MINECRAFT: XBOX 360 EDITION
A FAQ/Guide by Homsarrunner3
INTRODUCTION:
Hello, and welcome to my FAQ/Guide for Minecraft: Xbox 360
Edition. The goal of this guide is to provide information on
how to survive and thrive in the wonderful randomly-generated
world of Minecraft! In this guide, you will find a general
guide to surviving your first night, getting a good mine
started, and gathering the resources you need to, well, do
whatever you want. One thing to keep in mind though, is that
the game you play will not be the same as the one I play.
Whenever you start a new game in Minecraft, you receive your
own randomly-generated world, with completely unique
topographical features. Randomness is not a guide-writer's
friend, so I must let you know that this guide will not and
cannot hold your hand through every problem you have, simply
because I cannot anticipate what is going to happen in your
world.
Now, without further ado: The guide.
VERSION HISTORY:
v1.0: 7/4/12 First version of the guide completed and uploaded
to gamefaqs.com
v1.1: 7/15/12 Of course, right after I post the first version,
they update the game. Anyway, added in information about the
update, skins, and an infinite cobblestone cheat. Added
credits section and slightly altered Legal section.
v1.2: 7/29/12 Tiny little update. I was feeling ambitious,
so I added a section on the skins. Also fixed a couple of typing
errors.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
For the sake of saving you time, this guide uses a text-based
search system. Here's how it works:
1. Find the section you want to go to in this table.
2. Copy the code next to it (including the brackets)
3. Press CTRL-F on your keyboard to open the search submenu
4. Paste the code into the searchbar.
5. Press the ENTER key twice, and with the power of Redstone
Dust, you're at the section you want!
Disclaimer: This is the first FAQ I've used this system on,
so it might not work. If this is the case, use that handy-dandy
scroll wheel of yours.
Frequently Asked Questions----- [MINEFAQ]
Controls------- [MINECTRL]
Basics------ [MINEBAS]
Surviving the first night------ [MINE1ST]
The hunt for Obsidian------ [MINEOBS]
The Nether------ [MINEHELL]
Extra Stuff------ [MINEEXT]
Skins------[MINESKIN]
Crafting and Furnace-ing----- [MINECRFT]
Cheating------ [MINENOOB]
Achievement guide---- [MINEACHI]
Contact------ [MINEMAIL]
Legal------- [MINELEG]
Credits-------[MINECRED]
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS [MINEFAQ]
Q: What is Minecraft?
A: Ah, our first cliche "Nobody would actually ask this."
question. *cough* Minecraft is an indie sandbox
survival/construction game designed by Mojang, originally
released on the PC in late November 2011 as a Java game. As
the name implies, the basis of the game is to Mine (break down
blocks around you) and Craft (turn them into tools to help
you mine a wider variety of blocks, as well as structures to
live in). The Xbox 360 Edition was released on May 9th, 2012
for download as an Xbox LIVE Arcade game.
Q: How much does it cost?
A: The Xbox 360 Edition costs 1600 Microsoft Points, which
translates to $19.99 U.S. and 19.20 U.K. (My computer doesn't
have U.K. currency symbols, sorry)
Q: What's different in the 360 Edition?
A: Besides the new control scheme, the Xbox 360 Edition is
largely the same as the PC version of Minecraft, with a few
changes. The most major change is the overhaul to the crafting
system. In the PC version, players need to discover crafting
formulas on their own by placing materials in a crafting grid,
with no instruction for how to make a certain object. In the
Xbox Edition, all of the crafting formulas are already given
to you. All you have to do is find the proper materials,
highlight the object you want to make, and press a button.
In addition, there is a Tutorial in this version of the game
for teaching new players the basics. There is split-screen
Co-op multiplayer for up to 4 players (but only if you have
an HDTV), and online Co-op (including voice chat) for up to
8. As always, an Xbox LIVE Gold membership is required to play
online. Finally, the Xbox 360 version's graphics and general
gameplay mechanics are on par with those of the original
release of Minecraft, and does not include the many updates
the PC version enjoys.
Q: Wait, so this isn't the full version of the game? Lame.
A: Hey, I never said that! The developers are planning to
update the game often, so that it will eventually be caught
up to the PC version.
Q: Oh, alright then. Any word on DLC?
A: Yes, actually. The 1st Skin Pack DLC was released in July
2012. It costs 180 Microsoft Points (2 U.S. dollars) and
contains skins of characters from licensed games, as well as
generic characters. A free version of the skin pack was also
released, containing only the generic skins. In addition, in
the Summer of Arcade sale in 2012, a pack of free skins was
released, featuring characters in the games of the SOA sale.
Q: I heard that this version is harder than the PC version.
Is that true?
A: I'm not sure, really. Many people I've spoken to have said
that the spawn rate for monsters in this version is higher
than the PC version, but that could just be bad luck.
Q: What if I don't want to deal with monsters, and just want
to mine and craft at my leisure?
A: Every time you go to load a world (save file), you have
the option to adjust the difficulty slider (unlike in the PC
version, where you can do this from the pause menu). The slider
has 4 settings: Peaceful, Easy, Normal, and Hard. On Easy,
Normal, and Hard, monsters spawn at night and in darkened
areas, and do more damage according to how high the difficulty
is. On Peaceful difficulty, monsters will never spawn
(besides animals, and those won't attack you) and health that
you lose from fall damage, drowning, catching on fire, etc.
is restored over time. HOWEVER, you can still die on Peaceful
if you're really stupid about falling into lava or things like
that. Also, never having monsters spawn prevents you from
gathering materials that are necessary for several crafting
creations, most importantly bones, gunpowder, and strings.
Q: When I create a new world, the game asks me for a "seed".
What do I do?
A: A "seed" is a custom phrase that the game uses to create
a word. Though there are some seeds out there custom-made by
the developers to create awesome worlds, feel free to type
in your own phrase (like, say, your name), and see how the
game interprets it! Or, if you prefer, you can leave the seed
box blank, and the game will generate a random seed for you.
CONTROLS [MINECTRL]
Left Stick: Tilt to walk/, click to change camera angle.
Right Stick: Tilt to look around, click to crouch. Crouching
prevents you from falling off edges (unless you jump).
RT: Hold down to mine the block in front of you, or attack
monsters or animals.
LT: Alternative action: This changes depending on your
situation, and is used to do everything from opening doors
to eating food to firing arrows from your bow to placing down
blocks you are carrying.
RB/LB: Scroll right/left along your hotkey bar.
Start: Enter the pause menu. Note: This will not actually
pause the game.
