Guide:Ideas

=Shooting Range=

It's simple: A small area with some statues that spawn monsters, either with a timer or with a switch. You could use a Musket, Minishark, Shotgun... The best idea is to build this right next to the Arms Dealer, for quick ammo. However, you may also want to use magic weapons or a Blowpipe, so you could make an adjacent room with some star statues and empty clay pots (the flowers that grow on them will give you seeds).

The variants would be:

Underground
Make a long tunnel, somewhat high and add some statues. These could be: Bird, Bunny* or Slime (due to their jumping).

The tunnel would be something like this:

·XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX ·X                         XX   X ·X                           X   D ·X MM                         PP D ·X MM                        XPP D ·XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Where: ·X is the block you are using for it (Gray bricks are good) ·M is the statue ·P is where the player stands ·D is the door you use to get in

Advantages: ·Has the feeling of regular shooting range ·Prey cannot flee. ·Towns are more effective underground, as they don't obstruct the paths (you just             dig a big hole) ·Protection against griefers, they cannot steal your statues without entering your castle Disadvantages: ·Needs to be mined and then built. However, mining may give you enough stone for the walls ·Small.

Overworld scared bird
Didn't still made it, idea's on my head.

Simpler than the underground one: Get on a cliff, place bird statue, trigger, BOOM (platch).

Design:

·  MM ·   MM ·  GGGG · G   GGG · G ·GG

Where: ·M = Bird statue ·G = Grass or any other blocks

Advantages: ·Good for birds due to their speed ·Easy to build ·Infinitely big ·Can make different areas to shoot from Disadvantages: ·Easy to steal ·Only for birds ·Not private (people may come to annoy you(slimes too))

Obstacle "course"
An idea that came on my head when thinking about the underground S.R. It's based on a problem: Each shooting range is especially good with birds. However, it's hard to find those statues.

Say, you've found a skeleton statue, and you want to do one of these. However, underground would be too easy and overworld, dangerous. So, here's the solution:

Obstacle course

It would be somewhat hard, but could be controlled with wires and active stone blocks.

The design, one of the rarest, is:

·XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX ·X                         X    X ·X                 X             X ·X          XXX             XXPPPX ·X   X           X          X   D ·X MM                         JJ D ·X MM X          X           XJJ D ·XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Where:

Where: ·X are simple blocks ·M is the statue ·J is where the player stands ·D is the door you use to get in ·P Platform

Advantages: ·Allows almost all statues (birds too!!!) ·Can be toggled ·Can be underground or overworld ·Due to so many blocks here and there, gives a small protection against robbers. Disadvantages: ·Most of them are reffered to where is it built ·Having many blocks here and there can be too messy ·Very big, Only suitable for high resolutions

=NPC Housing=

NPC Houses
One idea is to personalize your NPC's housing.

Being the simplest of the NPCs, the Guide's house should involve things that include crafting, the simplest component in Terraria. For example, a workbench, a table and chair, and possibly some decoration like a clay pot or vase on a shelf.



As a salesman, the Merchant would probably be most at home in place where he can store his wares. A possibility could be some chests, maybe some shelves with merchandise on them. Mannequins are another decorative item that may work for his house. The furnace and anvil could decorate this room, but try not to overdo it. Save some items for other NPCs!

The Nurse's room should represent a place for resting and recuperating. Unless you have an individual bedroom, the bed is best placed here, as it makes restoring your health to full after respawning rather easy. "Potions" placed on a shelf might add to the aesthetic of a "healing room".

The Demolitionist can be rather difficult to choose decorations for. Perhaps a mannequin with a suit similar to his, like the mining armor or The Doctor's clothes. You can also reserve the furnace and anvil for him. He seems like the kind of guy that would live in a gray or red brick house, so something along those lines might look good. If you feel confident enough, you can even place Explosives as decoration, but be EXTREMELY careful not to use wire incorrectly or else his house will become a crater.

The Dryad is associated with plants naturally, so her home should reflect upon this. Some clay pots that are growing plants could work. You could also replace the floor with dirt and use the Staff of Regrowth to grow a grass "carpet". You might also add a water source to her room, so it seems more like a plant-friendly environment.

