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Fastest vehicle in brick rigs history1/25/2024 ![]() This last kind of missile is best put on a turret as it guides to where you point the half of the piston in the vehicle at, so it's common to see on air-to-air missiles or IFVs with ATGMs These can also have some difficulties keeping aim depending on the weight of the missile, the strenght and weight of the vehicle that holds and fires it, and that of its missile moint On these ones, there is a two-stage separation (with two separate detonators), the first one disconnects the missile part which is on one side of the piston, to fire it, and the second severs the connection between the vehicle and the missile just before the explosion, so as to not destroy the vehicle firing it at the same time (physics are weird in the game) actuator missile, which uses cheated physics driven pistons with hundreds of metres of expansion range (cheated with cheatengine/hexedit, the easiest way is to just copy the pistons from a creation using such pistons), abd have a thruster do all the work These can have troubles in multiplayer and also leave the original vehicle immobile as you put all your focus on the missile, unless another player is driving suicide bomb drone, where the separation happens as the missile launches, and the player manually controls the missile like a miniature plane To note is that guided missiles fall in two kinds ![]() ![]() Run them down with the scoop and make sure it functions correctly.Detonators are typically the way rockets and missiles get separated with Fire the guns and make sure they kill them. Once it all works, all guns fire, all doors open and are not obstructed, all spinning things still work and don't break into things then it's time to test it against some undead targets! Either make some zombies quickly or find a horde on the workshop before having some fun! Test out all the functions of the vehicle. If things fall off, make a note of what things break off before bringing it back to the garage and fix it. Drive it around and give it some driving tests. Make sure everything is attached and nothing falls off. You're now almost ready to unleash your survival vehicle on the workshop! The only things to do is make sure the vehicle is still structurally sound and is able to defend against the zombies! Remove any excess bricks not connected or not relevant for the vehicle before spawning it in the world. Cater to the class of vehicle you're making. If it's a gun truck, add more ammo and spare munitions in the vehicle. If it's a mobile home, add in beds and cooking supplies. Add in emergency supplies, cans of food, bottles of drink, crates of resources. Add in flamethrowers, saw blades, spikes, extra guns, the choice is yours! Again, don't go overboard with this, make it believable without adding too many spikes or extras to make it look like something from Mad Max, but make it seem like something the group would do the vehicle. If it's a low-down vehicle, extra measures would be added to protect the windows and keep zombies at bay. If it's a tall vehicle with high doors and windows, bars might not be required as zombies wouldn't be able to reach up there. However, depending on the design, you might add or remove some of these options. Most all vehicles have bars covering every exposed window, a scoop or frontal defence of some kind as well as sometimes a machine gun turret on top. Here's the real fun of making zombie vehicles, the detailing! Here is where you can go wild and really let out your creativity! Most zombie vehicles have got a standard-ish basic design. One point I want to stress is: DON'T GO OVERBOARD WITH RUST! DON'T JUST MAKE IT ALL RUSTED OTHERWISE IT LOOKS TERRIBLE AND LAZY! ![]() This is not mandatory, but it always looks good. ![]() Also, add in steel wheels on a few axles if you can, or some blank steel parts to make it look like the survivor has had to make running repairs at some point. For example, if there is a 1x4 brick in the design, can you break it down to plates and add some of them as rust? It really adds to the look and feel of the vehicle if the thing is weathered and made to look like it's been around for several years in all weathers. If you can break down bricks and add rust to them, then do so. If you can, add working doors if not already added made from bricks and glass, as having opening doors, bonnet and boot really help when adding details and extras to the design. Mess around with the lights and horn if applicable. What I mean by this is add some rust and missing bricks where they fit. ![]()
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