Apparel
|
Apparel is worn by your colonists to protect them from extreme temperatures or from damage in combat. See a pawn's Gear tab to see what apparel they are wearing.
Clothing vs Armor
There are two main types of apparel, clothing and armor. Both clothing and armor use the same basic mechanics and the distinction is largely arbitrary beyond its use in sorting items. They can be mixed and matched, as far as Clothing Layers allow.
Clothing usually:
- is made from light materials (fabrics and leathers);
- offers good insulation from extreme temperatures;
- offers lower protection from damage (with the right materials, clothing can be a worthwhile "light" armor).
Armor usually:
- is made from solid materials (metal);
- offers less insulation from extreme temperatures;
- offers good protection from damage;
- gives penalties to movement speed (from wearing the armor) and to carrying capacity (from the weight of the armor).
Protection
Colonists wearing protective apparel have a chance of outright avoiding all damage from an attack, as the item can sometimes utterly deflect a bullet or a melee strike. This will be represented by a "tink" sound and a spark. They may also receive a mitigated blow, for only half of the damage.
There are several types of armor ratings. They are expressed as percentages. The maximum armor rating per type is 200%.
Name | Label | Description |
---|---|---|
Sharp | Armor - Sharp | Protection against piercing damage like bullets, knife stabs, and animal bites. These attacks will cause cuts, stabs or gunshot wounds, which in turn are prone to cause bleeding. Even the lightest clothing material seems to offer some protection against sharp damage. |
Blunt | Armor - Blunt | Protection against blunt damage like fist and club attacks, rock falls, explosions, and strikes with ranged weapons at melee range. This protection is generally limited, and blunt weapons will generally have to deal with less armor than an equivalent tier sharp weapon. |
Heat | Armor - Heat | Protection against fire damage from natural fires and fire weapons such as molotov cocktails, as well as lightning strikes. Heat damage seems to never have armor penetration. Not to be mistaken with Heat Insulation. |
Calculation
The armor calculation is applied for each item of apparel the pawn is wearing that covers the targeted body part, from the outside in. Thus, if a pawn in only a duster, flak vest and tribalwear was struck in the torso, it would:
- Calculate the effect of duster first as it is on the outer layer
- If any residual damage remained it would calculate for the effect of the flak vest as it is on the middle layer,
- If any residual damage remained it would calculate for the effect of the tribalwear as it is on the skin layer,
- Finally if any residual damage still remained, it would then be applied to the pawn.
Meanwhile if struck the arm, then only the calculation would only be performed for the duster, as neither the vest nor tribalwear cover the arm. And if they were struck in the head, then the damage would be directly applied to the pawn as nothing covers that part. Alternatively, if the pawn was wearing a item that occupies multiple layers, such as wearing Marine armor in place of the duster and flak vest, they are only calculated against on their outer-most layer, leaving the other layer(s) they occupy effectively unarmored. Thus in that example, a strike to the torso would calculate against the marine armor once, then the tribalwear, before any remaining damage being applied to the pawn. Armor that takes up multiple layers typically has higher armor values to make up for this, however, so they can often still be worthwhile, especially when armor penetration is accounted for. See the Analysis section below for details.
In-game this is calculated as follows:
- The armor rating is reduced by the armor penetration value, dependent on the weapon. This gives the "effective armor rating". Note: While armor penetration is given as a percentage, it is subtracted from the target's armor, not used as a multiplier. E.g. if a target with 150% armor is attacked using a weapon with 50% armor penetration, the result is 150% - 50% = 100% effective armor rating, not 150% * (1 - 50%) = 75% effective armor rating.
- The effective armor rating is then compared against a random number from 0 to 100:
- If the random number is under half the armor rating, the damage deflects harmlessly.
- If the random number is over half the armor rating, but not higher than the armor rating, the damage is halved.
- If the random number is greater than the armor rating, the armor has no effect.
- If any damage remains, then the same process is applied to the next item on a lower layer using the new damage (if halved) or full damage (if the armor had no effect) and retaining the full AP of the attack. Damage halving is applied multiplicatively - so if the two layers both half the damage, the pawn receives one quarter of the damage.
