Falling through the ground
Forgerer
Join Date: 2016-10-31 Member: 223544Members
Okay fell through the ground again. I saved this time I think that underground cave is there for a reason. If you fall through and are not fast enough to catch it let yourself fall chances are you will land in the underground cave I am sure you know how to get out of there. there are also floating island under there that will catch you that lead to the cave if you have your grapple hook or jet pack they will get you out. if you miss those islands well it was nice knowing you.
Comments
That's where the debug console comes into play. Using the command WARPME it will return you to the base/structure you last entered, but if that fails you can try another method. By pressing F3 the game will display your XYZ coordinates, and this information with the WARP command can place you walking on top of your base. If you approach the entrance of the hatch, you can pan the camera down and enter the base, which can fix the clipping issue.
http://plays.tv/video/596195ba526e9c2880/running-through-building-fell-through-floor-aafter-messing-around-for-20-minutes-was-finally-able-get
http://lifehacker.com/steam-quietly-adds-the-ability-to-move-game-install-fol-1791417549
Had a similar experience sometimes before the release of voice of the deep where the terrain wouldn't load in the hallway between the giant moon pool and the stairway area. I got stuck in the Floor there and had trouble getting out
Must first create a Steam Library on the drive you want to move it to, and restart Steam. Then it will show.
I would. I personally run Subnautica from my SSD.
Well, if you get, say, a 120GB SSD (that's what I have, bigger is always better if you can afford it), you can move your Windows installation there, and just install your stuff that you don't always load up all the time on the normal hard disk (documents, videos, music, pictures, should all go on the normal disk as you won't notice any difference with them - you can re-direct your save location to the normal disk in Windows, if you need help with that, let me know).
Your boot times will go down to about 10-20 seconds from a cold power off to ready to load new programs. (Not the old "well, Windows is loaded, but you can't actually use it for another 1-2 minutes" deal that spinny disks are famous for).
So, regardless of whether it actually helps your Subnautica performance (and it should, at least a little, but it will help a lot if that's the bottleneck on your particular system) you'd want an SSD anyways. Once you've experienced using it, you'll never want to use a computer without one.
You'll also be limited by your interface if you do. If you have a USB 3 drive, using a USB 3 cable, plugged into a USB 3 port, then it might be worth it to use an external SSD.