Difference between revisions of "Minotaur"

From NetHackWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Encyclopedia entry)
(Overdue rewrite)
Line 19: Line 19:
 
}}
 
}}
  
The '''minotaur''', {{monsym|minotaur}}, is an especially deadly [[NetHack]] [[monster]]. Minotaurs are notoriously difficult to kill and deal out incredible amounts of damage, leading to many deaths by their hands even by experienced players. They are also infamous for being one of the few monsters to ignore [[Elbereth]].
+
A '''minotaur''', {{monsym|minotaur}}, is an especially deadly [[monster]] that appears in ''[[NetHack]]''. They are carnivorous, humanoid [[animal]]s that are notoriously difficult to fight and deal out incredible amounts of damage with their clawing attacks and heabutt, leading to many deaths at their hands from even experienced players. They are the strongest of the [[giant humanoid]] [[monster class]], and are also infamous for being one of the few monsters to ignore [[Elbereth]].
  
To estimate how badly you can expect to be stomped, see [[Armor class#How_much_is_enough?|armor class]].
+
==Generation==
 +
Minotaurs are not randomly generated; one or two minotaurs may be generated at level creation on a floor that is a full-level [[maze]].{{refsrc|src/mkmaze.c|766|version=NetHack 3.6.6}} A [[sleeping]] minotaur is generated on the [[Ranger quest]] home level.{{refsrc|dat/Ranger.des|69|version=NetHack 3.6.6}} Two minotaurs are generated on the [[Plane of Earth]], including one in the cavern you enter from, and another appears on the [[Plane of Fire]].{{refsrc|dat/endgame.des|56|version=NetHack 3.6.6}}{{refsrc|dat/endgame.des|103|version=NetHack 3.6.6}}{{refsrc|dat/endgame.des|351|version=NetHack 3.6.6}}
  
Minotaurs are carnivorous. They cannot wear armor or wield weapons. They will open unlocked doors, but are stopped by locked doors and boulders, and, as they do not fly, all traps will affect them. Since they are not [[intelligent]], they cannot make use of [[unicorn horn]]s, amulets, [[Potion of gain level|potions of gain level]], or unlocking tools.
+
Minotaurs are eligible forms for [[polymorph]], and can also be summoned by the [[summon nasties]] [[monster spell]].
  
==Generation==
+
A minotaur has a {{frac|3}} chance to [[Monster starting inventory|generate with]] a [[wand of digging]]; the minotaurs on Plane of Earth are guaranteed to generate with one.{{refsrc|src/makemon.c|707|version=NetHack 3.6.6}}
  
Fortunately, they are not generated after level creation by the [[normal mechanism]]. There are zero, one, or two{{refsrc|mkmaze.c|656|version=NetHack 3.6.0}} generated on each full-level [[maze]]. One also appears on the [[Ranger quest]] home level. They can also be summoned by the [[Summon nasties]] [[monster spell]], and finally, as a valid polymorphable form, are an unlikely but nonetheless possible result for that [[gnome lord]] who jumped into a [[polymorph trap]].
+
==Strategy==
 +
Minotaurs are slightly faster than an unhasted [[hero]] at 15 [[speed]], and have a natural [[AC]] of 0; their three attacks have the highest damage ceiling in the game, short of the [[Riders]] themselves. Minotaurs represent such a gigantic physical threat that there is [[Armor class#How much is enough?|an entire section]] of the article on [[armor class]] dedicating to estimating how badly a minotaur can stomp a player at a given AC threshold. Be ready to employ some of the strategies listed below, and be sure to scan your inventory thoroughly when making [[Things To Do If You're Going to Die Next Turn|last-ditch efforts]] in a worst-case scenario.
  
A minotaur has a {{frac|1|3}} chance of [[Monster starting inventory|getting]] a [[wand of digging]] (100% if on the [[Plane of Earth]]).{{refsrc|makemon.c|643|version=NetHack 3.6.0}}
+
Thankfully, since minotaurs are not [[intelligent]], they cannot make use of weapons, armor or various other items, including the wand of digging they often generate with. Minotaurs also have no [[Magic resistance (monster)|monster MR]] and lack any intrinsic resistances, making them very vulnerable to magic and other effects - one of the quickest ways to "handle" a hostile minotaur is to use a [[scroll of taming]] or other similar item; see [[#As pets|the below section]] for more information on that.
  
