Endings

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While RimWorld can be played for as long as you want, the game can come to an end in a few different ways. Counting all available DLC, there are 4 distinct ways to see the credits screen:

There are also two other ways to get a form of game over:

Colonists left behind after a ship launch or the royal ascent quest can continue the colony where it left off. If all colonists are gone or killed, then a wanderer event or refugee chased quest can restart the colony. Awakening the void will allow the game to continue with all current colonists, including those who took part in awakening the void. The archonexus and planetkiller will destroy the planet, ending the game permanently. With these two endings, you can restart from a previous save, even with permadeath mode.

Ship to the Stars[edit]

Launch a ship to space, guided by an AI persona core. Both the "Ship to the Stars" quest (i.e. journey offer) and building your own ship give the same ending.

Briefing[edit]

Requirements:

  • Have a functional ship. Either travel to the journey offer, or build your own ship.
  • Activate the ship reactor, which takes 15 days. During this time, you will be assaulted by countless raids - anywhere from 15 to 25 in total. This is completely independent from, and in addition to, your storyteller, who will send their own raids on their normal schedule. This means that you should expect a minimum of 1 raid per day, often multiple.
  • Each colonist or animal requires their own ship cryptosleep casket to leave the planet, which may be desired on a personal level. The journey offer ship has space for 18 colonists.

Failure conditions:

  • Destruction of the ship reactor.

Failure simply means that you will have to do the process over again. The game won't end, so long as colonists are still alive.

Journey Offer Failure:
These following factors will make the journey offer ship unavailable or invalid:

  • Destruction of any vital ship part. If you can rebuild the ship part, then everything is fine.
  • The Ship to the Stars quest does not generate. (There is a minimum distance - spawning near the center on a smaller 30% map can rarely cause spawn to be invalid. Being surrounded by impassible ocean/mountain may also cause generation to fail)
  • Doing the archonexus chain of quests - this makes the journey offer invalid.

You can still build your own ship, possibly using the components of the old one.

Obtaining a ship[edit]

There are two ways to get a functional spaceship:

  • The journey offer (the actual "Ship to the Stars" quest).
  • Building your own ship.

Traveling to the journey offer[edit]

Journey offer event ship.

You will receive the Ship to the Stars quest in roughly 20 days from colony start. The quest creates an event space within 200 to 800 tiles from your original settlement, usually as far away as possible. This means that a world generated with 30% map coverage will make traveling to the event tile a much less arduous task than a world with 100% coverage.

You can reach the ship as soon as the quest spawns and you have the physical ability to make the trip. However, the ship itself is worth about Silver 55000, which is in addition to the wealth from your defenses and colonists. Wealth directly contributes towards the size of the raiders via the raid points mechanic - tribals stuck with short bows are ill advised to enter the ship's tile.

There are multiple approaches to actually reaching the ship:

  • Make the one-way trip.

This trip can take anywhere from a quadrum to 2 years, depending on the map and map coverage. Pack food. Or a way to buy food. In addition, colonists will automatically forage for food, so long as the biome supports it - see Foraged Food Amount for factors. A tribal colony with multiple colonists great at Plants could survive off foraging alone, but most realistic colonies will need to bring extra.

Each baseline colonist requires 32 pemmican / berries or 2 packaged survival meals per day. Ambushes, mental breaks, food poisoning, and the season can all slow the caravan down, so bring more than what the game's estimated travel time states. In practice, you can also buy food with light and valuable goods like silver, gold, and drugs, so long as at least 1 friendly faction base is within your path. Alternatively, you can settle down for a short while to get more food - see the next subsection for details.

Usual caravan tips apply. Bring bedrolls so that your colonists do not sleep on the ground (construct the bedroll, then uninstall it to bring as an item). Mental breaks slow the caravan down, but minor and major breaks are otherwise harmless. And due to the lowered expectations moodlets, colonists will be somewhat happy. Horses or other ridable pack animals like donkeys are highly recommended to speed up the trip, though they must be fed when unable to graze.

  • Be nomadic, creating multiple settlements.

Any passible tile not adjacent to a faction base can be settled, for as long or as little as you want. Whenever it's a pitstop to hunt animals and grow a batch of rice, or a semi-permanent encampment, settling can be a viable means to travel to the destination. You could play the entire game this way if so desired.

