Adding a connected external tool cupboard to a Rust base will stop most raiders from griefing a base. Depending on how the externals are set up, they can make grief a base infinitely more expensive, which may save your wipe from being ended due to a raider who decided to grieve.
A player with building privilege can grief a base by blocking necessary entry points with walls or deployable items such as doors. Griefing aims to make the base unusable to the original base owners.
Adding external tool cupboards to take over building privilege in a raid requires a lot of building space. The external TC will have a very close foundation to the base through a specific combination of squares and triangles.
Start by going eight blocks out from the side of the base with squares, then place a triangle foundation at the end. Keeping these foundations at twig is essential since they will be removed later.


Without breaking the triangle foundation, remove each twig square foundation until you are back at the base. Go back to the triangle, and place triangle foundations until the base stops you. You can remove all triangle foundations, except the triangle directly next to the base.

You can now upgrade the triangle next to the base as it shouldn’t be removed. Various builds can be made from the triangle to place the tool cupboard. However, the most basic design is five squares with a triangle for the tool cupboard.

If the central tool cupboard in the base is broken, any connected external tool cupboards will take over the building’s claim. This means your base is safe from being griefed, that is unless the raiders decide to blow into the connected externals.

To stop players from building into your compound or building near your base, view our guide on how to place external TCs correctly in Rust. Thank you for taking the time to read our guide! We hope you found it helpful, feel free to drop a comment down below if you have anything to add!
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