Hi! I made this medieval house for a game I’m trying to make, and I’m looking for feedback on what I could do to make it look better and if I should add or change anything to improve the build.
The front
The back
![Screenshot 2024-02-19 143644](/secure-uploads/uploads/original/5X/2/6/3/4/2634ad39b4f6907f932a497ed2e3f5c977fc61dd.png)
Hi! I made this medieval house for a game I’m trying to make, and I’m looking for feedback on what I could do to make it look better and if I should add or change anything to improve the build.
The front
It looks pretty good for a Roblox house.
I’m pretty picky about architectural things, so here are a couple of points:
I know, these aren’t really points that most players would notice, but there are a few who will.
Thank you for the feedback! The steps are 1.3 studs tall while the door is 7.5 studs tall. I hadn’t noticed the steps looked quite tall. I will also look into the other 2 things you’ve pointed out. Your feedback has been really helpful.
This medieval house looks good! I like the style of it! Nice job on this!
I think it looks amazing, great work!
You could also add some flowers outside to make it really pop.
This is a very common detailed choice for fantasy medieval homes where the roofs edges will overhang. If it were realistic 1400’s I would agree but I don’t think thats the genre. Besides if they didnt overhang it’d look like a box, it gives it more shape and contrast
I think its overall fine but the chimney is really boxy and not as detailed compared to the rest- just looks out of place
Maybe this shape or similar could be better?
Also;
Add in some variance of the wooden beams on the walls, it looks too copy paste with it all being the same
It’s hard to tell from the 1st pic you posted, but I didn’t mean the beams seemed too long, just that the shingles should be on top of the beam, not coming from the sides of it.
Your last picture shows what I mean. There is a long ridge cap piece (not the beam itself) at the peak of the uppermost shingles which keeps the water from leaking in at the peak.