Training

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All skills in Rimworld increase by using them; there is nothing special that needs to be done in addition to that.

In a few cases it is not obvious that a specific task trains a seemingly unrelated ability:

  • Making smokeleaf joints requires and trains cooking (not crafting).
  • Making medicine and hard drugs (flake, yayo, etc.) requires and trains intellectual (not crafting).
  • Cutting stone blocks does not train any skill (but requires crafting).
  • Making Kibble is done at the butchering table, but requires and trains cooking.
  • Butchering a dead animal is a cooking activity.
  • Brewing beer is a cooking task (not crafting, which would be plausible)
  • Many construction tasks could plausibly instead be crafting, smithing or tailoring tasks.
  • Smithing and tailoring are actually sub-skills of crafting, but do not have their own skill level.

This article talks about a few special ways to forcibly train colonists in certain skills. This is usually only necessary and recommended if you need a certain ability on a colonist, but do not want to use this person for productive work. Normally this is because an untrained worker would be a liability – for example, an untrained cook can cause food poisoning, and an untrained miner can waste valuable resources while trying to extract them.

If you train a colonist by letting them do busy work, or monkey business, you are wasting one of the most valuable colony resources, namely work hours. Only do that if you really have to.

Even a colonist that is bad at everything, and passionate for nothing (these exist...) should be a hauler and cleaner, or maybe the guy who fulfills that caravan trade request 5 days away, before you let them repair a mountain stone face for days just to get them 3 levels of construction.

Combat training

If you feel you are not prepared for the next raid, you can train a few combat abilities. This will always need to be done manually, ie. with the trainee drafted (except for hunting). That means you can not manage the colony in the mean time, and it can be difficult to train more than one colonist at a time. This probably means a net loss of productivity in your colony, so only do it if you feel it is really necessary.

Shooting

The best way to train shooting is to assign the colonist to the "hunting" task. Giving them a long-range weapon, for example a bolt-action rifle makes hunting safer, because animals are less likely to enrage and retaliate if shot at from long range. To be safe, only hunt passive animals that will never retaliate.

Deliberately damaging your own structures or buildings does not improve your shooting skill.

Aggravating animals

Outside of hunting, some resilient animals such as the Megasloth, Rhinoceros and Thrumbo can give a lot of shooting skill by kiting them, and slowly shooting them to death with a low DPS weapon. You need to be very careful with this approach, because those animals do a lot of damage if given the chance to get into your melee range. They will probably stagger or even stun you, and possibly down or even kill the colonist.

The best weapon types for this tactic are weapons with a fast windup and high shot frequency, not too short a range, and low damage. This makes you use the skill more often, by firing more shots, and has your "training dummy" last longer from low damage.

This approach does require extensive micromanagement, and you won't be able to perform other manual tasks in the colony in the meantime. It is even possible that actually killing the animal will take so long that your colonist will pass out from exhaustion or go into starvation. You must have a capable shooter available to finish off the animal and end the training if necessary.

Melee

Fighting anything with melee attacks will increase the melee skill. Hunting with melee attacks works, but animals are prone to fighting back so be warned (this is true even for animals that never retaliate when hunted from range). You will have to draft the colonist and "hunt" the animal manually by attacking it. An undrafted colonist will not hunt if they are lacking a ranged weapon.

If you want to train a character this way, use the best possible armor so they will take less damage from the animal. Taking no damage at all is usually not possible, so do not train a colonist that you require to be in good shape; they will at least have a few bruises for a couple of days, reducing their manipulation skills and movement ability. Also be aware that attacking herd animals (like muffalos and wild boars) can enrage the entire herd, usually leading to a heavily injured colonist, or worse.

Tamed animals will fight back, so they are not safe training dummies; they can however be kept in a controlled environment which makes them more convenient targets. There is also no risk of an entire herd taking revenge for you hurting their friend. You can patch up the animal you just abused afterwards, which will train the medical skill.

Using melee attacks does raise the skill very quickly, and you will hit the "soft" XP cap of 4000 points in a matter of a few attacks. Disengage afterwards, because training over the soft cap is not efficient.

