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Difference between revisions of "DF2014:Party"

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{{av}}{{Quality|Exceptional}}
 
{{av}}{{Quality|Exceptional}}
If you have a [[Meeting hall]] designated from a [[table]] ([[dining room]]), a [[cage]] ("[[zoo]]"), a [[well]], a [[statue]] ([[Sculpture garden]]), or a [[memorial]] ([[memorial hall]]) dwarves will often throw parties there and many of your precious productive workers will now display the status '''Attending Party.''' This has benefits, in that dwarves will get happy [[thought]]s from admiring high-value [[furniture]] and architectural [[building]]s, [[preference|favorite]] caged animals, [[waterfall]]s, etc. in your meeting hall, and from making [[friend]]s and talking to them. They will also slowly develop [[social skill]]s. However, parties may slow down your fortress's work as your dwarves idly hang-out, sometimes for more than a [[season]] (dwarven partying is serious business).
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If you have a [[Meeting hall]] designated from a [[table]] ([[dining room]]), a [[cage]] ("[[zoo]]"), a [[well]], a [[statue]] ([[Sculpture garden]]), or a [[memorial]] ([[memorial hall]]) dwarves will throw parties there and many of your precious productive workers will now display the status '''Attending Party.''' Partying dwarves will get happy [[thought]]s from admiring [[furniture]] and [[building]]s, [[preference|favorite]] caged animals, [[waterfall]]s, etc. in your meeting hall, and from making [[friend]]s and talking to them. They will also slowly develop [[social skill]]s. However, parties slow down your fortress's work as your dwarves relax in the meeting hall (sometimes for more than a [[season]]).
  
Oddly, dwarves usually cancel party attendance to get a drink or some food - Only a dwarf could forget to bring booze to a party! Despite their numerous desperate attempts they obviously know next to nothing about how to roll in style. Dwarves will also go [[On break|On Break]] from a party, even if that means hanging out in the same meeting hall, talking to the same people.  Partying is serious work for dwarves.
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How often a dwarf will choose to attend a party is based on an internal [[syndrome]] counter named [[syndrome#counter_triggers|PARTIED_OUT]]. Dwarves should be expected to attend a party at least once every three months.
  
Parties can be canceled by "free"ing the room where they take place via {{k|q}} {{k|f}}. Even if you immediately recreate the room the party goers will disperse. Canceling the meeting hall status is not enough.
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Oddly, dwarves usually cancel party attendance to get [[food|eat]] or [[alcohol|drink]]. Dwarves will also go [[On break|On Break]] from a party, even if that means hanging out in the same meeting hall, talking to the same people.
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Parties can be canceled by "free"ing the room where they take place via {{k|q}} {{k|f}}. Turning off the room's status as a meeting hall (with {{k|q}} {{k|h}}) will not disperse a party. Recreating the room will not restart the party, although a new party may be immediately started at the meeting hall by another dwarf.
  
 
Each eligible room can have its own party going. With multiple overlapping rooms (like several tables in a dining room set to the same area), each can have its own party. If you free the room a particular party started in, the dwarves attending that party will stop partying, but those partying from other rooms (even in the same space) will keep going. If you're going to overlap rooms that can have parties, it may be best to make each room-designated construction from a different material, so you can free the correct party to get an important dwarf to go back to work.
 
Each eligible room can have its own party going. With multiple overlapping rooms (like several tables in a dining room set to the same area), each can have its own party. If you free the room a particular party started in, the dwarves attending that party will stop partying, but those partying from other rooms (even in the same space) will keep going. If you're going to overlap rooms that can have parties, it may be best to make each room-designated construction from a different material, so you can free the correct party to get an important dwarf to go back to work.
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==Party Reduction & Prevention==
 
==Party Reduction & Prevention==
 
[[File:Attend_party.png|right|thumb|Dwarves with priorities]]
 
[[File:Attend_party.png|right|thumb|Dwarves with priorities]]
[[personality trait|Less-social]] dwarves seem to be less likely to throw parties, and less likely to make friends to invite them. Less-happy dwarves also seem to be less likely to throw parties. Thus antisocial and dour dwarves can be assigned important [[labor]]s without as much risk of stopping work to party.
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[[personality trait|Less-social]] dwarves seem to be less likely to throw parties, and less likely to make friends to invite them. [[Stress|Stressed]] dwarves also seem to be less likely to throw and attend parties. Thus antisocial and unhappy dwarves are at a lower risk to stop important [[labor]]s to party.
  
Note that dwarves don't throw parties at meeting halls designated from [[Activity zone|zone]]s. If all your meeting halls are of this type, your dwarves won't party.
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Dwarves do not throw parties at meeting halls designated by [[Activity zone|zone]]s. If all your meeting halls are of this type, your dwarves won't party.
  
Dwarves will cancel the "Attend Party" status if the meeting hall is not within their assigned burrow.
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Dwarves will cancel the "Attend Party" status if the meeting hall is not within their assigned burrow. This can lead to large amounts of cancellation spam.
  
 
== Party Timing ==
 
== Party Timing ==

Revision as of 06:22, 18 June 2015

This article is about an older version of DF.

If you have a Meeting hall designated from a table (dining room), a cage ("zoo"), a well, a statue (Sculpture garden), or a memorial (memorial hall) dwarves will throw parties there and many of your precious productive workers will now display the status Attending Party. Partying dwarves will get happy thoughts from admiring furniture and buildings, favorite caged animals, waterfalls, etc. in your meeting hall, and from making friends and talking to them. They will also slowly develop social skills. However, parties slow down your fortress's work as your dwarves relax in the meeting hall (sometimes for more than a season).

How often a dwarf will choose to attend a party is based on an internal syndrome counter named PARTIED_OUT. Dwarves should be expected to attend a party at least once every three months.

Oddly, dwarves usually cancel party attendance to get eat or drink. Dwarves will also go On Break from a party, even if that means hanging out in the same meeting hall, talking to the same people.

Parties can be canceled by "free"ing the room where they take place via q f. Turning off the room's status as a meeting hall (with q h) will not disperse a party. Recreating the room will not restart the party, although a new party may be immediately started at the meeting hall by another dwarf.

Each eligible room can have its own party going. With multiple overlapping rooms (like several tables in a dining room set to the same area), each can have its own party. If you free the room a particular party started in, the dwarves attending that party will stop partying, but those partying from other rooms (even in the same space) will keep going. If you're going to overlap rooms that can have parties, it may be best to make each room-designated construction from a different material, so you can free the correct party to get an important dwarf to go back to work.

Party Reduction & Prevention

Dwarves with priorities

Less-social dwarves seem to be less likely to throw parties, and less likely to make friends to invite them. Stressed dwarves also seem to be less likely to throw and attend parties. Thus antisocial and unhappy dwarves are at a lower risk to stop important labors to party.

Dwarves do not throw parties at meeting halls designated by zones. If all your meeting halls are of this type, your dwarves won't party.

Dwarves will cancel the "Attend Party" status if the meeting hall is not within their assigned burrow. This can lead to large amounts of cancellation spam.

Party Timing

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It is a noticed trend that whenever something really important needs to be constructed lest doom fall upon the entire fortress, every dwarf capable of working will instead decide to throw a random and boring party where no one even plays 'pin-the-tail on the hoary marmot.' These parties tend to serve no purpose at all, besides wasting roughly a month of everyone's time, even if the whole fortress is starving to death. Dwarves are well known for being less than capable of prioritizing their time, but parties are above and beyond the most flagrant display of this cognitive disconnect.