Guinea pig

From RimWorld Wiki
Revision as of 00:55, 16 July 2024 by Harakoni (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Guinea pig

Guinea pig

Neither a pig or a creature from Guinea, these little rodents are bred to be a household pet and a delicious dinner.

Base Stats

Type
Animal
Market Value
150 Silver
Flammability
70%

Pawn Stats

Combat Power
33
Move Speed
5 c/s
Health Scale
40% HP
Body Size
0.2
Mass - Baby
2.4 kg
Mass - Juvenile
6 kg
Mass - Adult
12 kg
Carrying Capacity
15 kg
Filth Rate
1
Hunger Rate
0.16 Nutrition/Day
Diet
herbivorous
Life Expectancy
4 years
Manhunter Chance
0%
Manhunter Chance (Taming)
0%
Trainable Intelligence
None
Wildness
60%
Minimum Handling Skill
5
Nuzzle Interval
1 day
Mate Interval
8 hours
Maturity Age
0.2 years (12 days)
Juvenile Age
0.15 years (9 days)
Comfortable Temp Range
-15 °C – 55 °C (5 °F – 131 °F)

Production

Meat Yield
31 Guinea pig meat guinea pig meat
Leather Yield
16 Guinea pig fur guinea pig fur
Gestation Period
6.66 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
Technical
tradeTags
AnimalUncommon, AnimalPet


Guinea pigs are tameable herbivores with a fast movement speed. Guinea Pigs come in three colors: Cream, Black and Brown.

Acquisition[edit]

Guinea pigs can be found in temperate forests, temperate swamps, tropical rainforests, tropical swamps, arid shrublands, deserts, extreme deserts, and cold bogs. They can either be tamed by a handler or self-tame in a random event.

Guinea Pigs can be bought and sold in other faction bases and from bulk goods traders. Guinea Pigs purchased from traders will be already tamed.

Analysis[edit]

Guinea pigs can be farmed for meat and fur. While each guinea pig is small, they reproduce rapidly, so a large pack of guinea pigs can produce a lot of material. Compared to chinchillas, guinea pigs are not pen animals, so they will need to constantly be re-tamed. However, guinea pigs can nuzzle and can be controlled via allowed areas.

Due to their high reproductive rate, guinea pigs can be used as bait animals. Set an allowed area towards the direction of raiders. This allows you to direct where the guinea pigs go, and they will be shot at rather than your colonists. This results in less meat & leather than slaughtering them would, but can be useful in combat. Compared to rats and hares, guinea pigs offer a more valuable fur and can nuzzle colonists, but are larger targets and reproduce less.

They are one of the few animals that can nuzzle, occasionally giving a +4 Nuzzled moodlet to colonists. Guinea pigs and monkeys are the only 2 wild animals that can nuzzle.

Leather[edit]

Guinea pigs have valuable fur. As clothing and building material, it has a few merits, but is generally lacking:

  • Guinea pig fur may not have the best physical protection, but it has the best cold insulation in the game, protecting your colonists against cold temperatures. Guinea pig parkas are the most insulative gear in the game. In less extreme biomes, tribalwear can be used to protect against heat and cold, potentially letting you wear a jacket instead of a parka. However, guinea pigs are only native to tropical biomes, which ultimately limits this use.
  • Guinea pig fur is very beautiful. However, only a select few objects can be made out of leather - a single armchair's beauty is unlikely to have much impact.

Otherwise, the best use for their fur is for trade. It is a valuable resource, worth more than even devilstrand.

Female guinea pigs produce:

  • Baby slaughter: Guinea pig fur 1.05 fur per day, or Guinea pig fur 6.569 fur per 1 unit nutrition.
  • Adult slaughter: Guinea pig fur 4.2 fur per day, or Guinea pig fur 10.357 fur per 1 unit nutrition.

When considering a 1:1 ratio of males:females, fur lowers to Guinea pig fur3.285 per 1 unit nutrition (baby), or Guinea pig fur 7.429 per 1 unit nutrition (adult). A higher ratio of females will increase efficiency from there.

For the sole purpose of farming leather, chinchillas are superior as they do not need to be retamed. Guinea pigs have some non-leather advantages, as listed above.

Training[edit]

This animal can be trained as follows:

Guard:  Ex.png
Attack:  Ex.png
Rescue:  Ex.png
Haul:  Ex.png

*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[edit]


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] Ex.png - Death
Tail 4 1 7% 7% Body Ex.png - -
Spine 10 1 3% 3% Body Check.png Moving
−100% Moving[5]
Stomach 8 1 3% 3% Body Check.png Digestion
−50% Digestion
Heart 6 1 3% 3% Body Check.png Blood Pumping
Death
Lung 6 2 3% 3% Body Check.png Breathing
−50% Breathing. Death if both lost.
Kidney 6 2 3% 3% Body Check.png Blood Filtration −50% Blood Filtration. Death if both lost.
Liver 8 1 3% 3% Body Check.png Digestion
Death
Neck 10 1 20% 5% Body Ex.png Eating
Talking
Breathing
Death
Head 10 1 75% 2.25% Neck Ex.png - Death
Skull 10 1 25% 1.125% Head Check.png - Cannot be destroyed
Increasing Pain based on damage.
Brain 4 1 70% 2.625% Skull Check.png Consciousness
Death
Damage always results in scarring.
Eye 4 2 12% 1.8% Head Ex.png 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 Ex.png Hearing
−25% Hearing. −100% if both lost.
Nose 4 1 10% 1.5% Head Ex.png - -
AnimalJaw 4 1 10% 1.5% Head Ex.png Manipulation
−100% Manipulation.
Can no longer use Bite attack.
Front Leg 12 2 7% 5.95% Body Ex.png Moving
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost.
Can no longer use paw attack.[6]
Front Paw 4 2 15% 1.05% Front Leg Ex.png Moving
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost.
Can no longer use paw attack.
Rear Leg 12 2 7% 5.95% Body Ex.png Moving
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost.
Rear Paw 4 2 15% 1.05% Rear Leg Ex.png Moving
−25% Moving. −50% if both lost.
  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Note that capacities can affect other capacities in turn. Only the primary effect is listed. See specific pages for details.
  4. This is the part that everything else connects to to be considered 'connected'.
  5. If Moving drops below 16% a pawn cannot move.
  6. A Scratch attack that varies from animal to animal. Each front paw allows one attack.

Gallery[edit]

Version history[edit]

  • 1.1.0 - Added as part of the integration of the Vanilla Animals Expanded - Livestock mod into the basegame.