Like redstone, a new material that can link several blocks together in a line, giving it somewhat free movement.
Will call it "greenstone" for the time being.
Want to make a raft? Make a grid of wooden blocks and cover the surface with (greenstone) to make them stick together, yet float over water. Place a double chest on top of it and you can transport large amounts of materials across lakes and rivers.
A line of blocks, held together with (greenstone) with three iron blocks (rod) on a line on its end could be attached to another line of blocks held with (greenstone) and create pivotal movement with the line of (rod) marking the movement's axis. Make your own massive robot!
Make a circle with cobblestone held together by (greenstone) with a (rod) to make a wheel. Get your own car!
Castle under siege? No problem! Make a large platform held together by (greenstone) and attach the base of it to a pair of (rods) and create a rising bridge! Chains optional!!
Mixes with resdstone to make aerial circuits.
Mixes with lava (in a bucket) to make luminous blocks (Not sure about this one)
Mixes with water (in a bucket) to create a more nutritious crop watering system (bit slower than just water, but by no means immediate)
About as common as redstone, but only drops 1-2 per block.
(random thought) Could be found in dirt instead of stone. Possibly mistaken for grass.
Could merge with a block, allowing other blocks to be placed on top of it without obstructing.
To recover (greenstone), break the block. The (greenstone) could be extracted, but the original block lost. (or perhaps backwards [maybe depending on tool?])
Great idea, but this would be ridiculously hard to program (based on my limited programming knowledge).
It would be. Especially considering that minecraft doesn't seem to have skeletal movement and it would be particularly troublesome to have actual blocks fitting outside block spaces.
Will call it "greenstone" for the time being.
Want to make a raft? Make a grid of wooden blocks and cover the surface with (greenstone) to make them stick together, yet float over water. Place a double chest on top of it and you can transport large amounts of materials across lakes and rivers.
A line of blocks, held together with (greenstone) with three iron blocks (rod) on a line on its end could be attached to another line of blocks held with (greenstone) and create pivotal movement with the line of (rod) marking the movement's axis. Make your own massive robot!
Make a circle with cobblestone held together by (greenstone) with a (rod) to make a wheel. Get your own car!
Castle under siege? No problem! Make a large platform held together by (greenstone) and attach the base of it to a pair of (rods) and create a rising bridge! Chains optional!!
Mixes with resdstone to make aerial circuits.
Mixes with lava (in a bucket) to make luminous blocks (Not sure about this one)
Mixes with water (in a bucket) to create a more nutritious crop watering system (bit slower than just water, but by no means immediate)
About as common as redstone, but only drops 1-2 per block.
(random thought) Could be found in dirt instead of stone. Possibly mistaken for grass.
Could merge with a block, allowing other blocks to be placed on top of it without obstructing.
To recover (greenstone), break the block. The (greenstone) could be extracted, but the original block lost. (or perhaps backwards [maybe depending on tool?])
It would be. Especially considering that minecraft doesn't seem to have skeletal movement and it would be particularly troublesome to have actual blocks fitting outside block spaces.
I just wanted to throw in an idea
True, but wouldn't it be awesome to have a working Mechwarrior?
A Mech battle?
...
A Mech war?