So when I finally got Minecraft loaded up and found my launcher downloading updates, I got excited.
Yup. I built this before the update was even out in preparation. |
So after a few brief seconds, the purple haze whisks you away to a terrible, horrible land that is also awesome.
After a brief loading screen where you learn of the official name of this new dimension, The Nether, you'll find yourself in a strange, hellish world.
I guess there won't be any swimming. |
A small thing that I also noticed was that your compass doesn't work in The Nether. Like some science-fiction malarkey using terms like metal deposits, magnetic fields, and smoke monster, your compass will swirl around, giving you zero information on your bearing. My planned exploration was just a few meters away from my portal anyways, so I should get lost. The Nether allows you to fast travel through it's compressed surface area anyways, so I'll probably slip through The Nether in short distances.
After exploring the land a bit, I realized I was playing on peaceful, because I prefer the exploration without the sense of dying and losing all my hard earned loot. So I changed the game to easy and was immediately hit by The Nether's eerily improved sound work.
On easy mode, I heard the blood curdling wailing of moans and screeches nearby. I came face to face with The Nether's neutral mob of pig-like man zombies.
"Why hellooooooooh my god." |
The camera takes off 10 feet. |
Suddenly, I found myself in an entirely new, unexplored cave system back on Earth. I discovered I must've been in pretty deep as I found lava floes, gold deposits, and red stone.
Remember my original portal was outside. |
After I figured it was safe by now, I went back in The Nether and continued exploring. I found out to my amazement that there was another source of light in this world that wasn't nearly as dangerous as lava or fire.
These strange golden blocks actually emit light, already setting my imagination off of constructing a self-lit home out of this strange glass like substance. Every block you break gives you two piles of gold-like powder. I later found out that making a block out of all 9 squares on a work bench allows you to reconstruct the block for use.
I knew it was making light when I'd break a piece and found the area to be darker. |
Eagle eyed readers can see that the compass has changed relative to position. |
1 comment:
this was exciting!
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