Doing a brief run in a 1050 large world, while waiting for the next release. A bit of adventuring, but also test the new reactions in play. I kind of think a test world is great for checking to see if a reaction works, but sometimes you need a full run world to see how they feel with everything together.
Basic character setup.
Here just the usual starting routine. Axedwarf Imush Dirtclods has a look at the dwarves around him (apparently all lifelong friends/acquaintances) and then takes a peek into the cabinets.
Cabinets seem to have a hardcoded fill requirement for leather. Once in a past world I removed the [leather] token from all clothing save for shoes, and every cabinet was still full of leather, except this leather was adjective laden as if they were items from a vault. So not much of reason to butt heads against the code. Normal leather goods in each cabinet, but because of the longer history, items were of better quality.
The masterwork elk bird mittens were tempting, but Imush holds fast to that austere lifestyle, so he'll have to pass on those items at least until he can alter them. A reaction with no skill attached will always produce a plain item. It's handy for the minimalist.
The biome is desert and it's hot outside. Rock type available here is quartzite. Check Imush's sprint speed. Top sprint is 2.875. That's at high strength and average agility. Not bad. Not hugely useful to know either.
The only reason to look into each mound is to check each cabinet. While there is plenty of leather, I replaced the specs for the leather armor entry to fit those of gambeson. The last time I did this, animal and plant fiber gambeson was rare in terms of cabinet population. The drinking mound had two soldiers, both clad in mail. Neither generated with gambeson, padded jack, brigandine or breastplate as additional layering. Well, that's just the hillock Leadpainted.
Not much else to do here. Imush will head to the fortress Rinserocks. He'll need to borrow a metal barrel to do a little wood burning inorder to make charcoal.