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Or there's always the modding route. Just download a mod that disables building integrity requirements and go nuts.
Gotta go for the flex. This is my 1st run, so it has to be pure vanilla.
It is not god enuf if its green.
I recommend watching various building videos on youtube about how structures can hit red.
There are limitations on structures depending on the materials used. Seemingly you're exceeding those limitations in some capacity.
Valheim has a structural "stability" system and the following video can maybe help understand it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gD3YQGufXgA
It's also possible to raise terrain on (technically next to,) already built pieces without moving the pieces. They will just sink into the ground or float respective of whether you are adding or lowering terrain height (floating pieces will update their new structural integrity and may break in the process). I personally do enjoy doing this with my outer walls and the large stone pieces, partly because i also tend to put my pathways (preferably roofed, which i often build off of those stone walls built into the earth wall) around the inner edges of my outer walls to give it a bit more buffer space for when i do get a troll raid or something. Nothing that important or difficult to replace ever gets damaged (except maybe a buried ward i have to dig up to fix, not hard, just have to remember where the heck it was for spawn blocking reasons).
No mods. the wider bottom is hidden terrain in the walls. That puts the next narrower level at 'ground', and from there, it goes up with iron as far as I could. I also dug it out to bedrock and flattened it, so it has a very deep basement. I like 3M walls inside, I think it has close to 15 floors, been a while since this one... Also when stone goes red, you can pile wood on another 2-3 floors.
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2799499765
"Totally" is clearly an exaggeration. The fact that objects have limits is based in physics, that they fall to the ground is based in physics and there are cases where supports are needed, specifically when building with stone and using the arch.
Respect on the vanilla run.
The structural integrity is a bit annoying, there are times when it seems a bit too off from physics. However, I get that making modestly real would be really hard so no hate on my part to the team. just have to understand the mechanics as others have mentioned. good luck and have fun.