G Force is right. For now, I'd stick to one colour only. Maybe leave some planters empty? Or with some topiaries? Add a few awnings? That might also reduce the amount of white railings a bit. Would add some more visual interest.
Welcome indeed! I'm not as concerned about the different flower colours, it's mostly the path shapes and widths that I would change. Replace the 1x1 fountains in the middle with a single 3x3 fountain for example, that will leave wider paths around the edges. For a park entrance, you want the paths to be wider than one tile at the bare minimum. You've created a labyrinth full of bottlenecks! The L-shaped flowerbeds would then also need to be shorter, so that the gap between each is three tiles, not one. It will create a much more pleasant space, trust me!
Another tip that always works: put a different land texture directly under your paths; the tan sand usually works. (Example #4 in this passive agressive tutorial I made)
3 Comments
Comment System Offline
G Force Offline
Pretty basic start, I would probably just chose 2-3 types of flowers personally to keep it a bit more cohesive but ultimately up to you!
Jappy Offline
That's a lot of flowers!
G Force is right. For now, I'd stick to one colour only. Maybe leave some planters empty? Or with some topiaries? Add a few awnings? That might also reduce the amount of white railings a bit. Would add some more visual interest.
Liampie Offline
Welcome indeed! I'm not as concerned about the different flower colours, it's mostly the path shapes and widths that I would change. Replace the 1x1 fountains in the middle with a single 3x3 fountain for example, that will leave wider paths around the edges. For a park entrance, you want the paths to be wider than one tile at the bare minimum. You've created a labyrinth full of bottlenecks! The L-shaped flowerbeds would then also need to be shorter, so that the gap between each is three tiles, not one. It will create a much more pleasant space, trust me!
Another tip that always works: put a different land texture directly under your paths; the tan sand usually works. (Example #4 in this passive agressive tutorial I made)