I'd just like to point out that saying that nerves can regrow is something like saying you can swim to Africa--technically true, but not practically so.
While limb atrophy and nerves slowly regrowing to fill out the network sounds neat, I don't think more than one or two dwarves, period, would be likely to benefit from it.
It is important for the sake of a few aspects such as healing minor brain injuries.
Well, yes, healing brain damage is important, but it doesn't involve limbs.
As well as for non-dwarves who may have regeneration or Dwarves who have somehow been given the ability to regenerate.
That goes
without saying I suppose it needs saying.
That goes.
So if a dwarf has regeneration, should the game allow Dwarves to develop limb reattachment?
If the whole civ has enough of them over enough time, why not?
So maybe a legendary suturer requires some sort of magic salve to reconnect muscle strings.
Seriously, why does it have to be legendary this and legendary that?
I'm surprised no one mentioned using lava to melt the loose ends together. What happened to the applying lava to everything is the solution mentality of Bay12?
Necro got banned. Without him, the meme faded.
it should be extremely hard and probably require magic.
quite the contrary, it should be extremely EASY with magic, but magic should be rarer.
It depends on the magic, and on how you define "easy."
My feeling is that the state of the medical art being what it is in the 12th-16th centuryish level that DF is situated in, removing limbs should be a much more common curative technique than reattaching them. DF docs are insufficiently quacky as it is.
...implying that amputation is an ineffective medical technique?
What about necromancers reattaching limbs?
Well, such a construct would involve A.) stitching the arm back on and B.) reanimating it. It would have several counterproductive qualities, such as infecting the part of the remputee where the arm was attached, not working on other limbs, and of course having a violent antipathy for life in general.