Select: Access the list of players in your world in
multiplayer. From here you can view others' Gamertags, or,
if you are player 1 in this world, kick unwanted players out
of the game.
Home: Open the Xbox 360 Home menu. This will not pause the
game.
A: Jump.
B: Drop your equipped item. If you are carrying a stack of
items, this will only drop one.
Y: Open your inventory. From here, you can rearrange the items
you are carrying, assign items to your hotkey bar (you can
only use items assigned to this bar), and equip armor. Opening
this menu will not pause the game.
X: Open the Handcrafting menu. Crafting is the bread and
butter of Minecraft, but this particular menu will become
basically obsolete when you craft a workbench. See the
"Crafting and Furnace-ing" section for how to use the
handcrafting and workbench crafting menus. Opening this menu
does not pause the game.
BASICS [MINEBAS]
Day and Night:
Minecraft employs a day/night cycle to show the passage of
time. Each day consists of 10 minutes of broad daylight, a
90 second sunset, a 7-minute night, and finally a 90-second
sunrise. During those 7 minutes of night (which feels like
much, much longer), there is enough darkness to allow monsters
to spawn outside, and if you're not safely in your home, you
run the risk of bumping into some seriously nasty critters.
See below for more on monsters and their spawning. The only
weapon you have against the night is a bed, crafted from wooden
planks and wool. Fall asleep in a bed, and time will progress
to just after sunrise the next morning. Monsters can no longer
spawn on the surface, and many of the monsters left over from
last night will burn to death in direct daylight. Good
riddance.
Health, healing, and death:
This is pretty important. Those 10 red hearts at the bottom
left of your screen represent your health. If it hits zero,
you're dead. If you die, you will reappear with full health
at your original spawn point (the place you were when you began
your game). Nothing in the world has changed, except for the
tiny fact that you dropped EVERYTHING you were carrying. You
now have 5 minutes to hoof it back to the place you died and
grab all your stuff before it disappears forever. Harsh?
Maybe. But that just makes it all the more important that you
DON'T let your health hit zero. You lose health by getting
attacked by monsters (or other players, in the instance that
you have scumbag friends), drowning (When you're underwater,
a line of 10 bubbles appears above your health bar. This is
your air meter. If it hits zero, you start losing health
rapidly. Surface to replenish it.), stepping in lava,
catching on fire (which quite often follows the lava
stepping), falling from a height of over 3 blocks, getting
buried by blocks that follow gravity (sand and gravel), and
touching a cactus. It's a dangerous world, huh? Health is
replenished by eating food, and there are many types:
Raw Porkchop: Dropped by dead pigs.
Cooked Porkchop: Cook a raw porkchop in a furnace. Dropped
by dead Zombie Pigmen.
Bread: Made from 3 wheat.
Cake: Made from 3 wheat, 3 buckets of milk, 2 sugar, and 1
egg. Cakes function differently from other food in that you
place them down like a block, and then by pressing RT on them,
you eat a slice. There are six slices in each cake.
Raw Fish: Catch with a fishing rod in any body of water.
Cooked Fish: Cook a raw fish in a furnace.
Cookie: Made from 2 wheat and 1 cocoa bean. Cocoa beans are
only found in treasure chests in dungeons.
Mushroom Stew: Made from 1 bowl, 1 red mushroom, and 1 brown
mushroom. After you eat it, you recover the bowl.
Apple: Found in treasure chests near monster spawners.
Oh, yeah, and when you sleep successfully in a bed, your spawn
position is set to the location of that bed, so that's where
you'll respawn if you die. Handy! Sadly, sleeping does not
restore your health.
Monsters:
Behind every great game is a cast of wonderfully nasty
villains, and Minecraft is no exception. In this game, light
is life and darkness is death, literally. You see, every area
in Minecraft is lit up to a certain degree. This degree of
light is measured by an invisible counter that goes from 0
(darkest) to 15 (brightest). Monsters can spawn in light level
7 and below. Here's a list of all light sources and their light
levels.
The Sun: 15
Fire (from burning blocks or Netherrack): 15
Jack-O-Lantern: 15
Lava: 15
Glowstone block: 15
Torch: 14
Active Furnace: 13
The Sun with rain: 12
Nether Portal: 11
Redstone Torch: 7
The Moon: 4
(For light sources that are placed (Fire, Jack-O-Lantern,
lava, glowstone, torch, furnace, nether portal, redstone
torch), the light level decreases by 1 for every block away
from the source.)
The three exceptions to this rule are Slimes, Ghasts and
Zombie Pigmen. Ghasts and Zombie Pigmen only spawn in The
Nether, and will spawn no matter what the light level is.
Slimes only spawn very deep underground, and they are
incredibly rare. Also, animals are TECHNICALLY classified as
monsters, but they can spawn in any light level (but not
underground).
Here is a list of all the monsters and animals in the game,
with general information on each:
Zombies:
The original brain-munching walking corpse is the most basic
monster in Minecraft, and can be classified by their
human-like shape and constant moans and gurgles. They attack
by walking into you and (inexplicably) drop feathers on death.
Zombies burn in direct sunlight, unless they are underwater.
Skeletons:
My personal most hated and feared monster in the game,
Skeletons make a distinctive bone-rattling sound when they
are nearby. The other sound they make is the *twang* of arrows
flying out of their bowstrings and right towards your head.
That's right, Skeletons are the ranged specialists of
Minecraft's monster lineup, and they have deadeye aim. It's
difficult to even get close enough to smack these suckers
without taking a couple hits. And if you meet one in the
cramped quarters of an underground cave? Yikes, good luck with
that. They drop arrows and bones when they die. Thankfully,
they burn in direct sunlight, unless they are underwater.
Creepers:
The official mascot of Minecraft, Creepers have a very odd
attack pattern. They make absolutely no noise until they get
very close to you. Then, they start flashing white and letting
out a hissing noise. If you haven't already seen it coming,
it's already too late to turn around and fight it, because
that hiss means it's about to explode. When a Creeper
explodes, it not only hurts you A LOT (It can 1-hit kill you
if it's right next to you when it blows), it also rips up all
the blocks around it, breaking them down as if you had mined
them all. Now just imagine you were standing near your house
when this happened. Yep, I hope you were ready for a renovation
anyway, because that wall is coming down. These habits,
combined with the fact that they don't burn in sunlight, makes
Creepers a highly annoying foe. They drop gunpowder when you
kill them. (But not if they blow themselves up.)
Note: Creepers also have a second item drop on death. These
are music discs, which you can use in jukeboxes to play music.
