I was the construction coordinator for Minecon 2016 and both Mojang and Microsoft were extremely specific about the size of everything. We had to keep everything to-scale, which for us was 48”x48”. Every pixel within the block was 2”x2” and was painted by-hand. Our enderman statue atop the centerpiece, I believe was also 9’ tall. Okay, just some fun bts. Not sure why Microsoft didn’t hold the movie to the same standards they held the convention to.
Different times i suppose. Different management teams, who knows. So many styles and directions the minecraft movie could have gone and this is what we got.
That's cool. I would have loved to dive those dumpsters after the con. I have pulled thousands of dollars worth of wood, metal, plexiglass, etc from the dumpster behind the business that builds trade show floor displays. This was 10+ years ago and I still find boards in my woodpile from my scrounging. The guys there were cool with it too. They said it kept their WM bill lower. win-win
Im just shocked anyone plays basic Minecraft haha. I haven't played in years, but technic pack and other mod packs are billions of times better than vanilla, airships, reactors, elevators, industrial machines..goofy potions and redstone is just lame
@@KaladinVegapunk You're not shocked. You're deliberately saying it here because you think it makes you better or more fun. Not sure how tho, since that means you lack the creativity to make a _sandbox_ yours.
I don't know what colors you have but the emojis originated in Japan, where red is used to represent increases in stock prices.Therefore, red is usually increasing, and green or blue is decreasing.
Don't forget that Minecraft worlds technically go WAY beyond the border, it's only there to prevent terrain issues when too many blocks away from spawn. It goes up to 2 billion as far as I know
floating point precision start to wreak havoc when there's less bits for decimals, but ya, you can get out pretty far if you're ok with a higher h-bar value and quantum jank.
The reason why people and even I base it on the boarder is because without glitches or exploits or commands and even mods to get passed it, the pure vanilla gameplay of it, is impossible and you aren't actually meant to as it's not considered the playable area within the Minecraft world. U base it on pure vanilla experience only and no cheap methods or tactics to bypass the border.
They could technically use Double to make it even higher to the level of trillions of blocks (there's a mod that does that) but it takes a lot of power to process it
And to think that it all origenated from the properties of water. 100C boiling point, 0 freezing point and 1000kg in a volume of 1 cubic meter. Pretty cool and simple. ;)
@@szymonmaciak8930 Apart from length, which I think comes from light But hey, basing off a measurement system from light and water is some pretty smart and basic logic
@@gachabloxgirl3958 Only relatively recently did scientist remake the meter to be based off of light (how far light travels in x seconds (don't remember the variable)). Before that it was measured in something else (like what @davidbergfors6820 is saying).
@@FawnTheCreatorUnlike Corridor Crew, they don't have any sense of the scale of Minecraft. It would've been way more interesting to have the movie play in a correctly scaled world.
Seriously, Wren needs to make this a whole series. With the nether, Steve’s strength, the end, the deep dark, every little thing and what it would look like in real life
The effects in this video feel more like Minecraft, than the movie trailer. Honestly, CC should have made (or at least been working on) the Minecraft movie. The passion for the game within the team is clearly visible.
Yeah piggy back on what everyone else says. It’s a trailers who cares. Good bad whatever I don’t plan on seeing it. No effects will change shit casting.
@@braxbro7602The effects in this video are quite different than the trailer. For one, they kept the 1m scale of blocks instead of trying to sculpt everything out of different size blocks like the movie. That alone makes a huge difference
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="247">4:07</a> also, lets all appreciate that wren went through the work to mine and craft different blocks for his tower instead of just digging up dirt and calling it a day
Fun fact: The 60,000,000 block world generation limit can be removed with a little modding, and the world will generate 2^32 blocks end to end. With a lot of modding (using mods that do exist), 2^64 blocks end to end can be achieved. (Possibly more, I’m not sure) Now try to imagine how much space every world seed generated out that far, stitched together, would cover. 😂
with lot more modding it could be infinite (like emulating 128+bit digits on 64bit cpus) but man, that'd be slow also cubic chunks mod will increase it extremelly (vertically 30m also)
It would cover an area of about 70.13 septillion square light years. The total volume would be about 2.85 trillion cubic light years, so if it was packed into a sphere, it would be about 17,584 light years in diameter (almost exactly 1/6 the diameter of the milky way).
The shot at <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="282">4:42</a> is incredible! Made me rewind at least 10 times to appreciate how clean you pulled it off.