Sharp damage
If the damage is Sharp, and any layer halves the damage, then any resulting damage to the pawn will be changed to Blunt damage.
Note: despite the common misconception, the armor effect of layers below will still be calculated against the sharp armor rating of those layers, not against the blunt armor rating. So if a pawn wears a duster over a flak vest, and the duster halves the damage of an incoming sharp attack, converting it to blunt damage in the process, the flak vest will still use its sharp armor rating for its attempt at mitigating the damage.
Flame damage
Heat armor works to prevent Flame damage from injuring the pawn using the same process as any other armor and damage type, but any Flame damage that actually deals damage to the pawn has a chance to set the pawn on fire. This ignition chance is the same regardless of the damage dealt to the pawn, so long as some damage is actually dealt. Thus if the Heat Armor does not outright negate the damage, it otherwise does nothing to prevent the pawn from being ignited.
While Burn damage is otherwise identical to Flame damage, including its interaction with heat armor, it cannot ignite pawns.
Analysis
Thus each effective point of armor gives 0.5% to harmlessly deflect damage, and another 0.5% chance to mitigate it, instead receiving half the damage as blunt damage. Each effective armor point below 100% results in a net 0.75% reduction in damage, while each point above results in a 0.25% reduction. This means that at 200% effective armor rating, colonists will be completely immune to damage; this currently works only on heat damage which lacks armor penetration, and can be seen on mechanoids. Cataphract armor at Legendary quality comes at a close second, reaching 200% sharp rating, but all sharp attacks have armor penetration meaning that even a pawn hit too many times will fall.
Armor is calculated per item of apparel, from the item occupying the outermost layer in. Armor mitigation does stack multiplicatively, e.g. two pieces of armor layered on top of each other can each mitigate the damage by 50%, reducing it to 25% of the base damage. Each layer also has an independent chance to entirely negate the damage, using the above calculation steps.
Armor Penetration is applied identically to each layer. This means that, while multiple layers of armor each have more chances to mitigate the damage, layering apparel with low armor values may do little or nothing against projectiles with high armor penetration, while a single layer of high armor value may be able to mitigate it.
For example a pawn with both a devilstrand shirt with sharp armor of 28% and a toughskin gland with sharp armor 35% would always receive full damage from a charge rifle, as its armor penetration of 35% completely nullifies the protection of both items. This is why higher armor values may be preferable over multiple layers of much lower armor values. However there is little reason not to stack the best protection on your pawns when the items not mutually exclusive. A hyperweave shirt might still stop an assault rifle bullet that penetrates a flak vest, and it could be the only thing protecting the pawns arm.
Note that armor does not stop weapons with sufficient stopping power from staggering colonists, even if the damage is deflected.
Durability
Apparel, including armor, takes damage from several factors. It takes 1 HP of damage for every 4 points of damage dealt to the wearer, provided the damage is applied to that layer and location. Thus, if an attack hits a pawn's torso and is stopped by apparel on the Outer layer, such as a Duster, the duster will receive damage, but a torso-covering item on Middle layer, such as a Flak vest will receive no damage. If the duster were to halve the damage instead, then the flak vest would receive half of the durability damage, while the duster would receive full damage.
The damage to the item is the same regardless of whether it deflects all the damage, half the damage, or no damage, just so long as the attack is calculated against that item. The durability damage is calculated off of the raw damage as it reaches that layer, before that layer's mitigation is applied. Therefore, as quality does not affect an item's HP, high-quality armor lasts about as long as low-quality armor in combat, but will better protect lower layers from damage.
Apparel also takes damage when the pawn wearing it is on fire. Each time the fire deals damage to the pawn, it deals the same amount of damage to a random piece of worn apparel.
All apparel worn by a pawn has a 40% chance to take 1 HP of damage each day (so on average, each piece of apparel takes about 0.4 HP of damage per day). This effect is only applied to pawns in a map - pawns in caravans, transport pods etc do not suffer apparel damage in this way.
Finally, when a pawn is killed by an attack, all worn apparel takes anywhere between 15% and 40% of its current hit points in damage.
