Difference between the same seeds Yeah, there were a few days, maybe a week, went by between the time I created the Survival Mode (SM) world and its Creative Mode (CM) counterpart. I don't know if there were any title updates between them though. I was careful to make sure I spelt the seed exactly the same both times, as I figured that capitalization would be important. For some strange reason, the CM world seems to be a few Y levels lower than the SM world. The church / temple in the village near the original spawning point had its door well hidden behind a pile of sand in the CM world, whereas it was readily accessible in the original SM world I made with the same seed.
My Latest In-Game Update Being that I couldn't easily map between the two instances, I decided on a new tactic for accessing the Nether Fortress. I re-visited that tower which I had carved a spiral staircase up through the middle of earlier. This time I came equipped with enough obsidian to be able to build a Portal inside the Nether Fortress itself. Navigating between my first base in the Nether and the Nether Fortress just proved way too difficult and risky, so now I can portal straight in to the Fortress. Much easier.
My village on the hill is looking quite good now. I'd like to entice some villagers back into my village and have them come live in some of the buildings I've made there. Also, I'm about ready to start looking at making some automated factories in my village.
I've been experimenting with Redstone, Repeaters, Levers, Buttons, and Pistons. I have a gate in my village wall made of two Sticky Pistons stacked vertically, which opens and closes at the flick of a lever on either side. One thing I noticed is that, if I leave the village through that mechanised gate and close it from the outside, if I then find my way back in to my village through some other way (such as the Potrtal), I cannot open the mechanised gate from the inside again. I have to smash the gate open and re-build it. Strange.
Replies perrinMD: I have started making a map of the Nether now. Thanks for that suggestion.
forrgott: That's a great suggestion, using cobblestone instead of Nether Brick, thanks. I'll do that from now on.
Cobra951: Nice to see someone else uses the same seed I'm using. Is that for a single-player world, or is that on a server? And thanks for the information about "Branch Mining". That sounds very useful.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
Difference between the same seeds - Resolved I struck upon an idea for how to resolve this issue on my own. Others here might like to follow the same procedure if they are having similar problems with two world instances of the same seed not being exactly the same. This procedure may be documented elsewhere on the forums or on the wiki, but I haven't gone searching for it, so please don't shoot me if what I am saying here is not something entirely new or unique.
The solution involves backing up the savegame file to an external USB device, renaming the backup, then loading the renamed world in Creative Mode. Using this method you get an exact copy of your current world, not just the plain world as it was seeded, but including any changes you have made to that world since it was created. Before you begin, make sure you have a USB thumb drive or other USB storage device that is formatted for use with the XBox. If you don't already have one set up for the XBox, any data on the device you intend to use will be lost when formatted for use with the XBox.
Here's how it's done...
1. Exit out of the game first (don't forget to save) and return to your XBox main menu.
2. Go to Settings > System > Storage and select the device you saved your Survival Mode world to originally, most likely to your XBox's hard drive. Then go to Games and Apps > Minecraft and locate the savegame file for the Survival Mode world you want to clone, then select it (A), and Copy (A) it to the USB device.
3. Go back to playing Minecraft, and when it asks you which device to load your world from, choose the USB device instead of the hard drive. Load the game using Creative Mode rather than Survival Mode, and select the Host Options if you want them.
4. Once the world loads, save and exit back to the Minecraft menu. Go back to the load screen and rename the save file. I rename mine the same as my Survival Mode world, but with a (CM) at the end to denote Creative Mode. Renaming is vital if you intend to follow the next step, which is optional.
5. Exit out of the game and return to your XBox menu, and follow step 2 above again, but this time copy the savegame from your external USB device back to your XBox's hard drive. You should now have two exact copies of your world, one in Survival Mode and one in Creative Mode.
This procedure can be done over again whenever you have made major changes to your Survival Mode world, so that you can keep your Creative Mode copy in synch. I hope this proves useful to someone. I know I'll be doing this often.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
Good idea. And entirely within the confines of the game and the Xbox too, so no ToS hassles. Great idea, in fact. This way, I can give the creative copy of my world resources it lacks entirely, like Spruce trees and melons (to check them out in familiar territory) while my survival world keeps its legitimacy.
Update: This worked like a charm. The only thing I had to figure out was how to rename the save file. (Press RB when prompted in the menu to get that option.) Your instructions made it easy otherwise. Now I have a Creative copy of my world, and it doesn't interfere with my Survival instance. I was thinking of trying creative mode on it already, since now I have all achievements, but this is a much better solution. Thanks!
