Hey if you're interested in more engineering/Terraria projects like this please subscribe! I wasn't originally planning on making more but there clearly seems to be an audience. My current project is making a foosball playing robot, if that sounds cool then you're in the right place: twitter.com/from_scratch_yt/status/1734116135384363291
@Felice_Enellen Жыл бұрын
6:30 - Are you ok? I want to assume it's just an easter egg, but, y'know... see something, say something. ❤️
@abutb2745 Жыл бұрын
Why you have a giant calculator also yea i am very interested pls make more yes i subbed and bell
@anonymous_246 Жыл бұрын
@@Felice_Enellen what easter egg you taking about?
@Felice_Enellen Жыл бұрын
@@anonymous_246 Oh, the binary contents of memory at that timestamp represent the ASCII text, "HELP". I figure this is just a variation on the famous fortune cookie note that says, "Help! I’m being held prisoner in a fortune cookie factory!" Any time you see binary in 8-bit blocks (in this case formatted with the 0b prefixes some programming languages use to differentiate binary from decimal) where the first two bits of every octet are almost always 01, you can guess that it's ASCII. There are multiple online decoders if you don't know how to do it in your head.
@mathman0569 Жыл бұрын
Please, I want to see this thing evolve! or a technical explination, I love CS and this is really impressive
@TheTobilan Жыл бұрын
This is ultra impressive. Not only did you plan this whole project, made a very succinct video on it, made your own terraria optimisation mod, you stuck to it all and finished it! As somebody who is currently doing his master in computer science, your dedication and skills are top notch. I am trully mind blown
@built-from-scratch Жыл бұрын
Thank you, not quite a graduate degree but definitely took a fair bit of motivation to finish this off!
@ajeetstationajeet Жыл бұрын
@@built-from-scratch u should continue making these type of videos and also make a video on how u got quant role in jane street what are the skills required for that please dude
@Dries007BE Жыл бұрын
@@built-from-scratch Don't kid yourself. This is definitely worth the equivalent of a masters thesis as far as I'm conserned. On a related note: Are you looking for a job?
@Optimusprime917 Жыл бұрын
Dude this is absolutely grad school material, miles ahead of anything my classmates and I pulled off
@stuart6478 Жыл бұрын
give him your degree
@scratch6402 Жыл бұрын
That initial zoom out from the screen to the wiring had my jaw on the floor. I’ve seen CPUs in Minecraft and they look pretty big, but that reveal was MASSIVE.
@DaichiMatsu Жыл бұрын
Real
@robertotarter7839 Жыл бұрын
Same reaction fr. I guess most of it is actually memory, but still!
@SifArtorias Жыл бұрын
It looks larger than Minecraft bc 2d. Everything had to be layed flat, where in Minecraft you can stack things and make them more compressed
@jxck7453 Жыл бұрын
thats because minecraft has never had a 32bit build
@ABoojumSnark Жыл бұрын
@@jxck7453 It has, watch?v=USH-PME_rls
@enque01 Жыл бұрын
I'm a senior software engineer AND embedded electronics designer with 9 years of industry experience, as well as a relevant degree from university. I understood every single thing you did here, even the things you just mentioned in passing, and yet I am absolutely blown away by the fact that you did it. Like.... HOW OLD ARE YOU? And then you edited it all into an entertaining video as well.... My man, you will have ZERO problems finding a job. You can basically just point at where you'd like to work and they'd THROW money at you.
@ross.neuberth Жыл бұрын
I think all the adults with backgrounds in the industry were thinking the same. I was.
@animenaga Жыл бұрын
yep@@ross.neuberth
@AlbertRyanstein Жыл бұрын
he doesnt need to find a job, but kind words nonetheless!
@Leaferr Жыл бұрын
but the point is this is so insanely dedicated and sophisticated for somebody of his age (assuming he's young), this is the kind of brain companies will froth over.@@AlbertRyanstein
@atlasone3263 Жыл бұрын
I think he sort of meant it like if he really needed a job then it would be effortless - but I'm sure this guy is already living pretty comfortably.@@AlbertRyanstein
@NeqoNi5 ай бұрын
What I learned from this video is that syphilis does not like malaria very much.
@built-from-scratch5 ай бұрын
That indeed was the intended main takeaway of the video, not sure why all these other commenters are focusing on the minor Terraria/computer aspect of it
@ps13645 ай бұрын
@@built-from-scratchthat's true and I am surprised you knew about that analogy! spending 3 months on making this design, wow. Very patient and dedicated!