Insulation
Insulation offers protection against extreme temperatures like freezing cold and scorching heat. Every pawn and every animal has a natural range of acceptable temperatures. By default a naked human has a very narrow acceptable temperature range (16°C - 26°C), so you'll need to wear apparel to survive in the harsh environment of a rimworld.
Insulation from a single piece of apparel
Apparel can offer "Insulation - Cold", which protects from extremely cold temperatures, and "Insulation - Heat" which protects from extremely hot temperatures. The amount of insulation a piece of apparel offers is equal to:
Insulation = Material insulation * Apparel insulation_factor * Quality multiplier
- Material insulation: the material used to create an article of apparel has a large impact on how much insulation a piece of apparel offers. For example, muffalo wool offers 30°C of insulation from cold, while birdskin only offers 10°C. See textiles for a full comparison of clothing options.
- Apparel insulation factor: each type of apparel has an insulation factor associated with it. For example, a parkas have an insulation - cold factor of 2.0, so a normal muffalo wool parka offers 60°C of insulation from cold. See clothing for a full comparison.
- Quality multiplier: the quality of an item influences it's insulation as well. For example, legendary quality offers a 1.8x increase in insulation, so a legendary muffalo wool parka offers 108°C of insulation from cold. See quality for a full comparison.
Total insulation for a pawn
The total insulation for a pawn is the sum of the insulation from each piece of apparel. A pawn's minimum comfortable temperature is reduced by their total Insulation - Cold, while their maximum comfortable temperature is increased by their Insulation - Heat.
For example, consider a pawn wearing a legendary muffalo wool parka and a poor quality cloth button-down shirt. By default, humans have an acceptable temperature range of 16°C - 26°C. We can find the new temperature range by computing the insulation from the clothing, then adding to the base insulation:
Computing insulation from clothing
Parka cold insulation = muffalo wool cold insulation * parka cold insulation factor * legendary modifier = 28°C * 200% * 1.8 = 100.8°C
Parka heat insulation = muffalo wool heat insulation * parka heat insulation factor * legendary modifier = 12°C * 0% * 1.8 = 0°C
Shirt cold insulation = cloth cold insulation * shirt modifier * poor modifier = 18°C * 26% * 0.9 = 4.2°C
Shirt heat insulation = cloth heat insulation * shirt modifier * poor modifier = 18°C * 10% * 0.9 = 1.6°C
Adding to base insulation
Minimum acceptable temperature = default minimum acceptable temperature - parka cold insulation - shirt cold insulation = 16 - 100.8 - 4.2 = -89°C
Maximum acceptable temperature = default maximum acceptable temperature + parka heat insulation + shirt heat insulation = 26 + 0 + 1.6 = 27.6°C
So the new comfortable range is -96.2°C - 27.6°C
Flammability
How likely the item is to burst into flames while in storage. Often Heat Protection and this value are related. It is entirely dependent on the material.
It is unclear if it affects the chance for a Pawn to catch fire while standing in a burning tile.
Damaged apparel
Apparel suffers wear and tear when worn causing it to lose hit points over time. They also become damaged when the wearer is attacked, and the apparel absorbs some damage as armor.
A colonist wearing badly damaged apparel will have one of the following thoughts. These debuffs do not stack, only one is given based on the apparel with the worst condition.
HP | Thought | Debuff |
---|---|---|
20% - 50% | "Wearing worn-out apparel" | -3 |
below 20% | "Wearing tattered apparel" | -5 |
Durability does not affect stats such as protection and insulation.
