I think building a warehouse on your property will be a game changer for you. I lay mine out in sections. There's a wood section, stone section, ore section ect. ect. The time it saves not having to go through every chest you own is worth the investment.
Just a suggestion though it might make for a dull episode is dig a mine down to y-56 to gather a full set of diamond armor and tools. You may run into a cave or a deep dark. Might help to set a mini base down there as well just in case you feint. It took me a while but once you understand the mobs they aren’t too bad. As in stack up 3 blocks for zombies, shield or place blocks in front for creepers and skeletons. Lastly if you lose hearts run and hide while you eat because bedrock regeneration is slow. Hopefully that helps. I posted a short vid of my hard mode let’s play. I’m only 36 days in so it’s not much.
She mined down to bedrock, but she hasn't done any significant branch mining. Honestly, she has an enchanting table, so I'm encouraging her to do more villager trading and just _buy_ diamond tools and armor. It's easier, ever since, umm, 1.14.something. Whichever Village and Pillage point release fixed the major bugs.
So under mountains and under swamps is where you hit diamond. I found my diamond gear in bastions, ancient cities and the end cities…. Just be ready to faint and respawn.
The world you get is based on the Seed number you input when creating the world. If you don't fill in the box before creating the world, the game will do it for you. You can see your current world's Seed in the options menu somewhere. If you create a new world 20 times with always the same seed, 99.9% of the world will always be the same. Biomes, mountains, villages, strongholds, all the chests... all in exactly the same position. I think the only thing that might be different is the loot in chests you find. Also, after nabbing a fish in a bucket, and placing it back, it won't despawn anymore. No need for name tags here. Animals you can breed also won't despawn after feeding them, or being born from breeding. Better save your name tags for either pets you actually want to rename, or hostile ennemies like zombies or skellies you want to keep.
I just recently heard something the other day about placing glazed terracotta. It still doesn't make sense, but at least it's consistent- whatever direction you are facing, it places the block backwards from how it appears in your hand..🤯
I don't really know anything about how multiplayer works on Bedrock. Which biomes you get near the world spawn point, really depends heavily on the seed. You can start in a desert, or the nearest desert can be thousands of blocks away. You can start in a cherry grove, or there can be no cherry groves anywhere nearby. You can start in a taiga (spruce forest), or the nearest one can be thousands of blocks away. It just depends on the seed. There are online tools that let you preview the biome maps of various seeds and pick out one that has the biomes you want within a reasonable distance of spawn, but the ones I am specifically familiar with are for Java Edition. (I know that equivalents exist for Bedrock, but I don't know what they're called.) The ideal blue material for the bottom of an aquarium, would be prismarine, but you'll want better armor and some potions before attempting to gather that. If you don't want to wait that long, you could use concrete, or, yes, the glazed terracotta, or lapis blocks. (Lapis is abundant. Don't worry too much about saving large amounts of it; once you start enchanting, you'll have fortune, and that will make getting larger amounts of lapis easy.) Yes, you can absolutely fill the aquarium with water completely. Just remember your water mechanics and place water sources in enough positions that the rest of them fill up. Remember that any given block either is a water source block, or it isn't. You can't put multiple buckets of water into the same exact location, for the same reason that you can't place multiple blocks of wood or stone or dirt in the same location. But you can place water sources at *each* location within the tank, or you can take advantage of water-spread mechanics, to optimize a bit. For a two-high 4x1 tank, you'd need to place a minimum of six water sources, three at each Y level, to completely fill the tank, if you place them optimally. See minecraft.wiki/w/Water#Source_blocks for details.
Thank you for the water mechanics explanation. I don’t know why that’s still the one thing I have trouble with. Well, not the ONE thing, but a consistent thing 😅. I did end up getting the aquarium filled but it still didn’t make sense to me lol.
@@ShallieCat For technical reasons, it's pretty much impossible to make a game where water works exactly like in the real world. Minecraft doesn't even try. If you're thinking it should work like real-world water, you're going to be very confused. It has more in common with Conway's Game of Life, than with real-world water.
I tried realms as well. Was not a fan. I did download the world to my pc so I could play with the family. Then I learned you can set up your own server. There are places out there you can pay to run it for you. Far better than realms. Mine runs on a $300 mini pc that I run, and aside from the pain of updating it works for me.
Does using your sword to harvest plants reduce its durability? I use anything without durability, such as seeds, which then let's me replant easily. I think only using a hoe as a hoe improves yield.
Fortune on anything adds to the harvest. Doesn’t have to be just the hoe. The wheat however gives you just more seeds and not more wheat. I believe same goes for the beets. I’m not 100% sure because I am sort of a noob as well.
The dumbest thing about realms in my opinion is that I also need to pay for the xbox gamepass to access it....the nintendo live fee doesn't bother me as much since its a different company. 😂