![]() Can be smelted into glass and crafted into TNT.Grass and mycelium fail to spread on it.Dirt variation that fails to be transformed to it through any method.Opaque, rather than translucent like normal ice.When broken, it does not turn into water, like normal ice blocks do.Both visually identical to regular oak leaves.A 2x2 configuration of spruce saplings on the ground, can create the large spruce trees from mega taiga biomes.Dark oak saplings require a 2x2 configuration to grow, much like big jungle trees.Same texture as normal oak planks but darkened almost black.Makes up the dark oak tree found in Roofed Forest biomes.Makes up the acacia tree found in Savanna biomes.Has ID number 95, which replaces the Locked Chest's data value.Other translucent blocks may have different effects.Adjacent glass of different colors will ignore each other's colors, and will only render the terrain behind, with the color of the outermost piece of glass.Air blocks make the view blurrier each time.Looking through a solid wall of glass blocks, is equivalent to looking through a single piece (this does not apply to glass panes of any kind).Water, nether portals and other stained glass blocks remain visible when looked at through a stained glass block.Doing this yields 16 stained glass planes, like normal glass.Stained glass can be crafted into stained glass panes using the same recipe as normal glass panes.This is done by putting a colored dye in the center of a crafting table and surrounding it with 8 pieces of normal glass, yielding 8 stained glass. ![]() Also, as an added benefit, you can make a more efficient mob farm with this (although make sure to have an on/off switch, farms can be laggy). DOES NOT PREVENT: slimes (pretty much it, even though slimes are rare)). This prevents most mobs from spawning (prevents: zombies, skeletons, spiders, other common mobs. Then finally, light up the caves under you if you are in survival and the difficulty is set to something other than peaceful. Redstone lines are laggy, and you are better off using powered rails with an observer at the end (I have very little experience with redstone, so please correct me if I'm wrong). This one might not apply to some players, but if you use a lot of redstone, use something other than redstone lines. So go into spectator mode or creative mode (or survival if you want to, it doenst really matter), and go around the world (maybe a couple hundred blocks away from spawn), which will load a lot of chunks, reducing the lag that players cause in-game. If you are on a server, load a lot of chunks first before you let anyone play on it (i believe aternos automatically loads the spawn chunks), because a lot of people loading new areas will cause a ton of lag. This should help reduce lag because most entities have A.I., so the less entities there are, the less the game has to process. Then, do it a second time if you want to kill the mob drops from the killed mobs. mob drops, items, armor stands, minecarts, etc.) in the game. Then type, /kill This will kill every mob and entity (i. ![]() Then, make sure you have a bed nearby, or if you are in creative, type /setworldspawn or /gamerule KeepInventory true (i have vitually no knowledge of commands so if anyone knows how to kill all entities without killing the player, please tell me in the comments). This will prevent anything from spawning (as the command implies). So, if you don't want mobs or entities ingame, first type in the chat, /gamerule DoMobSpawning false. This should only really apply to creative mode, but if you are doing some cheaty survival world then I guess it'll work too. This is all the video settings I can think of right now, will probably add more later. If you have a really bad computer, turn off the dynamic lighting. If you are still having problems, turn off fancy graphics. Also turn the particles to 'minimal', and the biome blend to 0. Don't do 10, unless you have a really bad computer, because the game will look very choppy and hard to play. Then, turn the max framerate to about 20-50. Firstly, TURN DOWN THE RENDER DISTANCE!!!! Turning down the render distance greatly reduces the lag, because the lower the render distance, the less chunks are loaded, which means that the game doesn't have to process a ton of stuff at once. But there are very simple ways to help reduce lag!Īlright, so this way applies to both creative and survival mode: You would have to have a crazy-powerful computer for Minecraft to run without any lag. Do you experience massive lag spikes when playing minecraft? That's okay, Minecraft is a naturally laggy game.
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