Thanks for the feedback. I actually sent you a PM a while ago, Cobra951, asking about melons in the "gargamel" seed. Seems that I was right, there aren't any there by default. Good to know, I can stop searching for them now.
Oh, and I've been using your branch mining suggestion extensively. I use it in my Creative Mode world (where I can one-hit destroy blocks), then only mine those branches in my Survival Mode world that yielded the resources I'm after. Thanks, this is a great way of getting just what I want, and not wasting torches, pick axes, and shovels going down unnecessary branches.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
I'm glad that was helpful to you. I find mining almost therapeutic. A bit of relaxing, braindead activity is great for lowering stress. I'll do a branch nearly every play session. I ended up building a rail line along the corridor that connects all the branches. After every 8 branches or so, I'll extend the rail line to the new endpoint. I use sand to fill in whatever lava gets in my way. (Gravel works too, but that happens naturally down to bedrock, so you may not be able to tell later if you put it there or not.) I use strictly stone tools (100% renewable), unless the resource requires something better. Then I use diamond, enchanted with fortune when that helps. I carry a workbench and a stack of sticks with me, rather than eating up inventory slots with replacements for the fragile stone tools.
I don't want to use my creative world to "cheat" in finding resources. I very much wanted to try things in my world that are not available there by default, but I didn't want to invalidate its survival status. Yours is the perfect solution, truly.
You sent me a PM? Where? The only PM option I see is this "Messenger" link at the top, and neither of the 2 messages I have there are yours.
You are using levers on both sides of your gate right? If so, that's your problem. You'll need to change one of them to either a pressure place or a button with a redstone latch.
"I don't want to use my creative world to "cheat" in finding resources." - Cobra951. Cheat? Me? Never! It's called "prospecting".
Umm, yeah, about that PM that I sent you, Cobra951. Erm, seems that I sent it to another user from this thread by accident.
Drifts115, if you get a strange PM from me, about the "gargamel" seed, please ignore it. Teeheehee.
Thanks for that suggestion, perrinMD. I'll have a go. Been playing with Redstone circuits a bit today, including NOR latches.
MinecraftWiki I'm now registered on the MinecraftWiki, and have started that discussion I mentioned here a few days ago, about clearly identifying information that is specific to the Xbox 360 Edition on the wiki pages. Also, I set up my userspace profile page on the wiki tonight, so hit me up there if you want to.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
My Latest In-Game Update I'm still playing my "gargamel" world in Survival Mode, and using a copy of it in Creative Mode for prospecting. I don't consider this cheating, as I am playing both worlds as single-player so it doesn't hurt anyone. I still haven't yet found the Stronghold or seen anything of the End Portal or Ender Dragon yet, so that is something I still have no experience with as yet.
Someone suggested that I start making a map of the Nether to help me find my way around. Umm, I must be doing something wrong with that, as my map of the Nether seems to be perfectly useless. I created the map in the Nether, as instructed, (so it is different to the Overworld map), but as I travel around in the Nether with the map, all it seems to be revealing is a series of brown and red dots. There is no Nether Fortress, no lava lakes, nothing other than ambiguous dots on the map. There's nothing that I can point to as a landmark, as such. Strange. Is this how maps of the Nether normally should look?
While maps in the Nether work, it has a ceiling, and all that will be shown is red and gray. The only useful function is finding where you are in relation to where you made the map (the center), or have placed framed maps (green pointers). Additionally, the direction indicator rapidly spins and is not a good indicator of direction.
So, that's the problem. I assume also that these "framed maps" don't exist in the Xbox 360 Edition, am I right?
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
I have found that using my overworld map in the nether is quite helpful. It still shows coordinates so I can just check where my portal is and anything else I find. Once you have the coordinates it is much easier to find things. The map portion is useless, but I think that's true of the "nether map" as well. All you need are the coordinates. The nether map will at least have an indicator showing your location, but as you quoted above, that indicator spins so it can't tell you which direction you're facing.
I like how logical you are about your game play. Minecraft is appealing on so many different levels.
Thanks for the reply, sixstringstrummer, I must try that. Oh, and as for my "logical" approach to my gaming, I have Asperger's Syndrome, so that would explain my logical approach to pretty much everything, not just gaming.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
Lol - that might explain your logical approach to gaming and life, but I think your politeness and positive attitude is simply the product being of a good person.
perrinMD, I had another look at that door issue I was having, and decided to Redstone it. I found the following YouTube video by TheGamersGlitched which shows how to make a two-way switch, which allows me to enter and exit my door from either direction, without being forced to come back in the way that I last left. Thanks again for your advice on this.