However, Creepers only drop music discs when killed by a
Skeleton's arrow. You can't imagine how difficult it is to
accomplish this task.
Spiders:
No, these aren't your everyday daddy longlegs. These are
hairy, red-eyed, arachnaphobia-inducing tarantulas the size
of small dogs, and to top it all off, they can run faster and
jump higher than you can. Spiders can jump over walls two
blocks high, making them nearly impossible to outrun. Their
cry is an unearthly, static-y screech that does nothing to
make them less scary. They drop string when they die, and
although they do not burn in sunlight, they become friendly
in the morning, and will not attack you. They also screech
less often in the daytime.
Ghasts: Probably the strangest and spookiest monsters in
Minecraft, Ghasts inhabit The Nether. They are large, white,
cube-shaped, ghost-like beings with sad faces. They attack
by floating out of reach and spitting flaming cannonballs at
you. Combined with Netherrack's forever-burn nature, Ghasts
can turn the very ground you walk on into a firey deathtrap.
Because they float so far away, the only ways to kill them
are to pelt them with arrows from a bow, deflect their
cannonballs back at them with a well-timed sword swing, or
(pros only), use a fishing rod to pull them right up in your
grill and hack away at their bodies with a sword.
Zombie Pigmen: The other, less-dangerous inhabitants of The
Nether are these creatures. Similar in form to Zombies, but
decked out in worn armor, Zombie Pigmen are unique in that
they will not attack you until you fight them first. Then,
they chase after you and bash you with their swords. Nearby
Pigmen will also rush to their comrades' aid in battle as well.
They are certainly tough, but because they drop cooked
porkchops when they die, the reward might just be worth the
risk.
Slimes: This RPG cliche makes its' way to Minecraft in a rather
obscure way. Slimes only spawn deep underground (below Y level
40 on your map) in natural caves, and they are very difficult
to find. They resemble jiggly green blocks of gelatin, and
attack by hopping toward you and ramming you. They come in
several sizes, with the larger ones being stronger. When dealt
lethal damage, larger Slimes split up into several smaller
ones. They drop Slimeballs when they die, which are used to
craft Sticky Pistons.
Cow: This farm animal wanders lazily around the world, as cows
often do, mooing its' little heart out. When they die, they
drop leather, which can be crafted into weak armor.
Pig: The most useful animal in the game by far, pigs drop raw
porkchops when they die. Going pig hunting is a great way to
restock on health-restoring items.
Chicken: These lil' guys wander around aimlessly, clucking
and crowing and clucking some more. They drop feathers when
they die, but you may want to consider letting them live. Every
five minutes or so, a chicken will lay an egg, which can be
used to craft yummy cakes, or you can just chuck them at your
buddies. Interesting note: Throwing an egg has a small chance
of hatching a live chicken.
Sheep: These fluffy animals come in several different colors
in nature. Killing them causes them to drop 1 block of wool,
but pressing LT on them with shears makes them drop up to 4
blocks and become bald. There is no reason to kill them after
shearing the wool, as they don't drop anything on death when
they are bald. Eventually, a sheared sheep will regrow its'
wool, and can be killed/sheared again for more wool. Also,
if you have dye in your hands and press LT on a sheep, you
will dye the sheep's wool the color of the dye. Have a whole
flock of blue, pink and yellow sheep if you want!
Squid: These rarely-seen sea creatures lazily swim around in
large bodies of water. They drop ink sacks when they die.
Wolf: Uncommon, sheep-hunting members of the canine family
that, at first glance, don't seem to be very special. They
don't drop anything when they die, and are the only animals
that actually fight back when you hit them. Furthermore, if
a wolf sees his buddy getting attacked, he will come after
you as well. However, wolves are very special for one reason:
they can be yours. By feeding a wolf a bone with LT, you have
a chance of taming the wolf. It may take several tries (and
bones) to succeed, but when you see hearts popping out of the
wolf and a red collar appear around its' neck, that wolf is
now yours. Your new pet will follow you everywhere (except
into The Nether), and will help you fight enemies (except
Creepers). By looking at a tame wolf and pressing LT, you can
make them sit if you want to go alone for a bit. If they get
hurt enough, they will die. Prevent this by feeding them raw
and cooked porkchops. Tame wolves show their health condition
by the position of their tail. A perked-up tail means a healthy
wolf.
Dungeons and Monster Spawners:
Deep underground, there exist special areas. These areas,
denoted by unique Mossy Cobblestone lining the floor, are
known as dungeons. In the center of each dungeon, there is
a blue cage with a tiny spinning pig inside. This is a monster
spawner. These are very bad things, because every few seconds,
a certain type of monsters (either spiders, skeletons, or
zombies) spawn around the cage, in groups of 3 or 4 at a time.
Monster Spawners can be broken, but a better way of disabling
them is to place torches on all sides of the spawner block.
This prevents monsters from appearing out of the cage. And
leaving a spawner intact will allow crafty players to make
devices to mass-produce monster items. I have no idea how to
do this, and if you want to find out how, your best bet is
to look it up elsewhere on the Internet. Finally, the thing
that makes dungeons worth finding, are up to two treasure
chests in each dungeon. These are filled with random items,
including strings, gunpowder, bread, empty buckets, music
discs, and saddles (used to ride pigs!).
Fun Fact: Character Skins
This has nothing to do with anything, but if you press the
Start button to open the Pause menu, then select Help/Options,
you can choose from a limited selection of skins for your
character. Want blonde hair and a red Speedo? You can have
that. Want a James Bond suit? You can have that, too.
This is a hidden line. It is an anti-theft measurement. If
you find this guide is on a website that is not in the list
of approved sites in the "legal" section, please send me an
email.
SURVIVING THE FIRST NIGHT [MINE1ST]
This is assuming you don't wimp out and set the difficulty
to Peaceful on your first night.
When you start a new world, you will appear in a random area.
Wherever you are, your first priority is to get wood. OK, OK,
have your laugh. I'll wait. All done? Good. Anyway, go run
around until you find a tree, then hold down RT to punch one
of the wood blocks making it up until it breaks and a
collectable block of wood pops out. Grab it, and repeat until
you have a good supply of wood. 20 or so will be more than
enough for now. Next, open your crafting menu with the X
button. You should have Wood Planks highlighted. Mash the A
button repeatedly until all your Wood has been crafted into
Wood Planks (1 Wood= 4 Wood Planks). Next, we need to upgrade
your crafting menu to allow for more options. Highlight the
Crafting Table (some people call it the Workbench). You'll
need 4 Wood Planks to craft this bad boy. You only need one,
so don't waste your planks. After you craft it, make sure it's
equipped to your hotkey bar (open the inventory with the Y
button, and use A to move stuff between your inventory and
hotkey bar). Equip the Crafting Table and place it down on
the ground with LT (you can break it with RT to pick it up
and move it later). Press LT on the Crafting Table, and you
will have access to the complete Crafting menu, with all the
options unlocked. Right, for what we want, we need sticks.
