Installa Steam
Accedi
|
Lingua
简体中文 (cinese semplificato)
繁體中文 (cinese tradizionale)
日本語 (giapponese)
한국어 (coreano)
ไทย (tailandese)
Български (bulgaro)
Čeština (ceco)
Dansk (danese)
Deutsch (tedesco)
English (inglese)
Español - España (spagnolo - Spagna)
Español - Latinoamérica (spagnolo dell'America Latina)
Ελληνικά (greco)
Français (francese)
Indonesiano
Magyar (ungherese)
Nederlands (olandese)
Norsk (norvegese)
Polski (polacco)
Português (portoghese - Portogallo)
Português - Brasil (portoghese brasiliano)
Română (rumeno)
Русский (russo)
Suomi (finlandese)
Svenska (svedese)
Türkçe (turco)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamita)
Українська (ucraino)
Segnala un problema nella traduzione
Alternatively add more support from land, like the incredibly OP (but costly) iron beams. You can also raise the ground beneath the pier so that you don't need as many supporting log pillars for each section. Less parts = more stability in this case. (You can also raise it to be flush with the pier, removing the need for supporting pillars entirely, but that just looks like shit in my opinion)
However, at some point (Unless using Iron beams afaik) you just can't build any longer piers, due to not reaching the sea floor to place any more foundation pillars. Once you get a fairly decent (borderline superfluous) length proper snapping also gets troublesome, haven't found a good workaround for that yet, so the solution here is to just eyeball it really.