Number one rule is to remember that Losing Is Fun - it’s not nearly such a brutally hard game to learn and understand now that the Steam version is out, but your fortress is a house of cards, and it can all come down very quickly. There’s no ‘win’ condition, winning means doing what keeps you happy.
In order to keep going, you need to keep your dorfs (a) alive (b) at least somewhat happy - as luck would have it, the things that kill them also make them unhappy, so you can eyeball the state of your fort from the top-left, keep an eye on any really unhappy ones and fix what’s troubling them.
My usual order of operations would be:
assign some nobles - certainly a captain of the militia, and then make the bookkeeper / trader / manager the same as the expedition lead
get access to some wood. If I’ve embarked somewhere wooded, just chop some down; if not, need to bring some with on embark, probs at least 30.
dig down until I’ve got some access to stone. If that means going through some silt / sand / loam layers with aquifer, dig a bit wide and then construct wooden walls to keep the water out. Walls can be removed again later when you’ve built a drain of some kind at the bottom (the mist from falling water makes dorfs absurdly happy) but you don’t really want to flood to start with. Damp stone can be smoothed to stop it leaking. You want to go at least one layer deeper than the last damp one, since it comes through the ceiling.
decide where I want my farms to be, and dig it out. There’s six underground plants and I find a 3x10 plot for each will support a lot of fort, so maybe a ten-by-twenty room. Plants grow in mud, which means either digging in a soil layer (very close to surface, not always available), getting some water in then letting it dry up, or digging down to the caverns and using the soil there (dangerous creatures live there! but if you’ve no surface trees, you’re going there anyway). Filling an underground room with water is quite easily done with pumps if the surface is suitable (near a waterfall, so your farms can be above the river but underground), by building a floodgate and connecting it to a lever with a pump and then channeling out to the surface river (needs attention) or by connecting it to the aquifer layer and then walling it off when you’ve enough water. As long as you’ve at least one tile of ‘depth 1’ water, then it’ll dry eventually - can expand your farm room until the water level falls, or pump it out, or drain it elsewhere. Designate farms, plant all the seeds you brought with.
While you’re messing about with farms, you can get the rest of your starting base set up:
prepare some defenses. A moat and a drawbridge (connected to a lever underground) is very effective - 2 wide and 2 deep if you’re expecting the living, 3x3 if the undead. (But I would stay away from evil areas and towers if you’ve just started.) Pull the lever and close the drawbridge if anything arrives that you can’t handle. Cage traps are massively overpowered - sprinkle them liberally. And doors and hatches can be forbidden against most incomers, plus dorfs are made happy by a good door
build a (one!) trade depot. Can be underground to start with, caravans can get there. Goods wagons need an open 3x3 path all the way into your depot, without traps - you’ll want that eventually as you scale, but it’s a weak spot you’ll need to deal with
keep chopping down trees, because fuck the elves. You might have to dig down to the caverns for underground trees if there’s few at the surface, but the caverns are dangerous so watch out. Only thing that can only be made from wood is beds, which you don’t need loads of, but trees are an insult to dwarvenkind, so down they come.
designate a couple of dorfs as military, and set them to ‘always ready’ but ‘sleep in room at will’ - this will make them wear all their gear all the time in case you need a quick response, but avoids the happiness and productivity debuff
get some preliminary industry set up. You’ll need stone, carpentry, mechanics, crafts, a still to start with. Wooden beds, bins and wheelbarrows; rock large pots (which work like barrels, but are generally better), tables, doors, ‘thrones’ (chairs), ‘coffers’ (chests), mechanisms, and mugs. I find it easier to allocate these in the ‘orders’ menu, build 3 if you’ve less than 2, and forget about it - also means that you can just move the workshops later and industry will continue when you want to consolidate. Also, add an order for ‘brew drink from plants’ - I usually set ‘brew 2 when number of drinks is less than 10× your dorfs’, but whatever works for you.
Get digging underground. I’d make space for the following:
a dormitory, which has a few beds in it. Dorfs get unhappy sleeping on the floor - they really like having their own room, which you can build loads of later, but you want to avoid the happiness hit from sleeping outside or on the floor.
an inn, which is a big empty room with some kind of chest in it, for mugs - dorfs really hate not having a mug. Store your booze in here.
a dining hall, which I’d then assign to the inn. Put some tables and chairs in.
a temple, which is essentially just a big empty room, and assign it to ‘no particular deity’. Dorfs hate not being able to do religion.
a small office for your bookkeeper - put a table and chair in, and assign it to them
some industry space. You want to keep supplies, workshops and outlets relatively close together to minimise walking, but you don’t have to go crazy - rock storage, rock workshops, rock finished goods and furniture. Kitchen products are absurdly overpriced for trade, lavish meals and milling products. But you’ll need bags - ‘process plants’ to make pig tails into thread (farmers w/s), weave thread into cloth (loom), make cloth into bags (clothiers) which takes some lead time.
Once you’ve got all that, most of the pressure is off, and you can just progress as you like, have a laugh. You’ll want a clothes industry to keep your dorfs happy (they hate wandering around naked) and a metal industry, which I find is easier done and also more dorfy by drilling straight down to the magma at the centre of the earth and melting/forging with it down there - wall off any holes you make in the caverns as you go, until you’re ready for some Fun. But this is quite the essay already ;-) so I’ll let you discover that.
Number one rule is to remember that Losing Is Fun - it’s not nearly such a brutally hard game to learn and understand now that the Steam version is out, but your fortress is a house of cards, and it can all come down very quickly. There’s no ‘win’ condition, winning means doing what keeps you happy.
