Function-wise, it’s jam packed with stuff like the steps leading to the balconies having smartly integrated portals for easy travel, a room that leads to your Longship for water traveling, and a Lox farm at the side to get meat or tame for riding that adds to the functionality a survival mode build should offer. Towards the inside parts of the castle, they are sectioned off to different functions, where one can be a treasure room, the other, a room serving as your personal quarters, and one as a blacksmith/workstation area for your metal repairs. Inside the perimeter are supposed aesthetic choices such as crops, but as the video mentions, it can be turned into a little farm for personal needs as well as a coal making area for all the ores you’ll collect. While castles can be barren at most in terms of usage of the land or structures they are in, this one maximizes the space allotted by the build to create a multipurpose complex that has the shape of a fort. When all is said and done, you’ll have a good castle that can fit in any biome that would add more to the old style aesthetic that Valheim has to offer. Once you work out the logistics of the stone, next would be the ration of Iron to be used to support the castles stone upper floor, and the amount will depend on the size you set this build to, but for the one in the video, you’ll need a lot of those, so prepare to set a trip to multiple Swamps for that to happen. A disclaimer to this build is that this build was done with a free mode command, but seeing how it’s done, it’s still possible to build in normal scenarios, but it will take a lot, and I mean a lot, of stone. With the whole thing being a square area with circular towers, the castle we have here is sturdy and straightforward in their design, perfect for those who just want a castle to add to their world and not wanting to do a lot of design work.
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