I spent hours placing virtual rocks and trees. They always looked too perfect and fake. Then I learned about using random placement tools. Now my valleys have variety and life. It feels more like a place you could really walk through. This tiny skill changed how I build worlds. I'm proud of this little step.
I remember when VR demo rooms were basic and lonely. Now, at a VR concert, you're surrounded by people and lights. It's amazing how much has changed in just a few years.
I was frustrated that all the plants and structures in my personal VR world would disappear after each session. After testing different save methods and checking the platform's documentation, I realized the auto-save feature was conflicting with manual edits. I set up a routine to manually export the world data before logging out, which fixed the issue. This whole process highlighted how fragile user-created content can be without proper backup systems in place.