Slime mold

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For the tree-bound comestibles known as fruit, see apple, banana, eucalyptus leaf, melon, or pear.
For other uses of the term, see fruit.
% Slime mold.png
Name slime mold
Base price 17 zm
Nutrition 250
Turns to eat 1
Weight 5
Conduct vegan

"Slime mold" is the default name for the customizable fruit that appears in NetHack. It is a comestible that is veggy and considered vegan, and its name can be defined via the fruit option.

Generation

Tourists may start with nameable fruits among their random food items.[1]

Nameable fruits make up 340 (7.5%) of all comestibles randomly generated on the ground, in general shops or as death drops. Delicatessens and health food stores can also stock nameable fruit. A hero that dies and leaves a bones file with any nameable fruits in it will have the names of those fruits preserved.

In a game where Orctown is generated, the named orc-captain that leads the invading horde may generate with some nameable fruits in their inventory, and the fruit will be named either "paddle cactus" or "dwarven root".[2][3]

Applying a charged horn of plenty has a a 6.9% chance of generating one or two nameable fruits.[4]

To wish for a nameable fruit, the player must input "fruit" regardless of its current name.

Description

Eating the nameable fruit grants 250 nutrition and takes a single turn to consume it. A hero can throw nameable fruits to tame domestic herbivorous monsters and pacify domestic carnivores.

In addition to messages from a hero or monster eating a nameable fruit, the fruit's name is also used for messages related to the following:

Naming

A player can use the fruit option to change the name of the fruit to almost anything they like: if they do so with a game in progress, existing fruit will keep their current name, while newly-generated fruit will use the new name. The chosen name has no impact on gameplay, except that differently-named fruits do not stack.

The game will properly parse phrases such as "slice of pizza", "bowl of gruel", and "leg of ham" and return the appropriate output for relevant messages (e.g., "This tastes like ham juice" when a hero quaffs fruit juice with the fruit being named "leg of ham"). However, NetHack will prevent players from naming their fruit after a corpse or tin, or else naming them with a word indicating beatitude status, and they will instead be given a candied corpse, tin, or blessed/cursed/uncursed fruit.[5]

Silly suggestions for fruit names can be found on nethack.alt.org (along with some much-less-advisable ones). A fairly common form of usually-harmless griefing is to name fruits after highly desirable items, or end the fruit's name with the sentence "You die... --More--".

History

The nameable fruit first appears in NetHack 3.0.0, where it replaces the slice of pizza as a food item; from NetHack 3.0.1 to NetHack 3.1.3, the nameable fruit is a compile-time option, with the slice of pizza appearing instead if the option was disabled. Nameable fruit fully replaces the slice of pizza in NetHack 3.2.0.

The possibility for an Orc Town orc-captain to generate with named fruit is introduced in NetHack 3.6.2 via commit 9eb78308.[6]

Origin

"Slime mold" or "slime mould" is an informal name given to several kinds of life forms; their informal name refers to the life cycle stages where they can appear as gelatinous "slime". More than 900 species of slime mold occur globally and can be found in tropical and forest biomes, as well as any habitat with sufficient conditions, including soil and even air conditioners or rain gutters. Slime molds spend part of their lives as isolated amoeboid and haploid cells; when a chemical signal is released, they aggregate and fuse to form a multicellular organism (or plasmodium) which reproduces and makes spores.

Slime molds slither over the ground and fallen tree trunks to feed on microorganisms that live in dead plant material, and scatter spores like plants and fungi, which grow into new slime molds; formerly classified as fungi, they have since been grouped with protists as far back as 1995. Most slime molds are smaller than a few centimetres, but some species may reach sizes up to several square metres and masses up to 20 kilograms.

Angband also features edible slime molds, but has no option to rename the item. Because slime molds are defenseless living creatures in the game, some players do not eat them–this has lead to the tradition of naming individual slime molds and keeping them as pets.

Paddle cactus

The prickly pear or pear cactus, also known as the paddle cactus, is a group of flowering cacti under the genus Opuntia,. The genus is named for the Ancient Greek city of Opus, where the philosopher Theophrastus claimed an edible plant grew that could propagate by rooting its leaves. The most common culinary species is the Indian fig opuntia (O. ficus-indica): a large, trunk-forming, segmented cactus that may grow to 5–7m (16–23 feet) with a crown of over 3m (10 ft) in diameter and a trunk diameter of 1m (1 yard).

Dwarven root

"Dwarven root" is the informal name for a type of food that appears in Unfinished Tales of Númenor and Middle-earth, a collection of stories and alternate narratives by J.R.R. Tolkien that were not completed in his lifetime, but edited and concluded by his son Christopher and first published in 1980; these stories are the source of the encyclopedia entry used for the name.

While in the company of Mîm the dwarf, the human Túrin Turambar is introduced to a meal made of roots that Mîm shares with his band of men. When asked about them, Mîm states that their names are only known in dwarven languages, and that dwarvenkind keeps their location a secret to prevent mankind from taking the root for themselves; conversely, Mîm claims that "wild" woodland Elves are largely unaware as well, whereas Grey-elves have sought but not found them, and High Elves were too prideful to even consider the notion. The "dwarven root" is described as filling and somewhat like bread when cooked and eaten.

