Difference between revisions of "Camelhide"
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Revision as of 15:03, 7 January 2024
Camelhide
Tanned, dried, scraped camel skin. Good at temperature regulation in hot climates.
Base Stats
- Stuff Categories
- Leathery
- Stack Limit
- 75
- Mass
- 0.03 kg
- Beauty
- -4
- HP
- 60
- Flammability
- 100%
- Rotatable
- False
- Path Cost
- 14 (48%)
Stat Modifiers
- Beauty Factor
- ×1.3
- Work To Make Factor
- ×1
- Work To Build Factor
- ×1
- Max Hit Points
- ×1.3
- Flammability
- ×1
- Armor - Sharp
- ×0.81
- Armor - Blunt
- ×0.24
- Armor - Heat
- ×1.5
- Insulation - Cold
- +16 °C (28.8 °F)
- Insulation - Heat
- +24 °C (43.2 °F)
- defName
- Dromedary_Leather
- Color
- (204,180,150)
Camelhide is a type of leather produced when a cook butchers a dromedary or an alpaca at a butcher table.
Acquisition
The following animals provide Camelhide.
Usage
Camelhide can be used to craft and build the following things:
Analysis
Camelhide is one of many textiles with stats almost identical to plainleather, only diverging in having better heat insulation and slightly higher market value and beauty factor. In this way, it can be considered the heat focused counterpart to Bluefur
As it is 6-way tied for the 11th most protective textile in the game, it is largely irrelevant as protective clothing after the very early game. Yet camelhide's heat insulation is amazing, the second best against heat (in a 3-way tie). So unlike comparably protective textiles, it can retain utility in hot biomes into the mid-game. Later on, devilstrand is as insulative and significantly more protective. Therefore, growing devilstrand should be made a priority in these biomes. If heat isn't an issue, then other leathers should be used before devilstrand whenever possible.
For use in furniture, it only has a slightly improved beauty factor than other common textiles. However, its mid-game redundancy as clothing makes it a decent choice for improving furniture beauty. Yet wools are superior for beauty and reasonably common, limiting the long-term utility of camelhide.