The Arms Dealer seems like a shady sort, so having a run-down place probably won't bug him too much. A chain lantern as the light source can give the room a sickly glow. Perhaps a table and chair with an empty clay pot, like a dead flower. You could also include a Shadow Chest to store guns in. Some faded wallpaper and a broken sink and it's a perfect run-down apartment!

Mannequins are a definite yes, and you might go through the trouble of getting a full Tuxedo, set of Hero's Clothes, or even an Archaeologist's Suit for decoration purposes. The Santa Costume, however, should be saved for Santa. You might add some chests for storing sewing supplies. The Clothier's house should also include a loom.

The Mechanic needs things that involve wires in her house for sure. Whether it be lights that blink on and off, or some kind of complex machine for opening the door doesn't matter. Because it is used to make many complex things, the sawmill might be a good addition as well. You may include some chests as well, for storage of wire based items.

The Goblin Tinkerer has to have the Tinkerer's Workshop and some chests for storage. You might include a workbench and maybe some chairs around an alchemy station. You may build his room out of ores or bricks. He might be better off living underground. You could possibly use a Shadow Chest here to store items to reforge later.

The Wizard's house should include Gold Chests for potion storage. Some shelves with "Potions" and an alchemy station should most definitely be included. The Music Box, if there is one, should be here. Colored "magical" torches are rather attractive and would brighten up the room if they are the right kind. Overall, this guy's house should be magic based.

Be sure not to stay up all night waiting for him! Santa Claus' house should be winter based, with red, green, and blue lights along with snow blocks. This would be a great house makeup for him. He should also have a mannequin with the Santa Costume on it.

=For the Player that Doesn't Know What to Do=

Let me set the scenario. You just wiped Skeletron Prime off the face of the planet in one fell swoop, and collected every end game weapon available. There is no item you don't have. You have all the items. All of them. So what now? You could easily start a new map and do it all again, but you've only explored maybe 40 percent of this large map you created to explore all by yourself.

There's always something to do.

The best part about Terraria is that you don't have to do it alone either. Several of these projects would go smoother with help. Just beware. A bumbling lunatic or a crafty saboteur could annihilate many of these ideas.

A list about random things (by the guy of the S.R.)
·You can delete your world and start a new one with your character. ·For extra fun, give the items to a hardcore character. ·Attempt to play without a house ·Make a town people disposal: A small square with a king and a queen statue. Call all the town, activate some pumps and burn 'em out! ·Call a Goblin invasion, watch who's the last town NPC alive. ·Make some kind of mission where you rescue every NPC (you kill them with lava and their room   blows up by some explosives.    Make a stairway to a free fall that ends in a lava pit.       Note: I haven't tried this yet, but I'm sure it would work:       Use a technique I've got in mind that allows town NPCs to move on some kind of 1-way       stairs. The design:

X     XX  X     A X  X    A  X  X   A   X  X  A    X  XPA     X  XX      X

Where: ·X is a wall ·P is a pressure plate ·A is an active stone block

The stairs would alternate (from left to right, active, from right to left, inactive). This way, when a town NPC steps on the pressure plate, his path is blocked and he's forced to move up.

-Got any ideas? I reserve this space for you!

Note for the one who made the lines below this ones: I've made here the point because I don't know much of the wiki, this is a quick addition. However, it's a list about what to do when bored, isn't it?

Monster Structure Projects
Only the most time consuming, proportionally massive concepts are grouped here. Gather your resources, grab some munchies, and mentally stockpile an unending reserve of patience. It's going to be a long night.

d 1. Castle Castles are great for showing the world of Terraria that you mean several thousand different kinds of serious business. Nobody feels better than when sitting on the throne, ruling with an iron fist over the meager monsters the clamor about outside your walls.


 * Materials Recommended: Stone brick blocks and walls are a great start, but remember that there are several different kinds of brick for you to personalize your  fortress with. Trying mixing different colors and create some intense patterns,  because the only thing better than an awesome king, is an awesome king with  creativity. You'll also need a ton of furniture, because the king's crib should be  the only crib this fly.


