Minecraft Game Rules
More news for Minecraft Game Rules. Kokomo Rise And Shine. Learn how to play the card game Minecraft with these official game rules and instructions. Download a free copy today.
Host: Chad 'OMGchad' Johnson This week, we'll manipulate the rules of the game to our will. For show notes. Planet Minecraft Rules. Server listings are required to have a minimum level of effort placed into them to be shown on Planet Minecraft and having in-game.
It happens to even the most cautious explorer: you’re far from home, you die, and all your precious loot is left sitting in a pile far, far away. Tired of losing your loot?
Read on as we show you how to make your Minecraft inventory persist after death (along with some other handy game-changing tricks). Note: This tutorial is focused on the PC edition of Minecraft as, presently, neither Minecraft Pocket Edition or Minecraft Console Edition support the editing of the in-game variables required for enabling persistent inventory or the like.
Should this change, we will update the tutorial with instructions for the other editions. Why Do I Want To Do This? We’re huge proponents of playing a game the way you want to play it and in the case of a game like Minecraft, the game is outright designed to encourage players to do just that: to build, create, manipulate, and outright edit the world to create the game universe and play experience they want. One particular aspect of the default play scheme that many players find quite frustrating is the way player inventory is dropped upon death. By default, when you die in Minecraft you lose experience (and some of that experience is dropped as experience orbs at the point of death) and you lose your entire personal inventory at that location too: all your armor, weapons, tools, and all the loot you’re carrying drop into a scattered pile (as seen in the screenshot below).