Quality Effects
Quality | Armor Factor |
Insulation Factor |
Market Value | Max Market Value Gain | Deterioration Rate | Beauty |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Awful | 0.6 | 0.8 | 0.5 | - | 2 | -0.1 |
Poor | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.75 | - | 1.5 | 0.5 |
Normal | 1.0 | 1.0 | 1.0 | - | 1 | 1 |
Good | 1.15 | 1.1 | 1.25 | 500 | 0.8 | 2 |
Excellent | 1.3 | 1.2 | 1.5 | 1000 | 0.6 | 3 |
Masterwork | 1.45 | 1.5 | 2.5 | 2000 | 0.3 | 5 |
Legendary | 1.8 | 1.8 | 5 | 3000 | 0.1 | 8 |
Nudity
This section is a stub. You can help RimWorld Wiki by expanding it. Reason: Does what a nudist consider nudity depend on the ideoligion's definition of nudity?. |
In RimWorld Core, male colonists are considered naked when their legs are not covered, while female colonists are considered naked when either their legs or chest are not covered. Most colonists will receive a -6 mood penalty from being naked, triggering an alert prompting the player to seek suitable clothing.
For Nudists the opposite is true - they receive a +20 mood bonus while naked and a -3 mood penalty while clothed.
With the Ideology (DLC) installed and active, Nudity, both in required coverage and the reaction to it, instead depend on the Ideoligion of the pawn and its precepts.
Special Values
Clothing can have very specific secondary values. The more common ones are:
- Negative movement Speed. This is mostly seen with armor
- Bonus to social skills. This is a extremely common stat for any form of headwear that is not armor
- Pain Threshold. Specific to Tribal clothing, this increases when a character will collapses from damage
Tainted Apparel
Clothing stripped from corpses is considered tainted apparel and is noted with a T. Colonists wearing tainted apparel gain a persistent mood debuff as long as they're wearing it- colonists with Bloodlust do not seem to mind, however.
Number of items | Debuff |
---|---|
1 | -3 |
2 | -5 |
3 | -7 |
4+ | -8 |
Disposal is usually the only option as traders do not buy them (as of 0.19).
Disposal
Apparel can be destroyed using a crematorium or a campfire. Simply create a "Burn apparel" bill, and be sure to uncheck anything you want to keep.
Materials
A number of Materials is available for Clothing and Armor. Not every piece supports every material and a lot of the protective power of armor and insulation of clothing actually comes from the used material, rather than something unique to the item.
Armor Materials
These materials are primarily used for armor. It includes any metal and in rare cases, even wood or stone might be supported.
Name | Stuff Category | Sharp | Blunt | Heat | Cold Insulation | Heat Insulation | Item HP | Market Value | Commonality | Flammability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Silver | Metallic | 72% | 36% | 36% | 3 | 0 | 0.7 | 1 | 100 | 0.4 |
Gold | Metallic | 72% | 36% | 36% | 3 | 0 | 0.6 | 10 | 0.02 | 0.4 |
Steel | Metallic | 90% | 45% | 72% | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1.9 | 1.0 | 0.4 |
Plasteel | Metallic | 126% | 63% | 108% | 3 | 0 | 2.8 | 9 | 0.05 | 0.2 |
Wood | Woody | 54% | 54% | 90% | 8 | 4 | 0.65 | 1.2 | 1 | 1 |
Uranium | Metallic | 108% | 54% | 90% | 3 | 0 | 2.5 | 6 | 0.05 | 0 |
Jade | Stony | 90% | 45% | 54% | 3 | 0 | 0.5 | 5 | 0.05 | 0 |
Clothing Materials
All variants of Fabric and Leathers.
