But the problem is anyone can come and snap their plot next to yours and take over a section of your plot and take what ever they want and delete what they want.
No? when someone snaps next to your plot, yours will become larger in that sections as well as theirs, expanding both and creating a new border. Makes it more squared for that side. Now if you build in that new section and then someone removes their plot again then I guess you will lose control over anything there. But not within the initial solo circle. At least that is my experience with it.
@@just5moremins Correct. As long as you keep your build inside your original plot circle you won't lose anything. I did lose some of my build right after the plot cleanup because I had unknowingly built in that 'expanded' area you get when there are plots next to each other.
@@stavrosTX yeah that expanded bit can fool you a little first time going in. On my first plot someone else moved in next to me and my plot expanded, but I did not notice this at first and built there. But then they moved and I had to rethink that bit :)
Thank you for this wonderful video my friend. It is one if not the most useful video I have watched to date for pax-dei building.
Thank you! Glad you found it useful!
But the problem is anyone can come and snap their plot next to yours and take over a section of your plot and take what ever they want and delete what they want.
No? when someone snaps next to your plot, yours will become larger in that sections as well as theirs, expanding both and creating a new border. Makes it more squared for that side. Now if you build in that new section and then someone removes their plot again then I guess you will lose control over anything there. But not within the initial solo circle. At least that is my experience with it.
@@just5moremins Correct. As long as you keep your build inside your original plot circle you won't lose anything. I did lose some of my build right after the plot cleanup because I had unknowingly built in that 'expanded' area you get when there are plots next to each other.
@@stavrosTX yeah that expanded bit can fool you a little first time going in. On my first plot someone else moved in next to me and my plot expanded, but I did not notice this at first and built there. But then they moved and I had to rethink that bit :)
"Circle"...
Well, a dodecagon then, but circle is easier to visualize for most.