Difference between revisions of "Chinchilla"
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| flammability = 0.7 | | flammability = 0.7 | ||
| marketvalue = 150 | | marketvalue = 150 | ||
+ | | combatPower = 33 | ||
| bodysize = 0.35 | | bodysize = 0.35 | ||
| healthscale = 0.4 | | healthscale = 0.4 | ||
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== Taming == | == Taming == | ||
− | Chinchillas can be tamed from a [[tropical rainforest]] or [[tropical swamp]] and farmed for their valuable, insulating, and beautiful furs | + | Chinchillas can be tamed from a [[tropical rainforest]] or [[tropical swamp]] and farmed for their valuable, insulating, and beautiful furs. |
== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
Line 59: | Line 60: | ||
== Analysis == | == Analysis == | ||
− | Chinchillas are most notable for their [[chinchilla fur | + | Chinchillas are most notable for their [[chinchilla fur|fur]]. While they are small and rare animals, chinchillas breed rapidly, and can produce a surprising amount of meat and leather. Should you get a breeding pair, they can make profitable pen animals. |
− | Chinchilla's main competitor are [[guinea pig]]s. Guinea pigs aren't pen animals, so they require constant taming upkeep. However, guinea pigs can nuzzle colonists and can be used as fodder in combat. | + | Chinchilla's main competitor are [[guinea pig]]s, which produce a similarly valuable hide. Guinea pigs aren't pen animals, so they require constant taming upkeep. However, guinea pigs can nuzzle colonists and can be used as fodder in combat. |
− | === | + | === Manhunters === |
− | + | By far, the cutest [[Mental break#Manhunter|manhunter]] event - until you realize how difficult small animals are to shoot. On the plus side, it would make for an amazing story to tell your friends if your colony got torn apart from a pack of cute chinchillas | |
− | + | == Slaughtering == | |
+ | When slaughtered, a chinchilla yields {{#vardefineecho:baby_meat|{{Meat Leather Curve|{{#expr:{{P|Body Size}}*0.2*140}}}}}} meat and {{Meat Leather Curve|{{#expr:{{P|Body Size}}*0.2*40}}}} leather as a baby; {{Meat Leather Curve|{{#expr:{{P|Body Size}}*0.5*140}}}} meat and {{Meat Leather Curve|{{#expr:{{P|Body Size}}*0.5*40}}}} as a juvenile; or {{Meat Leather Curve|{{#expr:{{P|Body Size}}*140}}}} meat and {{Meat Leather Curve|{{#expr:{{P|Body Size}}*40}}}} leather as an adult. 1 meat is worth 0.05 nutrition. | ||
− | + | Adult chinchillas consume {{P|Real Hunger Rate}} nutrition per day, and a female chinchilla creates an average {{#expr: {{P|Offspring Per Birth}} / {{P|Gestation Period Days}} round 3}} offspring per day. | |
− | * When offspring are slaughtered as babies, a female chinchilla | + | === Meat === |
− | * | + | * When offspring are slaughtered as babies, a female chinchilla produces {{#expr:{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby}} round 2}} nutrition of meat per day, for {{%|{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby}}/{{P|Real Hunger Rate}} round 3}} nutrition efficiency. |
− | + | * When offspring are slaughtered as adults, offspring consume {{#expr:{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}} - {{P|Real Hunger Rate}} round 2}} more nutrition for an average of {{#expr:{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}} - {{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby}} round 2}} more nutrition per day. This results in {{#expr:{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}} round 2}} nutrition of meat per day, for {{%| {{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}} round 3}} nutrition efficiency. | |
− | + | When considering a 1:1 ratio of males:females, nutrition falls to {{%|{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby|1|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|baby|1|1}} round 3}} (baby) or {{%|{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}} round 3}} (adult). But when considering a 1:3 ratio of males:females, nutrition rises back to {{%|{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby|3|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|baby|3|1}} round 3}} (baby) or {{%|{{Meat Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|3|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|3|1}} round 3}} (adult). | |
− | + | === Leather === | |
− | * | + | Female chinchillas produce: |
− | * | + | * Baby slaughter: {{icon small|Chinchilla fur}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby}} round 2}} fur per day, or {{icon small|Chinchilla fur}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby}}/{{P|Real Hunger Rate}} round 3}} fur per 1 unit nutrition. |
