Hello not sure if this topic is in good place. I searcherd around and found some threads about the IA of mobs, which seems to be a future rework.
Rising World seems to go to realistic. Lot's of survival games have animals. some usefuls (for meat, wool, whatever), some passive-agressive or agressive (wolf, bear are the more common, RW add tigers). I wish one day I can play a game witch show naturals behavior of wildlife. I'm not objective : Since 13 years, I try to live in wildlife and learn about wolves, bears, deers, squirrels and caribous.
What I have seen in Rising World is very cool yet for some behaviors : the fox is great (you can see him walking and if you want to encounter, he take distance), moose is right (perharps too passive). for me, bear is not realistic. bear don't attack humans like that. But they can be interested by your strawberries plant and try to get them all days ! (like fox). If you stay at same camp all the time, bears, foxes, squirrel and wolves will learn of your behavior and they can go closer (predators are curious about anything in their territory). I suppose this behavior is not impossible to code ? and for fun playing, it's a very smart way to build a safe farm, try to be smarter than these « pirates ».
In fact, I hope Rising World can learn a little about the real wildlife. In real world, we have so many to do for educate about wildlife. no, wolves don't kill humans and yes, wildlife will interact with you if you live near, but it is just so good if you forget your cultural fears…
why not physically show the taming evolution if one day it is possible : sheeps can't live in a fresh new rising world, they need humans. Mouflons are wild. So only mouflon can spawn right at spawn. when you tame a couple of mouflon, child is a sheep and hourra. we can say same with chicken and cows too. wolf can be dog (but not on one generation).
You think perhaps it will be boring and players need challenges ? if Rising World want to be realistic, so watch after NPC hostiles. (clans perhaps, bandits). I will never be boring to « talk » to a fox or a bear or sitting in the grass for watching a deer.
Just my 2 cents.