Pod launchers and transport pods take a total of Steel 110 steel, Component 2 components, and Chemfuel 150 chemfuel to carry 150kg of weight to 66 tiles. As one drop won't be enough to make it to the ship, you will need to settle at the landing site and build another set of pods. Steel can be mined or deconstructed at the landing site, reducing the weight per pod to 9kg.

Transport pods are faster than traveling, but require pods to be researched, and a lot of components. With many colonists, it can get very expensive to launch all the pods, even without considering the steel. You should have a great miner and good construction pawn, and ways to regulate mood between the relays. An alternative is to simply use 1 set of transport pods to make the trip faster, traveling the rest of the way by foot.

Farskip will send a non-burdened caravan of any size anywhere on the world, so long as another conscious colonist is already there. This is a very easy method to bringing everybody to the journey destination, so long as you have a level 5+ psycaster that actually has far skip.

Send 1 pawn, preferably great at Plants, preferably with a horse, alone to the ship. This pawn should not be the farskip user. When the pawn is (almost) there, send a caravan with the farskipper along with your rest of the colony, including food and supplies. You can leave a pawn at the colony if you feel the need to go back at any time.

Building the ship[edit]

Minimum amount of resources to create a functional ship, with space for 1 colonist. 8x13 in size.

To build a ship, you will need:

To get the resources for the ship, most players will use either a deep drill + ground-penetrating scanner or a long-range mineral scanner. You can also get supplies from traders, though each trader only has so much material. Generally, the most difficult material to get are the advanced components - you'll want multiple crafters and multiple fabrication benches to manufacture them.

The persona core is also a troublesome item. The most consistent way to get one is to ask any faction with 40+ goodwill on the comms console, for the cost of 1500 silver. This spawns an item stash quest, which will be guarded by a few raiders. You can also get one through regularly generated quests.

Notably, the ship reactor can be activated as soon as it is built. As gathering the supplies and actually constructing the other ship parts increases your wealth, it is technically optimal to start the reactor without the other ship parts. This also makes it easier to build 3-4 layers of walls around it, practically making it a non-target outside of breachers or sieges.

  • Forming a second colony

It is possible to form a second (third, fourth...) colony solely for the purpose of the ship. To have access to multiple colonies, change the maximum colony setting (in Options/Gameplay). Transport pods from your main colony will provide necessary supplies. The ultimate goal is to minimize wealth, decreasing the size of raids. This also increases the relative strength of certain defenses, like traps, turrets, and the immediate military aid from a comms console.

N.B. There is a minimum of 500 raid points for any raid caused by the ship launch, no matter how much wealth you have. Before accounting for colonist count or other factors, you can have up to Silver 94,000 "storyteller wealth" in Strive to Survive difficulty (100% threat scale) before raids start to become bigger. At the maximum of 500% threat scale, you have a leeway of roughly Silver 30,000 wealth. Values will become smaller for each colonist you have. Storyteller wealth is similar to colony wealth, but buildings only count as half.

Ideally, you should send 1-2 pawns with good Plants, Construction, and Medical into a temperate/warm biome, so they can be self-sustaining. A mountain tile can be good for its natural defense - while the ship cannot be built under overhead mountain, you can use the mountainous terrain as protection. Build the reactor (and possibly the rest of the ship), surround it in multiple layers of walls, and prepare for the ship launch.

The downside is pretty simple: work. Setting up a colony and sending all those transport pods is a lot of extra time, both for the player and colonists. You won't have access to any pre-existing defenses in your colony, so you will have to rebuild accordingly. Plus, you will lose mood bonuses from impressive Dining / Recreation / Bedrooms, unless you bring some sculptures in. Ultimately, you should not have to feel forced to establish a second colony - it's disabled by default, after all.

Ship Launch[edit]

The ship launch is the 15-day activation period of the ship reactor. You will be hit with constant human and mechanoid raids, 10-20 in total plus threats that may be normally fired via the storyteller. If the ship is complete and remains intact, then your colonists can board the ship and leave the rimworld.

The ship launch event is broken into 10 cycles of 1.5 days each. Each 1.5 day cycle sends one or two raids with a 50% chance for each option. The ship launch raids now have 500 Raid Points minimum, which is roughly equivalent to 8 human enemies. Some Storyteller fired threats will still fire during the ship launch.