− | + | * Adult slaughter: {{icon small|Chinchilla fur}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}} round 2}} fur per day, or {{icon small|Chinchilla fur}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult}} round 3}} fur per 1 unit nutrition. | |
+ | When considering a 1:1 ratio of males:females, fur lowers to {{icon small|Chinchilla fur}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|baby|1|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|baby|1|1}} round 3}} per 1 unit nutrition (baby), or {{icon small|Chinchilla fur}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}} round 3}} per 1 unit nutrition (adult). Like with meat, a higher ratio of females increases efficiency. | ||
Interestingly, the choice of whether to slaughter chinchillas as babies or adults varies as the proportion of females to males changes, with adult slaughter becoming more optimal as the proportion of males increases. This can be thought of as being due to the nutrition consumption of the males overpowering the benefit of not having to feed the offspring. Baby slaughter becomes preferable as the ratio of females:males rises above 2.4:1 for meat optimisation, or 2:1 for leather optimisation.<!--found with size=0.35, hunger=0.124*1.6, gestation=5.66, avg_offspring=1.75, juvenile_age=0.1, maturity_age=0.2222---> | Interestingly, the choice of whether to slaughter chinchillas as babies or adults varies as the proportion of females to males changes, with adult slaughter becoming more optimal as the proportion of males increases. This can be thought of as being due to the nutrition consumption of the males overpowering the benefit of not having to feed the offspring. Baby slaughter becomes preferable as the ratio of females:males rises above 2.4:1 for meat optimisation, or 2:1 for leather optimisation.<!--found with size=0.35, hunger=0.124*1.6, gestation=5.66, avg_offspring=1.75, juvenile_age=0.1, maturity_age=0.2222---> | ||
− | === | + | === Trade === |
− | + | [[Chinchilla fur]] is highly valuable, beautiful, and cold resistant. Of these uses, beauty is unlikely to make a meaningful impact. Chinchilla fur isn't great for protection, other than cold insulation. As chinchillas are found in tropical biomes, cold insulation is unlikely to be relevant. Thus, the main ''value'' of their fur, is money. | |
+ | |||
+ | With a 1:1 ratio of males:females, chinchillas produce {{icon small|Chinchilla fur}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}} round 3}} fur per 1 unit nutrition. 1 unit of nutrition is equal to {{icon small|hay}} 20 [[hay]], which can be grown in {{#expr: (20 / {{#show:Haygrass|?Harvest Yield Per Day (100)}}) round 1}} tiles of [[haygrass]] crop. The same tiles of [[psychoid plant]] could create {{icon small|Psychoid leaves}} {{#expr: (20 / {{#show:Haygrass|?Harvest Yield Per Day (100)}}) * {{#show:Psychoid plant|?Harvest Yield Per Day (100)}} round 1}} psychoid leaves per day. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Psychoid leaves are worth {{icon small|silver}} {{#expr: (20 / {{#show:Haygrass|?Harvest Yield Per Day (100)}}) * ({{#show:Psychoid plant|?Harvest Yield Per Day (100)}} / 4) * {{Q|Flake|Market Value Base}} round 1}} [[silver]] when turned into [[flake]]. With 1:1 female/male slaughter, the chinchilla fur would be worth {{icon small|silver}} {{#expr:{{Leather Production|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}}/{{Nutrition Consumption|{{PAGENAME}}|adult|1|1}} * {{Q|Chinchilla fur|Market Value Base}} round 1}} [[silver]] ''unprocessed''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Efficiency can increase for a number of reasons: | ||
+ | * When you have more females than males, chinchillas are more efficient per unit nutrition. You can support 5:1 ratio of females:males easily. | ||
+ | * Chinchillas can graze, which saves the work of having to sow crops in the first place. | ||
+ | * Fur can be turned into [[duster]]s or [[formal vest]]s{{RoyaltyIcon}} for even more value. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Note that chinchilla fur is then penalized by the butcher's [[Butchery Efficiency]] (dependent on Cooking skill) and the [[AI storytellers#Butchering yield|butchering penalty]] from [[difficulty]]. | ||
== Training == | == Training == | ||
Line 90: | Line 104: | ||
== Health == | == Health == | ||
− | {{Animal Health Table}} | + | {{Animal Health Table|QuadrupedAnimalWithPawsAndTail}} |
== Gallery == | == Gallery == |
Revision as of 01:12, 16 July 2024
Chinchilla
A small, nimble rodent. Its fur is softer than just about anything in the universe, making it very valuable as a trade good.
