Difference between revisions of "Docks"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Notes: types of docks) |
(→Notes: brace) |
||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
* Destroying the structure will not destroy the floor on the support, it will need to be destroyed separately. | * Destroying the structure will not destroy the floor on the support, it will need to be destroyed separately. | ||
* Docks can be built from wood (uses beams and nails) or any kind of stone (uses bricks and mortar). Choose the type you want when planning the adjacent tiles. | * Docks can be built from wood (uses beams and nails) or any kind of stone (uses bricks and mortar). Choose the type you want when planning the adjacent tiles. | ||
| + | * Wooden docks have two types: Brace and Support. Braces are supporting floor from one side visually. | ||
* Wooden dock supports have a max depth of 102 dirts. | * Wooden dock supports have a max depth of 102 dirts. | ||
* Stone dock supports have a max depth of 289 dirts. | * Stone dock supports have a max depth of 289 dirts. | ||
Revision as of 13:11, 20 September 2025
Main / Structures / Docks
Description
This feature allows you to build floors outside of houses and plan floors from an adjacent floor border into open air or sloped tiles.
- Attached docks- you build a floor adjacent to the house
- Free-standing docks- you plan and build a floor on a flat tile.
Notes
- mallet or hammer for wooden docks and trowel for masonry ones.
- You can build fences and houses on top of the docks and once completed it will become part of the structure.
- Destroying the structure will not destroy the floor on the support, it will need to be destroyed separately.
- Docks can be built from wood (uses beams and nails) or any kind of stone (uses bricks and mortar). Choose the type you want when planning the adjacent tiles.
- Wooden docks have two types: Brace and Support. Braces are supporting floor from one side visually.
- Wooden dock supports have a max depth of 102 dirts.
- Stone dock supports have a max depth of 289 dirts.