Launch preparations[edit]

  • (Journey Offer) Make accommodations for your colonists.

Like with any colony, a great dining and recreation room goes a long way towards improving colonist mood. You can also take the time to make sculptures, grow food / drugs, and gather other supplies you'll need. Relax - you can take as long as you'd like to start the ship.

If needed, then weapons and armor can be created on site. Extra ship cryptosleep caskets and one ship engine can be deconstructed to make some charge rifles.

  • Protect the ship.

That much is clear. Surrounding the ship with multiple layers of walls will keep it safe from most enemies. Raiders (other than breachers and sappers) will never target a wall if there is a combatant target (colonist, powered turret) they can access without a breaking a wall/door. Walling off the ship is harder with the journey offer ship, though 1-2 layers of walls are still recommended.

If you've built the ship on an established colony, then you should already have general defenses against raiders. If not, then build some. Make killboxes if so desired.

  • (Optional) Take the devil's bargain.

Luciferium improves a colonist's overall performance, at the cost of permanent addiction. However, addiction - on a gameplay level - does not matter once you've entered space. 3 doses of luciferium are required per colonist to last the ship launch, if the ship is actually complete (i.e. don't do this with just a ship reactor).

Ship defense[edit]

Raids can happen as soon as you press the "Activate Reactor" button. The startup sound doesn't even have to complete for enemies to appear.

There isn't anything different about ship launch raids in particular. The ship is not some sort of special target - if you've surrounded it with walls, then it will be safe from ordinary raids. The raids will be just as large as a regular raid, with access to all of the same strategies and arrival methods.

At any point, a colony should be prepared to fight breachers, sappers, sieges, and drop pods landing directly into the base, as well as standard frontal attacks. Manhunter packs and infestations will not happen because of the ship launch, though the storyteller can still cause these events to happen. In Biotech, wealthier colonies should prepare for fighting all 3 mechanoid commanders.Content added by the Biotech DLC

Note that all those raider corpses and weapons will contribute towards raid points, making each successive raid of the ship launch that much larger. Fire is your best means of disposal, though an electric crematorium works when it's raining.

In addition to actually fighting the raids, you'll have to contend with a potentially much larger issue...

Mood management[edit]

Staying awake all night shooting at raiders isn't a particularly fun experience, at least for those without bloodlust. A drop pod raid ruining your recreation room will make everybody suffer. Even minor mental breaks can be devastating - having a colonist wander out of cover mid-fight is very dangerous. Therefore, avoiding mental breaks should be your #1 priority. Things can quickly spiral out of control if colonists die while your base is already in shambles.

  • Set up a polyphasic schedule. This means alternating between Recreation and Sleep, and only Recreation and Sleep (ex. repeat 3 hours sleep, 5 hours recreation, three times). Colonists will still be able to work once both needs are satisfied, or if you prioritize the work task.
  • Use fine meals or lavish meals. Lavish meals give +12 mood, and you can cook them before you start the reactor. Alternatively, you can have your colonists default to fine meals, and order them to eat a lavish meal once mood gets too low. Meals can be eaten regardless of how full a colonist is.
  • Use drugs. Like with luciferium, drug addiction does not matter (on a gameplay level) once your colonists have left the planet, so long as you have some drug left. Note that hard drugs still have a risk of overdose. All drug moodlets stack completely, even for similar drugs like yayo and flake. You can set a drug policy for colonists to carry drugs, to be taken as needed.
    • Beer gives a +10 moodlet for only -2% Manipulation, if you drink only 1 or 2 a day. Psychite tea gives a +12 moodlet and ambrosia, +5, for no downsides so long as withdrawal is avoided.
    • Use wake-up if you need stuff done *immediately*, such as repairing the outer walls of your colony. It also gives a +5 moodlet and restores Rest.
    • Yayo gives +35 mood. Use if you need to stop mental breaks, now. Flake gives another +35 moodlet, but comes with a higher overdose chance. Use flake if yayo alone isn't enough.

Ending - Leaving the planet[edit]

You've launched the ship! Your AI will now try to guide the ship to a safe place. It might find a prosperous planet for you in this system, Or, it may undertake a centuries-long journey to another star. It might even decide to hide under ice on an asteroid for a few thousand years, waiting for someone to build a new glitterworld here. You'll find out when you wake up.

