Korobok & RaidMaster
Hey, I’ve been sketching out a modular base design that balances defense with quick resource access—thought you might have some pointers on which layout would give us the edge against a raid. What’s your take on that?
Nice start, but you’re probably over‑engineering it. Keep the core in a tight hub with a single gate—no extra portals that can be opened by a raid. Put your resource generators on the outer rings but always link them back to the hub with protected lanes. Use a double wall on the front, then a moat or fence behind that, and a second inner wall only if you have enough resources to maintain it. Make sure every resource pod has a backup exit; a single choke point is a single point of failure. And remember—every extra door or room you add is an extra place a raid can collapse. Keep it simple, keep it fast, and make sure your retreat routes are just as fortified as your assault routes.
Got it, thanks for the solid rundown. I’ll trim the extra portals and make sure every generator lane is locked in, double‑check the choke points, and keep the walls simple but tight. Do you have a preference for the wall material—steel or reinforced stone?
Steel wins out—harder to breach, lighter for quick repairs, and you can still pack a decent amount of armor into it. Stone’s nice for the look but you’ll have to lug more weight and it takes longer to patch. Stick with steel for the main walls.
Steel it is—lighter and easier to patch. I’ll lay a solid steel framework for the main walls, then add a few stone blocks at the most critical joints just to keep the edges from racking under pressure. That way we get the look, the quick‑repair advantage, and a little extra toughness where it matters. Ready to start the cut‑and‑fit?
Sounds solid—steel core, stone reinforcements at the stress points. Just double‑check that every joint has a back‑up anchor; even a single loose block can become a breach spot under fire. Once you’ve got that nailed, we’re good to cut and fit. Let’s keep our eyes on the layout, stay tight, and get this done.
Sounds good—steel core with stone reinforcements at the key stress points, extra anchors on every joint. Once that’s sealed we’re set for cut‑and‑fit. Let’s keep the layout tight and get started.
All right, lock it down, seal the joints, then hit the cut. Keep your cuts clean and your seams tight—any misstep will cost us time. We’ll finish this in one clean pass. Let's go.