Injury

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Injury preview anim.gif

Injuries are physical damage to a living being. Humanoids, animals, and mechanoids can sustain injuries from many sources, which each have their own Damage Type.

Injury types

Different weapons cause different types of injuries. For example, a mace will crush, a longsword will cut, and fire will burn. The type of injury impacts the amount of pain it causes, the rate of bleeding, and the chance of infection

Summary

Injuries reduce a body part's health, its efficiency, and causes pain to the pawn.

Damage

Every body part has a health value, which is lowered every time it takes damage. When it reaches 0, the part is completely destroyed.

Damage also lowers a body part's efficiency, proportional to its health remaining. For example, if a arm has 15/30 health, then that arm performs 50% worse. As each arm is responsible for 50% Manipulation, this results in the pawn having -25% Manipulation until the injury is healed. Some parts, like the torso, are not responsible for any pawn stat, but still take damage and cause pain.

Pain

The greater the damage, the greater the pain. Pain is equal to pain = (damage / healthscale) * damagetype, where most injuries have a damagetype of 1.25. For humans, health scale = 1, so it has no impact for their pain. Pain reduces Consciousness directly, which reduces most pawn capabilities. It also gives a rapidly increasing mood penalty, unless the pawn is a masochist or follows an ideoligionContent added by the Ideology DLC with the Pain is Virtue meme.

Excessive pain causes pain shock, the most common way to down pawns in combat, which prevents them from fighting. Most pawns have a Pain Shock Threshold of 80%. Note that enemies have a chance to immediately die when downed from pain shock, but not from other means, like blood loss or heat stroke.

Mechanoids are machines, and are immune to pain. In humans, pain can be completely eliminated with a painstopper, or reduced for a short time with go-juice or the Painblock psycastContent added by the Royalty DLC.

Bleeding

Bleeding is a common occurance from certain damage types. While an injury is bleeding, pawns will gain blood loss, scaling with the wound and amount of wounds. Total blood loss is listed under whole body, with a tooltip showing the percent. If blood loss reaches 100%, the pawn will die. Bleeding pawns will also leave blood on the ground, making the area dirty.

Bleeding always stops immediately with tending, regardless of the tend quality or medicine used. However, higher quality medicine can cover more wounds at once, which can stop a pawn from bleeding out faster. Injuries will also heal on their own, though a lost limb will always continue to bleed until tended to.

The coagulator Content added by the Royalty DLC implant halves the rate of blood loss, while the Superclotting gene Content added by the Biotech DLC rapidly stops bleeding. The ability added by the CoagulateContent added by the Biotech DLC gene also immediately tends all wounds on the target pawn, instantly stopping bleeding.

Related

Infection

Infections can occur whenever a pawn is hurt by a bite, burn, frostbite, or any damage type that causes bleeding. A completely destroyed body part won't cause infection. Once a pawn recieves these injuries, the game starts a random timer between 15,000 ticks (4.17 mins) to 45,000 ticks (12.5 mins), per injury before checking for infection. The chance of infection depends on:

  • Damage type. Bite, burn or frostbite wounds have a 25% chance, other bleeding wounds have a 10% to infect.
  • Tend quality. The multipler is 85% at 0% tend quality, linearly decreasing to 5% at 100% tend quality.
  • Location. The higher the Cleanliness, the lower the chance for infection (50% at 0 Cleanliness).

Animals are 20% as likely to recieve an infection. Mechanoids can't get diseases.

Scarring

Scars are lasting markers of injuries. They permanently lower the health of the scarred body part, reducing their efficiency. They also cause a character a small amount of pain, even if the relevant body part is otherwise healed. The chance of scarring depends on damage type and the part being damaged. Pawns can also start with scars on them. The eyes are particularly vulnerable to scars, while brain damage will always be permanent.

Scars can be healed by a limited number of ways. Artificial body parts never scar, and replacing an organic part will cure any scars. Luciferium and the Scarless geneContent added by the Biotech DLC heal 1 scar every 15-30 days. A biosculpter podContent added by the Ideology DLC can do Bioregeneration, which costs Glitterworld medicine 2 glitterworld medicine and takes time to complete. A healer mech serum can heal scars, but is very rare.

Healing

Injured colonists will recover from their wounds over time. Tending to a wound and resting in bed speeds up recovery.

Healing Rate

Every 600 ticks (10 secs), heal rate × 0.01 points of damage are healed from a randomly selected (non-permanent) wound, or an average recovery of heal rate points of damage per in-game day (60,000 ticks). This healing reduces the severity of the injury, until the body part is fully recovered.