Base Stats
- Type
- Animal
- Flammability
- 70%
Pawn Stats
- Combat Power
- 33
- Move Speed
- 5 c/s
- Health Scale
- 40% HP
- Body Size
- 0.35
- Mass - Baby
- 4.2 kg
- Mass - Juvenile
- 10.5 kg
- Mass - Adult
- 21 kg
- Carrying Capacity
- 26 kg
- Filth Rate
- 1
- Hunger Rate
- 0.2 Nutrition/Day
- Diet
- herbivorous
- Life Expectancy
- 9 years
- Manhunter Chance
- 0%
- Manhunter Chance (Taming)
- 0%
- Trainable Intelligence
- None
- Wildness
- 60%
- Minimum Handling Skill
- 5
- Roam Interval
- 2 days
- Mate Interval
- 8 hours
- Maturity Age
- 0.222 years (13.3 days)
- Juvenile Age
- 0.1 years (6 days)
- Comfortable Temp Range
- -15 °C – 55 °C (5 °F – 131 °F)
Production
- Meat Yield
- 49 chinchilla meat
- Leather Yield
- 21 chinchilla fur
- Gestation Period
- 5.661 days
- Offspring Per Birth
- 1-3 (1.75 avg)
Melee Combat
- Attack 1
- Front left paw
3.6 dmg (Scratch)
5 % AP
1.5 second cooldown - Attack 2
- Front right paw
3.6 dmg (Scratch)
5 % AP
1.5 second cooldown - Attack 3
- Teeth
5.8 dmg (Bite)
9 % AP
2 second cooldown
0.7 chance factor - Attack 4
- Head
2 dmg (Blunt)
3 % AP
2 second cooldown
0.2 chance factor - Average DPS
- 1.35
- tradeTags
- AnimalUncommon
Chinchillas are small rodents with very soft and valuable fur. If slain, they can be butchered for chinchilla meat and chinchilla fur.
Taming
Chinchillas can be tamed from a tropical rainforest or tropical swamp and farmed for their valuable, insulating, and beautiful furs.
Summary
Chinchillas are pen animals. Once tamed, pen animals cannot and do not need to be trained any further. But if left outside of a pen or caravan hitching spot, pen animals will eventually roam outside your colony. Making a caravan is not required to tie animals to a caravan hitching spot.
Analysis
Chinchillas are most notable for their fur. While they are small and rare animals, chinchillas breed rapidly, and can produce a surprising amount of meat and leather. Should you get a breeding pair, they can make profitable pen animals.
Chinchilla's main competitor are guinea pigs, which produce a similarly valuable hide. Guinea pigs aren't pen animals, so they require constant taming upkeep. However, guinea pigs can nuzzle colonists and can be used as fodder in combat.
Manhunters
By far, the cutest manhunter event - until you realize how difficult small animals are to shoot. On the plus side, it would make for an amazing story to tell your friends if your colony got torn apart from a pack of cute chinchillas
Slaughtering
When slaughtered, a chinchilla yields 18 meat and 8 leather as a baby; 28 meat and 15 as a juvenile; or 49 meat and 21 leather as an adult. 1 meat is worth 0.05 nutrition.
Adult chinchillas consume 0.2 nutrition per day, and a female chinchilla creates an average 0.47 offspring per day.
Meat
- When offspring are slaughtered as babies, a female chinchilla produces 0.28 nutrition of meat per day, for 139.1% nutrition efficiency.
- When offspring are slaughtered as adults, offspring consume 0.49 more nutrition for an average of 0.48 more nutrition per day. This results in 0.76 nutrition of meat per day, for 110% nutrition efficiency.
When considering a 1:1 ratio of males:females, nutrition falls to 69.6% (baby) or 85.3% (adult). But when considering a 1:3 ratio of males:females, nutrition rises back to 104.3% (baby) or 100.3% (adult).
Leather
Female chinchillas produce:
- Baby slaughter: 2.47 fur per day, or 12.365 fur per 1 unit nutrition.
- Adult slaughter: 6.49 fur per day, or 9.431 fur per 1 unit nutrition.
When considering a 1:1 ratio of males:females, fur lowers to 6.183 per 1 unit nutrition (baby), or 7.308 per 1 unit nutrition (adult). Like with meat, a higher ratio of females increases efficiency.
Interestingly, the choice of whether to slaughter chinchillas as babies or adults varies as the proportion of females to males changes, with adult slaughter becoming more optimal as the proportion of males increases. This can be thought of as being due to the nutrition consumption of the males overpowering the benefit of not having to feed the offspring. Baby slaughter becomes preferable as the ratio of females:males rises above 2.4:1 for meat optimisation, or 2:1 for leather optimisation.
Trade
Chinchilla fur is highly valuable, beautiful, and cold resistant. Of these uses, beauty is unlikely to make a meaningful impact. Chinchilla fur isn't great for protection, other than cold insulation. As chinchillas are found in tropical biomes, cold insulation is unlikely to be relevant. Thus, the main value of their fur, is money.
