25 Secret Minecraft Hacks You Should Know

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- [Skip The Tutorial] This is every cheap hack you should use if you're homeless. When you're living like a nomad, that usually means you're not torching up the area very much. Which also means you have to deal with a lot of creepers. That is, unless you take the time to tame a cat. Since by just grabbing yourself a feline friend that'll be enough to keep all these creepers away from you. And phantoms too, which when you're not regularly sleeping in a bed, that's also very appreciated. And while, sure, it might take some fish to tame them initially they're an investment that pays off. And a cheap one at that too. And luckily for us, we don't have to just settle for one pet since by killing some of the skeletons that are giving you problems and using their bones to tame wolves we can grab just two of these and then breed them up until we have our own personal army. And since we're not getting any trouble from creepers now that we have our cat, these wolves will be able to deal with the other mobs that are giving us troubles. You just might also want to tie their collars so that you can keep track of them. Minecraft's only got the one breed of wolf. It can get pretty easy to mix them up. Stop worrying about getting a netherite sword, since the truth is that if you were to get yourself just three cobblestone and two sticks, you can actually deal more damage. In fact, if you give them both of them sharpness five, the stone ax will do 12 hit points per hit. whereas the netherite sword only deals 11. And while I'm not saying that enchanting table's cheap I will say it's a lot cheaper than a netherite sword, especially one that's also enchanted. So as long as you keep your distance from mobs and attack when your cool down's gone down I think you'll find this will be plenty well for you, especially on a game. When you've got a bed but you don't have a house it can be tough to place it down without having monsters nearby. That is if you're on land. Strange as it may seem if you take your bed and place it at the bottom of a body of water then as long as there's no drowns nearby you'll actually be able to sleep down there just the same. And none of the hostile mobs that were chased new on land will be able to follow you down there. So then when you wake up and swim to the surface you'll arrive with a whole bunch of zombies and skeletons burning in the air, which is all the reason that you should turn your bed into a river bed, or at least place it on one. Sand is a useful resource but digging up that sand is a tedious chore. So to solve that don't waste your time or your shovel mining sand. Since the truth of the matter is that if you just place down a single block of TNT, you can easily collect a stack or more of sand with each explosion. And especially if you happen to cross a shipwreck chest or one of the structures like a desert temple, you'll have plenty of TNT anyways. So this will be a worthwhile trade off. Instead of wasting your time to set up a furnace and getting the fuel to smelt your food if you just carry around a sword and a flint and steel you can get it done just the same. And with just that extra step of setting them on fire we can one hit kill it and get ourselves perfectly cooked pork chops and steak. There's a reason that speed runners do this. And not to mention that once you get fire aspect on your sword, doing this is even easier. And you won't have to wait the 20 seconds per cooking each pork chop when you have it ready. Finding your way back out of a cave can be tough. And while leaving a path of torches is definitely possible, that's also burning through quite a bit of the coal that you're going down there to mine in the first place. So instead, silly as it may seem, we should actually bring down a snow golem. Now hear me out. If you tie one of these to a lead, then we can drag it along and essentially create snow layers as a path to lead us right back outta the cave. Which would be incredibly useful if you're mining so long that your pickax breaks down in the caves. Because while you can always dig up to get out of a cave that's a lot tougher to do when you have nothing to dig with. And plus the snow golem will also be able to throw off some snowballs, maybe keep some other mobs away from you down in the caves, giving you both a getaway and a ride or die. Here's how to make an infinite water source just one water source block. All you're gonna need is one bucket of water and two pieces of kelp. And when we dig out our regular two by two hole, what we would do instead is place our water block one block elevated on one of the corners. And then with the two pieces of kelp on the alternating corners like this, you'll find that they turn the flow and water into actual source blocks. And there you go. Even if you're in the driest of deserts you're gonna have infinite water for as long as you need it. Potions are an underrated part of Minecraft survival. And while it can definitely be a chore to have to brew these up, here's a way to cut back on that. Since by just placing a hopper over top of one of your brewing stands, we can essentially queue up a playlist of all the things that we're going to be added into our potion. So right after the another war finishes it'll put in your ingredient and then put in the modifier after that, making this cheap and efficient, both adjectives that I like. Here's why you should fight your wither inside of the end. No, not during the dragon fight, that would just over complicate things. But rather when you've killed the dragon then it's worth noting that if you spawn in the wither sideways in this T shape it'll be trapped inside of the bedrock portal. And now you can use all of your cheapest tools to kill it off, even on harder difficulties. XP is a valuable resource to have, so you likely want to get a lot of it. But getting a lot of XP doesn't mean that you need to build yourself an XP farm. Since the simple truth is that if you head over to the nether, there's plenty of XP lying around in the floor. By just mining nether quartz ore I think you'll find this is one of the most effective ways of gaining XP at a very high rate. And it's a lot safer than having to kill a bunch of mobs. Plus nether quartz ore generates frequently and in pretty big veins, both of which means that you're gonna get a lot of this stuff too. So while quartz as a crafted ingredient might not be so useful if you're not building a house of red stone, even if you don't keep any of the item itself,, I think this is still worth doing in your next play through. If you need a lot of blocks fast, dirt is a good go-to. It's easy to dig and it doesn't burn up like leaves and other things. You don't have to worry about getting an overpowered diamond shovel to be able to instamine this. Since the real truth is that if you