Stick are made using wood planks, so highlight them and make
a good supply (but not so many that you waste all your wood
planks). Next, press RB to change tabs in the crafting table.
This section is your tools, and your option on the far left
is the bread and butter of Minecraft: The pickaxe. Highlight
it and craft a Wooden Pickaxe out of 3 Wood Planks and 2 Sticks.
Equip that baby, and our next priority is finding some coal.
By now, it might be getting a bit late, so hurry up and find
it! Coal Ore stands out against normal Stone by having big
black flecks in it. Break it with your pickaxe to gather the
coal from it. Note that you cannot mine coal, or even stone
for that matter, with anything besides a pickaxe. The block
*will* break eventually, but you will not be able to gather
the resource. Anyway, once you collect a bit of coal and a
good supply of cobblestone (you get cobblestone by mining
stone), you can build your first house. It doesn't need to
be fancy, just a little hut. You can also make it out of Wood
Planks if you're hurting for Cobblestone, but make sure to
upgrade to cobble ASAP. Wood-based blocks are not the best
building material, trust me. Now, craft some torches with Coal
and Sticks, and place them inside your house to light it up.
Craft a door with Wood Planks, lock yourself inside, and...
relax. You did it. You survived your first day and night.
Assuming your house is secure, your torches are placed, and
your door is shut, no monsters can get you. You're safe. If
you still have time before sunset, go out and smack some sheep
until you get 3 Wool of any color. Use it with Wood Planks
to craft a bed, place that in your house, and you have a way
of instantly turning night into day.
Worst-case scenarios:
1. I spawned in a desert/other area with no trees! What do
I do?
Find some. There is no substitute for wood. Birch wood can
be used just as well as normal wood, if that's all you have.
Really, if you can't find ANY trees by the your first sunset,
you can consider the world a flop anyway.
2. I can't find coal, and it's getting dark!
Alright, this is a pretty common problem, and fortunately
there is a workaround. What you want to do is gather some wood,
but only craft some of it into wood planks. Mine some
Cobblestone (you can find stone, I presume), and use it at
your Workbench to craft a Furnace. Place that down, and use
the planks as the fuel, and the wood as the ingredient. This
will create Charcoal, which functions exactly like Coal. Make
sure to find natural coal as fast as possible, because making
charcoal is just a waste of wood unless there is no other
option.
THE HUNT FOR OBSIDIAN [MINEOBS]
After you survive your first night, your main goal in
Minecraft is to find and mine iron, then diamond, then
obsidian. Firstly, you will need to start a mine. This is
sometimes as simple as digging down (but not straight down!)
into the ground until you randomly stumble upon a natural
cave. Then, just explore the cave systems beneath the earth's
surface until you find iron ore. Iron ore looks like stone,
with light brown/tan flecks in it, similar to coal ore.
However, mining out iron ore does not give you workable iron,
instead it just gives you a block of the iron ore itself. To
turn it into Iron Ingots (which is what you use to make iron
tools), you need to smelt the ore in a furnace (made with 8
blocks of Cobblestone at a Crafting Table) with fuel, ideally
coal. However, charcoal, wood, wood planks, sticks, saplings,
etc. can also be used as fuel. Once you have iron ingots, you
can craft an Iron Pickaxe. With the Iron Pickaxe, you can mine
any block in the game... except one: Obsidian. For that, you
will need to find Diamonds. Diamond Ore looks like stone, but
with light blue/green flecks in it, and it is even rarer than
Iron Ore. Thankfully, when you do mine Diamond Ore, you do
not need to smelt it, as it will give you a Diamond directly.
Now, we need at least 10 blocks of Obsidian to complete our
main quest. Obsidian, for those who don't know, is volcanic
stone that is very, very durable. In Minecraft terms, that
means it can only be mined with a Diamond Pickaxe (and even
then, it takes a long time to break). Finding Obsidian is even
more difficult than mining it, unfortunately. Obsidian is
created artificially when water touches unmoving lava. So,
you'll need to craft a bucket (3 Iron Ingots), fill it with
water, find some lava, and pour the water all up in there.
Break it with a Diamond Pickaxe, grab the Obsidian before it
falls into the lava, and rinse and repeat 9 more times. Hey,
nobody said it was easy!
Once you have your 10 Obsidian, you'll want to arrange it
(preferably on the surface) in this pattern: 4 blocks across
by five blocks up. The corners do NOT need to be made of
Obsidian, and if you want the corners, you will need a total
of 14 Obsidian. After the Nether Portal is constructed, craft
a Flint and Steel (1 Iron Ingot, 1 Flint from digging up
Gravel) and light the center. The Portal will now make eerie
noises, and purple haze will be inside the center.
Congratulations, you have reached the theoretical extent of
what you can accomplish in Minecraft: Xbox 360 edition! But
what lies behind the Nether Portal? Well, that's an entirely
different story altogether. (See the "The Nether" section
below)
THE NETHER [MINEHELL]
The Nether. Quite literally the "Hell" of Minecraft, this
strange place is home to strange creatures (Ghasts and Zombie
Pigmen) and new and intriguing types of blocks. Each step
taken in The Nether equals three steps in the surface world,
so if you build two Nether Portals, you can use the Nether
to travel more quickly between distant areas. What else is
in The Nether? Danger, and lots of it. Lava flows like water
here, the very ground beneath your feet is incredibly
flammable, and certain sections can slow your movement down,
making you easy pickings for the Ghasts. It's nice, but I
wouldn't build a summer home there.
EXTRA STUFF [MINEEXT]
So, you've built your portal and had your fill of The Nether.
What should you do while you're waiting for the next update
to come out? Try some of these little tricks to make your
Minecraft experience that much better:
1. Achievement hunt! (See the Achievement section below)
2. Take the fight to the monsters by crafting a bow and making
a stockpile of arrows!