Well um actually (nerd alert) Steve can carry much much more than a wimpy 45,359,237 kilograms (100 million pounds btw). This part is where I nerd out so be warned The true heaviest block in Minecraft is packed blue ice, which is made from 9 blue ice, which is made from 9 ice, which each ice block is precisely 1 cubic metre of water (like he said, that’s 1 ton), so a single block of packed blue ice is 729 tons, times that by 64 and you’d have a full stack, which weighs 46,656 tons. Now stuff 27 of those into a shulker box to fill it (1,259,712 tons), and take 36 of those shulker boxes to get a full inventory (excluding the armor slots and crafting grind). Now we’re at a meaty 45,349,632 tons, but we can add more weight. Like he said a cubic metre of gold weighs about 19,320 tons. We divide that by 9 to get the weight of a Minecraft gold Ingot, which is about 2147 (rounded up to the nearest whole number), and times that by 28 for a full armor set with gold trims, and we get about 60,107 tons. We add that with our old number, and we get about 708,721,940 tons. So Steve can carry 708,721,940 and jump more than a metre without bending his knees! He’s literally carrying about 71 Eiffel Towers in his pants’ pockets! If you managed to endure all that text and cringy math and Minecraft knowledge, I’m proud of you
Ice 919kg x 9 = 1 Packed Ice 8,271kg Packed Ice 8,271kg x 9 = 1 Blue Ice 74,439kg Blue Ice 74,439kg x 64 = Stack of Blue Ice 4,764,096kg Stack of Blue Ice 4,764,096kg x 27 = Shulker of Blue Ice 128,630,592kg Shulker of Blue Ice 128,630,592kg x 36 = Inventory of Shulkers 4,630,701,312kg Inventory of Shulkers 4,630,701,312kg / 1000 = 4,630,701.31t Cubic metre of Gold 19,320kg x 64 = Stack of Gold 1,236,480kg Stack of Gold 1,236,480kg x 27 = Skulker of Gold 33,384,960kg Skulker of Gold 33,384,960kg x 36 = Inventory of Shulkers 1,201,858,560kg Inventory of Shulkers 1,201,858,560kg / 1000 = 1,201,858.56t Gold Block 19,320kg / 9 = Gold Ingot 2,146.66kg Gold Ingot 2,146.66kg x 28 = Full set of Gold with Trim 60,106.66kg Full set of Gold with Trim 60,106.66kg / 1000 = 60.1t Inventory of Shulkers 4,630,701.31t + Full set of Gold with Trim 60.1t = 4,630,761.41t Weight of all items 4,630,761.41t / Weight of Eiffel Tower 10,100t= 458.49 Eiffel Towers Or 661,537.34 African Elephants Netherite is denser but isn't real so nothing to base calculations on.
Imagine a world you get transported into where the average person there is twice as wide, much more athletic, and can hold an inventory full of shulker boxes, each full of gold ore, without being slowed down. It would have been such a better twist on the new minecraft movie if the main characters weren’t the “main characters” and were just trying to survive and learn this new ecosystem superseding everything they’ve ever known.
What makes this worse is that minecarft has several official books, and the first one (that wasn's some type of guide) was literally this. Its about a dude that gets dumped in the world of minecraft and has to learn all the mechanics and rules by trial and error, and it was written by Max Brooks the guy who wrote "World War Z". They already had a good story they could use, and yet...
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="144">2:24</a> small correction. Its 37 slots because of the off-hand slot. Also if you fill each slot with a shulker box, which has 27 slots, you would have to multiply 37 (the amount of inventory slots) x 27 (the amount of inventory slots per shulker box) x 64 (one stack) x weight of a gold block. aka ~1.1 million tons
netherite blocks are at least 4 times denser than gold as they they take four gold ingots to make one netherite ingots not to mention the ancient debris.
What you mean unpopular opinion. Wren is practically the star of the whole studio, given its focus on CGI and his incredibly skilled specialist role in that exact field. His videos are always the most amazing ones for CC.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="295">4:55</a> I like the fact that they used soapy water to make it more visible. Classic Corridor practical effects.
I can't believe Wren got his Enderman lore wrong. Enderman can dodge all projectiles. Even when trapped on a single block with nowhere to teleport to, Enderman can perfectly dodge a whole hail of arrows that cover the entire block the Enderman is trapped on without being hit by a single one. Only teasing of course, it was a great shot Wren, no pun intended.
And care of Docm77 this can be used along with an arrow that has had its potential energy significantly increased to phase arrows through thousands of blocks before they hit their target.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="476">7:56</a> Theoretically it is. You can go far past the border, but the code slowly starts to break as the numbers get so large that the random number generators that are responsible for the world generation start to output garbage and the renderer starts to slowly fall apart, causing visual glitches.
I wish Wren had taught me at school. His enthusiasm is infectious and he presents in a very digestible way. He could have done this without the props and it still would have been fascinating
Was looking for this, No Man's Sky is FAR larger than Minecraft. In fact, one single galaxy in No Man's Sky is at least 400,000 LIGHT YEARS in diameter. There are 256 unique galaxies. They oughta look into it!
