Anonymous

Travel: Difference between revisions

From The Blockheads Wiki
51 bytes added ,  8 April 2016
>McClaw
>As2003
Line 54: Line 54:
The game will not deliberately make a blockhead '''fall''' more than a short, easily survived distance. It is most common when a blockhead is descending no more than a few block's distance, say from a ceiling to a floor, tree to ground, or ceiling to the top of a ladder. These falls cause no [[Health Bar|damage]].
The game will not deliberately make a blockhead '''fall''' more than a short, easily survived distance. It is most common when a blockhead is descending no more than a few block's distance, say from a ceiling to a floor, tree to ground, or ceiling to the top of a ladder. These falls cause no [[Health Bar|damage]].


But if properly arranged, a blockhead can be seriously injured from a long fall. This should require some deliberate (if inattentive) effort by a player or extremely unusual circumstances such as being on a despawning [[tree]] [[leaves|limb]] over a significant drop. The easiest way to force a blockhead to get hurt falling is to make it remove the ladder it's hanging from with a long gap below it, although newer versions of the game may block this.
But if properly arranged, a blockhead will sustain injuries from a fall of six or more blocks. This should require some deliberate (if inattentive) effort by a player or extremely unusual circumstances such as:
* Being on a despawning [[tree]] [[leaves|limb]] over a significant drop.
* Setting fire to the tree or ladder you are standing on
* Removing a [[jetpack]], mid-flight.
 
Previous version of the game allowed a player to remove the ladder a blockhead was hanging from, thus causing it to fall.  


A falling blockhead can catch itself on ladders or adjacent solid blocks, if falling at a slow enough speed. This often includes a slight up-down motion as the blockhead "recovers" from the fall and stabilizes itself.
A falling blockhead can catch itself on ladders or adjacent solid blocks, if falling at a slow enough speed. This often includes a slight up-down motion as the blockhead "recovers" from the fall and stabilizes itself.
Anonymous user