those reviews also state that one first has to overcome the quirky interface/graphics and extremely steep learning curve to really appreciate the game.[13][10][11] On the other hand, at least one review claims that the ASCII graphics actually add to the game: it helps the player mentally visualize game events, making the game more immersive.[12]

The interface of the game has often been criticized.[by whom?] Managing many dwarves is cumbersome enough to inspire the creation of several user-made utilities to make it easier.[14]

Mods

A large amount of the game's data is stored in text files. These files contain information on many things in the game, and by adjusting them, players can customize various aspects of the game. Due to the ease of modification, players have developed many different mods which vary in complexity. One common change is to make certain megabeasts (exceptionally powerful monsters such as dragons, titans, etc.) vastly more powerful so that they survive longer into the generation of the world. This allows players to have more challenging games, as megabeasts will occasionally attack a player fortress, if any are left alive after the creation of the world.

Another form of mods is the creation of utilities. Utilities serve all sorts of purposes and act as minor to major patches to the game executable itself. Each is its own separate executable and attaches itself to the Dwarf Fortress process and perform various memory editing. Some utilities are small and provide relief to a small annoyance, such as one modification which shows x/y coordinates on the world map, thus allowing players to more easily remember where a certain feature is. Others are highly complex, and even border on cheating, such as Tweak, which can change the wound status of units, either healing them or damaging them.

References

  1. ^ a b "Dwarf Fortress forum". bay12games.com. Retrieved 2009-09-22. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e Harris, John (2008-02-27). "Interview: The Making Of Dwarf Fortress". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2008-03-05. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ "Development in 2006". bay12games.com. Retrieved 2008-03-05. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "Slaves to Armok, the God of Blood". Retrieved 2009-08-20.
  5. ^ Gillen, Kieron (2006-09-13). "The State of Independence #5". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2008-03-05. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ a b "Recent Developments". bay12games.com. Retrieved 2008-03-11. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  7. ^ "Full list of Dwarf Fortress development goals and requirements". bay12games.com. Retrieved 2008-04-28. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  8. ^ "DwarfHeightMap Utility". Retrieved 2008-08-25.
  9. ^ "Version 1 Development". bay12games.com. Retrieved 2008-08-16. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ a b Costikyan, Greg (2007-12-02). "Play This Thing! Review". Retrieved 2008-04-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. ^ a b Sigl, Rainer (2008-01-13). "Telepolis Review" (in German). Retrieved 2008-04-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. ^ a b PC PowerPlay #148
  13. ^ "Dwarf Fortress Forum". Retrieved 2008-04-28.
  14. ^ "Dwarf Fortress Utilities".

Game and resources

Gameplay examples