3. Make a wheat garden and have a renewable resource of food!
Making a wheat garden is one of the most underrated practices
in Minecraft, fairly complicated though it is. First off,
you'll need some seeds. Seeds can be found by ripping up tall
grass and ferns. Once you have seeds, you'll need to craft
a Hoe to till dirt (preferably in a designated area fairly
close to your house). Next, you need to make sure that the
seeds have two things they need to survive: Water and constant
light. The former is as easy as making an infinite spring (See
the Cheating section below) and piping some of that water to
furrows in the ground near your tilled dirt. When the dirt
becomes very dark brown, seeds will begin to grow in it once
planted. For constant light, set up torches in and above the
garden. This not only stops monsters from spawning in your
fields, it also lets the wheat grow at night, when there is
no sun. Finally, we need to make sure that curious animals
and monsters can't get into the garden and trample the growing
wheat! Craft some fences with your Crafting Table (6 Sticks
makes 2 fences), and surround your entire garden with them.
Leave one space for a Door so you can enter and exit the garden
as you please. Now, just wait for the wheat to grow tall and
turn brown. Then, smack the crop with RT and you will recieve
1 Wheat and up to 2 Seeds. Replant a seed back in the open
plot, and start it all over again! With wheat, you can craft
many food items, most importantly bread. Bread is a cheap
alternative to Cooked Porkchops for restoring health.
4. Build a minecart track for easy access around the world!
The only thing to keep in mind for this is that you will need
Powered Rails as well as normal rails to get your minecarts
moving, and those need to be powered by Redstone to be
activated. I recommend placing Redstone Torches along the
sides of your minetrack wherever you have powered rails.
SKINS [MINESKIN]
Skins are, basically, alternative characters to play as. The
skin you are "wearing" does not affect gameplay in any way.
In the original release, the skin you had was dependent on
what player you were (player 1 in a world was always Steve,
player 2 was always Tennis Steve, etc.)
Standard Skins: These come preloaded when you buy the game.
1. Steve (green shirt, jeans)
2. Tennis Steve (Tennis uniform, blonde hair, headband)
3. Tuxedo Steve (Tuxedo and dress pants)
4. Athlete Steve (African American, white tank top, jeans,
gold chain)
5. Scottish Steve (Orange hair, tuxedo, kilt)
6. Prisoner Steve (White hair, orange prisoner's jumpsuit)
7. Cyclist Steve (Red sports top, Speedo)
8. Boxer Steve (Blonde hair, boxing gloves, boots, jock strap)
Skin Pack 1: The first 15 skins can be downloaded for free
via the Skin Pack 1 Free Trial. The rest will cost you 180
Microsoft Points (2 U.S. dollars)
1. Racing Driver 1 (Blue)
2. Racing Driver 2 (Green)
3. Racing Driver 3 (Red)
4. Racing Driver 4 (Yellow)
5. Nurse
6. Prisoner (Traditional black and white striped uniform and
cap)
7. Victorian Swimmer
8. Deep Sea Diver
9. King
10. Queen
11. Jester
12. Knight Templar
13. Black Knight
14. Wizard
15. Creeper Man
16. Squid Man
17. Zombie
18. Herobrine
19. Jack of Blades
20. Hero (from Fable 3)
21. Garth
22. Reaver
23. Hammer
24. Locust Drone
25. Cole Train
26. Clayton Carmine
27. Master Chief
28. Covenant Grunt
29. Covenant Brute
30. Banjo
31. Grunty
32. Bottles
33. Tooty
34. Mumbo Jumbo
35. Klungo
36. Trials Rider
37. Freestyle
38. Old-School
39. Biker
40. Combat
41. 'Splosion Man
42. Scientist Wilson
43. Scientist Danklef
44. Ms. 'Splosion Man
45. Mandy Elite
Summer of Arcade 2012 Skin Pack: Free for a limited time in
the summer of 2012. Downloaded from the Minecraft tab in the
Summer of Arcade 2012 menu, accessed from the Xbox Dashboard.
These skins feature characters from all the Summer of Arcade
2012 games.
1. Paladin
2. Wariant
3. Randall Wayne
4. Stella Patterson
5. Skinny Zombie
6. Female Zombie
7. Wreck
8. Knight
9. Hot Goblin
10. Bunny Suit Goblin
11. Dust
12. Fidgit
13. Tony Hawk
14. Ollie
15. Officer Dick
CRAFTING AND FURNACE-ING [MINECRFT]
What an undertaking this is, huh? Eh, whatever. Crafting is
the potatoes of Minecraft (the meat being the Mining, of
course). All sorts of things can be crafted in Minecraft, and
this will show them all. I've added personalized notes to
entries that require specific detail. Now, without further
ado:
TAB 1: STRUCTURES
1. Wood Planks (makes 4 Wood Planks)
Ingredient: 1 Wood
Very versatile crafting and construction tool. You will use
these a lot throughout the entire game, especially at the
beginning.
2. Sticks (makes 4 Sticks)
Ingredients: 2 Wood Planks
Used in bulk to craft Torches, you will mostly use these for
crafting the various tools throughout the game.
3. Sandstone
Ingredients: 4 Sand
This does not follow gravity like Sand does, making it better
for construction. It's also found naturally underneath Sand.
4. Snow Block
Ingredients: 4 Snowballs
5. Clay Block
Ingredients: 4 Clay Balls
6. Brick Block
Ingredients: 4 Clay Bricks
7. Crafting Table
Ingredients: 4 Wood Planks
This is used to open up the full crafting menu. Absolutely
essential for crafting anything useful.
8. Furnace
Ingredients: 8 Cobblestone
Used to smelt ore into ingots, burn wooden things, turn Sand
into Glass, and cook raw meat.
9. Chest
Ingredients: 8 Wood Planks
Used to store items safely, and are found naturally in
Dungeons. If two chests are placed side by side, they share
a double-sized inventory.
10. Bed
Ingredients: 3 Wool (any color), 3 Wood Planks
Used to turn night into day. In multiplayer, all players must
be sleeping at the same time in different beds for time to
change.
11. Fence (makes 2)
Ingredients: 6 Sticks
Treated as 15 blocks high for players, animals, and monsters,
but 1 block high for blocks.
12. Ladder (makes 2)
Ingredients: 7 Sticks
13. Wooden Door
Ingredients: 6 Wood Planks
Press RT or LT to open/close. Keeps animals and monsters out.
15. Iron Door
Ingredients: 6 Iron Ingots
Can only be opened by a lever or Redstone circuit.
17. Trapdoor (makes 2)
Ingredients: 6 Wood Planks
Basically a vertical door.