To level melee more safely, take prisoners who are incapable of "Violent" and repeatedly punch, then heal them in their prison cell. To avoid accidentally killing your prisoners, use fists only with neither a melee nor ranged weapon equipped. Carefully watch the health of the prisoner pausing the game between each punch if needed. A colonist with no weapon (not even a ranged weapon) does up to 7 base blunt damage per punch (see Base Melee Stats for details), so when any single body part falls below 8 hp remaining, stop and allow the prisoner to heal. This will allow you to train medical skill as well.

Construction

Construction is already trained quite efficiently by simply using the skill, since construction is such a common activity in an expanding colony.

Smoothing walls and floors counts as construction, is very time consuming, and does have no quality penalty associated with it. It is maybe the best way to train a low skilled worker, without the risk of wasting materials or creating bad products. Having your apprentices do the smoothing keeps the master constructors free for more demanding work. Restrict the trainee colonists to the respective areas by creating a temporary zone, and let them do wall and floor smoothing exclusively for a while.

Making furniture is not the best way to train construction, because colonists with low skill will produce low quality furniture, which has then to be deconstructed and re-built, wasting material in the process. You can, however, keep deconstructing and reconstructing the furniture until the desired quality level is produced, if you do not mind losing some resources along the way; the popular mod Quality Builder helps tremendously if you want to employ this strategy.

If you are about to build a lot of walls in the colony, you can temporarily take your capable builders off the construction task, and have the workers that you want to train take over the task to build the walls (and roofs). Walls do not have a quality stat, so it is not possible for your still low-skilled builders to create bad products. They will be slower, and probably "botch" construction several times, but the end result will be the same.

Do not train construction when high value material is involved, such as cloth (for carpets) or components (when making things like power generators). If the colonist "botches" construction in these cases, a fair amount of material will be irretrievably wasted; only do this if you have plenty of surplus so it would not matter.

Repairing things to learn construction

Only do this with a colonist that really needs to be up to speed in construction now, if you have absolutely no other suitable construction work to do at the moment. Repairing structures just for training is probably the worst kind of monkey business you could give to your colonists, and a horrible waste of work hours.

You can damage structures, usually purpose-built stone walls, deliberately by damaging them with melee attacks, shots or grenade blasts, and then have your construction builders repair them.

This will not train shooting skill. Use the shooters only to damage the structure, then undraft them and have them resume their regular colony duties. Of course the shooters could be the very same people who will do the repair work just after. Shooting skill does not matter much in this case, as pretty much everybody is able to hit a wall from point blank range...

  • By far the best approach is to smooth any stone wall, damage it, and repair it. Smoothed walls count as constructed walls, so they can be repaired. A smoothed granite wall does have 900 hitpoints, almost as much as a plasteel wall. Smoothing the wall will be training construction as well, hitting two birds with a single stone.
  • Designate the colonists you intend to train so that they can only repair. Create a zone around the training area, and the general facilities of the base, then restrict the trainees to this zone.
  • Skill training becomes much less effective after 4000 XP has been acquired in a skill during a day. Take the trainees off the training task by removing their zone restriction after the XP cap has been reached for the day.

Mining training

The only issue with mining is that unskilled miners will let resources go to waste if they mine an ore vein. You can check a colonists mining yield stat to see if they are already at 100%. If they're not, do not use them to extract valuable resources from a mountain.

To train these people, restrict them to a temporary zone with a mining job in it that does not include any valuable ores (even steel will become valuable eventually, make no mistake...). If you dig into a mountain face randomly, be aware that this could become a space for infestations to spawn if the location is too close to your colony.

If you have developed deep drilling already, you can let your apprentice miners work the drills. Waste of resources is usually not a problem anymore at this point.

Cooking training

The cooking skill level is increased by butchering, cooking meals at a stove or campfire, and also by making smokeleaf joints. Low cooking skill increases the chance of the produced meals being "spoiled", and giving the colonist (or animal) consuming them food poisoning. This is a fairly disrupting condition that should be avoided; keep that in mind when training low skilled cooks if you plan to have your colonists consume the meals produced.

