Also it would probably be wise to change your username back to what it was. Your former name had a reputation behind it from years of good work. Howeverm now that you changed your name, you have to rebuild that reputation connected to your name. Your profile pic doesn't really matter because you don see that on the hottest/highest rated page. However, people do see your username and it will help convince people to click on your build.
Because people have begun to click and upvote rather than download and upvote, making highly detailed builds is also another way to get people to upvote your post. People like things that are detailed and complex, so if it looks complex and details, they will be more likely to upvote it. When paired with a good thumbnail, you probably will achieve your goal.
I have noticed that rather than downloading a build, people rather just upvote it based on the thumbnail. If I were you I would start looking into better advertisement strategies for your thumbnails. I have partially explained this in this forum post (Scroll down to screenshots). I ultimately suggest though you switch to making thumbnails in Maywar due to the human eye enjoying the colors yellow and light blue the best, something which maywar has plenty of. This will help your builds stick out more and grab the attention of scrolling users, making it more likely that they will upvote it.
It’s a simple air target I made when practicing building with blueprints, so I didn’t plan on adding a details. If I was going to I would have made custom missiles along with adding the star and other things. @Trainzo
Either through a piston system which spins the cockpit around the aircraft very fast and far away or by detaching half the part count off your aircraft. Example is if your plane is 250 parts you will need to add 250 parts to the plane and detach them.
As of this post, the SP Website has a Mixed Economy. There are rules that prevent upvote farming and protect users and their builds. This is an example of the "Government Regulations" I was talking about.
This will be my new little thing I do weekly or monthly.. I don't know yet. The goal is to raise fun, friendly discussions about different topics that relate to the SP community. The fequency of these discussions will depend on how I am feeling about writing and the success of this post.
Also, I will be posting a new SP Economic post soon, along with a possible new SP Explained coming in after that. Remember to have a great day or not, the choice is yours.
Crusader, in full "Tank, Cruiser Mk VI, Crusader", also known by its General Staff number A.15, was one of the primary British cruiser tanks during the early part of the Second World War. Over 5,000 tanks were manufactured and they made important contributions to the British victories during the North African Campaign. The Crusader tank would not see active service beyond Africa, but the chassis of the tank was modified to create anti-aircraft, fire support, observation, communication, bulldozer and recovery vehicle variants.
The first Crusader Mark I tanks entered service in 1941, and, though manoeuvrable, it was relatively lightly armoured and under-armed. The following Crusader Mark II had a maximum armour of 49 mm (1.9 in). The main armament for the Crusader Mark I and II's was a 40 mm Ordnance QF 2 pounder gun; the following Crusader Mark III was fitted with a 57 mm Ordnance QF 6 pounder gun at the expense of one member of the crew in the turret. This variant was more than a match for the mid-generation German Panzer III and Panzer IV tanks that it faced in combat. As part of the 1st Armoured Brigade, the Crusader was to prove vital during the Battle of El Alamein, at Tobruk and in Tunisia.
Retained in service because of delays with its replacement, by late 1942, the lack of armament upgrades, plus reliability problems due to the harsh desert conditions and the appearance of Tiger I heavy tanks among the German Afrika Korps, saw the Crusader replaced as the main tank by US-supplied M3 Grant and then by the M4 Sherman medium tanks but it was retained in combat use until the end of the war in North Africa and after that for training purposes in Britain.
Didn’t ask 31 @Dathcha
Lmao noob doesn’t even have 100 followers
Totally tag the submitter that submitted this comment
About the same speed as the A-10, so I don’t see the problem with it. @11qazxc
So to recap, its not that people are tired of your builds, but rather a change in the market. You just haven't adapted to the change.
Also it would probably be wise to change your username back to what it was. Your former name had a reputation behind it from years of good work. Howeverm now that you changed your name, you have to rebuild that reputation connected to your name. Your profile pic doesn't really matter because you don see that on the hottest/highest rated page. However, people do see your username and it will help convince people to click on your build.
Because people have begun to click and upvote rather than download and upvote, making highly detailed builds is also another way to get people to upvote your post. People like things that are detailed and complex, so if it looks complex and details, they will be more likely to upvote it. When paired with a good thumbnail, you probably will achieve your goal.
