Character Types
|
---|
|
description of page Throught your play of Rimworld you will come across several diferent types of characters. Some of these characters will be friendly such as drifters who just wander through your colony and other hostile, such as the mechanoids, looking to destroy you.
Animals
Main Article: Animals
- For the skill of the same name, see Skills.
- For a complete search, see List of animals.
Animals are a type of nonplayable, nonhuman pawn in Rimworld with their own needs, stats, capacities, and actions. They come in dozens of species, all of which can be wild or tamed. Wild animals occasionally spawn at the map edges according to the biome and sometimes from random events.
Animals usually wander the map aimlessly and feed when hungry, even eating player-grown plants. Like humans, animals don't require water and generate filth on Rimworld. All animals on RimWorld will fight back if melee combat is initiated. With just a little luck, even a small rat or squirrel can take down and even kill a casually armored colonist. The most dangerous species regularly hunt humans or can immediately turn manhunter out of revenge. Some animals can be trained to Guard your colonists and Attack enemies.
Animals are an important source of food by the meat they provide once hunted and butchered.
Colonists assigned to Handle receive 90 XP towards their Animals skill per training or taming attempt. When tamed "cute" animals nuzzle a colonist, the non-psychopath colonist receives a +4 Nuzzled mood for 1 day. Animals can also form bonds with colonists, providing a permanent +5 [Bonded animal]'s master mood as long as said colonist is assigned as a bonded animal's master, or a −3 Not [Bonded animal]'s master mood otherwise. These moods don't apply to psychopath colonists.
Friendly fire can happen with domesticated animals.
Colonists
Main Article: Colonists
Colonists are the main protagonists in RimWorld. They are living inhabitants of each RimWorld colony, and the primary goal of the game is for the player to properly manage them. Each colonist has specific skills, positive and negative traits, and a character backstory. In general, every human is a colonist, except for raiders/travelers/prisoners. The colonists come in various outfits based on their background, which can be seen by looking at the 'Character' tab in game. Colonists are also often referred to as the player's "pawns" by the RimWorld Community. Note, however, that when used without the possessive the term "pawn" more correctly refers to any ambulatory entity in the game including, but not limited to, colonists. See Pawn for further explanation.
When managing the colonists, the player must take note of as many of the colonists' attributes as possible. These include, but are not limited to, managing their needs at all times, utilizing their skills to help with their progress throughout the game, increasing their skills, having them research technologies and build anything that helps them the most, and defend themselves against raiders - which include increasing their defenses with each passing moment.
When possible, playing into the strengths of each colonist, as well as their likes, will increase the player's efficiency of advancing through the game.
Mechanoids
Main Article: Mechanoids
Mechanoids - Autonomous intelligent robots built for domestic, industrial or military purposes. Only available to advanced cultures because such complex AI is needed to control them.
Killer machines of unknown origin. Hidden in ancient structures, under mounds of dust, or at the bottom of the ocean, mechanoids can self-maintain for thousands of years. This group of mechs seems to be unified in purpose, but not well-coordinated in action. While local scholars believe they're autonomous weapons left over from an ancient war, tribal legends describe them as the demonic servants of a sleeping god. - Faction description.
In the lore, Mechanoids are autonomous intelligent robots built for a variety of purposes. The technologies required to build them vary based on the complexity of the resultant mechanoid, with Spacer-level[1] urbworlds[2] being able to construct more simple mechanoids for companionship, combat and labor use, while only glitterworlds are capable of constructing the more advanced, quasi-conscious versions.[1] Others still are constructed and utilized by archotechs. [3][4]
In-game, mechanoids can be constructed and controlled with a mechlink. Otherwise, only combatant mechanoids from a single, somewhat mysterious source are seen. There are some indications that the Mechanoids seen in game may have been built by, or otherwise allied with, an ancient army, perhaps that of the Ancients faction.[5]. Whatever the case however, they have since lost any allegiances they may have had and are now hostile to every other faction.
Defoliator ship parts are usually associated with orbital-drop mechanoid armies.[6]
Insectoid ecosystems were genetically engineered to fight Mechanoid invasions[7] and thus the two factions are always hostile to one another.
In addition to the existing mechanoid types encountered by a colony, the ancient exostrider ruins are described as being mechanoids before their destruction.
Prisoners
Main Article: Prisoners
Prisoners are people who have been taken captive. This usually includes raiders, but colonists can be imprisoned too.
Drifters
Main Article: Drifters Drifter
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namedCryptosleep Revival Briefing
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namedKeuneke
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namedCodex
- ↑ Quest descriptions
- ↑ Orbital mech cluster targeter description
- ↑ Ship part (defoliator) description
- ↑ Megascarab description