## About The Pull Request
Throwing a bee at someone injects that bee's reagents.
This has a larger code footprint than you might expect because venom
injection is done via an element which in turn gives a callback to a
component.
While I was touching that I also separated `COMSIG_MOVABLE_IMPACT` into
`COMSIG_MOVABLE_PRE_IMPACT` because a lot of effects trigger from
`COMSIG_MOVABLE_IMPACT` despite the fact that the throw impact can be
cancelled after the signal is sent.
I also added an inject check onto the venomous element for mob attacks,
so thick clothing can now protect you from venom injection.
I elected that Giant Spiders have big enough fangs to ignore this such
that this isn't a major balance change, as do moonicorns (that horn is
massive), Fire Sharks, and Clowns (no idea how they are applying chems
at all to be honest).
## Why It's Good For The Game
I thought about someone throwing a bee at someone like a little dart and
thought "hee hee"
## Changelog
🆑
add: If you throw a bee at someone it will hit them sting-first and
inject that bee's reagent
balance: Thick clothing can now protect you from the venom of bees,
snakes, frogs, and (small) spiders
/🆑
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Co-authored-by: John Willard <53777086+JohnFulpWillard@users.noreply.github.com>
Loosely adapted from /vg/. This is an entity component system for adding behaviours to datums when inheritance doesn't quite cut it. By using signals and events instead of direct inheritance, you can inject behaviours without hacky overloads. It requires a different method of thinking, but is not hard to use correctly. If a behaviour can have application across more than one thing. Make it generic, make it a component. Atom/mob/obj event? Give it a signal, and forward it's arguments with a SendSignal() call. Now every component that want's to can also know about this happening.