Originally posted by TConwellOriginally posted by hyyyper
if want to know a rides height i look at the top of the lift to the bottom of the drop, or the lowest point in the rest of the track, not at the statistics
Look man, pay attention because you are about to be schooled. Where are you going to find those "numbers"? Or are you saying that your eyes are calibrated and so you can look at a structure and determine exactly what the hieght is without a ruler? No, they are not ... and you
are an idiot. In order to tell these things about any ride you would look at the statistics ... imagine that. Geesh man, stop showing us your arse, it is becoming quite sickening to look at.
i look at the gridlines in the editor, not in the 'statistics' function in the option menu
Originally posted by Princess_G
So it does matter? Even if the land is raised higher? So would it be better you think if I left the coaster where it is and terraform without lifting it? Or how about this, I label the ride the way I label my Fantasy coasters in URDC - XRF (Experimental Realistic Fantasy). For those who don't know we on the UR side have created extra Coaster Categories for our Fantasy coasters - XRFF (Experimental Realistic Frictionless Fantasy), RFF (Realistic Frictionless Fantasy), and Extreme Fantasy (I created the last one). Perhaps if I explain it in the description it will make sense on the ride?
the height of the coaster remains the same if the total coaster is lifted. wether you put terrain under it is upto you,
for classification, i can't measure the height of it just from the pics, but i think that if a woodie is over like 80meters from top till bottom it should be considerd fantasy, but there's no real guideline for that