My Latest In-Game Update I've decided to lay out all of my Redstone circuits on Sandstone, as it looks nice with some contrast to the surrounding dirt. I'm starting to accumulate a good supply of Iron now, and my previous aversion to making armour out of Iron is now dwindling. I'm slowly making a full set of Level 30 enchanted Diamond armour, which I'm not wearing yet, but storing away until the day I finally find the Stronghold in my map.
I haven't even found an abandoned mineshaft in my "gargamel" seed world yet, but I have found and explored a couple of ravines. They're fun! How do most people get down into them? I dig a staircase to the side of the ravine, running parallel to it, then angle toward the ravine every 7 or so steps down, to see if I have reached a platform or the ground below.
The Cobblestone that I am digging out with Branch Mining (Cobra951's suggestion) is now being used extensively in the Nether (forrgott's suggestion). Everyone's help and advice here has been really helpful, and my gameplay has improved through all your tips. I still don't have Xbox Gold, and being a beneficiary I probably won't be getting it any time soon, so I won't be playing online, sorry. I'm hoping to get (or borrow from a friend) a second Xbox controller, so my wife can join me in the game, split-screen. She's played a bit of Minecraft in Creative Mode only, and isn't very interested, but it would be nice to play a game together, so maybe that will happen someday. I've been collecting resources for her to play with when she joins the game, and leaving a large space in my walled city for her to build in.
The city is coming along nicely now. I have a three-storey apartment block, made of Bricks, and a linen shop that sells wool, dyes and leather. I'm making shops that specialize in different resources. On the outskirts of the city, but still within the city wall, I have a farming area for crops (only Wheat and Pumpkins at present), and animals, including various colours of sheep, some pigs, cows, and chickens.
Beyond the city limits, I now have a paved and lit road almost all the way to the new Portal, the one that takes me straight into the Nether Fortress. My initial fear of mob spawners (that led me to destroy them on sight) has now tempered, and I have found one that I've kept as an XP farm.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
I often use a bucket of water to get into a ravine. You can leave the water source block at the top to swim back up or you can collect the source block and ride the water down as it disappears so you still have your bucket of water. I always carry at least one bucket of water with me. It has saved me on a number of occasions. Last night I was working around my Mayan city area which has numerous large netherack torches on the ground surrounded by stairs to make them look good. I kept backing up to look at what I was building and stepping right into the fire! Bucket of water saved me every time.
By the way, If you like learning more about minecraft, I suggest checking out Etho's channel on youtube. He plays on the computer, but his earlier videos apply to Xbox. He is a really smart minecraft player and is fun to watch. I also enjoy watching BdoubleO and VintageBeef for their building skills and entertainment value. They all play on the Mindcrack server which is a fun group of people to watch, and Etho and BdoubleO have their own LP's as well.
Thanks for the advice, sixstringstrummer. I'll be sure to take a bucket of water with me everywhere from now on. I'll start watching through Etho's channel. I'm slowly getting through OverlookedENT's vids too. There sure is some great information out there about Minecraft.
I've started playing with Mordritch's Javascript Redstone Simulator. Below is a sample of my first creation in it, a simplified example of the 2-way switch setup I'm using for the door to my main "residence" room in my Survival Mode game. Click on the image below to experience it LIVE in the simulator.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
When it comes to seeds used for world generation, the terrain of two worlds made with the same seeds will be identical while things like trees, animals, etc, will not be the exact same. The blocks that make up the ground however, should be nearly identical.
This. And gargamel was decimated by one of the earlier TU's that took it from "my favorite seed!" to "meh" ... ruined my big castle world.
Difference between the same seeds
Yeah, there were a few days, maybe a week, went by between the time I created the Survival Mode (SM) world and its Creative Mode (CM) counterpart. I don't know if there were any title updates between them though. I was careful to make sure I spelt the seed exactly the same both times, as I figured that capitalization would be important. For some strange reason, the CM world seems to be a few Y levels lower than the SM world. The church / temple in the village near the original spawning point had its door well hidden behind a pile of sand in the CM world, whereas it was readily accessible in the original SM world I made with the same seed.
My Latest In-Game Update
Being that I couldn't easily map between the two instances, I decided on a new tactic for accessing the Nether Fortress. I re-visited that tower which I had carved a spiral staircase up through the middle of earlier. This time I came equipped with enough obsidian to be able to build a Portal inside the Nether Fortress itself. Navigating between my first base in the Nether and the Nether Fortress just proved way too difficult and risky, so now I can portal straight in to the Fortress. Much easier.
