Difference between revisions of "Corpse"
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=== Butchering & Feeding === | === Butchering & Feeding === | ||
− | Non-rotten corpses can be butchered by a pawn assigned to [[Work#Cook|cooking]]. Butchering requires {{ticks|450}} of work, modified by the [[butchery speed]] of the cook and up to two nearby [[tool cabinet]]s. Mechanoids can be scrapped by a pawn assigned to [[Work#Crafting|crafting]] and requires {{ticks|300}} of work from a table, or {{ticks|450}} from a crafting spot. This is often the main way to destroy animal and mechanoid - see [[#Butchering & Shredding]] above for details. | + | Non-rotten corpses can be butchered by a pawn assigned to [[Work#Cook|cooking]]. Butchering requires {{ticks|450}} of work, modified by the [[butchery speed]] of the cook and up to two nearby [[tool cabinet]]s. Mechanoids can be scrapped by a pawn assigned to [[Work#Crafting|crafting]] and requires {{ticks|300}} of work from a table, or {{ticks|450}} from a crafting spot. This is often the main way to destroy animal and mechanoid corpses - see [[#Butchering & Shredding]] above for details. |
− | As butchering human corpses incurs a mood penalty, you may want to feed corpses directly to your carnivorous and omnivorous [[animals]], which takes no work beyond hauling. Otherwise, butchering gives more resources. Corpses and their meat will rot over time, it is recommended to use a [[cooler]] if you want to preserve their food. | + | As butchering human corpses incurs a mood penalty, you may want to feed corpses directly to your carnivorous and omnivorous [[animals]], which takes no work beyond hauling. Otherwise, butchering gives more resources. Corpses and their meat will rot over time, so it is recommended to use a [[cooler]] if you want to preserve their food. |
=== Manual Destruction === | === Manual Destruction === |
Revision as of 22:14, 19 October 2022
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A corpse is the dead body of a human, animal or mechanoid.
Acquisition
Corpses are obtained whenever something dies. They reflect what they had in life; missing limbs will affect a corpse's yield.
Certain means of death may destroy the corpse, or deal so much damage that there is nothing left to see.
Summary
Corpses provide negative beauty while on the ground, worse than most items. All corpses have a Missing Body Parts value.
Organic corpses
The corpses of organic life (e.g. non-mechanoids) can be used for food. When eaten directly, corpses will gain Missing Body Parts until there is nothing left. Animals don't mind, but colonists will receive the −12 Ate corpse moodlet and have a flat 5% of food poisoning when directly eating corpses. Eating human corpses will also impose the −20 Raw cannibalism on non cannibal pawns, or a mood buff of varying intesitity for pawns with the Cannibal trait or a pro-Cannibalism ideoligion. Corpses can instead be butchered, which is a more efficient way of gaining food - see the below section for details.
Organic corpses will quickly rot[What time?] if left above freezing temperature, 0 °C (32 °F). Animals with scaria have a chance to rot immediately on death dependent on the AI Storyteller settings, and pawns with toxic buildup will have a chance to rot immediately equal to the severity of buildup. Rotten corpses cannot be eaten or butchered. Rotten corpses will produce corpse bile, which is ugly to look at and also dirty.
Colonists who see a human corpse will receive negative thoughts, which are worse if the corpse is rotten. Colonists with the Cannibal or Psychopath don't mind fresh corpses. Those with Bloodlust are completely immune, as well as those following an Ideoligion with the "Corpses: Don't Care" precept.
Butchering & Shredding
Organic corpses without rot can be butchered at a butcher spot or the superior butcher table for meat and leather, which can be processed further. How much is determined on a variety of factors including:
- The base Meat Amount and Leather Amount of the animal, which also varies with maturity
- The butchery efficiency of the cook butchering
- A 150% multiplier, on meat only, for cleanly slaughtered tame animals. [Fact Check]
- A percentage multiplier for lost body parts
- A 70% multiplier if using a butcher spot instead of a table.
When butchering human corpses, colonists will get a -6 We butchered humanlike moodlet, and the butcherer gaining a further -6 I butchered humanlike mood. For the former penalty, it doesn't matter how many corpses you've butchered, it will remain at -6. Colonists with the Cannibal, Psychopath, or Bloodlust traits are immune, as does an Ideoligion that finds Cannibalism acceptable. There is no further penalty for working with human resources until eaten.
Mechanoid corpses can instead be smashed at a crafting spot or shredded at a machining table to produces steel and plasteel. The amount depends on which mechanoid you're shredding, as well as Mechanoid Shredding Efficiency, itself reliant on Crafting skill, whenever a machining table is used, and other factors.
In both cases, having more missing parts means less yield.
Disposal
The following methods can dispose of corpses:
Butchering & Feeding
Non-rotten corpses can be butchered by a pawn assigned to cooking. Butchering requires 450 ticks (7.5 secs) of work, modified by the butchery speed of the cook and up to two nearby tool cabinets. Mechanoids can be scrapped by a pawn assigned to crafting and requires 300 ticks (5 secs) of work from a table, or 450 ticks (7.5 secs) from a crafting spot. This is often the main way to destroy animal and mechanoid corpses - see #Butchering & Shredding above for details.
As butchering human corpses incurs a mood penalty, you may want to feed corpses directly to your carnivorous and omnivorous animals, which takes no work beyond hauling. Otherwise, butchering gives more resources. Corpses and their meat will rot over time, so it is recommended to use a cooler if you want to preserve their food.
Manual Destruction
Molotov cocktails or incendiary launchers will create fire. Placing a pile of corpses in a fireproof room (such as using stone for walls and floors) and lighting them on fire is the least work-consuming method of disposing corpses. It requires a pawn to be drafted, move to the place in question, and fire a single shot. Make sure that the room is fireproof, as a large fire can destroy many buildings. Regardless, fire tends to be the best and least time-consuming way to dispose of human and rotten corpses.
Alternatively, you can use frag grenades, which can destroy most items. As multiple grenades are needed per corpse, and as the explosion is rather small, they use more time. However, you don't have to mess with fire. Grenades can also destroy walls, so give a little space when throwing them.
Mechanoid corpses are immune to fire (but not frag grenades), but don't rot and can always be shredded into useful ingredients.
Burying
Corpses can be buried in a grave or sarcophagus, where the corpse is hauled to its location. Graves are much better for general disposal, costing no resources and 800 ticks (13.33 secs) of work to make. Sarcophagi are more beautiful, so are useful if placed inside.
They can be useful for preserving corpse in a freezer, preventing both rot and overzealous cooks from destroying them. This helps if you're waiting for a resurrector mech serum to revive the corpse in question. Up to 5 buried coprses can be used for meditation of the Morbid type. They will also improve the Funeral ritual. Finally, either building acts as solitary recreation. However, this type of recreation is always available, and colonists may visit graves that are far away.
Having a buried human allows the Corpse Obsession mental break to occur. Everybody who sees the corpse will receive the normal Saw (Rotten) Corpse penalty, but this is one of the least immediately harmful of the major breaks.
The main problem with burying is space - large raids can quickly consume a lot of time and area. And as you need to go further away, the longer it takes to bury. It is recommended to swap to another form of corpse disposal, once available, for your enemies.
Burning
Corpses can be burnt in an electric crematorium. Each cremation requires 180 ticks (3 secs) of work [Fact Check], and the crematorium itself requires 250 W of power to function.
If a way to start fire manually is available, then it is typically more efficient. Cremation is automatically done by haulers, so is largely for convenience's sake, or if fire isn't available.