Hi everyone,
I wanted to quickly make a small, informative
video about how the building grid works, as
a response to a Reddit video I saw on the
Fortnite Competitive sub(reddit) about floors
being placed above your head while doing 90s.
In the video, the guy is doing 90s.
Floors get placed above his head.
A lot of people got the right idea, that the
person was looking too high up, and that's
why the floors were being placed.
But I really want to make this clear as to
why this is happening.
And it's not clear, and the building grid
system is super opaque, so it's understandable
that people don't know this, but let me break
it down really quick.
So, when you look at a wall, if you look below
the midpoint of the wall, you place a floor
below you.
And if you look above the midpoint - approximately
- it'll go above.
The same principle applies to ramps: if you
look below - here, let me - if you look
below the half point of the ramp, like approximately
wherever that is, it'll place below.
If you look above, it'll place above.
So, that all makes sense.
But now we have - like - a 90 like this, where
there is a wall and a ramp.
And this is where it gets confusing: whatever
is in front of you, takes priority.
So, we look up and down, here's the mid point,
coolcoolcool.
But then when we get here, property doesn't
apply, and that's because the ramp has now
taken priority.
So, here: cool.
Once we're on ramp: no, you gotta look below
the midpoint of the ramp, not the midpoint
of the wall anymore.
So, I quickly wanted to clarify that thing
about how the building grid works.
And, yeah.