==Strategy==
+
===Defeating minotaurs===
Some minotaur-repellent ideas, roughly in decreasing order of effectiveness (the last three options are virtually [[Things To Do If You're Going to Die Next Turn|last-ditch efforts]]):
+
A very fast spellcaster should be able to keep at a safe distance and wear the minotaur down, and other roles that can reach Expert [[skill]] in [[dagger]]s and/or [[bow]]s are capable of the same - the {{spell of|jumping}} spell or [[jumping boots]] can aid you in either case, though be careful not to get backed into a corner. While any strong enough player can theoretically outdamage a minotaur in melee, this is generally a [[bad idea]] - a minotaur can kill even highly-armored melee roles such as a [[Valkyrie]] carrying their [[quest artifact]], [[the Orb of Fate]].
*Taming, from any source, is guaranteed to work. Minotaurs have zero magic resistance.
 
*A minotaur is a worthy candidate for a [[wand of death]] charge. If not magic resistant or reflecting, be careful where you aim - fire in a panic and you might hit yourself with the rebound.
 
*If a minotaur has interrupted your [[dig for victory]], zap a wand of digging straight down (unless on the Castle level).
 
*A very fast spellcaster, possibly armed with {{spell of|jumping}}, might be able to keep at a safe distance and wear the minotaur down. Be careful not to get backed into a corner.
 
*An expert archer or dagger-thrower can do the same thing.
 
*Attack wands are another option; watch when they run out of charges. If the minotaur is in a maze, you can bounce rays off walls to get more hits in.
 
*A [[wand of slow monster]] (or the equivalent spell) will reduce a minotaur's [[speed]] to 10.  Any unencumbered character can outrun a monster with speed 10, and if you're forced to melee it, you'll only take about 2/3 as much damage.
 
*[[Blind]] the minotaur before engaging it. That [[expensive camera]] will significantly reduce the minotaur's ability to land hits on you, and make it much easier to run away if you start taking damage.
 
*Stand on a [[scroll of scare monster]]. This is 100% effective at scaring minotaurs, even if you are in Gehennom or the endgame. Be aware that minotaurs will walk over scrolls of scare monster that you are ''not'' standing on, and you will probably have to move at some point!
 
*If you have [[free action]], wield a [[potion of paralysis]] and smash it over the minotaur's head, buying yourself a few (approximately 3-12) turns to kill it, run, or prepare some of the other options mentioned here.
 
*Build a [[boulder fort]] and take it down with ranged attacks.
 
*Build an acid blob fort to buy yourself time to either dig down or combine inventory items (performing alchemy, or writing a scroll of taming).
 
*Zap the minotaur with a [[wand of teleportation]]. You will probably have to deal with the minotaur later, though.
 
*Zap the minotaur with a [[wand of sleep]] and run/dig/teleport. You will probably have to deal with the minotaur later, though.
 
*Zap the minotaur with a wand of sleep and try to kill it in melee before it wakes back up. Make sure you have an escape item in case this doesn't work.
 
*Engage the minotaur head-on. Unless you're well-kitted, this is probably a [[bad idea]].
 
*Throw a potion of paralysis at the minotaur, buying yourself a few free hits or a few turns to run. Thrown potions are quite likely to miss.
 
  
=== As pets ===
+
Attack wands can weaken or impair a minotaur somewhat efficiently, especially if you have a [[wand of slow monster]] to reduce its speed (and thus its damage) or a [[wand of sleep]] to immobilize it; the [[wand of lightning]] can [[blind]] the minotaur as well as damaging it, and most wands can be made more effective by rebounding their [[ray]]s off maze walls. Minotaurs are even a worthy candidate for a [[wand of death]] or [[finger of death]] charge - be careful where you aim, as without [[magic resistance]] or [[reflection]] a rebound may inadvertently [[YASD|solve the problem harder than you intended]]. If all else fails, slow monster and sleep wands can also make it easier to escape, as can a wand of digging.
  