Variants

SLASH'EM

In SLASH'EM, slime molds can be generated in the fungus farm special room.

dNetHack

In dNetHack, notdNetHack and notnotdNetHack, several nameable fruits with various names can be generated in the possession of heroes and monsters alike:

  • Drow Healers start with 5-10 slime molds named "mushroom cakes". Non-player drow monsters that are not generated with specific sets of equipment have a 15 chance of generating with a slime mold named "mushroom cake".

Named fruits can also occur in the various alignment quests:

  • In the Mithardir variant of the Chaos Quest, Elshava (where the portal from the main dungeon leads) may contain a fishery shop run by a deep one shopkeeper or a sea garden run by a Yurian shopkeeper, both of which sell named slime molds; fishery fruits can be named "salted fish", "pickled fish", "fried squid", "baked clams", "live oysters", or "sea cucumbers", while sea garden fruits can be named "algae mats" or "seaweed".
  • One of the Outlands rings map inclusions is a "fishing village" inhabited by deep ones that has a 19 chance of generating a fruit named "salted fish" on each square.
  • The Law Quest may generate Valavi shepherd's mounds as map inclusions in Arcadia, which are special shops that sell fruits named "mutton roast" and "lump of wood" among other goods.

Fruits named "loaf of baked bread" and "honeydew" may appear among the food items found in antholes, which have a higher chance of being populated with specific food item types compared to antholes in NetHack.

xNetHack

In xNetHack, nameable fruits generated on specific days will be named to represent treats from holidays that fall on those dates. The list of holiday fruit names and the conditions they are generated under are listed below:

  • "bowl of zoni" (New Year's Day, Samurai only)
  • "datemaki" (New Year's Day, Samurai only)
  • "kuromame" (New Year's Day, Samurai only)
  • "box of chocolates" (Valentine's Day)
  • "chocolate-covered strawberry" (Valentine's Day)
  • "slice of king cake" (Mardi Gras)
  • "beignet" (Mardi Gras)
  • "bowl of gumbo" (Mardi Gras)
  • "bowl of jambalaya" (Mardi Gras)
  • "irrational pie" (Pi Day)
  • "perfectly circular pie" (Pi Day)
  • "Caesar salad" (Ides of March)
  • "easter egg" (Easter)
  • "chocolate bunny" (Easter)
  • "bag of jelly beans" (Easter)
  • "maple sugar candy" (Canada Day)
  • "bag of candy corn" (Halloween)
  • "lollipop" (Halloween)
  • "popcorn ball" (Halloween)
  • "roast turkey drumstick" (Thanksgiving)
  • "mashed potato with gravy" (Thanksgiving)
  • "cup of cranberry sauce" (Thanksgiving)
  • "slice of pumpkin pie" (Thanksgiving)
  • "ma'amoul" (Eid al-Fitr)
  • "baklava" (Eid al-Fitr)
  • "kleicha" (Eid al-Fitr)
  • "pan de muerto" (Day of the Dead/Dia De Los Muertos)
  • "honeyed apple" (Rosh Hashanah)
  • "matzo ball" (Passover)
  • "latke" (Hanukkah)
  • "sufganiyah" (Hanukkah)
  • "sugar plum" (Christmas)
  • "candy cane" (Christmas)
  • "figgy pudding" (Christmas)
  • "fruitcake" (Christmas)

Encyclopedia entry

Slime mold

Slime mold or slime fungus, organism usually classified with the fungi, but showing equal affinity to the protozoa. Slime molds have complex life cycles with an animal-like motile phase, in which feeding and growth occur, and a plant-like immotile reproductive phase. The motile phase, commonly found under rotting logs and damp leaves, consists of either solitary amoebalike cells or a brightly colored multinucleate mass of protoplasm called a plasmodium, which creeps about and feeds by amoeboid movement.

[ The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia ]

Paddle cactus

Opuntia, commonly called prickly pear, is a genus in the cactus family, Cactaceae. Prickly pears are also known as tuna (fruit), sabra, nopal (paddle, plural nopales) from the Nahuatl word nopalli for the pads, or nostle, from the Nahuatl word nochtli for the fruit; or paddle cactus.

[ Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia ]

Dwarven root

But when they were cooked these roots proved good to eat, somewhat like bread; and the outlaws were glad of them, for they had long lacked bread save when they could steal it. "Wild Elves know them not; Grey-elves have not found them; the proud ones from over the Sea are too proud to delve," said Mim.

"What is their name?" said Turin.

Mim looked at him sidelong. "They have no name, save in the Dwarf-tongue, which we do not teach," he said. "And we do not teach Men to find them, for Men are greedy and thriftless, and would not spare till all the plants had perished; whereas now they pass them by as they go blundering in the wild. No more will you learn of me; but you may have enough of my bounty, as long as you speak fair and do not spy or steal." Then again he laughed in his throat.

"They are of great worth." he said. "More than gold in the hungry winter, for they may be hoarded like the nuts of a squirrel, and already we were building our store from the first that are ripe."

[ Unfinished Tales, Part 1, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]

Custom fruit

The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that the information below is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate it.

This encyclopedia entry will be printed when looking up "fruit", "fruitname", or any string that has been used for a fruit in the game so far and does not already match something else in the encyclopedia.

They say this is edible. Some adventurers have strange tastes.

See also

References