 * Rooms to Build: Can't be a castle without a throne room. Build a Throne and stick it somewhere with overblown royal decoration, to drive the point home that you  ARE the man. Consider an armory to store your many weapons, just in case those guns  you call biceps aren't enough (which they should be). Even with a 20-room castle, it  just isn't complete without some turrets on the roof, with a spiral staircase to the  top from the inside. Seriously, its a castle, so don't be all meek about it. Build a  room for EVERYTHING. Make it the one and only World Wonder.

2. Outpost System You can't stand using the magic mirror to go all the way back home to use your crafting stations! It is truly madness. You have a few outposts here and there, but it isn't enough. You slaughter so many monsters and mine miles of blocks every five minutes, so you think an outpost every hundred  yards ought to do it.


 * Materials Recommended: Doesn't matter, as long as you have a lot of it. Creating a network of outposts will take a lot of time and patience already, so make sure you  stockpile some material before you take this journey. If you stored thousands of  blocks already just in case while fighting bosses, then you are a step ahead. You are  a different league. No, not IN the league, you have BECOME the league. If you don't  have better than gold tools, get there, because you're going to be using them a lot,  and the better tools you have, the quicker you'll be able to make these structures.  Get you the  too, since hanging around suspended three stories up on plant life is much faster than building scaffolding.


 * EXTRA CHALLENGE: Make an outpost in ALL the biomes, and put a lot of thought into each one. Every outpost is your canvas; a work of art crafted from the finest outpost- smithy the universe has to offer.

3. Sewage For reasons you don't entirely understand, you believe a working toilet is completely vital if your successes up to this point are to continue. This is not a tested idea. The processes and materials described here are typed in theory, not fact. If you actually decide to make this for some reason, please edit any misconceptions or missing details. I will correct this myself when possible.


 * Materials Recommended:Golden Toilet. Wire. A switch of some kind. Water pumps. These are all necessary for your roleplay toilet. For god sakes man, you're really going  through with this aren't you? Boredom is a frightening thing indeed.


 * The Building Process: Any extra plumbing frills you can imagine are up to you, but this would be the most basic. Your toilet should be on the bottom floor with a  tunnel going downward into a small pit underground. Fill this pit with water (do not  fill the tunnel and place the inlet pump in the pool. Now dig a small tunnel that  leads into the vertical tunnel just under the toilet and place the outlet there. Hook  up the two pumps with wire and lead the wire to a switch next to the toilet. When the  switch is flipped, if I'm correct, water will begin to cycle back under the toilet,  down the tunnel and into the pit.

Why is this in the monster structure section? Because when you get the basics down, take it a step further. Build a sewer that leads to the underworld.

Now go, and make it as unreasonably complicated as your depraved mind desires.

You monster.

4. The Skybridge of Connectification! Mother of Slime, you hate trying to travel between floating islands. As it stands, you climb your current multipurpose skybridge and walk to all your hastily built ladders leading up under the islands,  which you dug a crumbly dirt staircase through to the top. How inadequate you must feel. Its time to claim the title of master bridge builder and wow the world below you with your gravity defying bridge of destiny.


 * Materials Recommended: By the great deities of 32-bit creation, you are going to need a lot of stuff. If you think a one block tall wooden bridge is going to cut it,  you have set your standards at mediocrity. Its okay, however, because that's what  we're here to do today: break through those standards.


 * Preparations: It is extremely recommended that you build an outpost at the starting floating island and pile at LEAST 10 chests there, along with crafting  stations. You're going to fill as many chests as your willpower allows with as much  resources from the ground level as possible. Don't mine the islands, you boob, or the  skybridge is purposeless. If you have a piggy bank and/or chest, you can use it for  extra inventory space to try and lessen the trips taken. The materials you use are up  to you, though most will likely go with a combination of wood, stone, and wooden  beams, since those are the most readily available resources besides dirt. If you  build a whole bridge out of gold or silver brick, I applaud your unheard of, nigh- masochistic patience.

