
To make a layered dungeon, all you gotta do is make two layers and then build what you want on which layer. Let's compare the design to this free web browser tool (mentioned earlier). And for the more advanced stuff? Feel free to do theory work. You should be able to click and then click, that's it. You shouldn't need to read layers of instructions if you're new.

There are so many more glaring design issues that this is just the surface.Īnd it's not an MRI machine, dude it's a map maker where you draw lines. The manual still uses Windows 95 (that's older than I am), why? It doesn't look clean and makes it look like abandonware. Why are there two colour selectors? Why not just one? They're exactly the same. You can't move layers up and down or overlayed or change the opacity. There are no resizing bars, instead, you need to type it in manually. There's no blank tool option, where it doesn't do anything if you click.

With doors and walls, why not have it so the door automatically connects to the wall and deletes the segment of the wall underneath it? Why not add brush and scatter options for creating forests instead of clicking, dragging? If you click on another window and drag the CC+ Window, there will be floating text where it thinks your mouse was.

When you delete objects, there's a white square that needs a refresh. It's choppy and laggy for when you pan around the canvas, laggier than photoshop. You need to manually edit the layers because you placed things wrong, instead of it being automatic (when will a mountain ever be in front of trees?), autosave is literally a button prompt.

Like seriously, you need to press Refresh when you place an object down that's around floors. I've made a comparison, that was ignored, of a map creator that isn't as fluffy and pointlessly difficult. Good programs rely on intuition, where icons, results, feedback and ease-of-use come naturally to the user. >It seems you just want programs to work without reading the instructions - what a good way to go about life. All you need to do is to open a new mapĪll you need to do is read through these hundred+ pages of PDF while referring to images and cross-referencing inside of the actual PDF-Or you can watch these couple of hour-long videos.
