Difference between revisions of "Stone-Age Guide"

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===Logs===
 
===Logs===
  
[[Log]]s are gathered by chopping down [[trees]] with an [[axe]]. If you use your axe to break the bottom log of the tree, it will chop the entire tree down. If your axe does not have enough durability to fell the entire tree, as many logs as possible starting from the top of the tree will be chopped and the axe will break.
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[[Log]]s are gathered by chopping down [[trees]] with an [[axe]]. If you use your axe to break the bottom log of the tree, it will chop the entire tree down. If your axe does not have enough durability to fell the entire tree, as many logs as possible starting from the top of the tree will be chopped and the axe will break. ''<u>It is important to note that while you are using a stone axe, each log block only has a 90% chance of dropping a log when broken.</u>'' '''may not be implemented in TNG'''
  
 
''Tip: Trees of the same type that are close together will act as one combined tree and both will fall when breaking one of the bottom log blocks.''
 
''Tip: Trees of the same type that are close together will act as one combined tree and both will fall when breaking one of the bottom log blocks.''
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====Axe====
 
====Axe====
  
[[Axe]]s are used to chop down [[trees]], and acquire [[Fruit Trees|fruit tree saplings]]. Stone axes only have about a 90% chance of dropping a [[log]] item for each log block.
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[[Axe]]s are used to chop down [[trees]], and acquire [[Fruit Trees|fruit tree saplings]].
  
 
While the axe is not technically a weapon, it can be used to deal [[Damage Type|slashing damage]] at the cost of using twice the durability per hit.
 
While the axe is not technically a weapon, it can be used to deal [[Damage Type|slashing damage]] at the cost of using twice the durability per hit.

Revision as of 23:26, 26 January 2020

This page/section was imported/copied from the TFC-Classic Wiki!
The information provided by this page/section was imported/copied from the Classic wiki and is likely outdated, missing information and not up to standards. Do not use it as a reliable source of information, if you can improve it please feel free to improve it!


WORK IN PROGRESS

This guide has been updated to TNG. Please see the Differences From Classic page for important changes between Classic TFC and The Next Generation.


Welcome to TerraFirmaCraft!

The following guide will help you get started playing this survival-overhaul Minecraft mod. This guide has been written with the expectations that the reader has a basic understanding of vanilla Minecraft mechanics. It will focus on aspects of the game that are different with TerraFirmaCraft, as well as a few tips and tricks for easier starting gameplay. Throughout the guide, the text will contain links to individual wiki pages for learning more information about that particular topic.

Important Differences

There are a few key differences when playing TerraFirmaCraft from vanilla Minecraft that are important to understand from the very beginning.

Health

HealthBar.png

Instead of hearts, health is represented with a red bar. When you first spawn, you will have a maximum health value of 1,000 HP. This value will increase and decrease depending on your nutrition. Health regenerates very slowly over time, as long as your hunger bar is at least 25% filled.

Hunger

HungerBar.png

Instead of shanks of food, hunger is represented with a green bar. Food drops resemble vanilla in that each food item is the same "size", however the effects of eating them are more complex. Some foods even replenish your thirst bar by a slight amount.

Unlike vanilla, the hunger bar does slowly deplete over time even while you are standing still, or even sleeping. In addition to the slow continuous drain, hunger is primarily depleted by performing actions such as breaking blocks or attacking.

It is important to note that it is possible to starve to death in TerraFirmaCraft. When your hunger bar reaches below 25%, you will get Mining Fatigue II and Weakness II potion effects.

Thirst

Freshwater pond

ThirstBar.png

Thirst is represented with a blue bar. The thirst bar, like the hunger bar, slowly depletes over time even while you do not move. The thirst bar is replenished by drinking fresh water, which is distinguished from saltwater by the deeper blue color. Starting out, you will drink the water directly from the pool by using Rmb.png Right Click with an empty hand on the face of a block that is exposed to the water. A slurping sound will play, and your thirst bar will increase slightly. You can simply hold Rmb.png Right Click to continue drinking until you are no longer thirsty. Once you have created a ceramic jug you will be able to fill it with fresh water to drink. Ceramic jugs replenish much more of the thirst bar than drinking directly from the pond, and offer a way for you to be able to drink even when no fresh water is nearby. It is important to note that ceramic jugs are not indestructible, and there is a random chance that it will break each time you take a drink.

