Terraforming

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Revision as of 09:31, 9 August 2010 by Torley Linden (talk | contribs)
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In Second Life, not only do you have the power to do amazing things like fly — you can terraform, which means you can change the shape and elevation of land (terrain) in seconds! All it takes is a few quick clicks.

Where can I terraform?

You can terraform land you own or group-owned land you've been granted the ability to.

However, the range you can terraform depends on region settings which may be controlled by Linden Lab or an estate owner/manager. See Land Limits.

Where do I enable/disable terraforming?

A landowner can always terraform their own land, provided there aren't greater restrictions.

If you want to allow others, including random strangers to terraform your land parcel:

  1. Choose World > Place Profile > About Land.
  2. In the About Land window, click OPTIONS tab.
  3. Check Edit Terrain tab.
KBwarning.png Warning: Be very careful before enabling this! Edit Terrain is usually off because you, as the landowner, don't need it to terraform. Many builds are dependent on the shape of the terrain, and allowing passerby to incidentally or intentionally change your terrain can destroy builds — raising the terrain can return objects to their owners.

Further up a level, terraforming range can be changed by estate owners and managers:

  1. Choose World > Place Profile > Region/Estate.
  2. In the Region/Estate window, click Terrain tab.
  3. Set the Water Height, Terrain Raise Limit, and Terrain Lower Limit.

See this for a further explanation of what each control means.

If I don't own any land, can I practice terraforming?

Yes, there's a quick and easy place you can feel free to mess up — Torley's landbox, which you can teleport to now. This video shows you how easy terraforming is.

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How do I prevent terraform griefing?

"Terraform griefing" refers to intentional destruction of your terrain, which can also affect objects which were previously resting on or near your terrain. As the old saying goes, "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure". First of all, as mentioned above, don't enable Edit Terrain unless you're absolutely sure you want everyone else in the world to come by and change your terrain. For example, this would be appropriate if you have a chaotic creative space that Residents are free to litter on, but you wouldn't want Edit Terrain on if you've meticulously sculpted a mountain.

See also