My village on the hill is looking quite good now. I'd like to entice some villagers back into my village and have them come live in some of the buildings I've made there. Also, I'm about ready to start looking at making some automated factories in my village.
I've been experimenting with Redstone, Repeaters, Levers, Buttons, and Pistons. I have a gate in my village wall made of two Sticky Pistons stacked vertically, which opens and closes at the flick of a lever on either side. One thing I noticed is that, if I leave the village through that mechanised gate and close it from the outside, if I then find my way back in to my village through some other way (such as the Potrtal), I cannot open the mechanised gate from the inside again. I have to smash the gate open and re-build it. Strange.
Replies
perrinMD: I have started making a map of the Nether now. Thanks for that suggestion.
forrgott: That's a great suggestion, using cobblestone instead of Nether Brick, thanks. I'll do that from now on.
Cobra951: Nice to see someone else uses the same seed I'm using. Is that for a single-player world, or is that on a server? And thanks for the information about "Branch Mining". That sounds very useful.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
I struck upon an idea for how to resolve this issue on my own. Others here might like to follow the same procedure if they are having similar problems with two world instances of the same seed not being exactly the same. This procedure may be documented elsewhere on the forums or on the wiki, but I haven't gone searching for it, so please don't shoot me if what I am saying here is not something entirely new or unique.
The solution involves backing up the savegame file to an external USB device, renaming the backup, then loading the renamed world in Creative Mode. Using this method you get an exact copy of your current world, not just the plain world as it was seeded, but including any changes you have made to that world since it was created. Before you begin, make sure you have a USB thumb drive or other USB storage device that is formatted for use with the XBox. If you don't already have one set up for the XBox, any data on the device you intend to use will be lost when formatted for use with the XBox.
Here's how it's done...
1. Exit out of the game first (don't forget to save) and return to your XBox main menu.
2. Go to Settings > System > Storage and select the device you saved your Survival Mode world to originally, most likely to your XBox's hard drive. Then go to Games and Apps > Minecraft and locate the savegame file for the Survival Mode world you want to clone, then select it (A), and Copy (A) it to the USB device.
3. Go back to playing Minecraft, and when it asks you which device to load your world from, choose the USB device instead of the hard drive. Load the game using Creative Mode rather than Survival Mode, and select the Host Options if you want them.
4. Once the world loads, save and exit back to the Minecraft menu. Go back to the load screen and rename the save file. I rename mine the same as my Survival Mode world, but with a (CM) at the end to denote Creative Mode. Renaming is vital if you intend to follow the next step, which is optional.
5. Exit out of the game and return to your XBox menu, and follow step 2 above again, but this time copy the savegame from your external USB device back to your XBox's hard drive. You should now have two exact copies of your world, one in Survival Mode and one in Creative Mode.
This procedure can be done over again whenever you have made major changes to your Survival Mode world, so that you can keep your Creative Mode copy in synch. I hope this proves useful to someone. I know I'll be doing this often.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
Update: This worked like a charm. The only thing I had to figure out was how to rename the save file. (Press RB when prompted in the menu to get that option.) Your instructions made it easy otherwise. Now I have a Creative copy of my world, and it doesn't interfere with my Survival instance. I was thinking of trying creative mode on it already, since now I have all achievements, but this is a much better solution. Thanks!
Oh, and I've been using your branch mining suggestion extensively. I use it in my Creative Mode world (where I can one-hit destroy blocks), then only mine those branches in my Survival Mode world that yielded the resources I'm after. Thanks, this is a great way of getting just what I want, and not wasting torches, pick axes, and shovels going down unnecessary branches.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
I don't want to use my creative world to "cheat" in finding resources. I very much wanted to try things in my world that are not available there by default, but I didn't want to invalidate its survival status. Yours is the perfect solution, truly.
You sent me a PM? Where? The only PM option I see is this "Messenger" link at the top, and neither of the 2 messages I have there are yours.
Cheat? Me? Never! It's called "prospecting".
Umm, yeah, about that PM that I sent you, Cobra951. Erm, seems that I sent it to another user from this thread by accident.
Drifts115, if you get a strange PM from me, about the "gargamel" seed, please ignore it. Teeheehee.
Thanks for that suggestion, perrinMD. I'll have a go. Been playing with Redstone circuits a bit today, including NOR latches.