Minotaurs can easily be tamed, as their lack of MR prevents them from resisting taming magic, and their high damage and HP make them formidable fighters. However, unless you get a lucky polymorph, you likely won't encounter a minotaur until you're in or near Gehennom. Minotaurs lack [[flight]], [[regeneration]], and resistances, and do not wear equipment, making them vulnerable to various monsters and traps, so they don't tend to last very long in the late game. Like other [[carnivorous]] pets, they're often eating when you need them to fight or follow you across levels.
+
Tools such as an [[expensive camera]] or a [[tooled horn]] are capable of scaring minotaurs, and the camera can additionally blind them - a blind minotaur is much less likely to hit you, significantly increasing your chance of surviving against one. A [[scroll of scare monster]] can also keep non-blinded minotaurs away, though be sure not to have other monsters [[burn]] it away from under you - they can also walk over the scroll when you are not standing on it. [[Boulder]] forts and [[acid blob]] formations can reliably keep a minotaur away while you prepare other counter-measures.
  
==Variants==
+
If you have [[free action]], a thrown or (much more preferably) wielded [[potion of paralysis]] can buy you approximately 3-12 turns to kill it, run away, or prepare some of the other options mentioned. If all else fails, zap yourself or the minotaur with a [[wand of teleportation]] and hope that you can avoid encountering it down the line before you are ready to take it on again. [[Things To Do If You're Going to Die Next Turn|last-ditch efforts]]
  
===UnNetHack===
+
Beware of running into a minotaur during a [[dig for victory]], especially in the [[undiggable]] [[Castle]] maze.
As of version 4.0.0 of [[UnNetHack]], minotaurs respect Elbereth.
 
  
===SLASH'EM===
+
===As pets===
 +
Minotaurs can easily be tamed, as their lack of MR prevents them from resisting taming magic, and their high damage and HP make them formidable fighters. However, unless you get a lucky polymorph, you likely won't encounter a minotaur until you're in or near Gehennom. Minotaurs lack [[flight]], [[regeneration]], and resistances, and do not wear equipment, making them vulnerable to various monsters and traps, so they don't tend to last very long in the late game. Like other [[carnivorous]] pets, they're often eating when you need them to fight or follow you across levels.
  
Minotaurs gain intrinsic resistance to death magic, so they will not be vulnerable to the wand of death.
+
==History==
 +
The minotaur was first present in Hack121, a variant of [[Jay Fenlason's Hack]], and also appears in [[Hack 1.0]]. From this version of Hack to [[NetHack 2.3e]], minotaurs used the {{white|m}} glyph. [[NetHack 3.0.0]] moves the minotaur to the {{white|H}} glyph; [[3.0.5]] introduces their immunity to Elbereth.
  
== History ==
+
From NetHack 3.0.5 to [[3.4.3]], including some variants based on these versions: minotaurs are also not affected by the scroll of scare monster. This behavior was explained in the following comment from the source code:<ref name="E">[http://unnethack.wordpress.com/2012/03/07/why-did-the-minotaur-cross-the-elbereth/ Why did the Minotaur cross the Elbereth? | UnNetHack & NetHack-De]</ref>
Since version 3.0.5, minotaurs have not been affected by Elbereth. In versions from 3.0.5 to 3.4.3, they were also not affected by the [[scroll of scare monster]]. This behavior was explained in the following way:
 
  
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="c">
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="c">
Line 74: Line 59:
 
   */</syntaxhighlight>
 
   */</syntaxhighlight>
  
Version 3.0.8 made it impossible to produce [[wand of wishing|wands of wishing]] from [[polypiling|polymorph]]; in 3.1.0, this note was removed but minotaurs continued to ignore Elbereth. This behavior remains unchanged in vanilla NetHack.<ref>http://unnethack.wordpress.com/2012/03/07/why-did-the-minotaur-cross-the-elbereth/</ref>.
+
As of [[NetHack 3.0.8]], it is impossible to produce a [[wand of wishing]] by [[polypiling]], and the note was removed in [[3.1.0]]. The behavior remained unchanged until Their behavior has remained unchanged until [[NetHack 3.6.0]], where minotaurs began respecting scrolls of scare monster while the player is standing on the scroll.  
  