Thirst is primarily depleted by sprinting and jumping. When the thirst bar is half empty, you will no longer be able to sprint. When there is only 25% of the bar left, you will get an invisible Slowness II potion effect until the thirst bar is replenished. If the thirst bar is completely empty, it is possible to die of dehydration.

Experience

There is currently no functionality for experience, but this will probably change.

Punching Wood

The tech-tree in TerraFirmaCraft is a complete overhaul of the vanilla progression system. There are no such thing as wooden tools in TerraFirmaCraft, with your first tools being made of stone. This means that you should not waste your time punching trees, as doing so will take a very long time to break the block, and will give you absolutely nothing in return.

Gravity

A cobblestone pile created from a cave in.

In addition to sand and gravel, the generated blocks clay dirt, dirt, grass and cobblestone are also affected by gravity in TerraFirmaCraft. Unlike in vanilla, gravity-affected blocks are able to fall sideways in addition to straight down. This means that without a proper support system, you will not be able to create walls or ceilings out of these blocks.

Mob Spawning

TerraFirmaCraft implements a hostile mob spawn protection system that prevents mobs from spawning in areas that you have spent a fair amount of time in. Areas with this hostile mob spawn protection will not spawn hostile mobs regardless of the current light level. With the removal of the light-level dependency for mob spawning, TerraFirmaCraft has also implemented the ability for torches to burn out.

Livestock in TerraFirmaCraft, including cows, chickens, pigs, sheep, and horses only spawn on initial chunk generation. These animals do not despawn and will not respawn after they have been killed.

Wild animals such as bears, pheasants, rabbits, deer, and untamed wolves also do not despawn or respawn.

Combat

At the very beginning of the game, your best chance at surviving combat is if you avoid combat entirely, hiding and running away from any and all hostile mobs you come across. If you find yourself caught in a combat situation that you cannot escape, it is important to know that TerraFirmaCraft has implemented different damage types. Different weapons will do different types of damage, and certain mobs can be stronger or weaker against a specific damage type. For every mob except for skeletons, your best stone-age weapons are the axe and the javelin. Knives can also be used as a melee weapon, but don't deal much damage.


If you get lucky and kill a skeleton that drops a bow, you can craft arrows using rocks, sticks and feathers. Bows cannot be crafted in the stone age.

Template:Grid/Inventory Table

Crafting

2x2 Crafting Grid

Probably will change: Your inventory will only show the 2x2 crafting grid, but with a hotkey (C by default) you can open the 3x3 crafting grid at any time. If you wish to use a crafting table, it can be made with four planks, just like in vanilla.

Climate & Seasons

Instead of traditional biomes, TerraFirmaCraft uses a climate system including rainfall, temperature, and evapotranspiration to determine where animals spawn, and what trees, crops, and other plant life grows in an area.

There is also an in-game calendar complete with different seasons throughout the year. The game will always start in the year 1,000 on June 1st. Spawn will be near 0,0 like vanilla and the climate will resemble a temperate region. The climate will get warmer as you move south until approximately z=20k which approximates the equator. The climate will then get cooler again. Heading north from spawn will immediately get cooler until z=-20k, approximating the pole, and then get warmer again. This cycle will continue, and is configurable.

Moving along the x-axis east or west will result in changes in rainfall and small changes in regional temperature.

Gathering Materials

Now that you understand some of the key differences between vanilla Minecraft and TerraFirmaCraft, let's move on to actual gameplay. The first thing you'll want to do is explore your world and gather materials.

Rocks and Ore

Some rocks laying on the ground.

Laying scattered on the ground you will find pieces of rocks and ore. All you need to worry about starting out is gathering the rocks by either breaking the block, or using Rmb.png Right Click on it. The small pieces of ore indicate that there is a vein of that ore nearby underground, so it is important to take note of its location for when you later have a pickaxe and are ready to mine.

