Not entirely sure why you quoted me, or what you're getting at - aside from 'mesh slaps are bad, good modders should release their mods and teach the kiddies how to mod properly too' Which I completely agree with, though mesh slaps could easily be seen as a starting point - which could then go on to become a fully J-beamed vehicle with working features, if the creator invested plenty of time and effort into it. Either way, the RX-7 isn't mine - I just made the skin for it, because there aren't enough Initial D references already. The skin is unreleased but you can get the car from here: https://www.beamng.com/threads/mazda-rx-7-iii-v1-4.57461/ As far as teaching people how to mod, Assuming you're patient, you're motivated and willing to sacrifice time to learn; I'd say there's plenty tutorials out there to get you started - but that's it. After that it's either go around asking people how they do it or figure it out on your own. It's peoples lack of patience that results in these quick mesh slaps, because they want a car right away, not have to wait half a year for it to be completed properly. OT:
You can finally now live your Ricer dreams from SLRR (street legal racing redline) in BeamNG we know its the..Einvagen 110GTK! soon at the repo.
I’m not saying modders should release their stuff I’m saying people shouldn’t resort to mesh slaps and instead learn how to properly mod themselves. It’s up to the modder weather or not they want to release it but I don’t think people who get rejected should go throw a tantrum and make mesh slaps. Although you can argue they make them for pics rather than driving and crashing. Like Fen said, they make the Community look bad and I’m pretty sure the Devs wouldn’t like that either. We as a Community should be teaching each other good tips. The more good tips shared, the more good shit that’s made. Everyone’s happy then , and in my books, that’s better than flame wars anyday. But like you said, they don't have the patience or motivation to make mods and yeah I guess mesh slaps could be a starting point. They do teach you a little bit on texturing and how it works, but certainly not enough to fully understand. I don't really use them that often and stick to proper mods. The reason I tagged you is because your post featured that beautiful RX-7. Mad skin, by the way. OT: Canberra plate on a car owned by a Queenslander. Makes sense
No. DM means the car was built for a certain market. It is assigned to a version, not a model. A single model can have multiple versions for different countries. O.T.: