But yetis are lame! They are also stereotypical for snowy environments in cartoons!
Do you mean yetis walking fast on four legs? I meant it would look silly for a yeti to be chasing you since they are generally all bipedial like, I'd imagine the crag would walk like a gorrila (seeing as they have rather stubby legs).
Yetis are not lame! They are cryptozooligical (it's a word. Look it up.)
I want to go to hell because I need lava. I need lava to get to hell. You see my difficulty. That (along with the countless people wanting a use for gold) inspired me to make this.
Part 1: What is a Fylob?
A Fylob is a mob that has sinned against minecraft. Its very body shows its sins. It was banished to hell, where it took on a new form, hoping to be accepted into the normal world. It wasn't. This creepy mob travels freely through hell and the normal world, although it can rarely stay in the normal world for more that thirty seconds.
It moves very fast and is only half a meter on each side, in the normal world, whereas in hell, it is a full meter, and moves much slower. If you can catch a Fylob by being on the same square as it (very hard to do) while it goes to hell, you can access the hell world, but getting out is even harder, because you'd either need a gate (which you might not have if you're using a Fylob for transport) or you'd need to catch a Fylob going out.
Part 2: How does gold come into this?
Fylobs avoid gold at all costs. If a gold block is placed next to a Fylob, it can't move away from that block until it transports to hell. If you have a gold block trapping a Fylob on both sides of the rift, you effectively have a temporary portal.
DISADVANTAGES OF FYLOB-GOLD TRANSPORT
-You can only use it at certain times (when the Fylob is transporting between dimensions
-You take anywhere from half a heart to three hearts of damage when using it
-The transport has a 10% chance of failing, and you end up randomly located in whatever dimension you were going to
-Any objects you are carrying have a 10% chance of disappearing during transport
ADVANTAGES OF FYLOB-GOLD TRANSPORT
-Ghasts won't spawn on the normal world side
-It doesn't require lava
-It provides a use for gold
But wait! It gets better. If you completely surround the Fylob with gold blocks (excluding the bottom) on both sides of the rift, you have a Fylob portal. The top gold block will shine, and when you step on it, it transports you to the other portal. This portal is more reliable than a single gold block and a Fylob, but less reliable then an obsidian portal.
DISADVANTAGES OF FYLOB PORTALS
-There is a 5% chance of the portal failing and transporting you randomly
-Any objects you are carrying have a 5% chance of disappearing during transit
ADVANTAGES OF FYLOB PORTALS
-You don't take any damage
-Ghasts won't spawn on the normal world side
-It doesn't require lava
-It provides a use for gold
-It works full time
Part 3: What does a Fylob look like?
Fylobs are horrid to look at.
Their own bodies are a sin against minecraft.
It the normal world they are horrible beasts of evil, and look the part.
In hell, they still look evil, but not as much.
Would you like to see what sin the Fylob has commited against minecraft?
IT
IS
A
SPHERE!
(At least, it is in the normal world. In hell it looks like this.)
Yes. Iron and gold! There's no silver in Minecraft, but I want to make a shiny silver-y gold-y block, and an iron-y (pun intended) gold-y block is the closest I can get.
I'm just saying that this is the first topic I've seen about pipes, while I've seen several others about blocks (specifically doors) letting water through.
They're not drawings. And I don't want these mobs to be manatees. I specifically gave them no head, because it looks cute. They are mostly just decorative (hence the colors). The manatee is only where I got the inspiration.
Lamantin literally translates to Manatee in French, and that's where I got the inspiration for this mob.
They are semi-aquatic (cannot go more than 5 meters above sea level and need to be within 10 meters of water.) They are very peaceful and spawn in large groups, and if you attack one of them, they all attack you. The aren't that hard to beat individually, but because they attack in groups, they can be somewhat of a hassle. Once you kill one, they all flee into the water. The move slowly on land, but quickly in water.. If you kill one, you get blubber (possibly used in oil lamps). They are somewhat rare. The tail moves up and down to propel them in water, and their fins drag them across land.
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Yetis are not lame! They are cryptozooligical (it's a word. Look it up.)
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I think that maybe they can climb fast, but walk on four legs (like a gorilla) fast too. That takes care of the bipedal walking quickly problem.
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Part 1: What is a Fylob?
A Fylob is a mob that has sinned against minecraft. Its very body shows its sins. It was banished to hell, where it took on a new form, hoping to be accepted into the normal world. It wasn't. This creepy mob travels freely through hell and the normal world, although it can rarely stay in the normal world for more that thirty seconds.
It moves very fast and is only half a meter on each side, in the normal world, whereas in hell, it is a full meter, and moves much slower. If you can catch a Fylob by being on the same square as it (very hard to do) while it goes to hell, you can access the hell world, but getting out is even harder, because you'd either need a gate (which you might not have if you're using a Fylob for transport) or you'd need to catch a Fylob going out.
Part 2: How does gold come into this?
Fylobs avoid gold at all costs. If a gold block is placed next to a Fylob, it can't move away from that block until it transports to hell. If you have a gold block trapping a Fylob on both sides of the rift, you effectively have a temporary portal.
DISADVANTAGES OF FYLOB-GOLD TRANSPORT
-You can only use it at certain times (when the Fylob is transporting between dimensions
-You take anywhere from half a heart to three hearts of damage when using it
-The transport has a 10% chance of failing, and you end up randomly located in whatever dimension you were going to
-Any objects you are carrying have a 10% chance of disappearing during transport
ADVANTAGES OF FYLOB-GOLD TRANSPORT
-Ghasts won't spawn on the normal world side
-It doesn't require lava
-It provides a use for gold
But wait! It gets better. If you completely surround the Fylob with gold blocks (excluding the bottom) on both sides of the rift, you have a Fylob portal. The top gold block will shine, and when you step on it, it transports you to the other portal. This portal is more reliable than a single gold block and a Fylob, but less reliable then an obsidian portal.
DISADVANTAGES OF FYLOB PORTALS
-There is a 5% chance of the portal failing and transporting you randomly
-Any objects you are carrying have a 5% chance of disappearing during transit
ADVANTAGES OF FYLOB PORTALS
-You don't take any damage
-Ghasts won't spawn on the normal world side
-It doesn't require lava
-It provides a use for gold
-It works full time
Part 3: What does a Fylob look like?
Fylobs are horrid to look at.
Their own bodies are a sin against minecraft.
It the normal world they are horrible beasts of evil, and look the part.
In hell, they still look evil, but not as much.
Would you like to see what sin the Fylob has commited against minecraft?
IT
IS
A
SPHERE!
(At least, it is in the normal world. In hell it looks like this.)
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0
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They are semi-aquatic (cannot go more than 5 meters above sea level and need to be within 10 meters of water.) They are very peaceful and spawn in large groups, and if you attack one of them, they all attack you. The aren't that hard to beat individually, but because they attack in groups, they can be somewhat of a hassle. Once you kill one, they all flee into the water. The move slowly on land, but quickly in water.. If you kill one, you get blubber (possibly used in oil lamps). They are somewhat rare. The tail moves up and down to propel them in water, and their fins drag them across land.