@Garyescargo2 ай бұрын
But they will work together
@fhfghfghfghfgh-o6x Жыл бұрын
Ok but two questions. 1: Can it run Bad Apple 2: Will you make it run Doom?
@ProjecT_Zer0 Жыл бұрын
Someone already made Bad Apple. Waiting for Doom
@v0xl Жыл бұрын
doom is open source right? it just needs some code to copy over screen contents from FB... if there's enough ram...
@leshamas_ Жыл бұрын
Doom in Terraria was literally my 1st thought lul
@marianolaguzzi Жыл бұрын
I love that for Doom you're not even asking if it can run, just if he's going to do it, since we all know that Doom can run on anything
@martiddy Жыл бұрын
It is a matter of time until him or someone else runs Doom on Terraria.
@tehmeex7341 Жыл бұрын
He's going to pull up to a job interview, and put "made a 32 bit computer in a block game" on his resume. What a legend.
@RobertoOrtis Жыл бұрын
People like him do not go work for companies, They create their own companies.
@henry.08216 Жыл бұрын
@@RobertoOrtis people like him have no social skills and awareness
@castrosenpai-6839 Жыл бұрын
he is not going to an interview, he is the manager
@jordixboy Жыл бұрын
Thats not how it works. No one cares really about technical details like this. People in interviews want to hear stuff like: My code was run in production without interruption and no bugs serving 100k users, biringing 2m$ in revenue to the company. People forget that code is just a tool to accomplish something else, no one gives a shit about code itself (except we nerds), code is not the "end product". If you want to succeed in your engineering career, dont forget this.
@MindBlowerWTF Жыл бұрын
@@jordixboy but noone will say that this isn't a great showcase of creativity/problem solving, which results in great code that can serve 100k people and bring 2m$ in revenue.
@timi_LoL5 ай бұрын
I have never felt more behind in my life after watching this. You're awesome.
@douglasemsantos4 ай бұрын
Same here
@overratedprogrammer2 ай бұрын
Don't compare, go your own direction
@marshoak14 күн бұрын
there's no such thing as being behind in life, you simply experience it. some move faster than others, some do more than others, it doesn't make them happier.
@belltowersubductions5104 Жыл бұрын
Honestly the bit where you made an entire mod overhauling the game's entire wiring system is possibly the part I'm most impressed by. That's dedication right there.
@dragonlord1225 Жыл бұрын
I mean, if I spent 5 months building some random shit in a videogame and it doesn't even work I'd also go to any lengths imaginable to make it work. 😂
@ExiledBowser Жыл бұрын
I would just want this mod just to make the game run smoother so more mods can be ran.
@seanbarnard8598 Жыл бұрын
This dude really, really loves pong
@skyluke9476 Жыл бұрын
@@dragonlord1225I haven’t coded since high school and decided to make a website this year from scratch. I could have used templates and websites but I decided to do it with only code and once you make up your mind…… 80+ hours later I finished, excited but completely warn out
@Jdbye Жыл бұрын
When you already spent 500 hours on designing a computer, you're probably willing to spend another 100 to make it work better.
@MappyGaming387 Жыл бұрын
Hands down the greatest technical achievement ever done in the history of this game. Hats off to you sir, mad respect!
@built-from-scratch Жыл бұрын
Thanks, stuff like your spawnkill/dps setups were some of the things to get me into Terraria engineering!
@PROPLAYEN Жыл бұрын
@@built-from-scratchRemake terraria in terraria then build an EoL spawnkill setup
@maz4rine1269 Жыл бұрын
@@built-from-scratchplay doom in the computer
@dibble7368 Жыл бұрын
@@built-from-scratchdudes gonna make a time machine watch
@espelhodasconstelacoes19 күн бұрын
@@built-from-scratch this is absolutely amazing! God bless ya and Jesus loves ya!
@Bloodrammer Жыл бұрын
Kids these days are superhuman, I swear. Combining deep technical knowledge, perseverance and perfect presentation while concealing all the effort besides implementing the computer, all for your presumably first video (likely not, please tell us it's not) is an insane feat. Kudos!
@konaqua122 Жыл бұрын
Mom: "You're always playing that video game." Him: "I was designing a game inside a game using real world science applied to video game logic."