When you've gathered enough, build the bridge from one island to the other. Then, build bridges to all the other islands. To lessen the sheer grinding boredom, use all your creative power to make these bridges as outlandish as possible, which as many  quirks and mysteries as the many caves you traversed gathering this ludicrous pile of  material.

5. Atlantis! You knew it would come to this. One of the most difficult, earth shattering tours of construction you'll go on. This doesn't mean build an underwater house, nor an underwater mansion. You already have a castle anyway. If you don't, go reread that section of this article and ask yourself how you sleep peacefully at night. Atlantis is an underwater city!


 * Materials Recommended: If its watertight, it works for building. You'll need a lot of pumps, switches, and wires to make this work. Although you could use the commonly accepted method of building underwater using sand to keep the water out, it will likely be easier to keep a lot of Gills Potions with you for the construction duration. That way, you can build the whole town infrastructure, section it off, and pump the water out of each section.


 * Preparation:Its recommended that you start with an outpost underneath one of the oceans and stash your materials there. If you've got the creative goods, and you know that you hold all the goods (all of them), you can create an entry-and-exit tube that utilizes active stone walls and a pump system. Once you have your entrance prepared, and a large number of gill potions, you can start building from the ground up.

6. The Ladder to the Ninth Circle! Dear God, I thought you should know that I built an elevator to Hell and plan on shacking up there for a while. I'm thinking with the way my financial situation is - that is, rolling in platinum - I can play the stock market and gain enough resources to launch a coup, kill the devil, and become the new President. I just thought you'd wanna know ahead of time, not that you already didn't, since you're omniscient. Love, the King of Terraria.


 * Materials Recommended: A pickaxe, as well as rope/chains/wooden platforms. Not much to making a basic hellevator. You'll need sand, however, to make it past any lava pits you run into.


 * Processes: Dig. Lots of digging. Also lots of rope/platform laying. If you have a large-size world, you're in for the long haul, but you have nothing to worry about. Your energy is infinite at LEAST. If you reach a lava pit, build a sand wall 4 bricks wide under your feet and into the lava pit. Dig through the two middle sections and repeat until you have bisected the pool of death. Don't, in the name of all that is magical, accidentally mine through the walls on your left and right, or your demise is nearly certain, and an inevitability at low levels.

7. Completely hidden house Mother of Slime, WHAT ELSE DO YOU WANT?! ...oh.


 * Materials Recommended: Lots and lots of Active Stone Blocks. The rest is up to you, the greatest builder ever to play Terraria, who has the infinite patience needed to build a 20-room castle with overblown decorations and turrets at the entrances. You, who could build an underwater city and still have all your hair still attached to your head. You, who had the skills to build a pyramid fit for a king or queen as great as yourself.

'''8. FLOOD THE ENTIRE WORLD! (use lava for some added death)'''
 * Processes: Dig down to the Cavern layer and find a cave to use as an entrance. Once you find the perfect cave, dig a horizontal tunnel just big enough to fit through into the side of the cave until you can't see the cave anymore, then fill it with Active Stone Blocks. Once finished, wire some (but not all, just the half farther from the cave) of the Active Stone Blocks to a switch somewhere else in the cave, but still near the entrance. Then wire the rest to a switch inside your house, which will be built on the side of the tunnel farthest from the cave. Then, you may feel free to let your imagination run wild and turn this hole into the best house EVAH.

9. Mob grinder!! Because of the addition of the Lucky Coin, and the snap load of Rare Drops, you could stock up on statues, fight the pirates for the Coin, build something nice, and go NUTS! Bam, before you know it, U R RICH!!

10. Pacify Hell! Burrow to the bottom of the underworld, and break every block of ash, hellstone, and structure for screens across (extra points for the entirety of hell on Large maps!) so that the bottom is one big lava pool. Build what you like, and make sure that every bit of the area is either glass wall, your own structures, or lava, as all 3 prevent monster spawning.
 * Materials Recommended: A good pickaxe and a grappling hook. Obsidian skin potions are helpful in temporary lava diving to fix mistakes. Don't make a habit of it. Pickaxes with extra range will make the process far easier.
 * Processes: Clearing the existing blocks is the hard part here. When digging in lava, always start as low as you can and work up. Burrow to the bottom of an area, make a platform a few blocks above the bottom of the screen (where you can still mine the bottom if needed), and use the area beneath as a reservoir while you mine more space to hold more lava. Careful with draining major lava lakes, it is recommended to do that last.
 * Bonus: Create an extremely luxurious resort in hell, complete with reinforced/safe hellevator all the way there, and amenities such as lava-heated obsidian baths.