In 3.6.0 and above, minotaurs do respect scrolls of scare monster, but only while the player is standing on the scroll.
+
==Origin==
 +
{{wikipedia|Minotaur}}
 +
The minotaur originates in ancient Greek folklore from the punishment of [[wikipedia:Minos|King Minos of Crete]]. The word "minotaur" derives from the Ancient Greek Μῑνώταυρος, a compound of the name Μίνως (Minos) and the noun ταῦρος "bull", translated as "(the) Bull of Minos"; the word was originally a proper noun in reference to this mythical figure, and only became a common noun in 20th century fantasy works to refer to members of a generic "species" of bull-headed creatures.
  
==Origin==
+
After ascending the throne of the island, Minos prayed to the sea god [[Poseidon]] to send him a snow-white bull as a sign of favour; Minos was to sacrifice the bull to honor Poseidon, but then decided to substitute a different bull and keep the original as his own. Poseidon retaliated by cursing Pasiphaë, Minos' wife, with a mad passion for the bull; Daedalus built her a wooden cow that she climbed inside in order to mate with the bull. The Minotaur, also known as Asterion or Asterius, was the result of this union, born with the body of a human and the head of a bull. Minos, following advice from the oracle at Delphi, had [[wikipedia:Daedalus|Daedalus]] construct a gigantic Labyrinth to hold the Minotaur located near his palace in Knossos (hence the tendency of ''NetHack'' minotaurs to appear in mazes); Daedalus and his son [[wikipedia:Icarus|Icarus]] were then imprisoned to ensure no one would ever know the secret of the Minotaur and how to escape the Labyrinth.
  
The encyclopedia entry is correct about the myth.  
+
The most famous story of the Minotaur outside of his origin is likely the tale of [[wikipedia:Theseus|Theseus]] and his encounter with the beast-man, a subject of many classical artworks and media. The Minotaur had no natural source of nourishment beyond nursing from his mother; as he aged he grew in size and became ferocious, devouring humans for sustenance. Minos required that seven Athenian youths and seven maidens, drawn by lots, be sacrificed every seventh or ninth year (or every year in some accounts) to be sent into the Labyrinth and devoured by the Minotaur. On the third such occasion, Theseus volunteered to stop this horror, taking the place of one of the youths; in Crete, Minos' daughter Ariadne fell madly in love with Theseus and helped him navigate the labyrinth, usually with a ball of thread that allowed him to retrace his path. Theseus found the Minotaur at the heart of the labyrinth and depending on the source slew it with his bare hands, his club, or a sword. He then led the Athenians out of the labyrinth, and managed to escape with all of the young Athenians and Ariadne.
  
Poseidon, to punish Minos, king of Crete, made the queen fall in love with a bull. She ordered the construction of a hollow wooden cow so that she could mate with the bull. The child that was born had the body of a human and the head of a bull. As it grow up, it became ferocious and a man eater. Minos was forced to keep it alive in the labyrinth and feed it.
+
==Variants==
 +
===UnNetHack===
 +
In [[UnNetHack]], minotaurs respect Elbereth as of version 4.0.0.<ref name="E"/>
  
The etymology of Minotaur is from Minos the king and "taur" meaning bull in greek.
+
===SLASH'EM===
 +
Minotaurs gain intrinsic resistance to death magic, so they will not be vulnerable to the wand of death.
  
== Encyclopedia entry ==
+
==Encyclopedia entry==
 
{{encyclopedia|The Minotaur was a monster, half bull, half human, the offspring of Minos' wife Pasiphae and a wonderfully beautiful bull....  When the Minotaur was born Minos did not kill him. He had Daedalus, a great architect and inventor, construct a place of confinement for him from which escape was impossible. Daedalus built the Labyrinth, famous throughout the world. Once inside, one would go endlessly along its twisting paths without ever finding the exit.
 
{{encyclopedia|The Minotaur was a monster, half bull, half human, the offspring of Minos' wife Pasiphae and a wonderfully beautiful bull....  When the Minotaur was born Minos did not kill him. He had Daedalus, a great architect and inventor, construct a place of confinement for him from which escape was impossible. Daedalus built the Labyrinth, famous throughout the world. Once inside, one would go endlessly along its twisting paths without ever finding the exit.
 