— Endgame text for Ship Launch on new ship or from Journey Offer

After the ship is complete, and the reactor activated, you can set your colonists off to space. Each colonist or animal requires their own ship cryptosleep casket. Once you confirm the launch, you hear the roar of rocket engines as the screen fades to white. The credits roll as the ending theme song plays. The credits will list colonists who died to commemorate them.

Royal Ascent[edit]

Host the High Stellarch, and leave the rimworld on a shuttle.

Briefing[edit]

Requirements:

  • Have a colonist of Count rank and not be hostile to the empire faction.
  • Have a spare bedroom suitable for a stellarch at the time of acceptance (see Titles#Table of Requirements). Your count must also have a suitable bedroom.
  • House the High Stellarch for 12 days, which is a controllable guest. Like the ship launch, you will be assaulted by a massive quantity of raiders. You can't just use a cryptosleep casket to preserve the stellarch until the end.
  • You will also receive 4 cataphract-level soldiers (Stellic Wardens or Defenders). These soldiers can die without consequence. Like any other soldier guest, they will have the +12 On Duty moodlet. They are always nobles of Knight or Dame rank, so they will come with psycasts and be conceited.
  • The High Stellarch must be kept above 25% average mood for the duration of his stay.

Failure conditions:

  • High Stellarch dies.
  • High Stellarch mood is too low for too long.
  • The empire faction becomes hostile to you.

Your count/countess does not have to stay alive in order to successfully complete the quest.

The Royal Ascent quest will be offered again periodically if it is failed. It takes roughly 22 days from failure to get this quest again. This quest technically fails if you abandon the colony it asks for, but it will refire again.

Housing the stellarch[edit]

The stellarch will come with the clothes necessary for his stature. You'll have to provide for the rest of a conceited noble's needs.

The noble requirements for stellarch are exactly equal to that of the count rank. In specific:

Throne & Bed[edit]

Throne

A throne room can be shared by multiple nobles. This means that you can use the same room as your count. However, each noble requires their own throne.

Bed

Couples can share a royal bed, but your count and the stellarch will need separate rooms.

The impressiveness can easily be met by meeting the space/fine floor requirements, and using a few sculptures. The rest of the requirements don't need much explanation. For a comparison of the fine floors available to you, see Fine floor#Analysis. Ideally, you'll want the stellarch's rooms to be somewhat defensible, in case of drop pod raids. At the very least, have some avenue for escape.

Food[edit]

Lavish meals should be your go-to food for the stellarch, due to the +12 mood boost. Humans require 2 meals a day, so that's 24 lavish meals if none of your other colonists are eating them. You may want to set colonists (and the guards) to not eat lavish as a result. Chocolate is the other food that can be farmed and ingested safely.

Insect jelly, milk, and berries can be used in a pinch, but all come at the risk of food poisoning. Beer can only be ingested so much until you black out. Ambrosia cannot be farmed consistently. If required, fine meals will provide a net −3 moodlet when ingested.

Surviving the onslaught[edit]

  • Raids are still the same.

For raiders, the stellarch isn't treated any differently than a regular colonist. Against most raid types, keeping them inside a bedroom should be enough for the purposes of safety. Be prepared for any type of raid possible. Most likely, it will be drop pods that are the greatest threat to the noble's life.

  • Use what you have.

The stellarch is a level 6 psycaster. The stellic guards can be up to level 3 psycasters. Use these powers. Don't shy away from bringing the stellarch in combat - just keep them in the backlines. Even low level abilities like Stun and Vertigo Pulse can be very useful, let alone staples like Skip, Berserk, and Berserk Pulse. Unfortunately, your guests are unable to use permits.
With the Biotech DLC, it is likely that some or all of the stellic guards will be hussarsContent added by the Biotech DLC. This xenotype has its perks, such as superfast wound healing, reduced pain, and go-juice resistance, but they are psychically deaf, meaning no psychic powers are usable without xenogerm replacement. They also come with a dependence to go-juice, so remember to get some.

  • Don't anger the empire.

Friendly fire can occasionally lower goodwill with the empire. A poorly aimed Berserk Pulse or Neuroquake can make the empire hostile. Ideally, you should use caravans or drop pods to send gifts until you reach +100 goodwill, and then prepare extra pods filled with goodies just in case.

