* Caution: Doesn't work on the back of the build, but works perfectly on any other side. Using this on the back might cause the end of the world. You have been warned
I'd love if that's how they end season 9. Grian tries to finish the back of the base and somehow causes a cataclysmic event bigger than what happened to Doc's bore machine
Great tip. A lot of beginners forget this, but even for someone like me whos not the best builder, abstract shapes make my builds look much better. Sure, it's a little more complicated, but not by much, and the aesthetic yield is very high :)
I honestly love these vids and miss seeing them. Please, please, please make more of these as they are great build tips and would be really useful nowadays
It will probably collapse from the weakest earthquake or wind going faster than nicocado avocado can walk but i bet it will look better than the mona lise
"Here's your new house with a world wide open floor design, your probably wondering how we made the whole world part of you ripen floor plan, well it's simple. THERE'S NO BACK!"
Am I the only one that thinks it was better before in the classic days of Minecraft when a solid yet sturdy and practical base was all you needed to provide yourself a comfortable home and protective base
*The voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back*
*the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back the voices are back*
my tip is always “don’t build your house so big. 1 block = 1m. use that as a guide when planning your space.” you’ll find that you can have a magnificent build that is the fraction of the size and still functions great as your base
I find that blending similar tones of wood can be useful. If your wall is mostly spruce having patches of dark oak can be useful. Mixing stripped logs with planks is useful for maintaining a similar color while breaking up the texture. Also, don't be afraid to play with blocks that aren't strictly wood- play around with things that are in the same color range, and see what works. Several colors of terracotta might play well with various types of wood. Both the cap of brown mushroom and the porous inside of mushroom blocks (made by placing two adjacent mushroom blocks, then breaking one) could make for transitional tones. Long story short, play around with different blocks, even if it's just screwing around in creative for a while- you might be surprised with what combinations work!
@@polarstriker3854 going to add to this too, you can also use stained glasspanes to modify the colors of things for both smoother transitions and to make colors work for texturing! I know people have used to make things that look like really realistic wood textures. Fun stuff! (Or you can just entirely scrap the blocks and build with glass too, that also works.)
be most careful with the texturing and sectioning parts if you plan on having a separate or uniform interior, the smaller the build the less viable it will be unless you love a sudden two-tone wall from wood to moss plan ahead, and use depth while keeping mind of what you want the outside and inside to look like
I would recommend having the sectioning correlate to something, rather than just applying it randomly. Usually, sectioning looks best at the seam. So, ideally you’d put the sections where the floors are broken up or underneath the windows. That way your house will look like it’s a house.