[ Mythology, by Edith Hamilton ]
 
[ Mythology, by Edith Hamilton ]
Line 93: Line 83:
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 +
{{nethack-366}}
 
[[Category:Monsters]]
 
[[Category:Monsters]]
{{nethack-360}}
 

Revision as of 03:30, 9 July 2022

A minotaur, H, is an especially deadly monster that appears in NetHack. They are carnivorous, humanoid animals that are notoriously difficult to fight and deal out incredible amounts of damage with their clawing attacks and heabutt, leading to many deaths at their hands from even experienced players. They are the strongest of the giant humanoid monster class, and are also infamous for being one of the few monsters to ignore Elbereth.

Generation

Minotaurs are not randomly generated; one or two minotaurs may be generated at level creation on a floor that is a full-level maze.[1] A sleeping minotaur is generated on the Ranger quest home level.[2] Two minotaurs are generated on the Plane of Earth, including one in the cavern you enter from, and another appears on the Plane of Fire.[3][4][5]

Minotaurs are eligible forms for polymorph, and can also be summoned by the summon nasties monster spell.

A minotaur has a 13 chance to generate with a wand of digging; the minotaurs on Plane of Earth are guaranteed to generate with one.[6]

Strategy

Minotaurs are slightly faster than an unhasted hero at 15 speed, and have a natural AC of 0; their three attacks have the highest damage ceiling in the game, short of the Riders themselves. Minotaurs represent such a gigantic physical threat that there is an entire section of the article on armor class dedicating to estimating how badly a minotaur can stomp a player at a given AC threshold. Be ready to employ some of the strategies listed below, and be sure to scan your inventory thoroughly when making last-ditch efforts in a worst-case scenario.

Thankfully, since minotaurs are not intelligent, they cannot make use of weapons, armor or various other items, including the wand of digging they often generate with. Minotaurs also have no monster MR and lack any intrinsic resistances, making them very vulnerable to magic and other effects - one of the quickest ways to "handle" a hostile minotaur is to use a scroll of taming or other similar item; see the below section for more information on that.

Defeating minotaurs

A very fast spellcaster should be able to keep at a safe distance and wear the minotaur down, and other roles that can reach Expert skill in daggers and/or bows are capable of the same - the jumping spell or jumping boots can aid you in either case, though be careful not to get backed into a corner. While any strong enough player can theoretically outdamage a minotaur in melee, this is generally a bad idea - a minotaur can kill even highly-armored melee roles such as a Valkyrie carrying their quest artifact, the Orb of Fate.

Attack wands can weaken or impair a minotaur somewhat efficiently, especially if you have a wand of slow monster to reduce its speed (and thus its damage) or a wand of sleep to immobilize it; the wand of lightning can blind the minotaur as well as damaging it, and most wands can be made more effective by rebounding their rays off maze walls. Minotaurs are even a worthy candidate for a wand of death or finger of death charge - be careful where you aim, as without magic resistance or reflection a rebound may inadvertently solve the problem harder than you intended. If all else fails, slow monster and sleep wands can also make it easier to escape, as can a wand of digging.

Tools such as an expensive camera or a tooled horn are capable of scaring minotaurs, and the camera can additionally blind them - a blind minotaur is much less likely to hit you, significantly increasing your chance of surviving against one. A scroll of scare monster can also keep non-blinded minotaurs away, though be sure not to have other monsters burn it away from under you - they can also walk over the scroll when you are not standing on it. Boulder forts and acid blob formations can reliably keep a minotaur away while you prepare other counter-measures.

If you have free action, a thrown or (much more preferably) wielded potion of paralysis can buy you approximately 3-12 turns to kill it, run away, or prepare some of the other options mentioned. If all else fails, zap yourself or the minotaur with a wand of teleportation and hope that you can avoid encountering it down the line before you are ready to take it on again. last-ditch efforts

Beware of running into a minotaur during a dig for victory, especially in the undiggable Castle maze.