Tip: Once a piece of ore or rock has been picked up from the ground, you can place it back down with sneak+'v' by default. Only gather what you need to save on inventory space. A single stack of up to 64 rocks will be more than sufficient for your first few in-game days.

Sticks and Saplings

Similar to rocks and ores, sticks can be found laying on the ground underneath trees. You can also punch leaves which will have a chance to drop sticks and saplings when broken. It does not matter if you use your fist or most stone tools to break the leaves, the drop rate will be the same. Stone knives and later metal shears and scythes do have an increased chance of dropping items from leaves.

Tip: When a tree is chopped down, all leaves instantly despawn with it and they will not drop any sticks or saplings.

Food

Raw beef of increasing decay amounts.

As it is possible to directly starve to death in TerraFirmaCraft, gathering food is an important aspect to increase your chances of staying alive. Food has an expiration date in TerraFirmaCraft, so it is important to manage your food supply carefully. Food with different expiration dates can be stacked in the crafting grid.

Agriculture

File:WildRye.png
A wild patch of rye.

Crops spawn randomly in the wild between the seasons of spring and late summer, and have a chance to regenerate during those seasons every year. Breaking a wild crop will give only seeds if it isn't fully mature, so you should wait until it has reached the last stage of growth before harvesting if you want food. Crop growth in TerraFirmaCraft is based off of how much time has passed since the crop was planted as well as some other factors, with many crops taking a few in-game months to reach maturity. It is possible for crops to freeze to death during the colder seasons.

Tip: You will always start a new world in the beginning of summer, so some of the seeds you gather during the first year likely will not reach maturity before freezing to death if they are planted before spring of the next year.

Animal Husbandry

The amount of meat that you get from killing animals is based on your butchery skill, so the first animals that you kill will drop very little meat. With each kill your butchery skill will increase, dropping more meat than the last.

When killing animals for food, it is important to leave at least a breeding pair of one male and one female of any animals you come across that can be domesticated, as they will not respawn if you kill them. TerraFirmaCraft implements a familiarity system for interacting with animals, and most animals have a very long gestation period before giving birth, so it is unlikely to breed any babies before your first year or two in-game.

Tip: Any meat you do get from killing animals will expire, so it is better to keep the animal alive until you actually need the meat.

Fruit Trees and Berry Bushes

A patch of blueberry bushes.

Fruit trees and berry bushes can be found scattered across the world in areas of warmer climate. Each type of tree and bush will only be ripe during specific seasons, and will not provide food for the rest of the year. Fruit trees are a renewable resource, providing saplings when their branches are broken with an axe. Berry bushes are not renewable, and the bushes that you find while out exploring are the only ones that you can get. Berry bushes can be broken and replanted elsewhere.

Clay

Clay deposit on a hillside with athyrium ferns.

Clay generates in areas with a rainfall value of at least 100, meaning that it cannot be found in deserts. Clay deposits range from four to thirty blocks wide, and two to six blocks deep, and will be marked by specific flowers. Bug: Breaking the clay block will yield four clay items.

Tip: A shovel is not required for harvesting clay, but will make the process faster.

Straw

Straw can be obtained by breaking tall or short grass with a knife, yielding a piece of straw per block, depending on the maturity of the grass. Straw is also produced as a byproduct when refining grains.

Tip: Tall grass will slowly grow back during warmer weather under the right conditions.

Logs

Logs are gathered by chopping down trees with an axe. If you use your axe to break the bottom log of the tree, it will chop the entire tree down. If your axe does not have enough durability to fell the entire tree, as many logs as possible starting from the top of the tree will be chopped and the axe will break. It is important to note that while you are using a stone axe, each log block only has a 90% chance of dropping a log when broken. may not be implemented in TNG

Tip: Trees of the same type that are close together will act as one combined tree and both will fall when breaking one of the bottom log blocks.

