Instal Steam
login
|
bahasa
简体中文 (Tionghoa Sederhana)
繁體中文 (Tionghoa Tradisional)
日本語 (Bahasa Jepang)
한국어 (Bahasa Korea)
ไทย (Bahasa Thai)
Български (Bahasa Bulgaria)
Čeština (Bahasa Ceko)
Dansk (Bahasa Denmark)
Deutsch (Bahasa Jerman)
English (Bahasa Inggris)
Español - España (Bahasa Spanyol - Spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (Bahasa Spanyol - Amerika Latin)
Ελληνικά (Bahasa Yunani)
Français (Bahasa Prancis)
Italiano (Bahasa Italia)
Magyar (Bahasa Hungaria)
Nederlands (Bahasa Belanda)
Norsk (Bahasa Norwegia)
Polski (Bahasa Polandia)
Português (Portugis - Portugal)
Português-Brasil (Bahasa Portugis-Brasil)
Română (Bahasa Rumania)
Русский (Bahasa Rusia)
Suomi (Bahasa Finlandia)
Svenska (Bahasa Swedia)
Türkçe (Bahasa Turki)
Tiếng Việt (Bahasa Vietnam)
Українська (Bahasa Ukraina)
Laporkan kesalahan penerjemahan
It could be forgiven if you are a new mapper looking to learn, but it doesn't seem like you want to learn because you delete and disable comments on all your submissions.
If you really are trying to become a better mapper, take inspiration from the official maps as a starting point, or any of the other artists on the workshop such as Porkchops4lunch.
Spend time on one map and make it complete and well designed, so that instead of releasing many low quality maps, you can release one high quality one.
Make sure that the textures are included.
Spellcheck and grammar check any text (objectives).
Don't tag your submissions with "noob" and "DOUGLAS".
If you take the time to make a quality submission, you can become much more popular as a mapmaker.