11. RAZE THE JUNGLE! Cut down all the trees and look at all the Rich Mahogany you get! This works because trees in the jungle will naturally grow back. On their own. Now get out there and enjoy devastating nature, you sicko. Make some thneeds. Enjoy capitalism. Write a goofy song about how bad you could be. Build an artificial, plastic town, and repeat the process again. You monster.


 * Materials Recommended: A Spectre Hamaxe to raze the trees, and a Fire Gauntlet to repel angry tortoises and Derplings as you swing. Turtle Armor pairs well with this because it increases the hamaxe's deadliness, provides bunches of defense and reflects damage back on attackers. If everything trying to kill you is either close to succeeding or performing their job, cast a Magnet Sphere to hit your adversaries hard and negate the advantage Jungle enemies get from flanking you and being incredibly mobile.

Home Improvement
Luckily, Tim Allen is not involved in any of the following ideas.

1. Pyramid Pharaohs had the right idea, but obviously were too busy perfecting their insane skills with eyeliner to think about master architecture any further. Sure, pyramids were for housing corpses, but who are you to deny such immense potential? A master craftsman, that's who. Is there a better builder in the whole universe? You doubt it.


 * Materials Recommended: Almost any will do, as usual, but this isn't your summer home. It's a pyramid. Therefore, get a material that closely mimics the color of a true Egyptian pyramid. Sand blocks are not the most intelligent selection to make a building where ninety nine percent of it is suspended in the air, balanced on a single, carefully measured point. Therefore, gold brick is your best bet. Why wouldn't you build everything out of gold in the first place? Because you use that gold to feed the orphans that live in your kingdom, because no child deserves to starve. Your heart is the purest. Better yet, clean out an actual pyramid and rebuild it!


 * Rooms to Build: Unlike the Castle of Infinite Fortitude, in all its magnificence, you don't require a giant amount of room to build this. The size of the structure is entirely up to you. Who is the public to judge? You're the man, woman, child, or gastropod in charge here. Even a small version could serve as a worthy outpost.

2. Floating House! Houses don't float. At least not on any universe you don't happen to be on. You don't even recall what physics means, or how that word even popped into your head one day while having a picnic on the ceiling of a gazebo. In this case, the floating house is your best, and safest bet.


 * It's just a house. Any house materials will do.


 * Process for Newbies: It's not hard. Just build a wood post or skyladder as high as you desire, and then build your house directly off of the post. When you're finished, you will have defied physics. Truly, this is a total victory on your part.

3. Spiral Staircase Want to have a stylish way to go up rooms, but don't know how? Well, let me show you.


 * Materials required: You'll need a bunch of wooden walls (exactly one per floor) a BUNCH of wooden beams, and a BUNCH of wooden platforms.


 * Instructions You'll need a house with 8 or a multiple of 9 minus one of floor space for it to look good, but that's my opinion.

B is wooden beams, P is wood platforms, W is a platform with a wooden wall behind it and F is flooring.

· BPP · BP ·  B · PB ·PPB · PB · W ·  BP And then it repeats.

Multiplayer Shenanigans
The more the merrier. Other words to substitute for merrier include "deadlier," "explosiveness," and "rocketship." You haven't built a rocket ship yet? Why not? These ideas are for you and your friends to either learn the values of friendship, or learn the values of the headshot...on each other.

All of these ideas must be implemented by creating a server first. It is extremely recommended that you create these levels with a level editor like TEdit.

Instead of materials and process, this section will consist of Arena construction, and multiplayer game modes, and also possible solutions to the current limitations of the game's multiplayer.