Your First Tools

There are a few basic tools and weapons that you will be using while in the stone-age. Once you've gathered some rocks and sticks, you'll be able to make some basic tools so you can gather rest of the above listed materials.

Tip: Tools cannot be crafted together for repair in TerraFirmaCraft, so it is encouraged to just use each tool until it breaks.

Knapping

Knapping is the process of using two rocks to create heads for stone tools. Rmb.png Right Click while holding a stack of two or more rocks to open the knapping interface.

Template:Grid/Knapping

The interface is broken up into a 5x5 grid. Clicking on each square of the grid will remove the image of the stone, chipping the rock into the desired shape. Once a piece of the rock has been removed, it cannot be put back, so be careful where you click. Whether you achieve the desired shape or not, one of your rocks will be consumed in the process. If you successfully create a specific shape, a tool head will appear to the right which can then be attached to a stick or a bone in the crafting grid to create a stone tool.

Template:Grid/Inventory Table

Tip: Completed stone tools do not stack, but tool heads will stack up to 32. At night when you are hiding from monsters, you can knap a handful of each tool head to keep in your inventory. Then during the day when your tool breaks, you can quickly combine another head with a stick or bone for a new tool.

With the exception of stone hammers and stone knives, some types of rocks will result in slightly more durable and/or efficient tools than others. This is not immediately apparent, as all stone tool icons look the same. In order of increasing durability and efficiency: Sedimentary, Metamorphic, Igneous Intrusive, Igneous Extrusive. Note however that there is only a difference of 20 uses between the highest and lowest durability stone tools, and the difference in efficiency is barely noticeable.

Tip: Some of the tools can be knapped out differently than the below forms, feel free to experiment.

Axe

Axes are used to chop down trees, and acquire fruit tree saplings.

While the axe is not technically a weapon, it can be used to deal slashing damage at the cost of using twice the durability per hit.

Hammer

In the stone-age, hammers are used to smash flux-stone and borax to create flux, and to break logs, yielding 1-3 sticks *Not yet implemented*

While the hammer is not technically a weapon, it can be used to deal crushing damage at the cost of using twice the durability per hit.

Hoe

In the stone-age, hoes can be used to turn grass or dirt into farmland, as well as check the water levels of the farmland, and the harvest state of growing crops. The mode of the hoe can be changed by pressing the Cycle Tool Mold key (Default:M), while having the hoe equipped. *not yet implemented*

File:Hoe Mode Toolbar.png < Mode Indicator

File:Toolmode 1-1.png Preparation - Standard use, tilling soil into farm-plot.

File:Toolmode 1-3.png Water - Highlights the target farmland with black: no water access, and blue: water access.

File:Toolmode 1-4.png Harvest - Highlights the farmland with a green display for finished crops and red for those whom are still growing into maturity.

Javelin

Javelins can be used as a melee weapon, but they are more effectively used as a throwing spear. Hold Rmb.png Right Click with a javelin to draw it like a bow, releasing to fire. Javelins deal piercing damage and pass through enemies so they can be recovered by picking them up off the block it was stuck into. Javelins will only take durability damage when they hit an entity. If you miss your target, no durability is lost. A javelin with low enough durability will break when hitting an entity.

You can store your javelins in a quiver, or just in your inventory. When throwing a javelin, the slot will refill with another javelin if you have one.

Knife

Knives can be used as a weak melee weapon inflicting piercing damage, though their best use is in a crafting table to process cereal crops, cut food into smaller pieces, and scrape sheepskin. Knives are also used to collect straw from tall and short grass, scrape soaked hides, and to open the leatherworking interface.

Tip: If you mess up the double knife knapping pattern, you can still get a single knife blade by just doing one half of the pattern.

Shovel

Shovels are used to harvest blocks of dirt, clay, gravel, and sand faster. They are also required to harvest charcoal from a charcoal pit.

Firepit

At the end of the first day, you will probably want to create a firepit to make some torches, and cook any meat you've collected so you can eat it. You'll need at least five sticks, some logs to use as fuel, and optionally a piece of straw. First you'll need to put two sticks in the grafting grid in a diagonal pattern to make a firestarter.

