Battlefailed

""This is why we can't have nice things in Battlefailed, someone will just wind up filling it with corpses.""

- Robocorn

""My god... this was a terrible idea.""

- Seth Creiyd

One of the more recent Lets Plays of Dwarf Fortress, making the lofty (if rather accurate) claim of being the Boatmurdered of DF2010, Battlefailed has spawned two sequels and a side story.

What began as the (seemingly) coincidental combination of a genocidal plot by the Jerkass Human-Queen of the Dwarves and the curious gambit of an incredibly ancient body-surfing Sorcerer. Seven dwarves ended up on the hellish coastline separating the Plains of Ooze from the Blueness of Malodors. Halfway through the first year, most of the original settlers and a good chunk of the new arrivals were either dead or dying. Ten blood-soaked years later, the fortress was an Escher-like nightmare of tunnels, shafts and stairwells leading nowhere, under constant assault from goblins, trolls, forgotten beasts and hordes of undead grazing animals. Eventually, parts of the fort started leaking water or magma for no apparent reason, occasionally in places that it should not have been possible for water or magma to be. Extinction-level events that would kill up to half of the population became not only frequent but regular.

When Battlefailed fell, there were attempts to reclaim it and continue the awesome. They failed, the fort was flooded beyond belief and deemed unrecoverable. The sequel, FailCannon: Super Happy Fun Beach, picks up where the previous fort leaves off, and has lived up to the Battlefailed name, albeit with a slightly different style at slower a pace. An intricate Metaplot has formed out of the players' writings and the actions of the dwarves that continues to frame the gameplay.

Several months after Failcannon began, Battlefailed was reclaimed, FAILCANNON rigged to work properly, and everything cleaned up.

Failcannon fell on the aptly-named Failday, when the Faillever was pulled to unleash an army of ghosts (and water from the sea) on the fortress. Now, Hellcannon has been started as the third fortress in the series. Whether or not it will live up to the reputation of its predecessors remains to be seen, but Hellcannon is already a hideous abomination rife with death and danger, so there's that.

You can grab the most current archive here.

Tropes:
"malkomk:"Pathfinding in Failcannon is like fighting a bronze colossus with your bare hands. Only more so.""
 * After Action Report: LordSlowpoke's detailed report of Failcannon's Flooding of 529:
 * Strategia's notes on a brief scuffle with some skeletal muskoxen, which escalated a little.
 * All Just a Dream: One of the early turns gets reset because the fortress floods and the dwarves murder each other, with the Lampshade being this.
 * Also, Battlefailed's.
 * All Your Powers Combined: The Gods tend to do this when they wish to do something to another God.
 * Anyone Can Die: It's Dwarf Fortress, so it's only to be expected.
 * Ax Crazy: Spending most of his on-screen time bisecting things, Kubuk is some kind of this.
 * Badass: Urist the Blue, who
 * From Failcannon, there was Gizogin. His first action upon entering the fortress was to . He ended up as . Note that this was after he.
 * In Hellcannon, Deathsword followed Urist's example in Battlefailed and
 * Simultaneously, Gamemaster, sans left leg, with a wooden sword, vs. a skeletal ogre. Gamemaster won.
 * From the reclaim of the original battlefailed, we have Stukos the marksdawrf along with his marksdwarf squad. They prevented the rebuilt failcannon, part of which was converted into a military base, from being tested against a goblin siege by killing each and every one of them before the cannon could be fired. On the intelligence front, there's also the fortress' leader, Kikrost Duralkosoth who, unlike the previous leaders of battlefailed, manages to keep his fortress, if not thriving, surviving, despite the fact that its situated in the middle of a Death World.
 * Back in Hellcannon, Kar Puwuncobi, El Glorioso Presidente, beheaded a forgotten beast without any previous combat experience and without taking any damage.
 * Big Bad:
 * The Dragon:
 * Bilingual Bonus: In Battlefailed, Robocorn says a few phrases in goblin that actually translate with the DF goblin language.
 * "Gu ek us dotom Mokgaru!" becomes " ___ many goose bloody Whoreanus!"
 * "Obu os-usp, emxa-los!" becomes "Hail Death-god, dung-creature!"
 * In Hellcannon, a dwarf is named Kar Puwuncobi at some point. Lord Slowpoke revealed that he gave the dwarf its name and that it translates to something in one of the DF languages.
 * Bizarrchitecture: By the time it ended, Battlefailed was an absolute rat's maze of chambers, tunnels, shafts and caverns, interconnected and interlaced, some of which were rapidly flooding with water or magma.
 * The fortress of Failcannon is arguably more convoluted. Even the dwarves have trouble navigating the place, let alone the players.
 * By the time rolled around, Failcannon was such a mess of tunnels that it broke the Forgotten Beasts' pathfinding.
 * By the time rolled around, Failcannon was such a mess of tunnels that it broke the Forgotten Beasts' pathfinding.

"Darvi:"The only thing that happened in general was the death of 71% of the fort, and that wasn't really worth mentioning.""
 * Body Surf: The dwarf bearing the player Andreus' name died in the first turn. As a joke, Robocorn wrote a short journal entry about how another dwarf was being taken over by Andreus' ghost. The joke stuck, and turned into a major part of the Metaplot.
 * Breather Episode: Those happen from time to time. The last one, as of this writing, was in Turn 20 of Failcannon, where, thanks to the invading goblins and F Bs having No Sense of Direction, a pair of dwarves actually managed to survive outside the Fortress for three entire months without major incidents.