I have noticed that rather than downloading a build, people rather just upvote it based on the thumbnail. If I were you I would start looking into better advertisement strategies for your thumbnails. I have partially explained this in this forum post (Scroll down to screenshots). I ultimately suggest though you switch to making thumbnails in Maywar due to the human eye enjoying the colors yellow and light blue the best, something which maywar has plenty of. This will help your builds stick out more and grab the attention of scrolling users, making it more likely that they will upvote it.
Okay... 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
ten eyes
Seems neat, may enter
It’s fine lol. @MrSilverWolf
@MrSilverWolf No! don't use facts to disprove my propaganda effort!
Please stop calling it a jet bronco. Just because you are right doesn’t mean you have to say it :(
All tags below were requested
-@ACEPILOT109
-@SCP1471
-@SadSadTheWojak
-@Beefy
-@TheNightmareCompany
-@Ouroboros
-@tsampoy
-@MikoyansterComeBack
-@ErgitheMobilefriendlyf
-@032
It’s a simple air target I made when practicing building with blueprints, so I didn’t plan on adding a details. If I was going to I would have made custom missiles along with adding the star and other things. @Trainzo
Thought it would be nice to post something other than a forum post.
I quit, how am I supposed to complete with this lol
First version was made in under 30 minutes lol. It’s been a steady month of building and adding to it to get to its eighth version. @032
Please stop calling it a jet bronco
@EternalDarkness Alright, thank you
fivexfour symbol of English language
Either through a piston system which spins the cockpit around the aircraft very fast and far away or by detaching half the part count off your aircraft. Example is if your plane is 250 parts you will need to add 250 parts to the plane and detach them.
Okay cool
@PapaKernels sure
2 years? Okay zoomer
Pog
In capitalist America, you are the missile.
As of this post, the SP Website has a Mixed Economy. There are rules that prevent upvote farming and protect users and their builds. This is an example of the "Government Regulations" I was talking about.
This will be my new little thing I do weekly or monthly.. I don't know yet. The goal is to raise fun, friendly discussions about different topics that relate to the SP community. The fequency of these discussions will depend on how I am feeling about writing and the success of this post.
Also, I will be posting a new SP Economic post soon, along with a possible new SP Explained coming in after that. Remember to have a great day or not, the choice is yours.
Insert buffalo noise idk what sound they make
Barrel of freedom
Lol
Why does everyone keep calling it that. Just because it’s true doesn’t mean you have to say it @asteroidbook345
This is great
Hold on, what?
When I released it @MikoyansterComeBack
-@TMach5
-@SimplyPlain
-@KayXDarje
-@TonnkatuTonnkatuThePig
-@Grroro
The updated person part is lookin great
Uh oh @Tsuchiisan
My biggest pet peeve is when someone doesn’t use the same formatting in their forum posts.
I know, I just got a new phone so let me start grading after school @Greggory005
@Greggory005 Unfortunately I dropped my phone in a harbor so please bear with me as I find another way to grade the performance of the aircraft.
Seems like a ploy to get you info, sorry Chief but I’m out
Cool art, still broke
Lol
Crusader, in full "Tank, Cruiser Mk VI, Crusader", also known by its General Staff number A.15, was one of the primary British cruiser tanks during the early part of the Second World War. Over 5,000 tanks were manufactured and they made important contributions to the British victories during the North African Campaign. The Crusader tank would not see active service beyond Africa, but the chassis of the tank was modified to create anti-aircraft, fire support, observation, communication, bulldozer and recovery vehicle variants.
The first Crusader Mark I tanks entered service in 1941, and, though manoeuvrable, it was relatively lightly armoured and under-armed. The following Crusader Mark II had a maximum armour of 49 mm (1.9 in). The main armament for the Crusader Mark I and II's was a 40 mm Ordnance QF 2 pounder gun; the following Crusader Mark III was fitted with a 57 mm Ordnance QF 6 pounder gun at the expense of one member of the crew in the turret. This variant was more than a match for the mid-generation German Panzer III and Panzer IV tanks that it faced in combat. As part of the 1st Armoured Brigade, the Crusader was to prove vital during the Battle of El Alamein, at Tobruk and in Tunisia.
Retained in service because of delays with its replacement, by late 1942, the lack of armament upgrades, plus reliability problems due to the harsh desert conditions and the appearance of Tiger I heavy tanks among the German Afrika Korps, saw the Crusader replaced as the main tank by US-supplied M3 Grant and then by the M4 Sherman medium tanks but it was retained in combat use until the end of the war in North Africa and after that for training purposes in Britain.