In my opinion, building tutorials DO help you get better at building, for a few reasons.
1: It shows you color/texture pallets, things that you can use to spruce up future walls.
2: It shows you about block aesthetics (or whatever the word I'm looking for is). For example, say you watched a tutorial for a lush garden with a really nice and detailed fence. You could take the fence design and experiment with the general shape of the fence, the blocks, etc.
3: Not really including interiors, it's a good way to learn how to decorate a build, like window plants or adding depth to windows and walls.
This really only applies if the tutorial actually shows whats going on and doesn't just make the build
This is Déjà vu bc I just rewatched your second stardew video yesterday and woke up to this. Also you are probably one of the only creators I watch where I intend to relax just because you are so chill, so never change bro your the goat 🐐
Coming at the whole Build Tutorial thing from an artist's point of view: There's really two ways you can follow a tutorial for building in Minecraft. You can either:
1) mindlessly follow the tutorial, placing blocks as the narrator says and only as the narrator says, on and on until you complete the build, not learning anything because – as you said – you're just following the instructions without looking at the thought behind the placed blocks. Or you can:
2) treat the tutorial as a sort of art study. This can be sort of difficult, depending on the tutorial. If it's just placing blocks layer by layer, like Lego instructions, it's very difficult to learn from it. But if the tutorial is blocking out the shapes of the build, then adding depth, then details, and so on and so forth, then following the tutorial can help with understanding the process behind creating builds.
But it's all really dependent on the type of tutorial and the willingness of the person following it to learn. If the person following the tutorial just wants an end product to show off and claim as their own on the server, they're just going to follow the tutorial and not learn, but if they actually try to look at the thought behind the builds they're copying, following tutorials can help.
Of course, it's far better (In my opinion) to look at references and try to make something similar if you want to improve, but that's not to say there's no merit in following tutorials.
26 Comments
Hello
Fltuff
Miss these ones ❤
title should have been fresh start in minecraft stardew valley
Been waiting for this, thanks for making my Saturday worth it 🥳
Minecraft always looks gorgeous when this man plays it
I really like these type of videos because they’re very calming and I can keep it on in the background while I work! Excited for this 🙂
12 views is wild
❤
That intro was absolute gold.
holy refresh pull
Yooo i'm featured!!
Made My Day
early gang
Next episode: Turning Hytale into Stardew Valley (totally, lmao)
Farms not big enough, sorry about the problem tho
Mythical youtube pull
In my opinion, building tutorials DO help you get better at building, for a few reasons.
1: It shows you color/texture pallets, things that you can use to spruce up future walls.
2: It shows you about block aesthetics (or whatever the word I'm looking for is). For example, say you watched a tutorial for a lush garden with a really nice and detailed fence. You could take the fence design and experiment with the general shape of the fence, the blocks, etc.
3: Not really including interiors, it's a good way to learn how to decorate a build, like window plants or adding depth to windows and walls.
This really only applies if the tutorial actually shows whats going on and doesn't just make the build
This is Déjà vu bc I just rewatched your second stardew video yesterday and woke up to this. Also you are probably one of the only creators I watch where I intend to relax just because you are so chill, so never change bro your the goat 🐐
Coming at the whole Build Tutorial thing from an artist's point of view: There's really two ways you can follow a tutorial for building in Minecraft. You can either:
1) mindlessly follow the tutorial, placing blocks as the narrator says and only as the narrator says, on and on until you complete the build, not learning anything because – as you said – you're just following the instructions without looking at the thought behind the placed blocks. Or you can:
2) treat the tutorial as a sort of art study. This can be sort of difficult, depending on the tutorial. If it's just placing blocks layer by layer, like Lego instructions, it's very difficult to learn from it. But if the tutorial is blocking out the shapes of the build, then adding depth, then details, and so on and so forth, then following the tutorial can help with understanding the process behind creating builds.
But it's all really dependent on the type of tutorial and the willingness of the person following it to learn. If the person following the tutorial just wants an end product to show off and claim as their own on the server, they're just going to follow the tutorial and not learn, but if they actually try to look at the thought behind the builds they're copying, following tutorials can help.
Of course, it's far better (In my opinion) to look at references and try to make something similar if you want to improve, but that's not to say there's no merit in following tutorials.
Yooo flowstate 🗣️
Love the server man, its so fun and friendly
I still dont know how he isnt big. THIS IS AN AWESOME VID!
flowstate: making minecraft sexy one intro at a time
dude…got my fav food (Pizza) one of my fav youtubers just posted a banger AND its the weekend? this is amazing!!! 😀
I wish u continued ur other build worlds and not just start new projects every time, nevertheless, i still enjoy these videos so keep em cominnnnn.