The exact heal rate is determined by adding up three factors:

  • Default healing rate: All pawns have a base heal rate of 8.
  • Is the pawn lying down or in a bed?: +4 for resting on a sleeping spot or the ground, +8 for resting on a bed / bedroll, and +14 for resting on a hospital bed.
  • Is the wound tended?: +4 for 0% tend quality and +0.08 per percentage of quality, up to +12 at 100% tend quality.
  • Genes:Content added by the Biotech DLC Slow wound healing gives a ×50% multiplier. Fast wound healing gives a ×200% boost. Superfast wound healing gives ×400%.

Immunity Gain Speed has no impact on injury recovery; it only impacts diseases.

Example

To put this in perspective, consider a colonist who has taken 20hp of damage to various body parts, given different recovery scenarios:

  • Do nothing: With no tending or rest, they get the base heal rate of 8, so it will take (20 × 60,000) / 8 = 150,000 ticks (2.5 in-game days) to fully heal.
  • Basic tend and resting: With a 40% tend quality (+7.2) and rest in a non-hospital bed (+8), they'll have a heal rate of 8 + 7.2 + 8 = 23.2, so it will take 51,724 ticks to heal (approximately 21 in-game hours)
  • Best quality care: With 100% tend quality (+12) and rest in a hospital bed (+14), they'll have a heal rate of 8 + 12 + 14 = 34, so it will take 35,294 ticks to heal (approximately 14 hours in game)

Medicine

Medicine does not directly cause healing, but it increases the average tend quality. Whenever a wound is tended, the quality is multiplied by the medicine given:

Medicine Potency
Doctor care but no medicine.png None 0.30
Herbal medicine Herbal medicine 0.60
Medicine Medicine 1.00
Glitterworld medicine Glitterworld medicine 1.60

Each type of medicine has a cap on their tend quality; herbal medicine can reach a quality up to 70% in a regular bed, for instance.[Verify]

While bleeding wounds can be stopped by any quaity of treatment, medicine can treat multiple small wounds in a single "batch" of tending. For patients with many bleeding wounds, the difference can easily be life or death.

Medicine is also useful for treating disease, where tend quality is more impactful, and performing surgery, which is boosted greatly by medicine.

Disfigured

Damage to the nose caused Hairy to become disfigured

Disfigurement is caused by damage or destruction to the nose, eyes, ears, or jaw. It adds the "Disfigured −15" opinion modifier. Disfigurement can be treated by healing/replacing the injured/destroyed body part.

While disfigurement does not have a direct impact on a pawn's beauty, it does disable the positive opinion for positive beauty, while stacking with negative beauty.

Similarly to beauty modifiers, ascetic, kind, and blind pawns do not gain nor lose any opinion based on disfigurement. Pawns with the Blindsight ideoligionContent added by the Ideology DLC instead revere pawns with destroyed eyes.

Trauma Savant

Being shot in the brain can cause the trauma savant condition.

A pawn may become a trauma savant upon taking and surviving an injury to the Brain. Certain capabilities will rise and some will fall.

Trauma Savant removes all ability to socialise, trade, or recruit by capping the pawn's capacity of Talking and Hearing at 0%; In exchange, the pawn's Manipulation is increased by 50%, and they regain full brain function (meaning Consciousness and other functions will be normal) - this is great for doctors, crafters, general workers, and melee combat pawns (all of which rely on Manipulation and are not capped on its usage), but it'll make affected wardens or traders completely useless at that aspect.

There is a 12% chance of any pawn becoming a trauma savant upon receiving brain damage. It does not have to be a humanlike, and can sometimes be seen applied on animals.

While Trauma Savant can be cured, it is difficult and expensive; it is usually better to take advantage of the increased manipulation. To cure Trauma Savant, you will need a Healer mech serum; however this will heal the brain scarring first, so you have to either use multiple Healer mech serums or first apply Luciferium which will eventually heal all the scarring, at which point you can apply the Healer mech serum when Trauma Savant is the only health negative left.

Trivia

Brain injuries in Rimworld cause large amounts of pain (20% or higher for a 5 hp wound), which can render a pawn permanently comatose in certain cases. This is a result of the reduction in Consciousness from the pain being added on top of the direct reduction in Consciousness from the brain injury itself due to the reduced part efficiency. However, in real life the human brain has no pain receptors. Despite their perceived location, headaches are usually caused by receptors triggering elsewhere in the head or neck, not by receptors in the brain. Certain types of headaches are due to irritation or swelling in the meninges, which is the membrane enveloping the brain and which does have pain receptors.