"-- Darvi"
 * Hellcannon's third year started with fortifications being erected, a massive migrant wave, and the discovery of a magma pipe which jump-started metal production. Then some skeletal muskoxen killed an elven trader.....
 * Hellcanon's second try at it's fourth year wasn't interesting enough to warrant journal updates.
 * Brought Down to Normal:
 * The Chessmaster: ThatAussieDwarf, despite having been originally introduced as a Vizzini Gambitter, has eventually been interpreted as a memetic mastermind who is behind everything.
 * The Corruption:
 * Corpse Land
 * Council of Angels: The Gods are portrayed as such. They spend far more time discussing and observing events than interfering.
 * Deadly Decadent Court: Do not share drinks with Queen Led, especially if you're a known Philosopher.
 * Dead Baby Comedy: In Failcannon, Fetus Head Smash Day. And, judging by one of Queen Led's letters to Cappstv, she seems to prefer using dwarven fetuses for the head smashing. Also, the forumgoers basically treat the Eldritch Locations that the fortresses became for laughs.
 * Diner Brawl: A distinctly lethal one erupts following a forced community meeting that results in several deaths and over a dozen fatal injuries, leaving Seth Creiyd thinking he'd made a mistake.
 * Doorstopper: The full text of the saga is currently more than 1,000 pages long.
 * Eldritch Abomination: An occupational hazard at Battlefailed.
 * Eldritch Location: The Accursed Arena saw two miners trapped in a kind of hellish temporal stasis.
 * The Ocean of Slime, first encountered in Battlefailed, was an underground sea that became tainted by noxious secretions of a turtle monster
 * The General's Daughter: The Queen's Daughter is the reason Robocorn got sent to Battlefailed in the first place.
 * The Queen's Daughter is also her only Heir, so you can't blame her. Still, the fact that the princess is willing to don a beard and fool around with a dwarf can hardly please the viciously racist Queen.
 * Goddess Of Evil:
 * God Save Us From the Queen: Played straight. Queen Led Shakeoars, human monarch of the dwarves. She worships a number of monsters and gods of death and is implied to send dwarves to the fort as a form of genocide.
 * Grand Theft Me: Andreus' dwarf dies before his turn; the result is Andreus possessing one of the other dwarves, changing him into "Andreus II".
 * It actually became a Running Gag that Andreus liked so much he continued using the plot device in all the other succession fortresses he played.
 * Since then, several other players have begun following his lead.
 * Genius Loci:
 * Haunted Castle
 * Have You Seen My God?
 * La Résistance
 * Mad Scientist: Andreus II has some elements of it, with his crazy magnetic mad science lab beneath the fortress. (It is later repurposed into a tomb, providing Robocorn's page quote.)
 * The Man Behind Everything: That Aussie Dwarf.
 * -> "That would explain why we didn't get killed by the sieges during our first months in Failcannon. Y'know, when TAD and I couldn't get into the fort. Dude bribed the goblins."


 * Master of Disguise: That Aussie Dwarf. And because they're dwarves, Wig, Dress, Accent works marvelously.
 * Meaningful Name: Battlefailed.
 * And later,.
 * Me's a Crowd: Everyone turning into The Master in Hellcannon. We see what you did there.
 * The Millstone: Whever Meng, fake doctor, fake chief engineer, Etc., was involved with something, results tended to be disasteriffic.
 * Name's the Same: Stozu is a popular name for goblins.
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Led Shakeoars, Blueness of Malodors, Plains of Ooze, Ocean of Slime, Failcannon, Battlefailed...
 * Hellcannon
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Every. Single. Administrator. Every. Single. Turn. Although this only works for an extremely liberal definition of the word "hero".
 * Nice Job Fixing It, Villains: A loose example of this can be found in the reclaim of Battlefailed, where the various poisons and dusts which permeated the old fortress became the new fortress's best defense; while the poisons killed all of the dwarves livestock and any dwarves dumb enough to take off their shoes, it stopped countless barefooted Kobold invaders and about a dozen forgotten beasts.
 * There was one instance when Hellcannon was sieged by Skelks, Goblins, and an elven caravan. They ended up killing each other, leaving the dwarves free to loot the battlefield.
 * Omniscient Morality License: Deconstructed somewhat with Catalyst, the psychic overseer who Then completely inverted when
 * Our Demons Are Different: It was planned to use them as ammo for the aptly named Hellcannon. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending how you view things), the device hasn't been completed yet.
 * Pointless Doomsday Device:.
 * Specifically, two fundamental design failures, the first being one tile of missing wall in the stack assembly and the other being poor positioning of the source pumps meant that could not draw enough water to maintain consistent pressure, and a lot of the water it did deliver leaked out of the side.
 * , which was only in the early stages of design when the entire fortress was destroyed by a rampaging Eldritch Abomination.
 * The fortress Failcannon was named after the device above. Its doomsday mechanism 'Faillever' was possibly the most pointless one ever, being built for the sole purpose of providing a suicide switch for the unholy abommination that is Failcannon. Rigged up to destroy all coffins and gravemarkers it was planned to release an enormous army of murderous ghosts to kill all living things.
 * In the reclaim of Battlefailed
 * Gizogin made one of these during his run of Hellcannon, and then handed the fort over without providing any details as to its operation.
 * Psychic Powers: The Old Man makes extensive use of precognition, telepathy and teleportation.
 * Andreus can communicate telepathically, at least when he's a ghost.
 * Running Gag: Selling the clothes of the dead for supplies.
 * Rebuilding/Moving the Trade Depot during one's turn, though this is becoming a Bay 12 tradition.
 * Andreus getting killed in a variety of ways.
 * Requesting a dwarf while declaring how likely they are to be killed quickly.
 * The Stars Are Going Out
 * The Undead: Skeletal elks (or "skelks"), among others.
 * The Undead: Skeletal elks (or "skelks"), among others.