I mean, what real-life location is closest to the minecraft world? It would have to have all the biomes, and have the biomes close to each other, like a desert, tundra, grassland, and rainforest all within 5 or 10 miles.
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Somewhere mountainous, definitely, it’s the only way to get temperate and frigid climates in the same area. Perhaps Kilimanjaro? It’s got ice on it, and I’m pretty sure there’s both forest and savanna nearby, though my knowledge of the local geography is admittedly quite slim.
Somewhere mountainous, definitely, it’s the only way to get temperate and frigid climates in the same area. Perhaps Kilimanjaro? It’s got ice on it, and I’m pretty sure there’s both forest and savanna nearby, though my knowledge of the local geography is admittedly quite slim.
Since biomes generate randomly when you create a new world, I guess somewhere in your imagination or something since different biomes are really beside each other. (Far Far Away!)
Minecraft doesn't really take place, anywhere. The developers saw Terraria and decided to make Minecraft. In which, Terraria was an imaginary 2-d world where nothing existed. Basically, what I am trying to get at, is Minecraft is a pixelated world in which what you do is up to you.
Minecraft doesn't really take place, anywhere. The developers saw Terraria and decided to make Minecraft. In which, Terraria was an imaginary 2-d world where nothing existed. Basically, what I am trying to get at, is Minecraft is a pixelated world in which what you do is up to you.
Hope this helped!
Throwing out false facts does nothing to help someone. If there is one person who needs to figure something out, it is you. Take some time and read up on what inspired Minecraft. Here's a little assistance: https://minecraft.net/game
Minecraft gives you worlds of such varying degrees it is difficult to conceive that all of them can actually happen in one universe. Each world generated is roughly the same size of Neptune. That means that from your original spawn to the border 30,000,000km(30,000,000,000 blocks) away, you would have traveled approximately half the circumference of Neptune at its equator. That's a lot of Earths.
I equate playing in Minecraft to the world of Myst. In that story, one can describe a world to the finest details, restrained to a certain degree to the laws of physics. Just a certain degree, of course. You can then touch the image at the start of the book to travel to that world, where you can effect change on a personal level. You will need to make sure to bring along a means of returning to your origin point, of course, which one could call a return book.
In Minecraft, you describe the world with a seed, then travel there and effect change on a personal level which can actually turn into a grand scale. Returning? One doesn't return from a Minecraft world. Silly mortal.
That is just one perspective. There really isn't One View on what a Minecraft world is, or where it might be in the universe, or multiverse. It is left up to you to decide and imagine what it might be. Give it a try, you might surprise yourself.
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In the real world, you stick your head in the dirt to hide from problems.
In Minecraft, you stick your head in the dirt to find problems.
Minecraft doesn't really take place, anywhere. The developers saw Terraria and decided to make Minecraft. In which, Terraria was an imaginary 2-d world where nothing existed. Basically, what I am trying to get at, is Minecraft is a pixelated world in which what you do is up to you.
Hope this helped!
You know Minecraft predates Terraria, right?
Anyway, under the assumption that Minecraft actually is set on our planet, it's the entire planet. There's no real location big enough to take up the entire Minecraft world.
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No, there has never, ever been a sandbox game with a story or ending... except Grand Theft Auto... and Saints Row... and Red Dead Redemption... and Crack Down... and Assassins Creed...
I'm not too sure, but I remember some things... since pigs, cows, sheep and chicken are the only passive animals (Besides spiders), this is either somewhere in Europe, Asia, or someplace before the Columbian Exchange, (This requires a lot of history), OR this is in the Old World (America, Mexico, stuff left to Europe), after the Columbian Exchange, and the difference between races is just your uploaded skin. So, based on the color, you could be a Native American, (Indians), or Europeans (Columbus and the other guys). (Based on skin color, and I'm trying not to be racist.)
Um, takes place on a computer or a server, or some other complex combination of electronic workings.
But, really, imagination, etc. are good answers. Then again, if it were a real place, I'm not sure I'd like to go there, having to be constantly killed and re-spawned. Sort of like a Minecraft version of Jack Harkness.
You have to be kidding me.
Ha!
You don't really need to be angry and facepalming. All of us are still curious where Minecraft takes place even though biomes generate randomly...
A long time ago in a land far far away...
Baseball, then Minecraft.
Hope this helped!
Throwing out false facts does nothing to help someone. If there is one person who needs to figure something out, it is you. Take some time and read up on what inspired Minecraft. Here's a little assistance: https://minecraft.net/game
Minecraft gives you worlds of such varying degrees it is difficult to conceive that all of them can actually happen in one universe. Each world generated is roughly the same size of Neptune. That means that from your original spawn to the border 30,000,000km(30,000,000,000 blocks) away, you would have traveled approximately half the circumference of Neptune at its equator. That's a lot of Earths.
I equate playing in Minecraft to the world of Myst. In that story, one can describe a world to the finest details, restrained to a certain degree to the laws of physics. Just a certain degree, of course. You can then touch the image at the start of the book to travel to that world, where you can effect change on a personal level. You will need to make sure to bring along a means of returning to your origin point, of course, which one could call a return book.
In Minecraft, you describe the world with a seed, then travel there and effect change on a personal level which can actually turn into a grand scale. Returning? One doesn't return from a Minecraft world. Silly mortal.
That is just one perspective. There really isn't One View on what a Minecraft world is, or where it might be in the universe, or multiverse. It is left up to you to decide and imagine what it might be. Give it a try, you might surprise yourself.
In Minecraft, you stick your head in the dirt to find problems.
You know Minecraft predates Terraria, right?
Anyway, under the assumption that Minecraft actually is set on our planet, it's the entire planet. There's no real location big enough to take up the entire Minecraft world.
But, really, imagination, etc. are good answers. Then again, if it were a real place, I'm not sure I'd like to go there, having to be constantly killed and re-spawned. Sort of like a Minecraft version of Jack Harkness.