Birch is only for the walls of outbuildings. Spruce supremacy
Grotti-ltalie on
>dont say birch
Camman18 has done irreversible damage to the building skills of children. That said, I fuck with mangrove
Wild-Rip9681 on
spruce supremacy! but been liking the cherry wood recently
Rayvn22 on
Spruce forever, giant spruce trees ftw.
gBoostedMachinations on
How did you get your world to have that nice puke-hue to it?
Cheesethebeans on
Mangrove is such a pretty wood but I don’t use many blocks that complement it so I don’t use it much unfortunately (and it’s tree is hard to chop down and when you do finally manage that you get like 10 logs)
Spruce and dark oak on the other hand are pretty versatile and look awesome when paired together (plus they’re easy enough to obtain)
pineapplyreddit on
Spruce is the most versatile, but It really depends on the build. I’ve been using pale oak a lot recently.
smokeybear100 on
Dark oak and pale oak are in a league of their own.
Nice-Neighborhood975 on
My preference in order
1. Spruce
2. Jungle
3. Dark oak
4. Acaica (logs over planks)
5. Oak
6. Anything I’m forgetting
15. Birch
Note: Haven’t really built with Pale Oak, so can’t really rank it
thecountM on
Bamboo is my favorite
Opening_Ad_3890 on
All wood types are equal if you’re good enough
warrenjt on
Giant spruce trees strictly for number of logs and the fact that they grow straight up instead of branching out and being pains in the ass to chop down in full.
Ok-Buffalo5138 on
I used to always use birch with dark oak. Or birch with diorite and leaves. I thought it looked really good + I liked lighter builds
Lanky_Succotash_986 on
All the wood is good. But dark oak my favorite
Thebestworstthrower on
Nice dude I just started working on a build like that wit the raised walls
violafloral on
I love warped and dark oak :p
Ice2228 on
I dont know about the best type. I’d probably call it the *easiest* type. All woods can look great of you got the mojo, I dont think any of them are *best*
Farm them all, and use them all. Don’t limit yourself.
That being said, I value all of them the same in terms of colors and textures and usability. The only actual difference to me are the doors and trapdoors since they are literally different, and my favorite trapdoor would be mangrove since its got a round hole, I like to put blocks behind it to make unnatural looking circles in my detailing sometimes lol. So for this small trapdoor preference, I guess my favorite wood is technically mangrove. But they’re all great and 100% usable with the right mindset.
Jubal93 on
Birch used to be my favorite until spruce came along.
somesaggitarius on
Birch and sandstone pair really well with spruce for accents. And old growth birch forests are one of the most beautiful biomes to walk through. Spruce is a great starting point for learning to build aesthetically rather than just functionally because the color is inoffensive and it works well in most styles, but try branching out a little. Pun not intended.
BonezOz on
Fav at the moment is dark Oak, but that’s because my resource pack makes it as light as spruce is in vanilla. And it contrasts well with spruce.
But I use birch to line ceilings and I’ll probably keep using it for ceilings until concrete stairs and slabs introduced
20 Comments
Birch is only for the walls of outbuildings. Spruce supremacy
>dont say birch
Camman18 has done irreversible damage to the building skills of children. That said, I fuck with mangrove
spruce supremacy! but been liking the cherry wood recently
Spruce forever, giant spruce trees ftw.
How did you get your world to have that nice puke-hue to it?
Mangrove is such a pretty wood but I don’t use many blocks that complement it so I don’t use it much unfortunately (and it’s tree is hard to chop down and when you do finally manage that you get like 10 logs)
Spruce and dark oak on the other hand are pretty versatile and look awesome when paired together (plus they’re easy enough to obtain)
Spruce is the most versatile, but It really depends on the build. I’ve been using pale oak a lot recently.
Dark oak and pale oak are in a league of their own.
My preference in order
1. Spruce
2. Jungle
3. Dark oak
4. Acaica (logs over planks)
5. Oak
6. Anything I’m forgetting
15. Birch
Note: Haven’t really built with Pale Oak, so can’t really rank it
Bamboo is my favorite
All wood types are equal if you’re good enough
Giant spruce trees strictly for number of logs and the fact that they grow straight up instead of branching out and being pains in the ass to chop down in full.
I used to always use birch with dark oak. Or birch with diorite and leaves. I thought it looked really good + I liked lighter builds
All the wood is good. But dark oak my favorite
Nice dude I just started working on a build like that wit the raised walls
I love warped and dark oak :p
I dont know about the best type. I’d probably call it the *easiest* type. All woods can look great of you got the mojo, I dont think any of them are *best*
Farm them all, and use them all. Don’t limit yourself.
That being said, I value all of them the same in terms of colors and textures and usability. The only actual difference to me are the doors and trapdoors since they are literally different, and my favorite trapdoor would be mangrove since its got a round hole, I like to put blocks behind it to make unnatural looking circles in my detailing sometimes lol. So for this small trapdoor preference, I guess my favorite wood is technically mangrove. But they’re all great and 100% usable with the right mindset.
Birch used to be my favorite until spruce came along.
Birch and sandstone pair really well with spruce for accents. And old growth birch forests are one of the most beautiful biomes to walk through. Spruce is a great starting point for learning to build aesthetically rather than just functionally because the color is inoffensive and it works well in most styles, but try branching out a little. Pun not intended.
Fav at the moment is dark Oak, but that’s because my resource pack makes it as light as spruce is in vanilla. And it contrasts well with spruce.
But I use birch to line ceilings and I’ll probably keep using it for ceilings until concrete stairs and slabs introduced