Sparky101
Sparky101
7 / 8
8th Jul 2016
19th Jul 2016
It's alternate more durable version. Please do not spam the comments with messages saying it's a copy, because it isn't. More than 20,000 particles have been edited which in my head sounds like it isn't a direct copy. Anyway enjoy blowing this up :-) - S
towers city remake subway bomb dimagord nuke vault sparky101

Comments

  • nick445882
    nick445882
    19th Feb 2017
    is too big.
  • nick445882
    nick445882
    19th Feb 2017
    just write a sign if your description.
  • DiceFlame
    DiceFlame
    27th Oct 2016
    look at original it says "FREE TO COPY"
  • The-Powder-Disease
    The-Powder-Disease
    23rd Jul 2016
    more than 20k particles have been edited?! IMPRESSIVE! but I would say I could do that in less than a min. You said it is not copied, but, sir, more than 90% of this belongs to the real owner of this. Please make original work.
  • Ganbest
    Ganbest
    20th Jul 2016
    oooh it,s copied AND ONE ELEMENT CHANGED TO CONCRETE. GREAT IDEA! I CAN MADE THIS ONE TRY.
  • Sparky101
    Sparky101
    10th Jul 2016
    And also I changed more than one element so get your facts right!
  • Sparky101
    Sparky101
    10th Jul 2016
    I changed the quartz because I wanted to make the destruction more realistic by changing a solid element with a powder element that was also a common building material in real life. I can see where you are coming from but I carefully checked the rules to ensure I was not breaking any by publishing this!
  • NorthMustang
    NorthMustang
    9th Jul 2016
    "Oh look, a save that I can steal; I'll just change all of one type of element and then it won't be copying." -1
  • Sparky101
    Sparky101
    9th Jul 2016
    yes if you press "d" and remove all the concrete particles by pressing [CTRl+Shift+Right-Click] you will see that the particle count decreases by over 20,000. Thus proving that I edited over 20,000 particles!
  • dragoninferno99
    dragoninferno99
    9th Jul 2016
    Impressive. You sure that it was more than 20,000 particles? +1