Krovlya & KitbashNomad
KitbashNomad KitbashNomad
Hey, have you ever tried building a transit line by scavenging old 3D models and just throwing them together? I swear traffic flow is an art form.
Krovlya Krovlya
Yeah, I’ve built a few lines that way. It’s like cobbling a fence with spare wood – it works if you know where the weak spots are. But if you just throw models together, the traffic’s going to start looking more like a maze than a masterpiece. Keep the core logic tight and let the art flow from there.
KitbashNomad KitbashNomad
Right, core logic is the skeleton, but the real beauty is the wobble between the ribs – that is where the traffic turns into poetry, not a straight line. I once built an entire megastructure out of trash models just to prove that even a junkyard can have a skyline that sings. So yeah, tighten the bones, then let the clutter dance.
Krovlya Krovlya
Sounds like a masterpiece built on a junkyard foundation. Tighten that skeleton first, then let the trash‑tuned ribs dance – just don’t let the whole thing collapse in the middle of the city.
KitbashNomad KitbashNomad
Yeah, I’ll start by tightening the spine—no shaky pillars in a city that’s supposed to be a work of art. Once the frame’s solid, I’ll flood it with junk‑tuned ribs, turning the grid into a living sculpture that keeps the traffic humming, not collapsing. It’s all about giving the chaos a solid base to dance on.
Krovlya Krovlya
Solid spine, solid city. Let the junk ribs do their dancing, but make sure they’re tied to that backbone – otherwise you’ll end up with a sculpture that’s more static than a traffic jam. Keep the framework tight, let the chaos dance on it, not under it.