Hmm... I wonder if everyone who uses Ironhand graphics likes those same large quasi-circular hallways, because every time I see pics of people using that graphics set, they always do that.
Anyway, thanks for uploading and for the feedback, Patchy. It's a neat fort you have, even if seems plagued by cheese makers.
I'm going to put up the updated DFFD
soon right now.
I could also do other transformations of the graphics if you wanted. Like fitting it into 18x18 or even oddball transformations.
I see their human halves as being about the same as your average human. So then around 5 foot I guess. Or rather how tall is a human in df?
Well, let me get back to reverse-engineering the proper size, then...
Their total tail area was relsize 5400 compared to a total humanoid torso relsize of 1600 and total humanoid relsize of 2860. (The tail replaces relsize 2440 of human lower torso and legs.) This adds up to roughly 1/3 of their body being human by total volume (this presumes the human portion is wider than the serpentine portion, so that the tail is more than just twice as long). (Tail could probably stand to take up more of the body, but I wanted the humanoid section to still be large enough to be relatively humanoid.)
Hence, a 65,000 size lamia, compared to a 70,000 average human, where that human is 5,300 of relsize, and the lamia has a total of 8260 relsize. Each relsize of a human hence corrisponds to 13.21 size, while each relsize of a lamia correlates to 7.87. This means that, by comparison, since I kept most of the humanoid relsizes, the lamia is roughly 60% of the proportionate size of a human. A dwarf, meanwhile, is 86% of a human, proportionately.
This would make them have humanoid body portions approximately like those of a four-foot-tall person.
These were relatively small lamia.
Without doing some sort of recalibration of the reslizes, and simply altering the overall body size...
70,000 / 5,300 * 8260 = 109,094 size.
Yeah, that seems pretty big...
And that's when I'm lowballing the size of the tail.
I'll definitely need to cripple strength down a bit.