Mood (Stellarch & Colonist)[edit]

In practice, the mood of the stellarch shouldn't be too much of an issue - so long as your base is intact. Lavish meals, a suitable throneroom and bedroom, extremely impressive dining/recreation rooms, and a constant recreation/sleep schedule means that a well-off colony shouldn't even have to worry about minor mental breaks. However, things are bound to go wrong with so many raids. A few splatters of blood can make a bedroom unsuitable for a noble. Ideally, you should be avoiding any mental breaks - the minor break threshold is 35% for a regular pawn, which is greater than the 25% requirement for the quest.

Because keeping mood is important for everybody, both general purpose and (practically) stellarch only methods of increasing mood are included.

Ways that don't hinder combat:
Mostly transposed from the Ship Launch section

  • Clean stuff up. Dirt and blood will quickly lower the Impressiveness of any room they are in.
  • Set up a polyphasic schedule. This means alternating between Recreation and Sleep, and only Recreation and Sleep (ex. repeat 3 hours sleep, 5 hours recreation, three times). Colonists will still be able to work once both needs are satisfied, or if you prioritize the work task. The stellarch can't work at all, so there's no reason not to have constant recreation or meditation.
  • Have lavish meals for everybody. For colonists and guards, fine meals will stack with lavish meals. Meals can be eaten regardless of how full a colonist is. You may want to assign colonists and guards to fine meals by default, and manually order them to eat lavish once a day.
  • Use drugs. Nobles can get addicted, and you won't get penalized.
    • Beer, psychite tea, and ambrosia (if you have it) all give positive moodlets at 0 risk of death.
    • Use wake-up if you need stuff done *immediately*, such as repairing the outer walls of your colony. It also gives a +5 moodlet and restores Rest.
  • Watch out for ideoligion.Content added by the Ideology DLC The empire's ideoligion will be different than yours. Don't expect to butcher humans and not peeve off the stellarch. Unless you've edited the empire's ideoligion accordingly.

Ways that hinder combat:

  • All the drugs. Get blackout drunk. Smokeleaf becomes a valid option. Yayo and Flake are "safe" - overdoses are technically a positive, since they render a pawn unconscious. Just beware of the tiny chance of death from a major overdose.
  • Joywires. Installing a joywire is not considered a harmful operation, and gives a permanent +30 moodlet. The consciousness penalty does make the target easier to kill, however.
    • However, Word of Joy is considered harmful, despite being the exact same effect. It gives a −25 goodwill penalty with the empire, increased to −30 if it is towards natural goodwill. But because it lasts for 7 days, Word of Joy can still be viable to use.

Even in the base game, there's always a chance that the stellarch is a teetotaler, so plan ahead. And with the Ideology DLC, the empire's ideoligionContent added by the Ideology DLC will often contain the Drugs: Medical Only or Drugs: Medical / Social precept. This precept can be removed at the start of the game, but otherwise cannot be circumvented. This precept also makes waster Content added by the Biotech DLC and hussar Content added by the Biotech DLC pawns unhappy taking the drugs they need to survive.

Ending - Joining the royal court[edit]

You've escaped on the Imperial shuttle! The high stellarch will now welcome you into the Imperial flotilla as an honored noble party. You might stay in the Imperial court and jockey for political power. Perhaps you'll avoid the drama and focus on enjoying ultratech luxuries. Or, you might even buy a ship and set a course for your long-lost home. The choice is up to you.

— Endgame text after the shuttle containing the Stellarch departs with at least one colonist from the colony inside.

Once the onslaught is over, a shuttle will come pick the stellarch and your colonists up.

While the shuttle's actual loading screen can only fit 1000kg, you can load infinitely many colonists by selecting the colonist, right clicking the shuttle, and clicking "get in the shuttle". The stellic guardians do not need to be loaded into the shuttle, even if they are still alive.

The Archonexus[edit]

Awaken the archonexus core, unleashing insurmountable power into the world.

