Jump to content

Gravity affecting dirt but not diagonally


NastyFlytrap

Recommended Posts

I don't know that I'm understanding what you mean by "diagonally".

Let's say a block falls one Z. It hits a lone flat block directly below. It then:

  1. Stops. No further movement,
  2. Can (but does not have to) slide one block in either the X or the Y, but not both, or,
  3. Can (but does not have to) slide one block in X and one block in Y.

The most natural meaning of diagonal seems to be 3, but I don't think it does that anyway. Or it might. Landslides and avalanches seem pretty chaotic, so I just stay out of the way. But eliminating 2 is a major change in behavior, and completely eliminates the hazards of landslides and avalanches. Is that what you meant? Sandpiles work the same way they do in Terraria, where they can form cliff faces into outer space?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Thorfinn said:

I don't know that I'm understanding what you mean by "diagonally".

Let's say a block falls one Z. It hits a lone flat block directly below. It then:

  1. Stops. No further movement,
  2. Can (but does not have to) slide one block in either the X or the Y, but not both, or,
  3. Can (but does not have to) slide one block in X and one block in Y.

The most natural meaning of diagonal seems to be 3, but I don't think it does that anyway. Or it might. Landslides and avalanches seem pretty chaotic, so I just stay out of the way. But eliminating 2 is a major change in behavior, and completely eliminates the hazards of landslides and avalanches. Is that what you meant? Sandpiles work the same way they do in Terraria, where they can form cliff faces into outer space?

I meant the landslide mechanic.
I would like dirt to fall without it sliding off the tops of my pretty mountains.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Been thinking about this, trying to come up with how I'd use it. What is gained by having non-sliding falling blocks that you couldn't accomplish with, say, packed earth, apart from being able to remove them safely from ground level?

I don't think mountains shed dirt without you or some critter walking on it. I guess that could be worthwhile -- if a ram climbs your mountains and is caught in the slide, he will aggro.

Edited by Thorfinn
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
On 8/14/2023 at 11:57 PM, Thorfinn said:

Been thinking about this, trying to come up with how I'd use it. What is gained by having non-sliding falling blocks that you couldn't accomplish with, say, packed earth, apart from being able to remove them safely from ground level?

I don't think mountains shed dirt without you or some critter walking on it. I guess that could be worthwhile -- if a ram climbs your mountains and is caught in the slide, he will aggro.

Im asking for falling blocks/dirt for immersion.

Not because i want to 'use it' in any way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh I totally agree with this. When I place down a block on another block, it should not slide off of it on to the ground like it's greased and on ice during an earthquake.

It should stay put, at least until I hit it or walk on it. That part makes sense and I'm fine with it, but when I place a block, it should stay until something touches it.

Incredibly annoying when I'm trying to terraform and the land keeps randomly and imo illogically shifting around me while I'm placing blocks.

  • Wolf Bait 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So the angle of repose doesn't apply until someone walks on the dirt?

If terraforming with soil instability on, consider using cob or packed dirt.  Those two are not affected by gravity.  Cob will eventually grow grass, but takes a lot longer than regular soil.  Packed dirt will never grow grass.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Maelstrom said:

So the angle of repose doesn't apply until someone walks on the dirt?

If terraforming with soil instability on, consider using cob or packed dirt.  Those two are not affected by gravity.  Cob will eventually grow grass, but takes a lot longer than regular soil.  Packed dirt will never grow grass.

This doesnt solve the issue of all the pretty mountains the game generates by itself will turn to shit, which is what bothers me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Meh. The kind of mountains that are grass-covered, with greater than a 1 meter soil depth, like the Appalacians, are gradual enough that to the extent they exist in the game, they are stable. What's falling down are steeper than the Rockies and Cascades and Sierra Nevadas, even the new kids on the block, the Himalayas. Even something as steep as a 1:1 slope is stable in the game. If we are going for realism, those kinds of slopes should be grass- and dirt-free.

What is really under-represented are the vast swathes of the globe where the slope is under 5:1000. But that's kind of boring, and not so picturesque, so I'm good with the terrain as is. Though if I had my druthers, I'd prefer those really steep grades, 4:1 and up, for sure, to be dirt-free.

Edited by Thorfinn
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, NastyFlytrap said:

This doesnt solve the issue of all the pretty mountains the game generates by itself will turn to shit, which is what bothers me.

Then leave soil instability off when you create a world.  If you want to turn it off on your existing world, I'm sure there's a command you enter to turn it off.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Maelstrom said:

Then leave soil instability off when you create a world.  If you want to turn it off on your existing world, I'm sure there's a command you enter to turn it off.

Yea but i still want them to fall.


I genuinely dont understand why its such a hard concept for some of you to grasp this.

Edit: In fact, i want to be able to turn on gravity for most blocks, i just dont care about sideways instability

Edited by NastyFlytrap
  • Wolf Bait 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.