Arenas

 * The Open Arena: Anything goes when player construction becomes a priority. Simply flattening a large area and putting the two teams on both sides can be madness. The best teams will balance combat and construction, and use the spaces they have to their advantages. Sabotage, traps, and ambushes make this kind of fighting hectic. It's recommended that two beds be placed at either side to prevent spawn killing ahead of time.


 * Standoff: Two castles, standing for eternity, have witness countless lives lost in the battle of attrition. This kind of map eliminates the need for spending time on base construction. Teams can instead go straight to killing and trapmaking.


 * Waterlogged: If it weren't for the dirt soaking up all the blood, the water itself would've turned red long ago. Basically like Standoff, but underground. Make sure the bases are quite deep, and the map set to small. It can be confusing, given the caves random layout. This makes team coordination and sign placing a must. Since it takes place underground, traps can be made right off the bat, without lots of digging. Attacks can come from all directions much more easily too.


 * The Complex: Once filled with the bustling din of toiling workers, only the clang of blades and the cries of agony fill these halls. This building can be as simple or complicated as one wants. Set up as office structures or a mass of houses, these towering, dimly lit buildings - sometimes multiple buildings for that matter - can serve as fantastic battlegrounds.


 * Heights: Floating arenas are nothing new, but poke yours full of a few (or many) holes that would send any player to their doom, and things get a little more interesting. Build a ladder leading back into the arena for anyone that has fall damage negating items.


 * Love Thy Neighbor: This map should be made using an editor. A map made specifically for free-for-alls, whether with Hardcore characters for a Last Man Standing game, or otherwise. There should be a dozen or more starting points placed on the surface. None underground. None floating. Each starting point - a basic house, really - should come with three things at least. A bed for spawning, a work bench, and a furnace. A chest with some starting equipment or materials can speed the game up a little bit, or you can place other work stations.


 * The Infiltration: This requires 1 or 2 players on team A, and all other players in team B. The map should consist of a huge building with a maze-like setting, and Office and a control room. There are secret passages and pressure plates that connect to torches in the Control Room that indicate wether someone has passed over the pressure plates. In the control room can also be some switches to activate traps to lock players in or kill them, or something else. In the office is an item(can be anything as) located in a chest that acts as the "flag". The goal of team A is to infiltrate the building, get to the Office, take the flag, return to the base and put the flag in their own chest. The goal of team B is to patrol the building(one of them should stand sentry in the control room, or the traps have no point) and kill players of team A if they are seen! One honor rule is that the entire team B can not stand sentry in front of the door at the Office. Team B MUST patrol; walk around and may never stand sentry(except for the person in the control room).

Game Modes
Several of these game modes require some sort of Honor Rule, where cheating of certain kinds is prohibited. You can discourage this by threatening a kick or ban from an online group, refusing to allow them to play with you, or simply by telling them that if they continue, they'll be branded a douche bag for all eternity. Whatever keeps people in line is good enough.

'''UNIVERSAL HONOR RULE: Spawn killing. Not cool, dude.'''


 * Deathmatch: No limits or restrictions. Decapitations abound. Show them you aren't just the best builder in the universe. Teams Optional.


 * Money Grubber: In this team game mode, similar to capture the flag, each player gets a cache of a rare ore of any type, like demonite or a gem, or even heart stones. Opposing team(s) must mine the gold and deposit it in their own chest back at their base. HONOR RULES: The chests can not be moved, and the ore/gem/crystal MUST come from the opposing teams bank, not a players inventory. If using heart or mana crystals, players MUST NOT use them for free boosts.


 * Last Man Standing: Start a free-for-all or team game with hardcore characters. The last one alive is the victor. HONOR RULES: Do NOT immediately kill people right out of spawn when the game first begins. SEE "LOVE THY NEIGHBOR" MAP TYPE.


 * Is That Possible?: Get your friends to defeat the Wall of Flesh in 16 seconds. Or just do it by yourself (it is possible to do it by yourself!).