In order to keep going, you need to keep your dorfs (a) alive (b) at least somewhat happy - as luck would have it, the things that kill them also make them unhappy, so you can eyeball the state of your fort from the top-left, keep an eye on any really unhappy ones and fix what’s troubling them.
My usual order of operations would be:
assign some nobles - certainly a captain of the militia, and then make the bookkeeper / trader / manager the same as the expedition lead
get access to some wood. If I’ve embarked somewhere wooded, just chop some down; if not, need to bring some with on embark, probs at least 30.
dig down until I’ve got some access to stone. If that means going through some silt / sand / loam layers with aquifer, dig a bit wide and then construct wooden walls to keep the water out. Walls can be removed again later when you’ve built a drain of some kind at the bottom (the mist from falling water makes dorfs absurdly happy) but you don’t really want to flood to start with. Damp stone can be smoothed to stop it leaking. You want to go at least one layer deeper than the last damp one, since it comes through the ceiling.
decide where I want my farms to be, and dig it out. There’s six underground plants and I find a 3x10 plot for each will support a lot of fort, so maybe a ten-by-twenty room. Plants grow in mud, which means either digging in a soil layer (very close to surface, not always available), getting some water in then letting it dry up, or digging down to the caverns and using the soil there (dangerous creatures live there! but if you’ve no surface trees, you’re going there anyway). Filling an underground room with water is quite easily done with pumps if the surface is suitable (near a waterfall, so your farms can be above the river but underground), by building a floodgate and connecting it to a lever with a pump and then channeling out to the surface river (needs attention) or by connecting it to the aquifer layer and then walling it off when you’ve enough water. As long as you’ve at least one tile of ‘depth 1’ water, then it’ll dry eventually - can expand your farm room until the water level falls, or pump it out, or drain it elsewhere. Designate farms, plant all the seeds you brought with.
While you’re messing about with farms, you can get the rest of your starting base set up:
prepare some defenses. A moat and a drawbridge (connected to a lever underground) is very effective - 2 wide and 2 deep if you’re expecting the living, 3x3 if the undead. (But I would stay away from evil areas and towers if you’ve just started.) Pull the lever and close the drawbridge if anything arrives that you can’t handle. Cage traps are massively overpowered - sprinkle them liberally. And doors and hatches can be forbidden against most incomers, plus dorfs are made happy by a good door
build a (one!) trade depot. Can be underground to start with, caravans can get there. Goods wagons need an open 3x3 path all the way into your depot, without traps - you’ll want that eventually as you scale, but it’s a weak spot you’ll need to deal with
keep chopping down trees, because fuck the elves. You might have to dig down to the caverns for underground trees if there’s few at the surface, but the caverns are dangerous so watch out. Only thing that can only be made from wood is beds, which you don’t need loads of, but trees are an insult to dwarvenkind, so down they come.
designate a couple of dorfs as military, and set them to ‘always ready’ but ‘sleep in room at will’ - this will make them wear all their gear all the time in case you need a quick response, but avoids the happiness and productivity debuff
get some preliminary industry set up. You’ll need stone, carpentry, mechanics, crafts, a still to start with. Wooden beds, bins and wheelbarrows; rock large pots (which work like barrels, but are generally better), tables, doors, ‘thrones’ (chairs), ‘coffers’ (chests), mechanisms, and mugs. I find it easier to allocate these in the ‘orders’ menu, build 3 if you’ve less than 2, and forget about it - also means that you can just move the workshops later and industry will continue when you want to consolidate. Also, add an order for ‘brew drink from plants’ - I usually set ‘brew 2 when number of drinks is less than 10× your dorfs’, but whatever works for you.
Get digging underground. I’d make space for the following:
a dormitory, which has a few beds in it. Dorfs get unhappy sleeping on the floor - they really like having their own room, which you can build loads of later, but you want to avoid the happiness hit from sleeping outside or on the floor.
an inn, which is a big empty room with some kind of chest in it, for mugs - dorfs really hate not having a mug. Store your booze in here.
a dining hall, which I’d then assign to the inn. Put some tables and chairs in.
a temple, which is essentially just a big empty room, and assign it to ‘no particular deity’. Dorfs hate not being able to do religion.
a small office for your bookkeeper - put a table and chair in, and assign it to them
some industry space. You want to keep supplies, workshops and outlets relatively close together to minimise walking, but you don’t have to go crazy - rock storage, rock workshops, rock finished goods and furniture. Kitchen products are absurdly overpriced for trade, lavish meals and milling products. But you’ll need bags - ‘process plants’ to make pig tails into thread (farmers w/s), weave thread into cloth (loom), make cloth into bags (clothiers) which takes some lead time.
when traders come, the highest priority stuff to buy is (a) all their cloth and leather, since it’s cheap and hard to make, and you need lots of bags (b) all their plants meat and fish, to make into lavish meals to sell right back to them © anything else you think looks fun. Dwarves arrive to trade in the first Autumn - the amount you export to them affects the number of migrants you’ll get, so feel free to pay over the odds. Elves arrive every Spring after the first year with loads of worthless shit and get offended if you offer them wood - seriously, don’t buy their armour. Humans arrive every Summer with absolutely tonnes of stuff, but their armour won’t fit you.
Once you’ve got all that, most of the pressure is off, and you can just progress as you like, have a laugh. You’ll want a clothes industry to keep your dorfs happy (they hate wandering around naked) and a metal industry, which I find is easier done and also more dorfy by drilling straight down to the magma at the centre of the earth and melting/forging with it down there - wall off any holes you make in the caverns as you go, until you’re ready for some Fun. But this is quite the essay already ;-) so I’ll let you discover that.