18. Wooden/Stone Stairs (makes 4)
Ingredients: 6 Wood Planks/6 Cobblestone
Used to make compact staircases
19. Wooden/Sandstone/Stone Slab (makes 3)
Ingredients: 3 Wood Planks/3 Sandstone/ 3 Stone OR 3
Cobblestone
TAB 2: TOOLS AND WEAPONS
1. Wooden/Stone/Iron/Diamond/Golden Pickaxe
Ingredients: 2 Sticks, 3 Wood Planks/2 Sticks, 3
Cobblestone/2 Sticks, 3 Iron Ingots/2 Sticks, 3 Diamonds/2
Sticks, 3 Gold Ingots
Needed to mine Stone and Ore
2. Wooden/Stone/Iron/Diamond/Golden Shovel
Ingredients: 2 Sticks, 1 Wood Plank/2 Sticks, 1 Cobblestone/2
Sticks, 1 Iron Ingot/2 Sticks, 1 Diamond/2 Sticks, 1 Gold
Ingot
Digs Dirt, Grass, Sand, Gravel, and Snow faster, required to
gather Snowballs
3. Wooden/Stone/Iron/Diamond/Golden Axe
Ingredients: 2 Sticks, 3 Wood Planks/2 Sticks, 3
Cobblestone/2 Sticks, 3 Iron Ingots/2 Sticks, 3 Diamonds/2
Sticks, 3 Gold Ingots
Chops Wood-related blocks faster
4. Wooden/Stone/Iron/Diamond/Golden Hoe
Ingredients: 2 Sticks, 2 Wood Planks/2 Sticks, 2
Cobblestone/2 Sticks, 2 Iron Ingots/2 Sticks, 2 Diamonds/2
Sticks, 2 Gold Ingots
5. TNT
Ingredients: 5 Gunpowder, 4 Sand
Used to make big booms. Set off by hitting with RT or a Redstone
circuit.
6. Fishing Rod
Ingredients: 3 Sticks, 2 Strings
Used to fish in any body of water. Press LT to cast, and again
to reel in a Raw Fish when the bobber sinks underwater.
7. Shears
Ingredients: 2 Iron Ingots
Used to more efficiently harvest wool from sheep, and can also
be used to gather leaves, instead of just breaking them.
8. Flint and Steel
Ingredients: 1 Iron Ingot, 1 Flint
Starts fires, activates Nether Portals
9. Bow
Ingredients: 3 Sticks, 3 Strings
Ranged weapon. Fires arrows.
10. Arrow (makes 4)
Ingredients: 1 Stick, 1 Flint, 1 Feather
Used as ammunition for the Bow. They don't need to be in your
hotkey bar for you to fire them, they just need to be in your
inventory.
11. Bucket
Ingredients: 3 Iron Ingots
Used to transport water, lava, and milk. Press LT to gather
and again to pour.
12. Bowl (makes 4)
Ingredients: 3 Wood Planks
13. Wooden/Stone/Iron/Diamond/Golden Sword
Ingredients: 1 Stick, 2 Wood Planks/1 Stick, 2 Cobblestone/1
Stick, 2 Iron Ingots/1 Stick, 2 Diamonds/1 Stick, 2 Gold
Ingots
Used to fight monsters more easily.
14. Torch (makes 4)
Ingredients: 1 Stick, 1 Coal OR 1 Charcoal
Lights up areas, preventing monsters from spawning. Melts
snow and ice.
15. Jack-O-Lantern
Ingredients: 1 Pumpkin, 1 Torch
Brighter than Torches and more festive than Glowstone Blocks.
Melts snow and ice, and can be placed underwater.
16. Glowstone Block
Ingredients: 4 Glowstone Dust
Exactly the same as a Jack-O-Lantern, but less festive.
17. Clock
Ingredients: 4 Gold Ingots, 1 Redstone
Shows the position of the Sun and Moon. In other words,
completely useless.
18. Compass
Ingredients: 4 Iron Ingots, 1 Redstone
Points to your spawn point, or to the last bed you slept in.
19. Map
Ingredients: 8 Papers, 1 Compass
Shows a map of your world, with X, Y, and Z coordinates and
colored markers for different players in multiplayer. Filled
out automatically when you walk to new places with it
equipped.
TAB 3: FOOD
1. Mushroom Stew
Ingredients: 1 Red Mushroom, 1 Brown Mushroom, 1 Bowl
Health: 5
You recover the bowl after you eat it.
2. Cookie (makes 8)
Ingredients: 2 Wheat, 1 Cocoa Bean
Health: 0.5
3. Cake
Ingredients: 3 Buckets of Milk, 2 Sugar, 1 Egg, 3 Wheat
Health: 1.5 per slice, with 6 slices
Placed like a block, press LT or RT to eat 1 slice at a time.
Formerly, you would lose the Buckets when you craft it, but
this has been fixed.
4. Sugar
Ingredient: 1 Sugarcane
Cannot be eaten, only use is in crafting Cake.
5. Bread
Ingredients: 3 Wheat
Health: 2.5
TAB 4: ARMOR
1. Leather Cap/Iron/Diamond/Golden Helmet
Ingredients: 5 Leather/5 Iron Ingots/5 Diamonds/5 Gold Ingots
2. Leather Tunic/Iron/Diamond/Golden Chestplate
Ingredients: 7 Leather/7 Iron Ingots/7 Diamonds/7 Gold Ingots
3. Leather Pants/Iron/Diamond/Golden Leggings
Ingredients: 6 Leather/6 Iron Ingots/6 Diamonds/6 Gold Ingots
4. Leather/Iron/Diamond/Golden Boots
Ingredients: 4 Leather/4 Iron Ingots/4 Diamonds/4 Gold Ingots
TAB 5: MECHANISMS
1. Lever
Ingredients: 1 Stick, 1 Cobblestone
2. Redstone Torch
Ingredients: 1 Stick, 1 Redstone
Provides less light than Torches, so little that monsters can
spawn in their light.
3. Redstone Repeater
Ingredients: 2 Redstone Torches, 3 Stone, 1 Redstone
4. Button
Ingredients: 2 Stone
Stays activated for about 1 second after being pressed, then
automatically turns off.
5. Pressure Plate
Ingredients: 2 Wood Planks
Activated by a player, animal, or monster stepping on them,
or when an item is dropped on them.
6. Dispenser
Ingredients: 7 Cobblestone, 1 Bow, 1 Redstone
Place items inside, then activate it with a Redstone Circuit
to make it dispense them. Dispensed Arrows, Snowballs, and
Eggs are fired rapidly,break on impact, and can damage
monsters or players.
7. Note Block
Ingredients: 8 Wooden Planks, 1 Redstone
Plays a note when activated by LT. Use RT to change the pitch.
Plays different instruments when placed on different types
of blocks.
