Difference between revisions of "Guard"

From NetHackWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Split into sections)
(Majorly needed updating)
Line 22: Line 22:
 
}}
 
}}
  
The [[vault]] '''guards''' are an exceedingly rare [[NetHack]] monster. They will appear occasionally when a player is in a vault (''Suddenly, one of the vault's guards appear!'') and will accost the player.
+
The '''guard''' is an exceedingly rare [[human]] monster in ''[[NetHack]]'' that will only appear occasionally if a player is in one of [[Croesus]]'s many [[vault]]s. They are very similar to [[Yendorian Army]] soldiers, and can even be [[bribe]]d.
  
In most circumstances, the guard will ask your name (with a small [[alignment]] penalty for lying if you are [[lawful]]) and then demand that you drop all of your gold (''"Most likely all of your gold was stolen from this vault."'') and follow him out. If you throw your gold at the guard, a [[bribe]] attempt will be made; if you drop it, it will remain where it is and you can return later. In either case he will open a passage from the vault to a nearby corridor and wait for you to follow him. When you reach the corridor he and the passage will vanish. Items left inside will stay, embedded in stone; monsters will be moved to a random location on the current level.
+
Guard corpses cannot be revived with a [[wand of undead turning]]; doing so produces a [[human zombie]] instead.
  
He will attack if you persistently ignore his orders, attempt to escape by some other means (such as [[teleportation]]), or, obviously, if you initiate combat. If he dies in his passageway, it will close leaving you embedded in rock, and his corpse and possessions (including any gold you threw him) will vanish never to be seen again. You can recover these only if you lure the guard out of his passage (typically, into the vault itself) before killing him or digging your way back.
+
==Generation==
 +
As previously indicated, guards are not randomly generated, and only appear if the player waits around while within a vault, creating an opening in the vault or solid rock for them to stand in. They follow the same generation mechanisms as soldiers and [[watchmen]] for armor and weapons.
  
Guards cannot be revived with a [[wand of undead turning]]; doing so produces a [[human zombie]] instead.
+
==Interacting with guards==
 +
If you are present in a vault when the guard appears, they will ask you for your name. If you reply with [[Croesus]], Kroisos or Creosote, they will leave you alone and disappear; this incurs a small [[alignment]] penalty for lying if you are [[lawful]], unless it is also your actual name. Attempting this after killing the actual Croesus will cause them to turn hostile.
  
== Strategy ==
+
Otherwise, they will demand you drop all of your gold and follow them out of the vault; this includes any gold you have in a [[container]] within your inventory as well as in open inventory. Once they see you have no gold in your inventory, they will open a passage from the vault to a nearby corridor and wait for you to follow them, and both the guard and passage will vanish once you reach the corridor. Items left inside the passage will be embedded in stone; any monsters caught in the disappearing passage will be moved to a random location on the current level.
  
=== Avoiding combat ===
+
If you take too long to comply, attack the guard or attempt to escape by some other means, they will become hostile. If a guard dies in the passageway they create, it will close immediately; their corpse and possessions will be left embedded in rock, along with you if you were also in the passage.
  
There are several ways to avoid fighting a guard:
+
If you are in a [[polymorph]]ed state from eating a [[mimic]] corpse when a guard appears, they will not notice you and leave, puzzled; doing so while [[hallucinating]] produces a different message, but otherwise has the same effect. Polymorphing into a form that can hide under items produces the same message. If you are unable to speak from [[paralysis]], [[unconsciousness]], being in the middle of [[engraving]], or else being in a form that prevents speaking, they will also leave. The guard will not notice you if you are [[invisible]] when they enter, and will leave when you move away from them.
* Tell them your name is [[Croesus]] (or Kroisos or Creosote); if Croesus has not been killed the guard will leave in peace (''"oh, yes, of course. Sorry to have disturbed you"'') but you will still be trapped in the vault. If Croesus has been killed, however, the guard immediately turns hostile (''"Back from the dead, are you? I'll remedy that!''"), without the chance to pacify them by dropping your gold. Under most circumstances, of course, a game where Croesus is dead is a game where the player is easily powerful enough to handle a vault guard.
 
* Eat a [[mimic]] corpse, which temporarily transforms you into a pile of gold; if the guard appears while you are in this state, they will turn around and leave, puzzled. (If you are [[hallucinating]], you turn into an orange instead; the guard will still leave - ''"Hey! Who left that orange in here?"'')
 
* Do not stick around long enough in the vault to let them appear.
 
* Be unable to speak, by being paralyzed, unconscious, engraving, or polymorphed into a non-speaking monster (the guard will say ''"I'll be back when you're ready to speak to me!"'')
 
* Be invisible, and move away from the guard.  He will disappear.
 
* Or be polymorphed into something that can hide under items, being hidden, making them turn around and leave, puzzled.
 
  
Note that a guard really only cares about whether or not you have gold in your inventory and bags, not what happened to the gold in the vault. You are free to drop it and teleport it away, throw it outside of the vault, or loot a cursed bag of holding containing it until it disappears if you're feeling spiteful, with no risk of angering a watching guard. Once you are carrying no gold the guard will attempt to escort you out as usual.
+
==Strategy==
 +
Guards are easy to avoid fighting, but can be useful for inexperienced and/or early-game players who happen upon a vault completely by accident and have no other means of escape. After dropping their gold and following the guard out, they can grab a [[pick-axe]], [[mattock]] or [[wand of digging]] and go back to the known location of the vault to retrieve the gold. For a more experienced character, the guard represents a nuisance that gets in the way of you cleaning out a vault, and a quick lie will get them out of your hair; some players name their lawful character Croesus (or one of the acceptable variants) to avoid the alignment penalty for alignment. Even for other lawful characters, the penalty is small and in most cases can be easily remedied.
  