@davidsaso1234 Жыл бұрын
They're very rare sadly
@myrusEW Жыл бұрын
Slow down, pal. Kids in the past didn’t have so much free time and money and the ability to relax and play games for hours. Kids in the past didn’t even have things like this to do. What would a kid in the 1950s do to be equally impressive besides…? Being a great athlete? Starting a business? It’s totally an unfair assessment. The world as a whole is exponentially more skilled/knowledgeable/capable than any world in the past. This is neat, but let’s stay mindful.
@NatTardis Жыл бұрын
@@myrusEW Look, this guy is what people call a genius. This is not just neat, this is absolutely insane. It's fine that you weren't doing this when you were a kid. I sure wasn't. It's fine. We're geniuses in our own personal fields. Society wants us to compare and evaluate ourselves constantly. It's bullshit. We can both be glad that this guy is doing what he loves and that we also are, regardless of how society evaluates what it is that we enjoy doing with our lives. And what he did is still absolutely insane and I love it.
@winsomehax Жыл бұрын
Not to run anyone down because this is great, but today kids have access to an astonishing amount of information and tutorials for free. When I was a kid, I had a commodore c64 programmer's reference manual. An unspeakably precious book. But that was basically it.
@MarcVzin3 ай бұрын
bro, sorry for breathing the same air as you
@barbatos16322 ай бұрын
Lmao😂
@Thassae Жыл бұрын
Dude, I am a Computer Engineer and I am totally blown out by your work. What you did here is worth a ressearch paper. Congratulations.
@VisionThing Жыл бұрын
Why? There’s no research here, even though it’s quite impressive (mostly because of the time spent building the darn thing in a non-optimal editor). I’d assume most engineers being able to do this kind of thing if they put enough time in it.
@Taricus Жыл бұрын
@@VisionThing It is definitely worth a research paper. He was even referencing academic papers to design it. He's applying methods in unique ways and pushing boundaries.
@VisionThing Жыл бұрын
@@Taricus It’s a hardware emulator. There’s nothing new here, even though it’s entertaining and clearly took a lot of effort. Do you even know what a research paper is? You don’t make one just for something being impressive if there’s nothing novel. How good of an engineer are you if you are so blown away by this on a technical level?
@TheGrizzypoo Жыл бұрын
This, so much this. I am an academic and this should be published somewhere. This is the kid of thing that brings humankind one itsy, bitsy, teeny, weenie step forward. And in our lifetime, that is all we can realistically do.
@arisandoval1190 Жыл бұрын
@@VisionThing lol bruh you goofy..
@ChippyGaming Жыл бұрын
Just from a single video, it's so clear you're gonna go on to do great things! This project is genuinely amazing, and the infodumps along the way were super interesting too!
@TheBeatenBush Жыл бұрын
Pleasure seeing you here chippy
@built-from-scratch Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much, I really appreciate it!
@silvrivy Жыл бұрын
oly shit it's chili 😊
@Weedocto Жыл бұрын
@@silvrivy chili💀💀💀
@brodinigotmagic Жыл бұрын
Makes me happy seeing you encourage smaller terraria KZbinrs. You really do care about our little community.
@reniswiss1733 Жыл бұрын
As a mechanical engineer I am blown away by the dedication you put into this. I don't understand half of it but I can clearly see the genius behind a project like this.
@gianfrancolongo Жыл бұрын
As I civil engineering student, my mind blow off while I watched this video due to this insane creation.
@kirleyq1394 Жыл бұрын
As a CE junior, same. The time that was put into this. Really incredible!
@austindale312911 ай бұрын
YES!!!! Hats off to you, All hats, right off. I am a Sr Electrical engineer, and I got here without a degree because I spent 15 years hyper-focused on projects like this while working construction to pay the bills; burning the midnight oil on what I really loved. Architectural engineering, mechanical engineering, computer science, and primarily electrical engineering, building every crazy invention that came into my head, never knowing I could turn my passion into a career. My biggest issue for years was building the courage to display my efforts (you have no problem there), but when I did, my career skyrocketed. Because of people like you sharing your work, I learned how to be confident in presenting and promoting myself. You have an extreme talent, but more than that, you can communicate and present engagingly and interestingly. You have no limitations man! I am humbled and inspired by what you have done here! Keep following your interests and passions, and keep sharing! Thank you.
