![]() ![]() In 107 we had the agitated giant firefly interlude, which was dispatched and then a single agitated giant snail rolled in thinking we would put up with it loafing around.Īfter that was dispatched we had the agitated giant sparrow war that stretched on into late 108, and currently we have an agitated brown pelican skirmish that I'm leaving alone because I think it takes up the spawning spots for the giant creatures and this one is good for comic relief with substantially less drowning in murky pools via dodging, the dorfs at this point don't seem to care much as moral seems to be slowly improving, they still get interrupted but then they just grab the damn birds and strangle them now. Then we had the agitated giant seagull war of 105, a few snatchers and an ambush in early 106 which was abruptly ended by the agitated giant scorpion invasion of 106. Playing modded but yeah embarked savage because hell yes giant stuff.but then it's like omg agitated giant stuff.started off with the woodcutter getting constricted by a giant boa. Make sure to pasture them in front of a long and narrow bridge, for the maximum greeting effect of any unannounced visitors in any numbers :) The military was riding war rhinos into combat.Īnyway, good luck on your militarization of the unsuspected guests. My dorfs were habitually wearing long-flowing robes and headscarves as cultural garb. My fortress ended up being a massive obsidian-block Hanging Gardens-like structure, with flowing waterfalls cascading down its topmost terrace that extended tens of z-levels above ground. I definitely added to a bunch of exotics. Original civ was based around HOT biomes, and it came with rhinos (I might have added domesticated tag there, don't remember). Since was outright broken back then, I deleted it from the raws for everything larger. 45 or so days, I made an exclusively above-ground fortress in desert/savannah biomes. I hurried to make cages and mechanisms, and set up traps to catch the rhinoceroses.Hah, that was my very first reaction to your post.īack in. Originally posted by db48x:It took me about a minute, but eventually I realized my opportunity. Although she did initially panic on being attacked by the eagle, she mostly seemed to be grumpy because she was caught outside in the rain. Talking with her afterwards, she seemed unfazed by the combat. Then she returned the lightly–wounded rhinoceros to the pen. After several more turns strangling the eagle just to make sure it was dead, she calmly took it to the nearby refuse stockpile. The eagle’s spine couldn’t take the pressure, and the spinal cord was severed, along with several arteries and tendons. She grabbed it by the throat with her right hand, placing the eagle into a chokehold. ![]() There was a furious exchange of blows, followed by Ilral finally getting a solid grip on the Eagle. The fight was pretty short, but ironically it was the rhinoceros that was losing right up until Ilral, age 16 and eldest daughter of Litast and Reg, took matters into hand. They won’t provide any wool, but the dwarves are already debating which will taste the best in a few years when the calves are older.Ī few months later an Agitated Eagle attacked one of the original four rhinoceroses. They were all a bit miffed to be caged like that, but now they inhabit the pen not as invaders but as guests. The calves are quite domesticated, of course, while the adults will probably require continual training for the rest of their lives. Litast brought each one a treat from the kitchens and successfully tamed each and every one of them. The three calves were the first to bolt from the pen, but eventually all seven were lined up in their cages. I hurried to make cages and mechanisms, and set up traps to catch the rhinoceroses. It took me about a minute, but eventually I realized my opportunity. The mother, Reg, is a Legendary Hunter and Marksdwarf. The father, Litast, is a Legendary Animal Trainer, Dissector, and Trapper. However, a short while later I was reviewing the most recent migrants to the fort when I noticed an interesting family a husband and wife and two children and their pet turkey hen. They had been locked in my outdoor pen for over a year when they started giving birth to cute new baby rhinoceros calves. As I reported, I thought I would never be rid of those Agitated Rhinoceroses. ![]()
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