Name | Stuff Category | Sharp | Blunt | Heat | Cold Insulation | Heat Insulation | Item HP Multiplier | Market Value | Commonality | Flammability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LeatherBase | Leathery | 81% | 24% | 150% | 16 | 16 | 1.3 | 2.1 | 0.025 | 1 |
Plain Leather | Leathery | 81% | 24% | 150% | 16 | 16 | 1.3 | 2.1 | 0.020 | 1 |
Dog Leather | Leathery | 81% | 24% | 150% | 14 | 16 | 1.3 | 2.0 | 0.075 | 1 |
Wolfskin | Leathery | 102% | 24% | 150% | 24 | 16 | 1.3 | 3.0 | 0.075 | 1 |
Panthera fur | Leathery | 93% | 24% | 150% | 16 | 24 | 1.3 | 3.0 | 0.025 | 1 |
Camelhide | Leathery | 81% | 24% | 150% | 16 | 24 | 1.3 | 2.3 | 0.05 | 1 |
Bluefur | Leathery | 81% | 24% | 150% | 20 | 16 | 1.3 | 2.3 | 0.025 | 1 |
Bearskin | Leathery | 112% | 24% | 150% | 20 | 20 | 1.3 | 3.4 | 0.05 | 1 |
Human Leather | Leathery | 64% | 24% | 150% | 12 | 12 | 1.3 | 4.2 | 0.025 | 1 |
Pigskin | Leathery | 64% | 24% | 150% | 12 | 12 | 1.3 | 1.9 | 0.05 | 1 |
Lightleather | Leathery | 54% | 14% | 150% | 12 | 12 | 1.3 | 1.9 | 0.25 | 1 |
Birdskin | Leathery | 67% | 14% | 150% | 10 | 10 | 1.3 | 1.8 | 0.025 | 1 |
Chinchilla Fur | Leathery | 67% | 14% | 150% | 30 | 16 | 1.3 | 6.5 | 0.025 | 1 |
Foxfur | Leathery | 81% | 21% | 150% | 20 | 16 | 1.3 | 3.5 | 0.075 | 1 |
Lizardskin | Leathery | 81% | 27% | 150% | 12 | 12 | 1.3 | 2.1 | 0.075 | 1 |
Elephant Leather | Leathery | 112% | 24% | 150% | 14 | 12 | 1.3 | 3.0 | 0.025 | 1.5 |
Heavy Fur | Leathery | 124% | 24% | 150% | 30 | 14 | 1.3 | 3.3 | 0.025 | 1.5 |
Rhinoceros Leather | Leathery | 129% | 24% | 150% | 14 | 14 | 1.3 | 4.2 | 0.025 | 1.5 |
Thrumbo Fur | Leathery | 208% | 36% | 150% | 34 | 22 | 1.3 | 14 | 0.0025 | 2.0 |
Patchleather | Leathery | 45% | 19% | 90% | 9 | 9 | 1.3 | 1.5 | 0.075 | 1 |
Cloth | Fabric | 36% | 0% | 18% | 18 | 18 | ? | 1.5 | 1.4 | 1.2 |
Synthread | Fabric | 63% | 0% | 72% | 22 | 22 | 1.3 | 4 | 0.15 | 0.7 |
Devilstrand | Fabric | 140% | 36% | 300% | 20 | 24 | 1.3 | 5.5 | 0.2 | 0.4 |
Hyperweave | Fabric | 200% | 54% | 288% | 26 | 26 | 2.4 | 9 | 0.1 | 0.4 |
Woolbase | Fabric | 36% | 0% | 36% | Cold Insulation | Heat Insulation | ? | 2.7 | 0.12 | ? |
Megasloth Wool | Fabric | 36% | 0% | 36% | 30 | 12 | ? | 2.7 | 0.12 | ? |
Muffalo Wool | Fabric | 36% | 0% | 36% | 30 | 12 | ? | 2.7 | 0.12 | ? |
Camelhair | Fabric | 36% | 0% | 36% | 18 | 26 | ? | 2.7 | 0.12 | ? |
Alpaca Wool | Fabric | 36% | 0% | 36% | 28 | 16 | ? | 2.7 | 0.12 | ? |
Version history
- 0.8.657 - Apparel insulation introduced with temperature system.
- 0.9.722 - Apparel becomes damaged when owner dies from violence, takes the damage it absorbs as armor and wears out over very long periods of use. Tattered apparel thought added.
- Beta 19 - System changed d100 system. Previously each point of armor from 1 - 50% reduced damage by 1%, each point of armor between 51 - 100% provided a 1% chance to not take damage, each point of armor beyond 100% reduced damage by 0.25% and gives a 0.25% chance to not take damage. Total protection capped at 90% damage reduction and 90% deflect chance (i.e. 260% armor rating).
- 1.2.2753 - Apparel scoring algorithm no longer ignores heat armor, significantly shifting upgrading priorities e.g. pawns "upgrading" to Devilstrand dusters over Thrumbofur, despite the significant detriment to Sharp protection.