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Author Topic: Some musings on armour  (Read 2923 times)

Splint

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Re: Some musings on armour
« Reply #15 on: April 20, 2022, 03:30:03 pm »

-snip-
I think you underestimate just how crap leather and bone are for protective purposes in-game. Leather armor isn't worth making in the slightest IMO, and bone, while it may protect from some weaker and smaller creatures, breaks very easily (even breastplates and greaves). Chain leggings and mail shirts do help definitely (particularly against edged attacks), and iron ones definitely aren't worse than bone stuff of any kind.

I'd also say wood/bone shields/bucklers aren't worth it either due to how fast they break when they get used as bludgeons (which is disappointingly often).

I'm inclined to agree apart from one area, which is for ranged guys. Near as I can tell lighter armor can affect rate of fire (because encumbrance negatively affects agility which affects how quick units can do stuff in combat far as I know/have observed,) though I'll admit I'm pretty sure I've read somewhere the benefits of using lighter armor tapers off to being negligible if the marksdwarves are high-level armor users.

Also I'd like to add leather shields/bucklers to that. While they're by far the cheapest, lightest possible option, if they get used for bashing more than like twice they fall apart. They're beyond useless compared to any other leather armor piece, at least for melee troops.



In terms of what can be foregone if it absolutely must be forgone, leggings and/or greaves, breastplates and metal shields or bucklers (and bucklers I only recommend because they cost less and won't be busted apart constantly.) But again, that's more a matter of "if you absolutely have to do without," not "ignore it cause it's not worth it because of weight or material." In those scenarios helmet, boots and gauntlets with a mail shirt and leather armor over that (cause it's cheap) with a wooden shield and you'll probably get the best bang for your buck. Hell of late I've even done that as an RP thing and gotten... Okay results. Not great, but perfectly serviceable overall since well-trained soldiers with this sort of "medium" set up can usually overpower armed opponents before they can get a good hit in at their otherwise-exposed legs.

That said if werecreatures make an appearance I'd always recommend leggings get prioritized as a bare minimum addition to that, because even copper chain armor is going to be better than literally anything made of bone or leather at stopping bites from things like that reliably, at which point you're once again making a compromise of trading weight/encumbrance for better protection.

mross

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Re: Some musings on armour
« Reply #16 on: April 20, 2022, 06:32:52 pm »

How do you get a dwarf to wear more than one mail shirt?
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Alastar

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Re: Some musings on armour
« Reply #17 on: April 20, 2022, 06:39:56 pm »

-snip-
I think you underestimate just how crap leather and bone are for protective purposes in-game.
You could have asked instead of making assumptions about my assumptions.

Quote
Leather armor isn't worth making in the slightest IMO, and bone, while it may protect from some weaker and smaller creatures, breaks very easily (even breastplates and greaves). Chain leggings and mail shirts do help definitely (particularly against edged attacks), and iron ones definitely aren't worse than bone stuff of any kind.
Leather armour satisfies citizens' need for modesty, doesn't degrade over time, doesn't require metal, isn't excessively heavy, and can be an additional layer that reduces momentum by a few percentage points (assuming the Material Science entry on the wiki is correct). On its own, I consider it an attractive alternative to civilian clothing, not a replacement for metal armour.
Leather armour over mail shirt should offer the same protection as 2 mail shirts.
Bone greaves should offer the same or better protection than metal leggings when worn over mail shirt and metal boots.
In either case, the advantage over a single metal layer is marginal, and civilian clothing would do just as much.
Leather armour alone would be much weaker than a mail shirt, same for bone vs. metal legwear. That hasn't come up here, probably because it's obvious.

...well-trained soldiers with this sort of "medium" set up can usually overpower armed opponents before they can get a good hit in at their otherwise-exposed legs.

That said if werecreatures make an appearance I'd always recommend leggings get prioritized as a bare minimum addition to that, because even copper chain armor is going to be better than literally anything made of bone or leather at stopping bites from things like that reliably, at which point you're once again making a compromise of trading weight/encumbrance for better protection.
Which exposed legs, though? Mail shirt + high boots leave no gap, and by the mechanics it hardly matters if you wear chain leggings of the same material on top or an elf-made ramie skirt - a layer is a layer.
If the leggings stop an attack that the skirt doesn't, the attack doesn't get through the boots/shirt anyway.
In fact, if the mechanics in the wiki are correct, we have slightly bizarre behaviour that makes leggings and mail shirts especially unsuitable for layering:
Weapon success against a layer reduces the attack momentum by a few percentage points.
Weapon failure against a layer permanently converts edged damage to blunt, but doesn't change momentum for flexible armour (leather by elasticity, metal leggings and mail shirts by token).
Additional strong layers may do less to degrade blunt hits than additional weak layers.
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anewaname

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Re: Some musings on armour
« Reply #18 on: April 23, 2022, 09:11:29 pm »

I'd also like to point out that a text search of a gamelog showed one set of bone greaves deflect 2 were-folk bites before the 3rd bite destroyed them. And, that search also showed plenty of bone greaves deflecting the 1st were-folk bite before the dwarfs killed it, and less dangerous things like crundle claws.

The point is, bone greaves are effective if you don't have the metal to spare, and they will protect citizen dwarfs who are caught while on the surface or in the caves, far from the metal greave'd full-time military.

And, the OP was talking about a "starter/civilian kit" for his dwarfs.
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