=== Embracing combat ===
+
Note that a guard really only cares about whether or not you have gold in your inventory and bags, not what happened to the gold in the vault; as long as you are not carrying any gold yourself, they will escort you out. If you pick up the gold again, they will demand you drop it and turn hostile if you do not comply quickly; however, you are free to drop the gold and [[teleport]] it away or throw it outside of the vault without angering them. While guards can be bribed, since they are already peaceful, this will likely turn them hostile; this is often a waste of gold even if successful, though it can be used in some corner cases to pacify a guard and avoid risking penalties for [[murder]].
  
Some high level chaotic players kill guards systematically as these are occasionally generated with good items. Non-human characters can also feed on the corpses without suffering the penalties for cannibalism. Such a player could theoretically stay in the vault indefinitely doing so. 
+
Lawful and neutral characters who have dealt with Croesus and cleared [[Fort Ludios]] will want to avoid using Croesus's name as an answer, since this will immediately turn the guard hostile; killing a guard counts as murder, even if the guard attacks you first. However, most characters at this point will have a means to quickly enter and leave vaults as they please, and can easily avoid dealing with a guard in the first place much less Chaotic characters will not suffer penalties for murder and may consider killing the guards for their items once they have the ability to; however, there is still an alignment penalty for killing a monster designated "always peaceful", and most of the items a guard will have are generally not worthwhile, since there is usually no shortage of barracks in a game.
  
 
[[Category:Monsters]]
 
[[Category:Monsters]]
{{nethack-343}}
+
{{nethack-364}}

Revision as of 22:45, 2 March 2020

A user has suggested this page be merged with "Vault"


The guard is an exceedingly rare human monster in NetHack that will only appear occasionally if a player is in one of Croesus's many vaults. They are very similar to Yendorian Army soldiers, and can even be bribed.

Guard corpses cannot be revived with a wand of undead turning; doing so produces a human zombie instead.

Generation

As previously indicated, guards are not randomly generated, and only appear if the player waits around while within a vault, creating an opening in the vault or solid rock for them to stand in. They follow the same generation mechanisms as soldiers and watchmen for armor and weapons.

Interacting with guards

If you are present in a vault when the guard appears, they will ask you for your name. If you reply with Croesus, Kroisos or Creosote, they will leave you alone and disappear; this incurs a small alignment penalty for lying if you are lawful, unless it is also your actual name. Attempting this after killing the actual Croesus will cause them to turn hostile.

Otherwise, they will demand you drop all of your gold and follow them out of the vault; this includes any gold you have in a container within your inventory as well as in open inventory. Once they see you have no gold in your inventory, they will open a passage from the vault to a nearby corridor and wait for you to follow them, and both the guard and passage will vanish once you reach the corridor. Items left inside the passage will be embedded in stone; any monsters caught in the disappearing passage will be moved to a random location on the current level.

If you take too long to comply, attack the guard or attempt to escape by some other means, they will become hostile. If a guard dies in the passageway they create, it will close immediately; their corpse and possessions will be left embedded in rock, along with you if you were also in the passage.

If you are in a polymorphed state from eating a mimic corpse when a guard appears, they will not notice you and leave, puzzled; doing so while hallucinating produces a different message, but otherwise has the same effect. Polymorphing into a form that can hide under items produces the same message. If you are unable to speak from paralysis, unconsciousness, being in the middle of engraving, or else being in a form that prevents speaking, they will also leave. The guard will not notice you if you are invisible when they enter, and will leave when you move away from them.

Strategy

Guards are easy to avoid fighting, but can be useful for inexperienced and/or early-game players who happen upon a vault completely by accident and have no other means of escape. After dropping their gold and following the guard out, they can grab a pick-axe, mattock or wand of digging and go back to the known location of the vault to retrieve the gold. For a more experienced character, the guard represents a nuisance that gets in the way of you cleaning out a vault, and a quick lie will get them out of your hair; some players name their lawful character Croesus (or one of the acceptable variants) to avoid the alignment penalty for alignment. Even for other lawful characters, the penalty is small and in most cases can be easily remedied.

Note that a guard really only cares about whether or not you have gold in your inventory and bags, not what happened to the gold in the vault; as long as you are not carrying any gold yourself, they will escort you out. If you pick up the gold again, they will demand you drop it and turn hostile if you do not comply quickly; however, you are free to drop the gold and teleport it away or throw it outside of the vault without angering them. While guards can be bribed, since they are already peaceful, this will likely turn them hostile; this is often a waste of gold even if successful, though it can be used in some corner cases to pacify a guard and avoid risking penalties for murder.

Lawful and neutral characters who have dealt with Croesus and cleared Fort Ludios will want to avoid using Croesus's name as an answer, since this will immediately turn the guard hostile; killing a guard counts as murder, even if the guard attacks you first. However, most characters at this point will have a means to quickly enter and leave vaults as they please, and can easily avoid dealing with a guard in the first place much less Chaotic characters will not suffer penalties for murder and may consider killing the guards for their items once they have the ability to; however, there is still an alignment penalty for killing a monster designated "always peaceful", and most of the items a guard will have are generally not worthwhile, since there is usually no shortage of barracks in a game.

This page may need to be updated for the current version of NetHack.

It may contain text specific to NetHack 3.6.4. Information on this page may be out of date.

Editors: After reviewing this page and making necessary edits, please change the {{nethack-364}} tag to the current version's tag or {{noversion}} as appropriate.