Once you have a firestarter, throw (Default: Q) three sticks and one log on the ground or other non-flammable block so they are stacked together on the same block. Then with the firestarter in your hand target the block that the sticks are resting on and hold right-click. The firestarter will draw back and play a sound, simulating rubbing the two sticks together. It's possible that your first few tries will not be successful, and you may even have to make another firestarter, but you can throw up to 5 pieces of straw in with the three sticks and a log to increase your chances of it successfully lighting. Once the firepit appears, drop some logs on to it to quickly add fuel. You can Rmb.png Right Click on the firepit as long as you aren't holding a firestarter or flint & steel to open its interface. If the firepit goes out, you'll need to add some fuel and then Rmb.png Right Click on it with a firestarter to relight it. Relighting is instant, so don't worry when the drawing animation doesn't play.

Tip: Rain or snow falling directly on a firepit will prevent you from lighting it and will extinguish a lit firepit. To avoid this, make your firepit below some tree-branches or a stone outcropping, where it will be protected from the rain.

If you get lucky enough to kill a zombie that drops a wrought iron ingot, you can combine it with a piece of flint in the crafting grid to create a flint and steel that will always create a firepit on the first try, and has much more durability.

Torches

Once you have your first firepit, you'll be able to create some torches to light up the area around you. Simply put a stick in a firepit to get two torches. Note that you can only put the sticks in the firepit one at a time. Alternatively, once you've created some torches you can place one and Rmb.png Right Click it with a stick in your hand for quicker torch creation at the expense of only getting one torch per stick.

It's important to note that after a configurable amount of time (Default: 48 in-game hours), or if directly exposed to rain or snow, lit torches will burn out and no longer produce light. You can also manually extinguish a torch with a Rmb.png Right Click from an empty hand. Torches in your inventory will never burn out, and can be used to Rmb.png Right Click on placed torches to either relight burned out torches, or restart the countdown timer on lit torches.

Pottery

Once you've gathered some clay, straw, and logs, you can start to make various pieces of pottery. Rmb.png Right Click while holding a stack of five or more pieces of clay to open the clay-forming interface.

The interface is broken up into a 5x5 grid. Clicking on each square of the grid will change the image of the clay, forming into the desired shape. Once a piece of the clay has been changed, it cannot be changed back, so be careful where you click. Whether you achieve the desired shape or not, all five clay will be consumed in the process. If you successfully create a specific shape, a piece of pottery will appear to the right which can then be fired in a pit kiln.

In order to create a pit kiln, you must first place the pottery in a 1-deep hole by holding it in your hand and using V on the top of the block. You can place up to four small items or one large vessel in this manner. Then Rmb.png Right Click with eight pieces of straw, followed by eight logs and light the kiln using either a firestarter, a flint & steel, or by dropping a torch on the block. Once the fire finishes burning, you will be able to collect your ceramic items the same way you placed them down, or by simply breaking the block to collect all of them at once.

Important: The pit kiln will not work as pictured below. These images are in cross section, with the required surrounding blocks removed for visibility.

Tip: The fire from a pit kiln will light nearby flammable blocks on fire. For this reason, it is advised not to light pit kilns near wood, thatch, or other flammable blocks. Pit kilns will not be put out by rain, so you do not need to worry about putting them under a roof.

Ceramic Jug

Ceramic Jugs are used to carry water. They can be filled with Rmb.png Right Click on a source block of fresh water, or on a barrel that contains at least 1,000 mB of fresh water. Flowing water, salt water, and water from hot springs will not work. You can drink from a jug of water by holding down Rmb.png Right Click, the same as you would when eating food. Drinking will replenish three bars of thirst and completely empty the jug.

Tip: There is a very small chance that the jug will break when you drink from it, so it is a good idea to make sure you always have a few around.

If you Rmb.png Right Click an empty ceramic jug, you will blow into it and play a note. The pitch of the note played is dependent on the direction up or down you are currently looking.

