So I'm kinda tired of having to see desert right next to snow, which is extremely unsightly. I understand a jungle next to a desert, since theyre both hot climates. But to the point:
There should be a small strip of land that generates in between biomes, basically a flat grass strip of land, it would be like a river, but with grass, so if a desert and a snow biome happen to spawn next to eachother there would be a small flatgrass biome in between those 2 biomes, making it less unsiglty. But this grass biome would have a small bit of each biome "leaking" onto it.
desert doent always mean hot...ppl just think that way since most are in hot dry climates...
Well in most deserts, at night, are freezing cold since they are below sea level. But since these deserts are above sea level I'm thinking theyre humid deserts.
Oh i never knew deserts had icebergs. Makes reasonable sense.
But They really can't control how biomes spawn together, there should be something seperating them so the trasitions between the 2 biomes won't be so flat.
Oh i never knew deserts had icebergs. Makes reasonable sense.
But They really can't control how biomes spawn together, there should be something seperating them so the trasitions between the 2 biomes won't be so flat.
Deserts are not sandy places. A desert is a place with very low precipitation, so Antarctica is technically a desert.
The most logical thing to seperate a desert from taiga (The snowy forest) would be a mountain, as mountains such as the Rockies can do. (I am not saying that the Rockies seperate taiga and deserts, by the way.)
The most realistically ground separation would indeed be mountains. Because this is what mountains do. When humid air goes over mountains, it discharge all it's humidity. That's why you have luxuriant forests in British-Columbia when Alberta, on the other side of the Rockies, is much more dry.
Taigas have medium humidity. They're like cold plains. Tundra are dryer, they're often called snow desert.
You can have jungle adjacent to desert, because jungle are humid because they maintain their own humidity. When you cut down a jungle, don't expect to be able to grow vegetables and cereals here. The precipitations came from the transpiration(sweating) of the trees, so once the trees are gone, the heat and wind will turn soil to sand, even if sea is near.
So between taiga&tundra and sand desert with cacti, either you put a mountain chain, or else, laaarge plains.
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There should be a small strip of land that generates in between biomes, basically a flat grass strip of land, it would be like a river, but with grass, so if a desert and a snow biome happen to spawn next to eachother there would be a small flatgrass biome in between those 2 biomes, making it less unsiglty. But this grass biome would have a small bit of each biome "leaking" onto it.
Well in most deserts, at night, are freezing cold since they are below sea level. But since these deserts are above sea level I'm thinking theyre humid deserts.
False. Antarctica is the world's biggest desert.
I think that rather than this idea, there just should not be snow biomes next to sand deserts. Much more sightly.
Oh i never knew deserts had icebergs. Makes reasonable sense.
But They really can't control how biomes spawn together, there should be something seperating them so the trasitions between the 2 biomes won't be so flat.
Deserts are not sandy places. A desert is a place with very low precipitation, so Antarctica is technically a desert.
The most logical thing to seperate a desert from taiga (The snowy forest) would be a mountain, as mountains such as the Rockies can do. (I am not saying that the Rockies seperate taiga and deserts, by the way.)
I support BETTER DRAGONS!

The point is minecraft is NOT a logical game, just roll with it.
Taigas have medium humidity. They're like cold plains. Tundra are dryer, they're often called snow desert.
You can have jungle adjacent to desert, because jungle are humid because they maintain their own humidity. When you cut down a jungle, don't expect to be able to grow vegetables and cereals here. The precipitations came from the transpiration(sweating) of the trees, so once the trees are gone, the heat and wind will turn soil to sand, even if sea is near.
So between taiga&tundra and sand desert with cacti, either you put a mountain chain, or else, laaarge plains.