Valheim: 25 Roof Designs To Try In Your Next Build
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- Опубликовано: 3 май 2024
- A showcase of 25 different roof designs you can build in Valheim.
a bit of a different video than usual, this is for anyone looking for Valheim build ideas, while this doesn't cover all different roof styles that can be made in Valheim, it covers a fair amount of options. These roofs are based on real architectural roof designs, such as the Gable roof, Gambrel roof, and A-Frame Roof, but there are also many more to see in the video.
I hope you enjoyed the video, and if you would like me to make more videos like this, throw a comment down below! Игры
Hey! a little bit of a strange video for me, But I wanted to learn about different roof types so I could improve my building. I found it incredibly interesting and I thought
"huh It would be cool to share what I found today with everyone" so I did!
I hope you find these roof shapes as interesting as I did! the names are at the top of the screen if you would like to know more about the roof types!
You can create flat roofs by putting low angle roof pieces and enclosing them in whatever wall and floor tiles you want for a modernized house
i love the Jerkinghead roof at 3:43 alot of farm here in the Netherlands using that 1, and i'm trying to create 1 in Valheim right now
It was a roof design I had never seen until I looked at some architecutral drawings just recently.
I made the corner direction change using two 45 roof cornerers If I remember correctly, its pretty quick to do because you can use the normal snapping points for it.
You've become my go to place for Valheim tips and tricks. Keep it up :)
Thank you! I appriciate it! Im trying out some new idea's to keep things fresh, hopefully you find these as interesting as my usual guide based videos :D
@@ZerosterGuides You're welcome. I'm bad at roofing in any video game so this helps a lot :)
Thank you, this gave me more inspiration ✨✨
Roofs are notoriously hard to make visually appealing, thanks for the showcase of these designs!
You left out a radius roof. I built a round house around an oak tree that turned out awesome! Was an extreme challenge and had to rework it when I opened up the plans roof tiles. the center was an open courtyard for the tree. It has become my main base of operations. Give it a try I think you would like the challenge and I would love to see your flare with it. Enjoy all your builds.
My roofs have been getting boring so this is a nice reference video for me.
I'm glad it will be helpful!
Finally, a video that mentions my no-roof method. I feel represented!
lol Unironically Iv done the no roof method myself in games where resources are tight lol. (Green hell, need I say more)
@@ZerosterGuides
Hah xD
I haven't played Green Hell, but that sounds miserable. Then again, I bet it's anything but a cozy-feeling game like Valheim.
Very Impressive! I Love this!
Are you an architectural student or something? Also i imagine the time that it took to build each one if these for a four second clip each is amazing.
Not really, but since I have spent a while building for my channel I started looking up things to do with architecture so that I could make better content for everyone.
and it was surprisingly relaxing, usually when I make my regular building videos I re-record a lot due to errors. but with this I just ended up throwing on some music and relaxing while building.
❤
thank you thank you thank you you you
I feel like this is something you found useful lol
Glad it helped!
Wtf is with the butterfly roof lol
"My personal least favorite" made me lol. Didn't see that one coming, and didn't like it. I see no benefit to that one other than letting others know you make poor style choices.
when I found that one I instantly thought "how does that not cave in when it snows"
because thats a real roof design lol. I wish It didn't exist but it really does.
@@ZerosterGuides Probably for places with little or no snow/dry climates. Even then I fail to see any benefit to building this atrocity instead of regular roof
@@sanguinraven5672 honestly thats the only thing I could think of as well. It seems to be much more common in modern architecture and at much shallower angles.
but Its something I probably won't use in any builds personally.