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This video in particular is for BULL MOOSE and includes saga (large pack) tips! Moose have different mechanics depending on what type of moose they spawn as. 1. Moose pairs This group includes all 3 types of moose moms. Fall moms with grown calves, late spring moms with newborns, and early spring moose pairs that are just two adult cows. Moose pairs have horrible, horrible herd mechanics. They cannot be lured individually despite this, unlike cattle/bison/elk. This means you either need to herd both moose in the pair (which is only really possible with two adult cows, as the calves are coded to follow mom no matter what) or kill one of them and only then herd the other. When you break up a pair, by killing one of them, the remaining half behaves as you'd expect a cow/calf to. Easily lured anywhere. ---------- 2. Moose cows Now, for all 'normal' moose, the fight/flight mechanics are different from those of elk. The likeliness of a moose to fight or flight is seemingly RNG based. Health affects it very little, if at all. A full health moose may flee at the mere sight of a wolf, as can one that's already low. This is very useful for herding, as you can choose to lower the moose completely before you begin herding, with no consequences. Stamina, too, seems to have very little effect. A tired out moose (that has been ran for a couple hexes/minutes) will still display the same fight/flight mechanics. When a moose flees, they will run a certain distance from the player (around 100 meters) then stop. This stop means you can easily catch up to them, as well as control where they are, if you're mindful of their reactions and are able to predict when they flee so you can run away from them (minimizing the distance they have to travel to be out of your range). The fight part of their mechanic has a lot, and I do mean a lot, of chasing. The tether for it is seemingly longer than those of elk, bull elk included. That means you have more of a margin of error when it comes to staying at a good distance that maintains that chase without endangering your wolf. It also means, in some cases, you'll have to run a good bit away from them to get them to stop chasing you. Bull moose are the main culprits of this. ---------- 3. Bull moose Their fight and flight is the same as the cow moose, with the difference that they might choose fight more often than not. It can be hard to get them to flee. Much like elk, moose are slightly more likely to flee after finishing a chase animation. As mentioned above, the tether for their chase mechanic is longer. They can sometimes follow you without you even realizing it, if you happened to run past one while doing something else. This makes them great candidates for luring. ---------------------------------------- Full elk tutorial coming... sometime!