As pets

Minotaurs can easily be tamed, as their lack of MR prevents them from resisting taming magic, and their high damage and HP make them formidable fighters. However, unless you get a lucky polymorph, you likely won't encounter a minotaur until you're in or near Gehennom. Minotaurs lack flight, regeneration, and resistances, and do not wear equipment, making them vulnerable to various monsters and traps, so they don't tend to last very long in the late game. Like other carnivorous pets, they're often eating when you need them to fight or follow you across levels.

History

The minotaur was first present in Hack121, a variant of Jay Fenlason's Hack, and also appears in Hack 1.0. From this version of Hack to NetHack 2.3e, minotaurs used the m glyph. NetHack 3.0.0 moves the minotaur to the H glyph; 3.0.5 introduces their immunity to Elbereth.

From NetHack 3.0.5 to 3.4.3, including some variants based on these versions: minotaurs are also not affected by the scroll of scare monster. This behavior was explained in the following comment from the source code:[7]

 /* Note: minotaurs must be immune to scare monster
  * to avoid abuse from creating them and taking
  * their wands, then polymorphing 60 or so
  * wands to get wishing...
  */

As of NetHack 3.0.8, it is impossible to produce a wand of wishing by polypiling, and the note was removed in 3.1.0. The behavior remained unchanged until Their behavior has remained unchanged until NetHack 3.6.0, where minotaurs began respecting scrolls of scare monster while the player is standing on the scroll.

Origin

The minotaur originates in ancient Greek folklore from the punishment of King Minos of Crete. The word "minotaur" derives from the Ancient Greek Μῑνώταυρος, a compound of the name Μίνως (Minos) and the noun ταῦρος "bull", translated as "(the) Bull of Minos"; the word was originally a proper noun in reference to this mythical figure, and only became a common noun in 20th century fantasy works to refer to members of a generic "species" of bull-headed creatures.

After ascending the throne of the island, Minos prayed to the sea god Poseidon to send him a snow-white bull as a sign of favour; Minos was to sacrifice the bull to honor Poseidon, but then decided to substitute a different bull and keep the original as his own. Poseidon retaliated by cursing Pasiphaë, Minos' wife, with a mad passion for the bull; Daedalus built her a wooden cow that she climbed inside in order to mate with the bull. The Minotaur, also known as Asterion or Asterius, was the result of this union, born with the body of a human and the head of a bull. Minos, following advice from the oracle at Delphi, had Daedalus construct a gigantic Labyrinth to hold the Minotaur located near his palace in Knossos (hence the tendency of NetHack minotaurs to appear in mazes); Daedalus and his son Icarus were then imprisoned to ensure no one would ever know the secret of the Minotaur and how to escape the Labyrinth.

The most famous story of the Minotaur outside of his origin is likely the tale of Theseus and his encounter with the beast-man, a subject of many classical artworks and media. The Minotaur had no natural source of nourishment beyond nursing from his mother; as he aged he grew in size and became ferocious, devouring humans for sustenance. Minos required that seven Athenian youths and seven maidens, drawn by lots, be sacrificed every seventh or ninth year (or every year in some accounts) to be sent into the Labyrinth and devoured by the Minotaur. On the third such occasion, Theseus volunteered to stop this horror, taking the place of one of the youths; in Crete, Minos' daughter Ariadne fell madly in love with Theseus and helped him navigate the labyrinth, usually with a ball of thread that allowed him to retrace his path. Theseus found the Minotaur at the heart of the labyrinth and depending on the source slew it with his bare hands, his club, or a sword. He then led the Athenians out of the labyrinth, and managed to escape with all of the young Athenians and Ariadne.

Variants

UnNetHack

In UnNetHack, minotaurs respect Elbereth as of version 4.0.0.[7]

SLASH'EM

Minotaurs gain intrinsic resistance to death magic, so they will not be vulnerable to the wand of death.

Encyclopedia entry

The Minotaur was a monster, half bull, half human, the offspring of Minos' wife Pasiphae and a wonderfully beautiful bull.... When the Minotaur was born Minos did not kill him. He had Daedalus, a great architect and inventor, construct a place of confinement for him from which escape was impossible. Daedalus built the Labyrinth, famous throughout the world. Once inside, one would go endlessly along its twisting paths without ever finding the exit.
[ Mythology, by Edith Hamilton ]

References