Nature too finds its devious ways to mess with the lot, sending various disasters their way. The consistent incoming attacks have been proof of that. And so it does! There are horrors in the caverns below that no one likes to talk about, but are certain of their existence. Seldom will you find a settler dozing off - each hurrying about their activities like their very lives depended on it. We all know how efficient dwarves can be when they set their minds on a task and the widespread reach of the caverns underneath echo of their very success. If shredded dwarfs have babies, those babies will be more naturally shredded, and you will skew the average above the 60,000 cm^3 mark, as those muscle babies have their own children some day.Roar the mighty thunder gods and spill the ale in the taverns as a bustling city comes to life under a mighty mountain. It has also been theorized that Strength is affected by genetics, and that genetics is affected by Strength. But a Dwarf blessed with the natural steroidal power of 220 lead rings will go beyond that limit and push over 64,000 cm^3 genetic freaks that would put Arnold Schwarzenurist to shame. The max size of a Dwarf is supposed to be 60,000 cm^3. With any luck, or by trading for more lead bars, you'll flood your civilization with heavy bling and watch as they become freaks. If your military Dwarfs equip some heavy lead Jewelry and train with it on, they will hit insanely hard, and become a lot harder to kill because muscle counts as a natural armor. Theoretically, a single dwarf can wear 220 rings, 11 on each finger/toe, and an unlimited number of bracelets. Heavy lead crafts will slow your dwarfs down for a bit, but will make them insanely strong. Originally posted by Raxo:apparently i made a ton while trying to smelt ores and stuff for iron but idk what to make of them, any suggestions? My favorite use of massive quantities of lead is rings and bracelets. sweet dude thanks for the suggestions i'll get on it (researching) Also if you ever get an artifact mace of lead it's great.Ĭonsidering you have a lot of iron, if you find tin and copper then you can just make lay pewter. Alternatively if you are afraid of dragons or trolls, lead is the same strength as steel when it comes to bridges and chains. Sadly you can't make a lead mace or warhammer, silver being the best option for those, but if you make spiked ball traps I am fairly sure they rely on density for their damage. Originally posted by ♡︎Odessa:The people suggesting to use it as weapons sort of have the right idea. So if you don't need bronze it's a great option as the material value of lay pewter is higher than the materials combined.Ĭonsidering you have a lot of iron, if you find tin and copper then you can just make lay pewter. But with the steam release it's more realistic in color. My old favorite use for it was lay pewter because it used to have a bright cyan color in game. Since it's cheap it's great for teaching metal crafters. Also if you ever get an artifact mace of lead it's great.Īlso the heavier minecarts are great if you want to go orcs must die with your base defense (by that I mean having them zip around and slam into them). The people suggesting to use it as weapons sort of have the right idea. It depends on how many you want to use as battering rams against enemies.Īlso note that minecarts can be very deadly to your own forces, being the biggest downside (or not?) of minecarts used as direct weapons. Minecarts tend to be deadly regardless of material and lead is only somewhat dense with gold, rose gold and platinum being much denser (but also much more valuable and usually in lesser amounts). If you melt items, don't melt masterwork quality or whoever made that item will get a bad thought from it, for every item (same with destroying or being stolen them but selling is fine). Lay pewter has a fairly nice very light grey color for those that like to build a bit more visually pleasing things. You can also make Lay pewter (alloy) with tin, copper and lead but there are better alloys with tin and copper (without lead). If you have too much of it, consider using it for floors or walls, either directly as bars or by making blocks first (1 for 1 and not 4 like with rocks or logs sadly) since they don't have the same texture I second the furnitures and other similar things, it has a decent value (especially compared to rocks) so you can get better stuff from it.
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