Ceramic Vessel

Ceramic Vessels are a very versatile item, but in the stone-age you will simply use them for basic storage. You can use a ceramic vessel to store up to four stacks of items. However, ceramic vessels are only able to store items with a size of small, very small, or tiny. The size of every item in your inventory is displayed on the tooltip when you place your cursor over it.

To place items into a vessel, Rmb.png Right Click with the vessel in hand to open up the interface. A ceramic vessel with items in it can still be stored in your inventory, or placed on the ground, thereby providing increased storage capacity.

Tip: Food stored inside of a vessel will gain the preserved quality, and will expire at a later date.

Large Vessel

Large Vessels are the lowest tier of placeable storage.

Once sealed, a large vessel can be broken and moved around. It will keep its contents so that you can fill it in one location before moving it to another. If the large vessel is not sealed when it is broken, it will dump its items onto the ground. Sealed large vessels must be carried one at a time, or otherwise you will be overburdened and unable to move.

Large vessels have nine slots for storage of items and blocks, and can hold anything that has a size of medium or smaller. They can be placed on the ground and used in a manner similar to chests.

Tip: Unlike the other pottery items, unfired large ceramic vessels will take up the entire block and can only be fired one at a time.

Bowls

Ceramic Bowls are to craft a gold pan.

Shelter

Once you have gathered materials and created your first tools, you will probably want to start working on some form of shelter. Since you cannot mine stone blocks at this stage you need to either find a cave or build a primitive shelter. Putting up some cobblestone blocks as the base of temporary walls might be a good extra protection in the early days, just remember that once you've placed a block of cobblestone you won't be able to break it until you have metals tools, so place them only where you need them (building near a cliff-face or on a hill may help you in designing early defenses). You can break a cobblestone block with just your fist, but it will take an extremely long time to do so, and you will get nothing in return.

Tip: Cobblestone falls sideways just like dirt, so it can't be used to make tall, 1 thick walls without proper support.

Logs and Log Piles

The logs you get from chopping down trees with an axe can be used to build both the walls and roof of a structure similar to a log cabin. You can also stack logs into log-piles by sneaking (Default: ⇧ Shift) while placing the log. Log piles can be used for walls, and have the advantage of being very fast to break. However, log piles can only be placed on top of solid blocks, or a another log pile, so it will take a lot more logs to create a wall out of log piles, and it would be very difficult to use log piles to create a ceiling.

Thatch

Thatch is one of the earliest roofing blocks available in the game. Unlike dirt and cobblestone, thatch is not affected by gravity so you can use it to create a roof for your shelter. Thatch has an advantage over logs in that it can quickly and easily be removed by hand.

Note: Players and mobs are able to move through thatch, making the block essentially useless for walls that do not contain at least one other material. You also cannot use thatch to pillar up to safety, as you will simply fall through the block when you try to jump on it. Hostile mobs will not be able to spot you if you are already hiding in a thatch enclosure, but they are able to follow you through thatch if they have been aggro'd while you were outside of the thatch.

Tip: Thatch is also extremely flammable, and any thatch structures that are built near an open flame such as a pit kiln will quickly burn to the ground.

Beds

How you should be facing to create a Straw & Hide Bed.

While you won't be able to sleep through the night during the stone-age, you are able to create a primitive bed that can be used to set your spawn point. You can make a straw & hide bed by placing two thatch blocks next to each other on the ground, and then using a large raw hide to Rmb.png Right Click on the thatch and create a bed.

Leaving the Stone Age

Eventually you will probably want to progress out of the stone-age, and create some metal tools. In order to do this, you'll need to find some ore.

To make your first metal tool head you will need to collect 10 pieces of small, copper-bearing ore: Template:InfoTable/CopperOre

Prospecting

There are currently two stone-age methods of gathering ore. You can either collect them from the ground in the same manner that you gathered rocks and sticks, or by using a Gold Pan.

Tip: Ore that is found laying on the ground indicates that there is a vein of that ore nearby, so you should always mark the location after picking up the ore piece so you can come back and find the vein once you have a pickaxe.

Processing

For more information on how to process ore and leave the stone-age, please read the Metalworking Guide.

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