T-shirt

From RimWorld Wiki
Revision as of 07:09, 30 November 2016 by XeoNovaDan (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

T-Shirt

T-Shirt

"A basic T-shirt.."

Base Stats

Type
Apparel
"Modern Weapons" is not in the list (Neolithic Weapons, Medieval Weapons, Industrial Weapons, Spacer Weapons, Ultra Weapons, Mechanoid Weapons) of allowed values for the "Class" property.
Weapon Class
Modern

Armor

"°C" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 3.
Insulation - Heat
Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "&". °C (Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "&". °F)
"%" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 3.
Armor - Sharp
3%%
"%" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 3.
Armor - Blunt
3%%

Summary

Overview & Obtaining

T-shirts are one of two available shirts available in RimWorld, and are inferior to the button-down shirt. T-shirts can be purchased from traders, crafted, or stripped from Outlanders and Pirates.

Crafting

As a complicated garment, t-shirts can only be made at tailoring benches, which requires complex clothing to be researched in order to be constructed. A t-shirt requires 50 of any textile, and 84 seconds of work (5,000 ticks) to be created, assuming baseline global work speed, consciousness, sight, or manipulation.

Conclusion & Comparison

T-shirts are overall not particularly useful in the game, as button-down shirts easily outplace t-shirts in terms of insulation and protection (more coverage). Although t-shirts are cheap to make, button-down shirts are barely more expensive and the only real difference is the moderate increase in labour, but this isn't significant enough to justify taking t-shirts over button-down shirts.

Insulation Information

The following table(s) will display how good a normal quality T-Shirt is at insulating when made from various materials...

Keeps Warm
Minimum
Fabric Alpaca wool −90°C
Cloth −54°C
Devilstrand −60°C
Hyperweave −78°C
Megasloth wool −102°C
Muffalo wool −84°C
Synthread −66°C
Leather Bearskin −60°C
Birdskin −30°C
Bluefur −60°C
Camelhide −48°C
Chinchilla fur −90°C
Dog leather −42°C
Elephant leather −42°C
Foxfur −60°C
Heavy fur −90°C
Human leather −36°C
Lightleather −36°C
Lizardskin −36°C
Panthera fur −48°C
Patchleather −27°C
Plainleather −48°C
Rhinoceros leather −42°C
Thrumbofur −102°C
Wolfskin −72°C