With a 1:1 ratio of males:females, chinchillas produce 7.308 fur per 1 unit nutrition. 1 unit of nutrition is equal to 20 hay, which can be grown in 14.4 tiles of haygrass crop. The same tiles of psychoid plant could create 6.9 psychoid leaves per day.
Psychoid leaves are worth 24.2 silver when turned into flake. With 1:1 female/male slaughter, the chinchilla fur would be worth 47.5 silver unprocessed.
Efficiency can increase for a number of reasons:
- When you have more females than males, chinchillas are more efficient per unit nutrition. You can support 5:1 ratio of females:males easily.
- Chinchillas can graze, which saves the work of having to sow crops in the first place.
- Fur can be turned into dusters or formal vests for even more value.
Note that chinchilla fur is then penalized by the butcher's Butchery Efficiency (dependent on Cooking skill) and the butchering penalty from difficulty.
Training
This animal can be trained as follows:
Guard: | |
---|---|
Attack: | |
Rescue: | |
Haul: |
*As of version 1.1.2610, all animals can be tamed. The percentage of likelihood of success depends on factors such as the Animals Wildness Percentage, Pawn Handling Skill, and others. More information can be found on the animals page.
Health
Part Name | Health | Quantity | Coverage[1] | Target Chance[2] | Subpart of | Internal | Capacity[3] | Effect if Destroyed/Removed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Body | 16 | 1 | 100% | 21% | N/A[4] | - | Death | |
Tail | 4 | 1 | 7% | 7% | Body | - | - | |
Spine | 10 | 1 | 3% | 3% | Body | Moving |
−100% Moving[5] | |
Stomach | 8 | 1 | 3% | 3% | Body | Digestion |
−50% Digestion | |
Heart | 6 | 1 | 3% | 3% | Body | Blood Pumping |
Death | |
Lung | 6 | 2 | 3% | 3% | Body | Breathing |
−50% Breathing. Death if both lost. | |
Kidney | 6 | 2 | 3% | 3% | Body | Blood Filtration | −50% Blood Filtration. Death if both lost. | |
Liver | 8 | 1 | 3% | 3% | Body | Digestion |
Death | |
Neck | 10 | 1 | 20% | 5% | Body | Eating Talking Breathing |
Death | |
Head | 10 | 1 | 75% | 2.25% | Neck | - | Death | |
Skull | 10 | 1 | 25% | 1.125% | Head | - | Cannot be destroyed Increasing Pain based on damage. | |
Brain | 4 | 1 | 70% | 2.625% | Skull | Consciousness |
Death Damage always results in scarring. | |
Eye | 4 | 2 | 12% | 1.8% | Head | Sight |
−25% Sight. −100% if both lost. Damage always results in scarring. 0% Hit Chance against Blunt damage. | |
Ear | 4.8 | 2 | 8% | 1.2% | Head | Hearing |
−25% Hearing. −100% if both lost. | |
Nose | 4 | 1 | 10% | 1.5% | Head | - | - | |
AnimalJaw | 4 | 1 | 10% | 1.5% | Head | Manipulation |
−100% Manipulation. Can no longer use Bite attack. | |
Front Leg | 12 | 2 | 7% | 5.95% | Body | Moving |
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost. Can no longer use paw attack.[6] | |
Front Paw | 4 | 2 | 15% | 1.05% | Front Leg | Moving |
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost. Can no longer use paw attack. | |
Rear Leg | 12 | 2 | 7% | 5.95% | Body | Moving |
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost. | |
Rear Paw | 4 | 2 | 15% | 1.05% | Rear Leg | Moving |
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost. |
- ↑ Coverage determines the chance to hit this body part. It refers to the percentage of the super-part that this part covers, before its own sub-parts claim their own percentage. For example, if the base coverage of the super-part is 100%, and the coverage of the part is 20%, 20% of hits would hit the part, and 80% the super-part. If the part had its own sub-part with 50% coverage, the chances would be 10% sub-part, 10% part, 80% super part.
- ↑ Target Chance is the actual chance for each part to be be selected as the target when each part's coverage has been taken into account(I.E. Neck covers 7.5% of Torso but Head covers 80% of Neck so it actually has only a 1.5% chance to be selected). This is not pure hit chance, as different damage types propagate damage in different ways. See that page for details.
- ↑ Note that capacities can affect other capacities in turn. Only the primary effect is listed. See specific pages for details.
- ↑ This is the part that everything else connects to to be considered 'connected'.
- ↑ If Moving drops below 16% a pawn cannot move.
- ↑ A Scratch attack that varies from animal to animal. Each front paw allows one attack.
Gallery
Version history
- 0.12.906 - Added
- Beta 19/ 1.0 - nuzzle interval 72 -> 48 hours