just have a stone shovel enchanted with efficiency four that'll be fast enough to instantly mine grass, dirt, and sand. While, sure, the durability is nothing to write home about, you have to remember that we're homeless, so we don't have much of a home to write back to anyway. And that could still get you plenty of dirt that you would actually need, especially for when you need to bridge in other dimensions. Or you could use that same stone shovel with that snow golem to get a lot of blocks that way. And even if your stone shovel's unenchanted you'll still be able to instantly mine all of the snow layers at its feet to get constant snowballs for making snowball blocks. But keep some of those just snowballs too, since instead of using resistance potions or a bow to kill a blaze this is actually a rare case where our snowballs can do quite a lot of damage. And if you carry enough stacks of 16 of these in your inventory, you can clear out of nether forges pretty quick and get all the blaze rods that you would need to beat the game. And if you don't wanna worry about carrying around blocks at all, and it's worth mentioning that with just two buckets that's all the blocks for pillaring that we ever need. Since with two buckets of powdered snow and a pair of leather boots on your feet we can place them both on top of the other and then take the bottom one and then move it to the top. Repeat as much as you want. You can instantly scale up hundreds of blocks without having to have hundreds of blocks on hand. Instead of crafting a new bow every time they need a dispenser, it's worth mentioning that in recent updates, you're actually able to craft them with bows that have as little as one durability point left and that way you can save resources and recycle those old bows that you're getting from skeletons. Put the string to better use, like a fishing rod. Since with just one of these, we can easily kill ghasts. As EyecraftMC shows off, we're able to grab the big hit box of the ghast and pull it right back down to our level. At which point it does not take very many hits with a sword or ax to kill this thing off. And if you wanna make things even easier and quicker, just put the fishing rod inside your off hand and you can dual wield your way to victory. And hold onto that fish rod when you go back to the over world, since if it's raining you've got the perfect opportunity to get yourself a bunch of loot and food. Since fact of the matter is if you fish outside, that's already a benefit for fishing. And then when it's raining, that goes even higher. So even if you don't have fancy enchantments like luck of the sea or lure on top of your fish rod I think you'll find this does the job well enough to increase your rates. If you're trying to get a lot of leaves, then normally we would pick shears for that. But with that same two iron and a couple of sticks I think you'll find that a hoe actually does the job much better. Now, granted, you need to add soak touch to it, but even just having a hoe that's iron and above is enough to instantly mine through any leaves. Plus, you'll also find the hoe to be a useful tool for when you go down to an ancient city or for even just grabbing hay bales on top of a village. Really, unless you're trying to get wool from a sheep there's no reason to use shears instead of a hoe. Even has better durability too. Normally a night vision potion might seem excessive, but while you might not want to use one of these inside of a cave, you should try drinking one of these the next time you go to an ocean. Since with regular brightness settings by drinking one of these, you can see straight through the ocean. And that gives you an easy, cheap way to find things like geodes, ocean monuments, and the real kicker, shipwrecks. Which themselves can lead you to a lot of food as well as a lot of buried treasure. And after finding enough of that you won't have to worry about finding cheap hacks, you'll be pretty well to do. Since with just a few of these shipwreck maps we can get ourselves the diamond tools without ever having to touch a cave. And then if you mix the diamonds that you're finding from these loot chests as well as the obsidian that you might get from something like a ruined portal chest, you can have yourself a fully functioning enchanting table and that way you can have fortune enchantments for when you actually want to go down strip mining. After all, if you're gonna do something, might as well do it right. Let's face it, rails aren't cheap. So instead of spending all of your iron ingots on just getting a couple of these, I think you'll have a much better time if you just take the time to mine some of these when you're down in a mine shaft. That way we could save our iron ingots for when they actually matter. Now, we've talked in the past about using moss as a way to clear through deep slate, and that's still true. With bone mill and a stone hoe you can eviscerate the depths, but I want to add on another reason for why you should try this. Since while the moss is able to convert deep slate it can't convert the ores, and just at that little sticking point, we're able to find the ores that might have generated down there much easier. Which is great for diamonds, considering that those have a higher chance of generating underneath other blocks anyway. So when you can instantly mine away the blanket that the diamonds are sleeping under, that'll be a lot better for your time and for your pickax. And not to mention that just moss by itself is a really useful block. And as soon as we get our hands on this from something like a shipwreck chest, that gives us an easy path to have 10 new unique items that just come from one single block. Things like azalea and its variants, as well as oak wood leaves, hanging roots, rooted dirt, all of that just from one block. Not to mention that you can grind a lot of that down in a compost or to also get more bone meal. Repeat the cycle, it gets pretty crazy. And if you don't have arrows, don't worry about crafting them. Since while the materials look cheap they're actually pretty tough to get. So instead, save that flint and turn it into a fletching table to get yourself all of the arrows you need through a villager. By just trading with a fletcher you can get a stack of arrows for only five emeralds. And now you don't have to worry about killing off the entire chicken population just to get yourself a couple of these arrows. And with that, folks, YouTube thinks that you might like this video. So see if they're right and have a good one, all right?
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Channel: Skip the Tutorial
Views: 1,132,957
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Id: 5ALJrM-FQJE
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Length: 9min 45sec (585 seconds)
Published: Sun Aug 06 2023
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