@nut297511 ай бұрын
Respect to you. I think you should document those stuff on your KZbin channel (if you're comfortable with it). I will be your 2nd subscriber
@jeremycooper44145 ай бұрын
I was enjoying this immensely. At 8:31 that joy turned to absolute elation when you chose Bach/Busoni to get you through the 500 hours of work! Time well spent. Bravo
@built-from-scratch5 ай бұрын
Thanks! I played it a few years ago, great piece/transcription
@FameFocus Жыл бұрын
If you read this, please share this video! Such nerdy work must not go unnoticed. Somebody make this guy an engineer!
@MatVeiQaaa Жыл бұрын
im pretty sure he said in the video he has a job and somehow that project helped his advances or smth.
@Wituz Жыл бұрын
I don't think a guy like him needs to worry about work - if he's at the point where he can do this, there isn't much he can't do on his own. I would say it's a shame if he gets stuck in a corporate environment with this creativity. Thanks for a good vid. :)
@realityveil6151 Жыл бұрын
In my long years of experience in the field I have learned the hard lesson that just because someone did an amazing passion project doesn't mean they'll be a good engineer. There are motivation issues, and they tend to be mavericks and lone wolves. And they just suck in general. Guys who pour all their heart and soul into a terraria computer can barely bring themselves to open an industry standard circuit design tool and actually do work that someone else has assigned them. This is because they're all motivation and passion and no discipline and focus. If they ever get around to finally producing anything at all they produce shoddy, sub-standard, piss-poor implementations because they learned on the fly and did not persue classical training, on top of being unmotivated and just trying to do the minimum of work. In nearly every case, my more level-headed, dedicated, classically trained engineers have to fix everything before the product could ship. Often that fixing process takes longer than if my real engineers had just ran the project right in the first place. So no, I will not be hiring this kid or anyone like him. They can stay in youtube land while the real engineers with dedication, discipline, heart, and real world training do the actual work.
@MatVeiQaaa Жыл бұрын
@@realityveil6151 you worded it like if him making that actually is a red flag for you, but I guess you rather meant it doesn’t mean much?
@realityveil6151 Жыл бұрын
@@MatVeiQaaa Depends. If they have completed classical training with high marks (I don't care about GPAs, just show me your engineering class scores. I don't care if you flunked English or World History) and have a passion project to show off, and at least one of those was a team effort of 3 or more people: Instant hire. If all they have is a series of solo passion projects, big red flag.
@Qenton Жыл бұрын
Back when I was designing video games (90s) we would interview programmers. Sometimes we would just tell them to go off and program pong. This would tell us a lot about the programmer, both in what they did, if they did it, their aesthetic sense, and a lot of other stuff about the applicant. We would have shaken our heads and probably hired you on the spot if you came back with that one.
@FranciscoGoodface Жыл бұрын
probably hired him??? this kid could hire you in a few years from now
@vnm_8945 Жыл бұрын
@@FranciscoGoodface
@nobody-rb9xh Жыл бұрын
@@FranciscoGoodfacethat's not really how it works.
@terjemathisen1683 Жыл бұрын
I already commented in the reddit thread, but I'll repeat myself here: This is _seriously_ impressive. I started PC programming in 1982, so on a 4.77 Mhz CPU capable of about 1 instruction/us. Your emulated CPU is only a few orders of magnitude slower than what we had then!
@daleryanaldover6545 Жыл бұрын
really impressive, this guy might even surpass Terry Davis
@wj11jam78 Жыл бұрын
@@daleryanaldover6545 Lihzahrd Temple OS
@jameshildebrand907 Жыл бұрын
I still remember my first computer I started programming on. It was a TRS 80 from Radio Shack.
@mika_iran Жыл бұрын
@@daleryanaldover6545 lol no. and if the mere mention of an arduino wasn't enough to dispel such a thought, i don't know what to tell you
@Frostybijt Жыл бұрын
@@wj11jam78 LMAOOO
@Vultur3Kulture5 ай бұрын
I don't know why no one's brought it up, but your sense of humor throughout this is amazing lmao Great use of memes and everything!
@nktslp3650 Жыл бұрын
Make sure to add this to your resume. This is seriously impressive.
@gdb524 Жыл бұрын
yeah like try to focus on making money from your passion
@adissentingopinion848 Жыл бұрын
Sadly, this is covered by at least junior-level computer engineering in college. However, if I was a hiring interviewer for certain jobs, telling me you made a softcore CPU while solving routing issues (but not timing issues) in a videogame could be a nice opener if you had the HDL experience to back it up.