Making smokeleaf joints

If a cook has low skill but high passion for cooking, it is usually efficient to train them as an additional cook for your colony. The downside is that meals prepared by this character, while he or she is still learning, bring a higher chance of food poisoning with them. Cooks can, however, also be trained by having them make smokeleaf joints out of leaves at a drug lab. The rolling of joints will train cooking just as cooking meals would.

Set up a dedicated work bill at the drug lab, and restrict it to the character that you would like to train in cooking. The character needs to have priority to "Craft" things on the work tab. Make sure the drug lab is not occupied by other tasks; the easiest way is to put the smokeleaf job in the first slot on the list of bills.

This strategy requires the respective technologies to be researched, and to make or buy smokeleaf leaves as ingredients. The latter is, of course, a way to train the plants skill. Smokeleaf products have good recreational and cash (trade) value. Training cooks with smokeleaf is an excellent strategy for these reasons.

Plants (growing)

Letting an unskilled grower harvest your fields will waste some of the product; check the harvest yield stat of the colonist. If you need to avoid this, you will have to create a – possibly large – restriction zone to keep this colonist out of the area that they must not harvest. Allow them areas where sowing needs to happen.

Chopping trees is a good way to train plants. Disallow the task ("plant cut" in the work tab) for your skilled growers, so your trainees will get more opportunities to chop wood.

If you are growing plants that only skilled workers can sow (like Devilstrand and Healroot), make sure that your trainees will sow all the other fields. Do not let your skilled growers take that work away from them. Again, you will probably need to use restriction zones or work tab micromanagement to facilitate this.

The Work Tab addon by Fluffy makes partitioning the growing tasks a lot easier, avoiding the use of temporary zone restrictions.

Crafting training

Crafting skill increases steadily with work time. Crafting is a pretty common task in mid-late game so there's lots of opportunities to train.

If you wish to conserve materials, you can task the pawn on an electric tailoring bench which has been switched off. XP is given at a constant rate, regardless of work speed, so this will give more XP with the same amount of materials.

Assembling components is an effective albeit expensive way to top up crafting for level 8+ craftsmen.

Artistic training

Ensure a colonist is constantly set to create art. This boosts the skill quickly, especially if the colonist is interested in Art. The colonist will start by making low quality sculptures but will begin making very valuable masterworks before you know it.

You can sell the artwork for silver, or place them around the base for beauty. If the art is of a very low quality however, it's best to deconstruct and try again.

Initially it's better to use cheap materials like wood. After artists are leveled up sufficiently, switch to more expensive materials.

Medicine training

Repeated surgery such as adding and removing bionic limbs can boost a colonist's Medicine skill at the cost of medical supplies. Simply treating frequent wounds from battle, prisoners and animals will increase skill quickly. If that proves insufficient it is simple to deliberately inflict wounds (such as punching someone) then treat them. More injuries means more chances to heal. You monster.

You should use regular medicine or above to reduce the risk of surgery failure.

If there are no willing volunteers, you can also train medical skills on animals, though brutalizing animals will cause a -5 relations penalty.

  • Limb replacements:*
    • Attach artificial or bionic limb to pawn (~2000 XP @ Interested)
    • Remove part (~2000 XP)
      • This will leave the pawn bleeding, and you can patch them up (~200 XP).
  • Euthanasia (~900 XP)
    • Instead of slaughtering dead animals, allowing doctors to practice on them can quickly level up their doctoring skill.
    • It requires medicine, be sure to have that handy. Herbal medicine will do for this, and you can grow quite a lot cheaply.

Social training

Each social chat with a colonist gives 4 social xp per per speech balloon at 1x skill modifier and 0 mood modifier.

Having a friendly chat with a prisoner in order to convince him/her to join the colony gives roughly 50 social xp at 1x modifier per speech balloon. If you are recruiting prisoners, be sure that the one whose social skill you want to train is the warden. Keeping a prisoner at "friendly chat" will allow wardens to keep having conversations indefinitely, allowing skill training. However, this costs a lot of food over time to keep the prisoner alive.[

Research training

Research skill steadily increases with time, so a dedicated researcher should give the best results. Research skill is rendered useless as soon as the research topics are over.