8. Piston
Ingredients: 3 Wooden Planks, 4 Cobblestone, 1 Iron Ingot,
1 Redstone
When activated by a Redstone circuit, it pushes forward. When
the circuit is cut, it retracts. I'm not really good at using
Redstone mechanisms, you should find somebody else to teach
you how to use these.
9. Sticky Piston
Ingredients: 1 Piston, 1 Slimeball
Created to (finally) make hunting Slimes worthwhile, the
Sticky Piston functions similarly to the Piston, but the block
it touches when it extends becomes "stuck" to it and when the
Sticky Piston retracts, the block will stay with it.
TAB 6: TRANSPORT
1. Rail (makes 16)
Ingredients: 6 Iron Ingots, 1 Stick
2. Powered Rail (makes 6)
Ingredients: 6 Gold Ingots, 1 Redstone, 1 Stick
When activated by a Redstone circuit, makes Minecarts move
faster.
3. Detector Rail (makes 6)
6 Iron Ingots, 1 Redstone, 1 Button
Pressure Plate that is only activated by a Minecart rolling
over it. Needs to be activated by a Redstone circuit.
4. Minecart
Ingredients: 5 Iron Ingots
5. Minecart with Chest
Ingredients: 1 Minecart, 1 Chest
For transporting items along rails that won't fit in your
inventory. Harder to move than Minecarts.
6. Minecart with Furnace
Ingredients: 1 Minecart, 1 Furnace
Can move on its' own and push other Minecarts when given fuel.
7. Boat
Ingredients: 5 Wood Planks
For quicker travel over water than simply swimming.
TAB 7: DECORATIONS
1. Wool
Ingredients: 1 Various Wool, 1 Various Dye
Different-colored wool.
2. Dye
Ingredients: Various items
Different-colored dyes for wool.
3. Block of Iron/Diamond/Lapis Lazuli/Gold
Ingredients: 9 Iron Ingots/9 Diamonds/9 Lapis Lazuli Dye/9
Gold Ingots
Placable blocks, used for high-class construction or more
compact storage.
4. Breakdown Iron Ingot/Gold Ingot/Diamond/Lapis Lazuli Dye
(makes 9)
Ingredients: 1 Block of Iron/1 Block of Gold/1 Block of
Diamond/1 Block of Lapus Lazuli
5. Jukebox
Ingredients: 8 Wood Planks, 1 Diamond
Plays Music Discs.
6. Paper (makes 3)
Ingredients: 3 Sugarcanes
7. Book
Ingredients: 3 Papers
8. Bookshelf
Ingredients: 6 Wood Planks, 3 Books
9. Painting
Ingredients: 1 Wool (any color), 8 Sticks
10. Sign
Ingredients: 6 Wood Planks, 1 Stick
Displays text players can write on it.
THE FURNACE
The Furnace is a crafted item that, when placed, allows for
firing of objects. To use the furnace, you must put a
compatible object in both the ingredient and fuel
sections. Some types of fuel burns longer than others.
Sticks: Very short fuel time (smelts 1 block)
Wood Planks, Saplings, Birch Saplings: Short fuel time
(smelts 3 blocks)
Coal, Charcoal: Medium fuel time (smelts 8 blocks)
Bucket of Lava: Long fuel time (smelts 100 blocks, but you
lose the bucket)
Many objects can be fired to become different items:
Wood or Birch Wood----Charcoal
Sand----Glass
Iron Ore----Iron Ingot
Gold Ore----Gold Ingot
Cactus----Cactus Green Dye
Raw Porkchop----Cooked Porkchop
Raw Fish----Cooked Fish
Each firing process takes a bit of time to occur, signified
by whether the furnace is lit or not. A lit furnace generates
high amounts of light, enough to prevent monsters from
spawning! Also, furnaces can be combined with minecarts to
create a minecart that can travel on the fuel placed in the
furnace, without the need for Powered Rails and Redstone to
power them. I highly recommend using Powered Rails and
Redstone Torches, though.
CHEATING [MINENOOB]
I know of a few cheats so in this version of the game. Before
this guide was written, there was a duplicate items glitch
with the Dispenser, but to the best of my knowledge, that has
been patched.
1. Infinite Spring glitch
You'll need two bucketfuls of water for this. Dig a 2x2 ditch
in the ground, place a bucket of water in one space, allow
it to fill the hole, and pour the other bucket in the space
diagonal to the first Now every space in this tiny lake is
a "source" block, and you can collect as much water as you
need from any space in the lake without ever running out.
2. X-ray vision/See caverns glitch
For this glitch, you need to dig deep underground, then dig
a very long, straight tunnel that is just big enough for a
character to fit through (2 blocks high). Stand at the
entrance to the tunnel and go into third person mode. Position
the camera so it is behind and slightly above your character
and run forward. If the camera is angled correctly, the
bobbing of the camera should allow quick glimpses through the
ceiling of the tunnel, allowing you to see undiscovered
natural caverns on the horizon. When you see them, head
towards them and mine over to them, and loot the treasures
within.
3. Cobblestone Generator
There are several ways of creating these. This one was sent
in (complete with ASCII, which is beyond my realm of skill)
by reader "Necrolythe".
Required Items:
At least 20 stone or cobblestone
1 bucket of lava
2 buckets of water
1 ladder/sign
1 wood/stone/sandstone/cobblestone slab
Directions:
Start by placing 3 pieces of cobblestone on the ground in a
V, then build each spot up to 3 blocks high. At the opening
of the V, make another stack of cobblestone 3 high, and mine
out the middle piece. Pour the bucket of lava into gap between
the 4 blocks at the top of these stacks. Should end up with
something like this:
TOP VIEW
[c][c][c]
[c][L][c]
[c]
[c]=Cobblestone
[L]=Lava
The lava will flow down, and not spread through the gap. Now,
place a block of cobblestone on the ground on 2 opposite sides
of the generator, and make a V on each side, resulting in this
shape:
[c][c][c]
[c][c][L][c][c]
[c] [c] [c]
[c] [c]
Place 2 cobblestone on the ground diagonally from the inner
2, until you have a shape like this:
[c][c][c]
[c][c][L][c][c]
[c] [c] [c]
[c] [c]
[c] [c]
[c] [c]
In the 1 block wide opening, dig down one block and put in
a slab. Place a sign or ladder on the side of the cobblestone
next to this hole, as this will keep the water from flowing
out of the generator. Follow this up by pouring a bucket of
water into the middle of the side Vs, which will finish the
generator. The final product should look something like this:
[c][c][c]
[c][c][L][c][c]
[c][w] [c] [w][c]
[c] [c]
[c] [c]
[c][s][c] <---sign/ladder in middle
now, by standing on the slab in the hole, you can mine the
cobblestone in front of the lava flow, and a new one will pop
up, with the flow of water delivering the mined block to the
player. When lava flows into water, it makes a block of
cobblestone, while water flowing into water
does nothing. A simple way to get a lot of cobblestone is to
tape down your RT button, and walk away, coming back in a few
minutes to check on the progress. Hope you enjoy the infinite
supply of building materials.
