Also, what's with that block of dirt floating in mid air ?
In Minecraft, placed objects besides sand do not obey gravity. It's even common to run across natural "floating islands" because of the way that caves subtract land from hills, much less player effects of digging blocks out.
Also, what's with that block of dirt floating in mid air ?
At first I thought it was levitating, but it wasn't that. At first I thought it was island, but it wasn't that. At first I thought it was awesomeness, but it obviously wasn't that...
It'll take forever to build the library at the rate of cows.
Efelion said:
Cow farming was the worst.
That's why you build an semi-automatic cow breeder (water streams to push cows upwards)/cooker(lava dispenser at head level). Can be built quite compact thanks to hoppers, and you don't even need much redstone circuitry (heck, you can build one without wires).
Konekochan said:
Also, what's with that block of dirt floating in mid air ?
As mentioned, most blocks don't obey gravity. Also, due to the first person perspective and lack of minimaps, it can be hard for a player to find his way back to his house without landmarks.
The easiest landmark is a dirt pillar with a torch mounted on one side of it (to indicate direction), which can be constructed by piling blocks under the player while jumping continuously (often called "nerdpoling"). Getting down can be somewhat hard (assuming the player doesn't want to suicide, and there's no water nearby), so some people would build a block adjacent to the topmost block of the pillar and stick a torch to that. Then they dig their way down the original dirt pillar, leaving a single dirt block floating in the air, exactly like in the image above.