Briefing[edit]

Requirements:

  • The Archonexus quest appears once you have reached $150,000 wealth. To accept the quest, you must have a colony of at least $350,000 wealth and be allied with a specific faction. If no factions are available to ally, then "a group of wild people" will offer the quest for no extra requirement.
  • Sell your colony for an archotech map piece. If you had multiple colonies, all of them will be sold. You will start a new colony anywhere on the map, and are able to create a new ideoligion. Research is reset to Crashlanded.
  • You will get all the items from your original scenario, and can bring the following:
    • 5 colonists, with all their apparel, including any armor (but not their weapons or utility slot)
    • 5 animals. Does not include mechanoidsContent added by the Biotech DLC
    • 1 relic.
    • 7 stacks of items.
  • Get a total of 3 colonies to $350,000 wealth. Study the major archotech structure and then the grand archotech structure. These give a mood debuff for nearby pawns who are not psychically deaf, increasing as you get closer. They cannot be destroyed by any means.
  • Once the third map piece is obtained, you don't need to restart again. You can travel with all of your current colonists to the archonexus core. It is guarded by a small amount of mechanoids, but they start dormant and do not actually need to be fought. Regardless, the mechs are likely to be little challenge for a colony who has reached the archonexus.


Failure conditions:

  • None, besides a colony wipe.

Overall, the archonexus is the most relaxed of the three endings, but easily the longest. You could do multiple ship launches by the time it takes to reach the archonexus. This quest line should be treated as a "New Game Plus" with your favorite colonists, rather than some form of ultimate ending. Note that increasing wealth still increases the power of standard raids, so you'll have to contend with those for the entire time.

Gaining wealth/allies[edit]

Wealth can be gained by simply progressing through the game. Perform vast deep drill or long-range mineral scanner operations. Outfit all your colonists with bionics and full sets of marine armor / cataphract armorContent added by the Royalty DLC. Build a luxurious base, and wonderously impressive rooms. The mechanitorContent added by the Biotech DLC is a natural way to increase wealth - a mechanoid army is powerful and wealthy. Basically, you don't need to rush it. The more prepared you are for the new colony, the better.

The Production Specialist role is valuable for increasing quality of items, which increases both wealth and functionality. A set of masterwork charge rifles is bound to boost your wealth by the tens of thousands, and it serves a function. Combine with masterwork/legendary sculptures, armor, royal beds, and 350k should be hit in no time.

If you still need to make some cash, check out the money making guide. Important note: colony wealth does not care about actual silver, just Market Value. As you always sell at a market loss, selling your goods is actually counterproductive towards increasing wealth.

Theoretical wealth transport[edit]

With all 3 DLCs active, it is theoretically possible to bring over $350,000 wealth with you to the next colony, in the right set-up. A legendary gold plate armor and crownContent added by the Royalty DLC, thrumbofur formal shirtContent added by the Royalty DLC and pants, and hyperweave face maskContent added by the Biotech DLC are worth Silver 37,890. A full set of bionics are worth Silver 40,607, along with a base of Silver 1,750 for humans. Note that psylinksContent added by the Royalty DLC and mechanitor implantsContent added by the Biotech DLC do not add wealth. With 5 pawns, you'll reach well over 392,000 wealth. This is in addition to the relic, brought items, and animals.

However, you'll need to study the major archotech structure / grand archotech structure to completion, ally any requisite factions, and deal with the raids boosted by the incredible wealth.

Allies[edit]

You can easily ally any faction within 66 tiles by loading a transport pod full with valuable goodies like flake. For a colony with deep drills, a ground-penetrating scanner, and a fabrication bench, the cost of each pod is trivial. By the time you reach the wealth threshold, you should have enough stuff to spare.

If there isn't a faction base within pod range, then things get a bit harder. You'll have to make a caravan and send stuff this way - flake is great due to how light it is. A transport pod or shuttleContent added by the Royalty DLC can launch the first leg of the trip, then a horse can run the rest.

Founding a new colony[edit]

You have the freedom to pick any location, and have the ability to reform or make an entirely new ideoligion. Otherwise...

Things to bring[edit]

  • 5 Colonists

With colonists, treat the new colony like... a new colony. You'll want, at the very least, Plants, Construction, Cooking, Medical, and Intellectual roles to be fulfilled. You may want to bring virtually any other skill, too. Of course, you can just bring your 5 favorite colonists and hope things turn out for the best.

It's best not to bring a luciferium addict to a new colony, or at least, only bring 1 of them.