@@relaxstation8323 As they pointed out, space is empty but EVERY block in minecraft can be interacted with Also their math didnt account that every major update makes it so every seed will make a different world then the same seed for the last patch
@@biomike01 That's true. I'm talking more about just traversable distance. There are over 18 quintillion planets in No Man's Sky, however each planet is definitely smaller than an individual Minecraft world.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="845">14:05</a> There are still just a limited amount of possible block arrangements in Minecraft. It could be interesting to calculate the amount of them.
Impossible to calculate, you have to do all the surface, times height, and then some blocks have directions, effects, things that is not just "a block placed" that's basically virtually infinite.
Wren is one of my favorite educators on RU-vid. Yes, he's also an entertainer, but he truly finds way to make so many topics educational and entertaining at the same time. I really enjoy all of his educational VFX videos, his TEDtalk was really good too.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="151">2:31</a> the heaviest block is the netherite block, being 4 times heavier than a gold block (a gold block is crafted with 9 gold ingots, a netherite block is crafted from 9 netherite ingots, each netherite ingot is crafted with 4 gold ingots and 4 netherite scraps, we don't know for sure howheavy netherite scraps are, but we do know for sure that netherite ingots and blocks are an alloy that's at least 4 times more dense/heavy than gold)
Let's not forget about the crazy things that modpacks add - the Infinity Breastplate from Avaritia is made with 24 Infinity Ingots, each of which contains 11 Infinity Catalysts which are in turn crafted from a bunch of singularities (including the gold singularity which is made from 12,900 gold blocks); Octuple Compressed Cobblestone contains over 43 million blocks of cobble...
I haven't played MC in years. I introduced my kids to it when they were little and one of them still plays on the regular. They're 19 now. He learnt to code through the game and is studying coding at University.
Minecraft redstone got me interested in computer science when I was like 10. I'm also 19 now, tho I don't play Minecraft particularly often now. But I am majoring in computer science (learning C++ right now)
minecraft got me interested in 3d animation when i was 12, 10 years later and ive got a degree in game art and working towards my career as a 3d artist
The fact that someone can still find the exact seed and position of a minecraft world based of a single screenshot despite how large it is is crazy to think about
Wow, this has got to be one of the best produced videos on the history of the platform. I know Wren and crew have been working on this way before the Minecraft movie trailer came out, but this video really does feel like "boom, THAT is how you do Minecraft in live-action" and it totally achieves it. Fun, informative, and visual FX that are damn near seamless with reality (personal favorite is the blood splatter on the ceiling after shotgunning the Ender man) this is a video worth feeling proud of crew. Absolutely outstanding.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="132">2:12</a> Nope it's blue ice, it's made of 9 packed ice and packed ice is made of 9 normal ice which makes one block of blue ice 1000kg × 9 × 9 / 81,000kg / 81 metric tons
The heaviest block that exists in real life would be element 118 oganesson as it is the heaviest element and if you turn on education mode it contains a block for every element.
@@CrulexKnight 1 cubic meter of water is 1 ton, then 1×9= 9 tons, and that times nine is 81 tons, and it would be another nine to produce blue ice=729 tons I'm pretty sure, and Google says, at least, 1 cubic meter of pure gold is around 19 tons only, so Blue Ice in Minecraft is definitely heavier
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="513">8:33</a> that explains why Steve is so strong, His Muscle Adapted to accommodate to that insane amount of Gravity
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="719">11:59</a> and yet, some people have found the exact same world as the famous "default texturepack icon" world :D
Wren, you are probably one of the best teachers internet has ever seen. Everything you do is so visual and so creative in the rabbit hole questions and themes you touch along the topic you are discussing. You're such an inspiration of how to show things, and how much passion to put in them
Is Minecraft the largest game ever created? I dunno about that. Space Engine for example has our entire visible universe that you can explore - literally billions of galaxies each with billions of stars and planets (and you can land on every single one). It's volume is so much bigger than Minecraft and it's all in one large map, not 2^64 possible seeds like in Minecraft. Of course most of that in Space Engine is just empty space but still it is larger. Second largest would likely be No Man's Sky at just over 256 galaxies and third would be Elite Dangerous with just one galaxy. There might be other, perhaps even bigger games that I don't know about though! Still incredible video, absolutely loved the effects and information. This series might be my favorite of all the Corridor stuff.
@@netkv Elite dangerous is the more modern release for PC and consoles and is a 1:1 scale sim of the Galaxy. To fully catalogue every planet, star and system would take lifetimes of multiple generations
I dont think we can count space engine. Its not hard to make "game" filled with dots and call it "the planets". Sure its nice that this really exist. Its our universe. But i can in worldbox draw a map of earth and say that "this is one of the biggest maps in game bc its whole earth". No its not. Its representation of world with scale that cant be feelt at any way. Thats why NMS is at first place. Bc you can feel the size of this universe. You can land on any planet and go around which takes many many ours. And i would be against counting space between planets bc its unrealistic as hell. But all planets surface together x 256 galaxys.
