Valheim

Valheim

MythN7 Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:15am
tips for a very large roof in this design please.
so i like open concept, and without using the ^ shaped roof notches, like a bumpy surface, how can i make a large roof flat?
I dont wana keep going up like a pyramid, and the remaining hole is 3x6 volume.
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2943203389
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Showing 1-15 of 15 comments
Rhapsody Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:20am 
You could still use the roof pieces, just rotate them so they form a roof like this: https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2933773114
MythN7 Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:21am 
Originally posted by Rhapsody:
You could still use the roof pieces, just rotate them so they form a roof like this: https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2933773114
how do those frame peices you have higher than the roof not rot in the rain?
Rhapsody Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:28am 
They won't rot because their center point is aligned with the roof. Tarred pieces are also immune to rain damage.
MythN7 Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:29am 
Originally posted by Rhapsody:
They won't rot because their center point is aligned with the roof. Tarred pieces are also immune to rain damage.
tarred?
_I_ Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:31am 
you can put tar on platforms to prevent weather/rain damage
MythN7 Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:51am 
Originally posted by _I_:
you can put tar on platforms to prevent weather/rain damage
so i could tar a regular flat floor board and use it as a modern roof?
Sound Mar 6, 2023 @ 9:00am 
Originally posted by MythN7:
Originally posted by _I_:
you can put tar on platforms to prevent weather/rain damage
so i could tar a regular flat floor board and use it as a modern roof?
It's not "putting tar on", you use tar in order to craft new build pieces. You can craft darkwood beams (like regular beams) and the same roof pieces as normal but tarred. I believe the only difference is they look aesthetically different.
Last edited by Sound; Mar 6, 2023 @ 9:03am
umop-apisdn Mar 6, 2023 @ 9:18am 
Originally posted by MythN7:
Originally posted by _I_:
you can put tar on platforms to prevent weather/rain damage
so i could tar a regular flat floor board and use it as a modern roof?
Technically speaking, yes... although as I understand it, they won't count as roof, nor stop the rain. Perhaps do a "bumpy" roof (26 degree roof upwards, then downwards, then repeat; as Rhapsody suggested), then put darkwood flooring above it?
Pat Fenis Mar 6, 2023 @ 9:29am 
You could try to use 2x2 stone floor tiles to make a flat section over the chests, if those iron beams are going all the way to ground. Looks like they might be placed on the stone.
Last edited by Pat Fenis; Mar 6, 2023 @ 9:31am
Lil Puppy Mar 6, 2023 @ 7:21pm 
Thanks to the roof pieces only really being useful for ultra tall peaked designs, anything not rectangular or square will turn out weird because we need like 8 more roof piece designs for all the corner possibilities and peak connections. Anyway, you can either peak this or you can wave it. Or you can just say F-it and put a flat floor and then do the feather method.
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2943429944
FissionChips Mar 7, 2023 @ 12:59am 
Weird misinformation in this thread from people who should know better. Tarred pieces are not immune to rain. Roof pieces, angled pieces, and stakewalls are.
MythN7 Mar 7, 2023 @ 7:55am 
so theres not a single flat peice of wood immune to the rain?
even if its not counted as a roof for stopping rain.
all i care about is it not needing repairs from water.

you would think there is at least once wood that can do this by end game, to make an actual dock you walk on to reach the deeper water for a boat.

i mean, boats are made of wood and are always in water.
i dont think most of viking buildings in most historical shows use castle style stone work for full buildings. and needing boat docks are totally a viking thing.

they should add a floor piece that uses lots of that resin you get from every dwarf kill, to make a treated board, for making floors and planks to walk on without a roof over it.
Last edited by MythN7; Mar 7, 2023 @ 7:58am
Rhapsody Mar 7, 2023 @ 7:58am 
Originally posted by FissionChips:
Weird misinformation in this thread from people who should know better. Tarred pieces are not immune to rain. Roof pieces, angled pieces, and stakewalls are.

It's not misinformation. You can check the wiki and compare darkwood beams[valheim.fandom.com] with iron wood beam[valheim.fandom.com], for example, or test it in game yourself.

The whole point of using tarred wood in construction is because it's waterproof, at the expense of being more flammable (which is also reflected in the game).
Last edited by Rhapsody; Mar 7, 2023 @ 7:59am
umop-apisdn Mar 7, 2023 @ 8:12am 
It should be noted that building piece decay will bring the building piece to 50% durability, at worst. The majority of the effect is cosmetic, assuming your building isn't being damaged by other sources.

If you don't need it to stop the rain, and you don't mind a "roof" made of mossy floor tiles... simply use regular wood.
jonnin Mar 7, 2023 @ 8:33am 
if its all cosmetics to you, you can also do double deep floor tiles so the bottom (seen interior) remains fresh looking while the top one takes rain damage. Assuming you don't live in a valley where you climb the nearby hill/mountain/whatever to look down on your home, you should rarely see the grey 50% wood topside.

the game is not done, so comments about what is available at endgame is premature. But, yes, at this point we have only stone flat 'roof' using lofted floor tiles (and with marble, that includes 1x1 blocks, 1/2 floor tile triangle blocks, 2x2x floor tiles, 2x1 blocks ... all fit as a flat 1m thick stone roof. Marble has some slanted and oddball pieces so you can do something a little more fancy than just flat, mostly spiked corners but you can put those together in interesting ways.
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Date Posted: Mar 6, 2023 @ 8:15am
Posts: 15