
If you get the beast down to about 60% movement and 60% maniupulation, open fire with everyone, but be aware of who is the slowest member of your party and plan ahead. Hopefully he will be able to significantly injure the animal before it goes manhunter, but just in case, backup is there to help if needed. Only let the shooter with the highest hunting stealth shoot at first.

One strategy is to find a large animal, like elephant or megasloth and send your entire colony to kill it. Hunt predators and you will find your map has more prey for you to, well, prey upon.

Look at the wildlife tab and sort by meat amount and manhunter chance on injury before you go hunting. People play in different biomes on different difficulties, and some colonies have great hunters and others not so much, so sometimes meat is easy to get, sometimes not. So, you'd push to get rice or corn in any playthrough where that was possible and only use kibble if the situation in your playthrough very suitable for it. That's starkly contrasted with kibble's suitability. Both are great, both are desirable, either is always useful. :)įor instance, corn and/or rice has the highest yield with least effort in terms of nutrition and being used in meals. If you reply "No" to both questions, it's not useful to you. If you reply "No" to either question, it's not very useful for you. Ie: Can you make it in bulk? Can you do so consistently and, thus, can plan for it in your routine operations? If you can answer "Yes" here, then it's useful for you. The wiki entry for Kibble gives a very accurate and succinct explanation: There isn't really a standard that can be applied to every playthrough for kibble. IOW, it really depends on whether or not it's suitable for your current conditions in your current playthrough. My question is, where do all these people talking about how kibble is great get their meat? You end up loosing a lot of nutrition from running a chicken farm and using them for the meat, so where do they get it?Įvery time the subject comes up, most of the answers can be summed up as: Currenlty I just let my animals free range, eating the wild grass, I see little reason to switch over to kibble. I'd much rather use that on lavish meals. In mountainous maps, dig inside the.Originally posted by rBST Cow:Growing hay is easy, getting a steady flow of meat is not. Build everything in separated buildings, just like a small town. RimWorld Base Types Superstructure base Town-like settlement Mountain base Description Put everything in one large building.

It can only be made by a cook at a butcher table. Also pemmican does have a shelf life where kibble lasts forever. Pemmican would be a better option but it requires way more work to create the same pile of nutrition therefore your cook will be tied up longer.Lately, I feel like I'm in a game of dodgeball and I'm not sure if I should dive left or right. It's interesting when life throws you a curve ball.
