McRogueFace/roguelike_tutorial/README_PART_05.md

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# Part 5: Placing Enemies and Fighting Them
## Overview
Part 5 brings our dungeon to life with enemies! We add rats and spiders that populate the rooms, implement a combat system with melee attacks, and handle entity death by turning creatures into gravestones.
## What's New in Part 5
### Actor System
- **Actor Class**: Extends Entity with combat stats (HP, defense, power)
- **Combat Properties**: Health tracking, damage calculation, alive status
- **Death Handling**: Entities become gravestones when killed
### Enemy Types
Using our sprite sheet, we have two enemy types:
- **Rat** (sprite 5): 10 HP, 0 defense, 3 power - Common enemy
- **Spider** (sprite 4): 16 HP, 1 defense, 4 power - Tougher enemy
### Combat System
#### Bump-to-Attack
When the player tries to move into an enemy:
```python
# In MovementAction.perform()
target = engine.game_map.get_blocking_entity_at(dest_x, dest_y)
if target:
if self.entity == engine.player:
from game.entity import Actor
if isinstance(target, Actor) and target != engine.player:
return MeleeAction(self.entity, self.dx, self.dy).perform(engine)
```
#### Damage Calculation
Simple formula with defense reduction:
```python
damage = attacker.power - target.defense
```
#### Death System
Dead entities become gravestones:
```python
def die(self) -> None:
"""Handle death by becoming a gravestone."""
self.sprite_index = 6 # Tombstone sprite
self.blocks_movement = False
self.name = f"Grave of {self.name}"
```
### Entity Factories
Factory functions create pre-configured entities:
```python
def rat(x: int, y: int, texture: mcrfpy.Texture) -> Actor:
return Actor(
x=x, y=y,
sprite_id=5, # Rat sprite
texture=texture,
name="Rat",
hp=10, defense=0, power=3,
)
```
### Dungeon Population
Enemies are placed randomly in rooms:
```python
def place_entities(room, dungeon, max_monsters, texture):
number_of_monsters = random.randint(0, max_monsters)
for _ in range(number_of_monsters):
x = random.randint(room.x1 + 1, room.x2 - 1)
y = random.randint(room.y1 + 1, room.y2 - 1)
if not any(entity.x == x and entity.y == y for entity in dungeon.entities):
# 80% rats, 20% spiders
if random.random() < 0.8:
monster = entity_factories.rat(x, y, texture)
else:
monster = entity_factories.spider(x, y, texture)
monster.place(x, y, dungeon)
```
## Key Implementation Details
### FOV and Enemy Visibility
Enemies are automatically shown/hidden by the FOV system:
```python
def update_fov(self) -> None:
# Update visibility for all entities
for entity in self.game_map.entities:
entity.update_visibility()
```
### Action System Extension
The action system now handles combat:
- **MovementAction**: Detects collision, triggers attack
- **MeleeAction**: New action for melee combat
- Actions remain decoupled from entity logic
### Gravestone System
Instead of removing dead entities:
- Sprite changes to tombstone (index 6)
- Name changes to "Grave of [Name]"
- No longer blocks movement
- Remains visible as dungeon decoration
## Architecture Notes
### Why Actor Extends Entity?
- Maintains entity hierarchy
- Combat stats only for creatures
- Future items/decorations won't have HP
- Clean separation of concerns
### Why Factory Functions?
- Centralized entity configuration
- Easy to add new enemy types
- Consistent stat management
- Type-safe entity creation
### Combat in Actions
Combat logic lives in actions, not entities:
- Entities store stats
- Actions perform combat
- Clean separation of data and behavior
- Extensible for future combat types
## Files Modified
- `game/entity.py`: Added Actor class with combat stats and death handling
- `game/entity_factories.py`: New module with entity creation functions
- `game/actions.py`: Added MeleeAction for combat
- `game/procgen.py`: Added enemy placement in rooms
- `game/engine.py`: Updated to use Actor type and handle all entity visibility
- `main.py`: Updated to use entity factories and Part 5 description
## What's Next
Part 6 will enhance the combat experience with:
- Health display UI
- Game over conditions
- Combat messages window
- More strategic combat mechanics
## Learning Points
1. **Entity Specialization**: Use inheritance to add features to specific entity types
2. **Factory Pattern**: Centralize object creation for consistency
3. **State Transformation**: Dead entities become decorations, not deletions
4. **Action Extensions**: Combat fits naturally into the action system
5. **Automatic Systems**: FOV handles entity visibility without special code
## Running Part 5
```bash
cd simple_tcod_tutorial/build
./mcrogueface scripts/main.py
```
You'll now encounter rats and spiders as you explore! Walk into them to attack. Dead enemies become gravestones that mark your battles.
## Sprite Adaptations
Following our sprite sheet (`sprite_sheet.md`), we made these thematic changes:
- Orcs → Rats (same stats, different sprite)
- Trolls → Spiders (same stats, different sprite)
- Corpses → Gravestones (all use same tombstone sprite)
The gameplay remains identical to the TCOD tutorial, just with different visual theming.