This is why you can’t walk on lava, even when you’ve poured water over it to cool it down and turn it into stone, because it’s still hella hot and you’d burn your feet, unlike in computer games like minecraft.
Shout out to Noita for having the same mechanic. In the default mode, you start with a flask of water, and if you get to the bottom of the first biome and go to the right, there’s a lake of lava. A full flask is just enough to make a bridge of lava.
Worse, IRL molten lava is mostly solid like you see in the photo, not red water. If it’s as viscous as water (or close to that), it’s MUCH hotter and the air nearby would kill you. But that’s how it’s portrayed in the game. In a lot of games. Like Mario 1.
Getting back to Noita, to be fair to it, it is a pixel physics simulator. Every pixel’s physics are simulated in real time. So it’s not a pure bridge. Some pixels stay lava, and if you touch them, you take a slight amount of damage. Mostly if you’re conservative with your water. Me, I like burrowing through the ceiling and dumping the lake above on it. Then again, if you can get under the lava, there’s a nice little present waiting for you… best to get to the third biome and come up from under, though.
This is why you can’t walk on lava, even when you’ve poured water over it to cool it down and turn it into stone, because it’s still hella hot and you’d burn your feet, unlike in computer games like minecraft.
Shout out to Noita for having the same mechanic. In the default mode, you start with a flask of water, and if you get to the bottom of the first biome and go to the right, there’s a lake of lava. A full flask is just enough to make a bridge of lava.
Worse, IRL molten lava is mostly solid like you see in the photo, not red water. If it’s as viscous as water (or close to that), it’s MUCH hotter and the air nearby would kill you. But that’s how it’s portrayed in the game. In a lot of games. Like Mario 1.
Getting back to Noita, to be fair to it, it is a pixel physics simulator. Every pixel’s physics are simulated in real time. So it’s not a pure bridge. Some pixels stay lava, and if you touch them, you take a slight amount of damage. Mostly if you’re conservative with your water. Me, I like burrowing through the ceiling and dumping the lake above on it. Then again, if you can get under the lava, there’s a nice little present waiting for you… best to get to the third biome and come up from under, though.
You also don’t know how strong the shell is and you could break it and fall into lava.
This picture is staged
Yep I remember this picture and reading about how they put lighter fluid or something like that on the tripod legs and his shoes.