See the game "Don't Starve!" see traps, implement into this game.
Much rejoicing shall ensue.
L33LEE wrote:unclear_image wrote:It would be nice if rabbit came out of rabbit holes and ran back into them, so you can trap by their hole and bait them out or chase them towards it.
Chase rabbit into rabbit hole hole, make fire outside hole, wait 10s, rabbit appears outside dazed for 5 seconds, were you can loot it like KO;d turkey. If you fail to loot the rabbit it runs off, fire insta despawns, and the chase starts over.
No combat involved, better for new players to farm / kill, as well as bringing a new kind of hunting element to the game.
So under this new system, you need fire, and branches and time to hunt rabbits.
Mienja wrote:L33LEE wrote:unclear_image wrote:It would be nice if rabbit came out of rabbit holes and ran back into them, so you can trap by their hole and bait them out or chase them towards it.
Chase rabbit into rabbit hole hole, make fire outside hole, wait 10s, rabbit appears outside dazed for 5 seconds, were you can loot it like KO;d turkey. If you fail to loot the rabbit it runs off, fire insta despawns, and the chase starts over.
No combat involved, better for new players to farm / kill, as well as bringing a new kind of hunting element to the game.
So under this new system, you need fire, and branches and time to hunt rabbits.
A rabbit would never run TO a fire. Rabbiting was done using either dogs or some other animal to help chase the rabbit out of it's hole which was laid over with a net type of trap. Some were a bag type that would drape over the hole and ensnare the fleeing rabbit. The wiki also says this about historic rabbiting still practiced today! : "In medieval times, a hawk or falcon would have been used to catch the rabbit as it exited the warren burrow. For this type of hunt, an albino ferret would typically be used, allowing the bird-of-prey to more easily recognize it. While this hunting style is still occasionally used, especially in the UK where it remains popular, (see Falconry) the above methods have almost entirely replaced it." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbit-hunting
So you could use ferrets (females were used as males tended to EAT the bunnies in the burrows) and falcons with what they call long nets.
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