Just a normal nightly market.
s&box maps list
Browse public s&box maps by live servers, updates, votes, favorites, and Terry Score.
Just a normal nightly market.
A rooftop club in the middle of the city becomes a hotspot for a classic spot to pop and drop!
Sort of inspired by the classic 7-11 gas station map from Gmod. Currently a WIP.
No summary provided.
Classic Roblox-styled obstacle course made in S&box
No summary provided.
No summary provided.
Classic Flatgrass now brought up to Source 2 standards!
I could not find a version of Dust2 to play with friends, so I decided to upload this to make whimsy of this classic map.
Based on classic mini_dust_pro
No summary provided.
Minimal version of flatgrass with a lonely ambience.
No summary provided.
No summary provided.
Night version of gmod 10's gm_flatgrass remake
s&box maps are packages that provide places for games and servers to use. A map might be a competitive arena, a roleplay town, a remake of a familiar layout, a test scene, or a custom environment built for one specific game mode.
Maps are usually built in the s&box editor's mapping tools. The workflow keeps some familiar Source and Hammer ideas, but published s&box maps are scene-based packages that can target a game or be loaded by games and servers that support them.
Maps can matter even when they are not games by themselves. A server may run a game package on a particular map. A creator may publish a map so other projects can use it, or build a map as an addon for a specific target game. Being listed as a map does not mean every game can use it; a game or server still needs to load and support the map.
Maps can also be part of the s&box Play Fund. That makes map packages worth tracking separately from games, especially when a map is reused across servers or becomes part of how people play a mode.
This s&box maps list tracks public map packages by live servers, favorites, upvotes, downvotes, Terry Score, and recent momentum. Terry Score is a confidence-weighted approval score based on upvotes, downvotes, and vote count. Those numbers do not explain whether a map is balanced, optimized, or fun to play on, but they show public approval, interest, and recent movement.
Momentum is based on snapshots recorded by sbox.watch. It is useful for spotting maps that recently gained attention, but it should be read alongside the older signals. A map with low momentum can still be widely used. A map with high momentum may simply be new or recently updated.