 * Discotech Disaster: Build a giant disco (Or anything else; I just called it that because I started with a disco), spawn in a bunch of NPCs, and summon a Blood Moon, a boss, an invasion or an Eclipse. You win if you have 5-10 NPCs left alive, plus 5 gold for each extra NPC. HONOR RULES: Try to theme yourself. Wear some vanity items, get some themed weapons and accessories and get in character. HONOR RULES FOR HONOR RULES: Don't be that guy and be the "demigod" themed one. Be a clown, or Mario, or a steampunker or something. Don't take advantage of the theming to get the items you want.

Game Modifiers
Regular game modes not enough? Throw some modifiers in it and watch the bodies fly.


 * Clash n Smash: Swords and melee weapons only.


 * Gun-fu: Guns and ranged weapons only. Pre-end game armor recommended. For slightly more realism, use weapons that only take musket balls of any kind. For even more, only use pistols, the shotgun, the clockwork assault rifle, and the flamethrower.


 * Mana Mayhem: Spells only. For some extra challenge, wear only items that boost a magical stat.


 * Streaker: No armor, no accessories. Ranged weapons recommended for play - hope your aim is good.


 * World War 3: Explosives only, with all explosives permitted. Good thing there's no friendly fire.


 * One Wrong Step: Less a game mode modifier, more of a map modifier. Lace the battle field with trap trigger explosives. For added hilarity, place some of the explosives in completely different areas than the trap trigger, but still within the traveled battle field.
 * 1.2 now has more deadly traps. Go nuts.

Mechanics
Terraria isn't very flexible this early in its life. There isn't much you can do to work around the game to get the effect you want. To that end, I've imagined a few concepts that might work.


 * Weapon and Ammo Spawning: This is a tough one. No item respawns in the open environment. To that end, it requires an extra player willing to forgo the game and play the weapon spawner. This player should have max health and the best armor he can get, so as to avoid weapons damage as much as possible, and should be equipped with flight. This player will have a stash of weapons in his own chest, and will run around the map dropping weapons in random spots. There can also be chests around the playable map that he can place items in. The weapons should not be the most powerful, but also not the weakest. HONOR RULES: The weapon/ammo dropper must be completely neutral. He cannot assist a team by giving them a weapon with no effort.


 * Player Spawning: This is less tough, since it really only applies to free for all combat modes. There could be rooms spread throughout the map. Numerous rooms, all filled with a bed and maybe some potions in a chest. In a free for all, the player can find these rooms and place their spawn there. They shouldn't be too obvious, but also not completely hidden. A good indicator of a spawn location could be a certain colored torch, for instance. Another idea is to have a door mechanism outside of a spawn room assigned to a single player, which will open when they want to get out, and close when they leave. The spawn rooms should be made out of tough material. For instance, make the rooms out of adamantine ore, which requires no less than a mythril drill to get rid of. HONOR RULES: It must be known that using explosives to enter these rooms is considered cheating.

Bounty Hunting
So everyone's in a server-wide war and you don't want to choose sides? No problem, just weaken all of them by offering mercenary services to anyone who can pay. Extreme combat skills recommended.

Paused by CavalierCadaver at 12:36 AM on 2/9/12. Thought I'd add the multiplayer section, since I had some ideas.
(Modified by the guy of the S.R., due for some things being too obvious (such as speedkill boss))


 * Convert a large cave bit by bit into your home.


 * Convert a section of the Dungeon, the Underground Jungle, or several Obsidian Towers in the Underworld into outposts piece by piece.


 * Create a large liquid creator and combine it with Pumps to make your own artificial lake, sea, or underwater/lava city, and perhaps, if it is possible, an entire underwater/lava world.
 * As of 1.2, you can now make a lake of honey with the same method. Sugary goodness!

Leftover Ideas
-Build a big house, then place explosive blocks in lots of places, then pull a lever connecting to the explosives. You could also make the top bit sand, make it very tall and make sure you don't blow up the sand. It will all come crashing down.

-Build a castle from the top of the world to the bottom. It's a time-taking process, but you will be rewarded in Style!

-Even more outfits! I had an idea of designing a skin because one of my friends is obsessed with pandas. I designed a picture using a jungle background and created a Terraria sprite-style panda; http://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/378377_4919594626092_447386106_n.jpg

-Need help with color matching? Use wood and gray brick, they usually look good together.