@@Sandro_de_Vega They aren't dots - you can land on every single planet, moon or any astronomical object in the game. The planets are procedurally generated and there's not that much on them (except for oceans, seas, lakes, rivers, mountains, canyons, volcanoes, ice caps etc). Planet sizes are true to life and you could walk across their entire surface if you really wanted to. Also unlike No Man's Sky or Elite Dangerous there are no transition animations or loading screens between flying through space or landing on a planet - it's all completely seamless like it would be in real life - just one, complete, unbroken universe that you can explore without and interruptions. And yes, the only real consideration is whether or not to include Space Engine as a 'game' since it doesn't have any story, quests or much gameplay except for what you make of it. For the most part you are simply a camera flying through the universe, however there are spaceships that you can spawn and pilot - and you can perform actual orbital manouvers etc. So there is some gameplay even if it's barebones.
I really do think this video perfectly shows what Minecraft should look like. It even utilizes a texturing style that feels faithful to the games, as normal maps are now something coveted in the game's community. Man.... They really are gonna regret not letting Wren direct this whole thing.
I remember playing minecraft in VR, and you truly understand the scale of everything in there. Everything is huge, with the most jarring being the chickens that are like the size of a large dog
No Man's Sky has 18,446,744,073,709,551,616 unique planets. No man's sky does have way less seeds for universes, but of course a universe does contain all those planets in them while 1 seed for Minecraft world is one "planet". According to some youtube video it took 24 hours and 43 minutes to walk around a planet in NMS. So the single planets are a lot smaller than a minecraft world. No man's sky worlds are however round and not flat. So it's a matter of semantics how you would do the comparison. You can't go very deep in those planets, but you can build way way higher than in minecraft. So what would even be a fair comparison? Minecraft has the same 18 quintilion seeds for it's worlds as No mans sky has for it's planets and a minecraft world is way bigger, but if we conisder minecraft worlds flat worlds, then in terms of mass it's not very optimal since it's extremely thin while planets are much more optimal. So even when the length of a minecraft world is 500x bigger (I think) a NMS planet might be bigger in mass. Of course if we go by surface area, then Minecraft is way bigger. But in NMS you can fly between planets seamlessly inside a solar system so should we also consider that as playarea eventhough it's empty space? Those areas are pretty massive in size. So it really depends on how you make the rules. It is also somewhat pointless since anyone with programing knowledge could potentially make the biggest game ever on paper, but that game might look very primitive. At the end of the day what matters is how much variety and detail those worlds contain.
@@mateboros952 true no man's sky is way bigger than one minecraft world but of course not all of it combined.. Because all minecraft worlds combined would be 2320 times bigger than no mans Sky map
I did some calculations on the size of the planets in No Man's Sky a few months ago. The planets in No Man's Sky are an average of only 70 km in diameter or around 1 thousand km² in area. The total explorable area without glitches is equivalent to 29 trillion of times the Earth's surface.
From <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="568">9:28</a>, is how I said they should have done the Minecraft movie. Have humans enter the portal and come out the other side as block characters. You have made my idea a reality!
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="147">2:27</a> - Its actually A LOT more than that if you take shulkers and an ender chest into account.. including 36 inventory slots and 2 hand slots-you can calculate the total number of gold blocks carried. Filling 37 slots with shulker boxes holding 1,728 gold blocks each (27 slots × 64 blocks), the player carries 63,936 gold blocks. The remaining slot holds an ender chest containing 27 shulker boxes, adding 46,656 gold blocks. In total, the player carries 110,592 gold blocks. Multiplying this by $1.2 billion per block, the total value amounts to $132,710,400,000,000. - I think i got the maths right.
ender chest is like pocket universe so i dont think that counts ig shulkers could be of similar nature since it's all ender technology (like shulkers teleport, so there's def some magic involved)
@@netkv I understand what you're saying, but you cant bring too much logic into it. a player with a full inventory of gold block stacks is carrying 2,368 gold blocks, which weigh a total of 45,757,760 kilograms (or 45,757.76 metric tons). thats already impossible lol. i dont think pocket universes or shulker boxes break this new reality too much.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="282">4:42</a> genuinely impressed with this shot, i have no idea how they recorded this. is the whole environment fake?
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="120">2:00</a> the metric system is so superpower to the freedom units. You could visualize, how handy all the dimensions and relations are. From meter to Nm and liters and weight per mm and all of that. The metric system is perfect.
Minecraft inspired me to become a designer back in the day. The fact that i could build my own house and decorate it however i wanted was incredible to me.