MinecraftWiki
I'm now registered on the MinecraftWiki, and have started that discussion I mentioned here a few days ago, about clearly identifying information that is specific to the Xbox 360 Edition on the wiki pages. Also, I set up my userspace profile page on the wiki tonight, so hit me up there if you want to.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
Heh, I was wondering. I have an old version of the seed from pc equivalent beta 1.6.6, but it's completely different and I didn't even mention it.
I'm still playing my "gargamel" world in Survival Mode, and using a copy of it in Creative Mode for prospecting. I don't consider this cheating, as I am playing both worlds as single-player so it doesn't hurt anyone. I still haven't yet found the Stronghold or seen anything of the End Portal or Ender Dragon yet, so that is something I still have no experience with as yet.
Someone suggested that I start making a map of the Nether to help me find my way around. Umm, I must be doing something wrong with that, as my map of the Nether seems to be perfectly useless. I created the map in the Nether, as instructed, (so it is different to the Overworld map), but as I travel around in the Nether with the map, all it seems to be revealing is a series of brown and red dots. There is no Nether Fortress, no lava lakes, nothing other than ambiguous dots on the map. There's nothing that I can point to as a landmark, as such. Strange. Is this how maps of the Nether normally should look?
EDIT: I just checked the Wiki and found this comment about mapping in the Nether:
So, that's the problem. I assume also that these "framed maps" don't exist in the Xbox 360 Edition, am I right?
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
I like how logical you are about your game play. Minecraft is appealing on so many different levels.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
perrinMD, I had another look at that door issue I was having, and decided to Redstone it. I found the following YouTube video by TheGamersGlitched which shows how to make a two-way switch, which allows me to enter and exit my door from either direction, without being forced to come back in the way that I last left. Thanks again for your advice on this.
My Latest In-Game Update
I've decided to lay out all of my Redstone circuits on Sandstone, as it looks nice with some contrast to the surrounding dirt. I'm starting to accumulate a good supply of Iron now, and my previous aversion to making armour out of Iron is now dwindling. I'm slowly making a full set of Level 30 enchanted Diamond armour, which I'm not wearing yet, but storing away until the day I finally find the Stronghold in my map.
I haven't even found an abandoned mineshaft in my "gargamel" seed world yet, but I have found and explored a couple of ravines. They're fun! How do most people get down into them? I dig a staircase to the side of the ravine, running parallel to it, then angle toward the ravine every 7 or so steps down, to see if I have reached a platform or the ground below.
The Cobblestone that I am digging out with Branch Mining (Cobra951's suggestion) is now being used extensively in the Nether (forrgott's suggestion). Everyone's help and advice here has been really helpful, and my gameplay has improved through all your tips. I still don't have Xbox Gold, and being a beneficiary I probably won't be getting it any time soon, so I won't be playing online, sorry. I'm hoping to get (or borrow from a friend) a second Xbox controller, so my wife can join me in the game, split-screen. She's played a bit of Minecraft in Creative Mode only, and isn't very interested, but it would be nice to play a game together, so maybe that will happen someday. I've been collecting resources for her to play with when she joins the game, and leaving a large space in my walled city for her to build in.
The city is coming along nicely now. I have a three-storey apartment block, made of Bricks, and a linen shop that sells wool, dyes and leather. I'm making shops that specialize in different resources. On the outskirts of the city, but still within the city wall, I have a farming area for crops (only Wheat and Pumpkins at present), and animals, including various colours of sheep, some pigs, cows, and chickens.
Beyond the city limits, I now have a paved and lit road almost all the way to the new Portal, the one that takes me straight into the Nether Fortress. My initial fear of mob spawners (that led me to destroy them on sight) has now tempered, and I have found one that I've kept as an XP farm.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
By the way, If you like learning more about minecraft, I suggest checking out Etho's channel on youtube. He plays on the computer, but his earlier videos apply to Xbox. He is a really smart minecraft player and is fun to watch. I also enjoy watching BdoubleO and VintageBeef for their building skills and entertainment value. They all play on the Mindcrack server which is a fun group of people to watch, and Etho and BdoubleO have their own LP's as well.
I've started playing with Mordritch's Javascript Redstone Simulator. Below is a sample of my first creation in it, a simplified example of the 2-way switch setup I'm using for the door to my main "residence" room in my Survival Mode game. Click on the image below to experience it LIVE in the simulator.
Hi, I'm Augur and I'm from New Zealand (NZ). Just call me "Augur". I'm an older person playing Minecraft Xbox 360 Legacy Console Edition without Xbox Gold (no online gaming, sorry), so please don't hate on the old. 😄
This. And gargamel was decimated by one of the earlier TU's that took it from "my favorite seed!" to "meh" ... ruined my big castle world.