Text
I found this perfectly circular (well, it's minecraft) lava pool!
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
° ♡🌈 ★ thank u for 400 ★⚡♡ °
i swear i just hit 200 then i blinked 💀 but holy hell thank you all so much?? im glad i can appeal to all ur guys' minecraft sweettooth with this blog lol 😅 this honestly was just gonna be a small place to find inspo for builds but it very quickly grew 👀
anyways thank u all so much i hope u all stick with me in fonding over cite mimecraft cottages n such 😳💕💕
ps: if ur interested in a multiplayer world... that might still be a cool thing to do!!
28 notes
·
View notes
Photo
a special shoutout to this turtle who was absolutely vibing on my wheat crops the other day
6K notes
·
View notes
Photo
a special shoutout to this turtle who was absolutely vibing on my wheat crops the other day
6K notes
·
View notes
Text
Tommy is interested in becoming king, huh?
Blue sonder au by @/chewwypepsicola on twt
1K notes
·
View notes
Photo
6K notes
·
View notes
Text
Blown away by how pretty this is 😍
This one has the dynamic surroundings and dynamic trees mod added and stuff so now there are fireflies in the grass!!
Edit: No idea how but mooshrooms spawned!!
523 notes
·
View notes
Photo
❣️'been thinking about lovecore❣️
from this tutorial 💌
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
I think what makes the Nether Update so good is that Mojang really had a clear theme for what they wanted to do. They didn’t just add more content to the nether, they specifically wanted the make the nether a habitable space. As in, you can not just survive, but thrive. So, they added equivalents of wood and stone (removing the need to return to the overworld for simple crafting recipes) as well as more sources of food, and everything else you could need in life.
What I really love, though, is that there was a clear focus on making the nether have all the same sorts of ameneties as the overworld, but all slightly wrong. There’s a bed equivalent, but it’s expensive and needs to be refueled. The wood and stone equivalents I mentioned can only be found in specific areas, making those simple recipes a lot more challenging. There are animals that can be bred and farmed, but they’re also hostile to the player. There are sapient locals to trade with just like the villagers you’re used to, but they attack anyone they don’t like the look of and defend their homes with lethal force.
Instead of the nether being a nightmare landscape that only wants you dead, it now really feels like a bizarre alternate dimension— one where everything you know is flipped on its head and a lot more dangerous, but it’s not totally inhospitable.
6K notes
·
View notes