  • 5 Animals

Bring animals that you can feed. Grazers are preferred. Note that dryads will vanish after about a quadrum of time.

  • 1 Relic

If you have a charge rifle, or any other relic that is a weapon, then bring that. Otherwise, there's no point not bringing whatever relic you already have.

  • 7 Items

If your scenario has food and medicine, then you shouldn't need to worry about those. Materials like steel and plasteel can be obtained at any time. Instead, focus on weapons and things that can help rebuild, possibly components and advanced components. If you started with Naked Brutality, then you'll need to bring some essentials with you.

See #List of items for how much you can bring at a time.

Studying the archotech structures[edit]

Considering how long it takes to get to $350,000 wealth again, the actual study of the archonexus should be a non-issue. At the very worst, you can hook a sacrifical pawn up with constant doses of yayo until it finishes the research.

Do not build your colony near the Archotech Structure! A wide area near the structure gives your pawns a major mood debuff and also kills your crops before they can mature. You may want to forbid this area in your assigned Zones.

List of items[edit]

Item Max Allowed Value of Max
Beer 50 600
Ambrosia 20 300
Luciferium 50 3500
Flake 25 350
Go-juice 25 1325
Wake-up 25 875
Yayo 200 4200
Smokeleaf joint 50 550
Installable body parts
(organic or artificial)
1 2,800
Any archotech prosthetic
Most raw food
Pemmican
Kibble
200 -
Meals
Inc. Packaged survival meals
40 -
Chocolate 80 240
Milk 80 152
Insect jelly 150 1200
Eggs (any) 10 70
Herbal medicine 20 200
Medicine 10 180
Glitterworld medicine 5 250
Component 10 320
Advanced component 5 1000
Chemfuel 100 230
Neutroamine 25 150
Hay 400 240
Silver 1000 1000
Gold 100 1000
Steel 80 152
Plasteel 80 720
Wood 150 180
Uranium 80 480
Jade 80 400
Stone blocks (any) 100 90
All textiles
(Inc. thrumbofur and hyperweave)
80 1120
Thrumbofur
All weapons 1 18,060
Leg. Golden Warhammer Content added by the Royalty DLC
13,060
Leg. Golden Longsword
All utility items 1 1,200
Various
Inert relics 0 -
Mini-turret
Mortar
0 -

Awakening the core[edit]

You've invoked the archonexus core. The world fills with a blinding light and time seems to slow...
The machine god has noticed you. Nobody can predict what happens next. It may destroy you, or communicate with you directly, or transport your consciousness to another plane of reality. You sense a vast, inhuman structure of infinite fractal complexity flowing into your mind. Time and scale begin to dissolve. It's terrifying. It's beautiful...

— Endgame text after invoking the Archonexus core.

Once activated, the game ends permanently. Unlike with the other 2 endings, you cannot continue with colonists left behind. You can restart from a previous save, if so desired.

Colony End[edit]

Everyone is dead or gone. This story is over. Perhaps someone else will find a use for the ruins of this place.

— Popup text when there are no controllable colonists left.

Whenever all your colonists are dead, kidnapped, or have left the planet, your colony is now abandoned. Does not appear with the archonexus ending or the planetkiller.

When this happens, you have the option to create new wanderers to start the colony again.

Planetkiller[edit]

At near-lightspeed, the planetkiller weapon slammed into the ground with the force of a trillion hydrogen bombs. Like a water balloon shot with a rifle, this world liquified under the impact and sprayed its molten guts across the cosmos. Part of [planet name] is now a small asteroid belt. The rest is a molten, radioactive hellscape, constantly rippling with kilometers-high planetquakes. You did not survive.

— Popup text after the planetkiller weapon drops into the planet.

If the Planetkiller is enabled at the scenario, then you will have a certain number of days or years before the planetkiller strikes, shown at the bottom right. Once the timer hits, the entire map will fade to white with the weapon obliterating the rimworld planet, and a message will be shown on your screen to state you didn't survive the impact, only allowing you to return to main menu as it permanently ends your game, regardless whether or not your colonist has escaped.

Version history[edit]

  • 1.1 - Credits now list the memory of colonists who died.
  • Royalty DLC Release - Royal ascent ending added.
  • Ideology DLC Release - Archotech ending added.
  • Anomaly DLC Release - Void ending added.