ACHIEVEMENT GUIDE [MINEACHI]
1. Taking Inventory
Press the Y button to open your inventory. Done.
2. Getting Wood
Punch a tree until a block of Wood pops out. Easy Peasy.
3. Benchmarking
Gather 4 blocks of Wood Planks, and craft a Crafting Table.
Also easy.
4. Time to Mine!
Using a Crafting Table, use 3 blocks of Wood Planks and 2
Sticks to craft a Wooden Pickaxe.
5. Time to Farm!
Using a Crafting Table, use 2 Blocks of Wood Planks and 2
Sticks to craft a Wooden Hoe.
6. Time to Strike!
Using a Crafting Table, use 2 blocks of Wood Planks and 1 Stick
to craft a Wooden Sword.
7. Hot Topic
Using a Crafting Table, use 8 blocks of Cobblestone to craft
a Furnace.
8. Acquire Hardware
Smelt a block of Iron Ore in a Furnace and collect the Iron
Ingot that is made.
9. MOAR Tools
Using a Crafting table, craft 1 Pickaxe, 1 Shovel, 1 Axe, and
1 Hoe.
10. Getting an upgrade
Using a Crafting Table, use 3 Cobblestone and 2 Sticks to craft
a Stone Pickaxe.
11. Cow Tipper
Kill a cow, take the Leather that pops out.
12. Monster Hunter
Kill a monster. I suggest using a Sword.
13. Dispense with This
Using a Crafting table, use 7 Cobblestone, 1 Redstone, and
1 Bow to craft a Dispenser.
14. Leader of the Pack
Kill lots of Skeletons and gather a stockpile of bones. Carry
them around with you while exploring the surface. When you
find a wolf, feed it bones until it is tamed (hearts come out
of it). Repeat for 4 more wolves.
15. On a Rail
Construct a REALLY long minecart track (over 500 blocks long)
in one direction. Craft Rails, Powered Rails, and Redstone
Torches and lay them down until you can travel 500 blocks on
the track in a Minecart.
16. Delicious Fish
Craft a Fishing Rod, press LT to launch it into a body of water,
wait for the bobber to go all the way under, then press LT
again to reel in a Raw Fish. Take it and cook it in a Furnace,
and take the Cooked Fish.
17. Bake Bread
Grow and harvest 3 Wheat by following my instructions in the
"extras" section, and craft it into a loaf of Bread.
18. The Lie
Grow and harvest 3 Wheat, craft 2 Sugarcane into 2 Sugar, craft
3 Buckets(3 Iron Ingots each) and fill them with Milk (press
LT on a cow with the empty bucket equipped to fill it with
Milk), and follow a chicken around for a few minutes until
it lays an egg. Craft it all together to make a Cake.
19. When Pigs Fly
Find a dungeon with a Saddle in one of the chests, find a pig
standing on a cliff, attach the Saddle to the pig, ride the
pig, and hope it falls off the cliff and takes fall damage. </pre><pre id="faqspan-2">
If you have a friend, he or she can punch the pig to knock
it off the cliff early for you. Note that you lose the Saddle
when the pig dies.
20. Into The Nether
Construct a Nether Portal with at least 10 Obsidian following
my instructions in the "Hunt for Obsidian" section.
CONTACT [MINEMAIL]
If you want to contact me for FAQ related reasons, send me
an email at
[email protected] . Please use "Minecraft
FAQ" somewhere in the subject bar, so I know that it's
referring to this. I reserve the right to ignore emails that
I can't understand. If you send me a tip or point out a mistake,
I will fix it and credit you below.
Also, not to be a beggar, but if you like this guide, please
click on the "recommend to other users" link at the top of
the screen. It's free, it (literally) only takes a second,
and it helps me in ways you can't imagine.
LEGAL [MINELEG]
This guide was written entirely by me, homsarrunner3. It is
based on my own experiences with Minecraft: Xbox 360 edition,
and some extra information was gotten from the free Minecraft
wiki at minecraftwiki.net . Minecraft was created by Mojang,
and all characters, names, etc. belong to them. It was brought
to the Xbox 360 (minus Herobrine) by 4J Studios and Microsoft
Game Studios. I did not create anything pertaining to
Minecraft or Minecraft: Xbox 360 Edition, besides this guide.
I am not making a monetary profit off of this guide in any
way, shape, or form.
This guide may not, for ANY circumstances, be used for any
purpose other than personal use. It may NOT be used for ANYONE
to make a monetary profit in any way. If I wrote the guide
and I'm not making money off this thing, you aren't either.
If you want to put this site on your NON-PROFIT website, I
only ask that you shoot me an email to ask my permission first.
I'm not stingy, if you ask I will probably say yes.
As of right now, this guide may only be used on the following
website(s):
gamefaqs.com
CREDITS [MINECRED]
It takes many people to raise a child, and making a guide is
no different. I gagged a little bit just by writing that. But
anyway, this section was missing from Version 1.0, and with
the V1.1 update, I decided to remedy that. In the words of
Steve Jobs,
"I have many faults, but ungratefulness is not among them."
Thanks to gamefaqs.com for being the first to host this guide.
Thanks to Mojang, 4J Studios, Microsoft Game studios, and
anybody else who worked on Minecraft or Minecraft: Xbox 360
Edition.
Thanks to minecraftwiki.net for extra information that helped
make this guide.
Extra thanks to 4J Studios for not bringing Herobrine into
this version of the game.
Thanks to Herobrine for not murdering me for that last
statement.
Thanks to you, the reader, for reading this guide and putting
up with my idiocy.
*cough*Extrathanksifyouclickedthe"Recommendtootherusers"l
inkatthetopofthepage *cough*
Thanks to Necrolythe for sending in the Cobblestone Generator
cheat, and for taking the time to fix up his original
instructions to make it more clear for my tiny brain.
Thanks to delarosa1101 for confirming that the cake glitch
that made you lose your buckets has been fixed.
If you are reading this far, I hope that this guide helped
you. Have a nice day.
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