In a video I released a couple of days ago… I talked about a bunch of the different limits of Minecraft. A few that I mentioned were the Far Lands… …the old 32,000,000 block area where blocks are no longer solid… …and the 2.147 billion limit, where the game instantly crashes if you try to fly past it. And even though there are other documented limits beyond that, I didn’t feel they were worth mentioning in that video because I wasn’t able to show them to you personally. But soon after that video came out, YouTube user ‘Sulphurous’ made it clear that you can teleport past the 2.147 billion limitation of Minecraft Beta 1.7… …and continue further for BILLIONS of blocks. So naturally, I tried it out and it worked! So let’s go ahead and let’s see what other limitations lie beyond that, and explore some of the other limits that I missed in my previous video. Alright. Let’s just get this started. I’m going to go through the various limits that I missed in order of appearance in-game… …or the distance from the spawn point. I may not list absolutely all of them, but I’ll do the best that I can. So from Alpha 1.0 through Beta 1.7, the further away from spawn that you walk, the worse the jitter gets. Specifically, this jitter every ‘exponent’ of 2 blocks away from spawn. It becomes especially apparent at 2^19, or 524,288 blocks away. But did you know that this jitter gets worse at EVERY exponent of 2? If you want to get REALLY nit-picky, if you walk 2^16, or just 65536 blocks away from spawn… …look down and crouch-walk… …you can see the first truly noticeable amount of jitteryness around the hit box of the block that you’re looking at. And this effect gets doubled for every exponent of 2 that you go. So if you go 2^20, or 1,048,576 blocks away… …the offset becomes 2 total block pixels, or one on each side of the block. At 2^24, or 16,777,216 blocks away, this becomes 2 FULL BLOCKS of jitter, again one on each side. And this will continue to happen for every exponent of 2 blocks away all the way until blocks stop rendering at 2.147 BILLION blocks away! Wow, that was a lot. But I promise that things kinda get simpler from here. So while it’s well-known that the Far Lands 12,550,820-ish blocks away from spawn… Another set of Far Lands starts at DOUBLE that distance, or 25.101 million blocks away. Unfortunately, though, no visual difference can be seen. But I’d guess that if the world generated over 8,000 blocks high, you would see a very sudden difference between the two at that kind of height. Alright, let’s get crazy and get into what the title of this video means. In the past, I thought it was impossible to exceed 2.147 billion blocks, and I was wrong. While you can’t manually fly past this point, you can TELEPORT past it. See? It’s just as easy as that. So what limits lie beyond this point? Well, first off, once you surpass 2.147 billion blocks, the surfaces of blocks stop rendering, giving way to nothing but void and clouds. Chunks are still generating though, so the game won’t instantly crash. Actually, things can go quite smoothly here if you’re lucky. The next limit is one of my new favourite limits. With Fancy clounds on, somewhere between 25 billion, 769 million, 803 AND 804 thousand blocks away depending on where you are and where the clouds are rendered… …the clouds will vanish COMPLETELY, and only the void will remain. It’s honestly pretty interesting how this works. The clouds disappear when a certain section of the clouds float past you while you’re inbetween one of those two block areas. Crazy. So now, it’s time for the final limit of Minecraft that you can personally witness… …the end of chunks, and the end of Minecraft. 2^35 blocks away, or 34,359,738,368 blocks away. When you surpass this point, within a matter of JUST SECONDS… …your game will drop to ZERO frames per second and remain unresponsive until you force-quit out. I’ve personally tried to teleport past this point, just to render a SINGLE frame of gameplay, and it has never worked. Even when I left Minecraft sitting unresponsive for HOURS to see if I could do it, the result was the same. For this same reason, I was never able to get a single frame of gameplay to load anywhere near the 64-bit integer limit… …a number that is well over 9 QUINTILLION blocks away. And that’s all that I’ve got for now. Those are the limits of Minecraft Java. In the future, I may do a video just like this for Minecraft Pocket and Windows 10 Edition, so be sure to stay tuned. And if you enjoyed this video, please leave a like on it. It would really help out myself, the channel and the video quite a lot. But anyways, guys, I hope you all enjoyed. My name is AntVenom and I bid you all farewell. Thanks so much for watching. Video Information
This video, titled ‘THE TRUE END of the MINECRAFT WORLD!’, was uploaded by AntVenom on 2017-01-10 19:30:00. It has garnered views and [vid_likes] likes. The duration of the video is or seconds.
Today we find what lies beyond 2147483647 blocks in Minecraft. » Subscribe – http://bit.ly/AntVenomSubscribe » Experiments …