@zorroaster8895 Жыл бұрын
@@adissentingopinion848it speaks more about the dedication and planning required to code this, rather than the knowledge (although it certainlyrequires knowledge). I know that not every computer scientist or software engineer student would go to this length for a project (I certainly didn't)
@researchandbuild1751 Жыл бұрын
Meh, its not really that useful for real world software problems. Although it does show his tenacity in solving problems.
@choahjinhuay Жыл бұрын
@@researchandbuild1751the tenacity and documentation of it are the valuable skills.
@FonyWill Жыл бұрын
not only did you create a whole computer, you also created a revolutionary mod to help your project. wow
@MarcelloLins Жыл бұрын
I'm a senior software engineer with 12 years of industry experience and a degree in compsci. Still watching this video was incredibly humbling and impressive. I bet the journey was as incredible as the final result.
@jordixboy Жыл бұрын
Im a senior software engineer with 10 yrs and no compsci degree, same for me. Altough I made similar stuff (not this big though).
@blasttrash Жыл бұрын
@@jordixboywhat did you make?
@jordixboy Жыл бұрын
@@blasttrash Short list: VM's (Chip8/Gameboy...), Write assembly (and also binary) (not for x86 arch though), Make an ALU/CPU with logic gates (with LogiSim). Own Programming language, some reverse engineering... Idk stuff like that, I really enjoy it
@jordixboy Жыл бұрын
@@Lronhoyabembe i made it and have no degree. Not so hard, just take some books, learn and practice. Fun experience
@jordixboy Жыл бұрын
@@Lronhoyabembe I guess a lot of people just want to recollect the paper and dont care about what they learn lol. I love applied CS, computer engineering (whatever it is called), I also like electronics, I spend my free time learning and playing, not for the sake of a paper, but because i genuinely like it
@paranoidz62 ай бұрын
You are a true software engineer who not only understands the engineering, but also is able to explain it to others, in a fun entertaining way. True Prodigy!
@genericcatname9159 Жыл бұрын
I’ve never even seen or heard of anything close to this in Terraria. The amount of dedication this stuff seems to take is absolutely insane.
@RealCraft_MC Жыл бұрын
I know right?? Terraria is already good on its own.. but this?!
@sgtkilborn Жыл бұрын
I've been programming professionally for 6 years and this is cooler than anything I've ever made. I LOVE that you made a whole-ass mod just to facilitate development of the main project. Now that's committent!
@coffee_quaffer Жыл бұрын
Dude I about fell out of my chair when you dropped the containerized CI pipeline. There are so many impressive things about this project, but that attention to detail (and respect for maintenance and tooling) is absolutely next level. Well done!
@haroldp.sadwood1181 Жыл бұрын
Seriously! He just threw that in there!
@cakiral4 ай бұрын
1. Vision - Check 2. Doing - Check 3. Creativity - Check 4. Patience - Check 5. Focus - Check 6. Alternative Thinking - Check 7. Presentation - Check 8. Humor - Check 9. Sympathy - Check 10. Role model - Check 11. Power - Check 12. Sustainability - Check 13. Communication Skills - Check 14. Problem solving - Check 15. Time consciousness - Check 16. Clear thinking - Check 17. Storytelling - Check 18. Imagination - Check 19. Interdisciplinary thinking - Check Just amazing. Its another phantastic example of our potential as human beings. There are so many crazy and nice things to do in life! We are better than machines and AI. Many thanks for investing such a huge time for your passion! And I hope that this amazing investment of yours will open a great future to you and your friends! ❤
@kallesamuelsson8052 Жыл бұрын
For validity; I'm a full time developer for more then 20 year. Your computer skills, dedication and presentation skills are suuuuuper impressive! This project alone will surely land you a job at any tech company you want. Personally I hope you choose your own path and write your own projects because you seem really good at it. Best of luck, well done!
@MohsenAliTalb11 ай бұрын
Can I contact you, I need advice from you
@mahjoubadam17428 ай бұрын
Yep, I'm a computer engineering senior and literally have no idea how he made this.
@ChangeOfHearts398 ай бұрын
@@mahjoubadam1742engineering senior where ? Construction ? 😂😁
@mahjoubadam17428 ай бұрын
@@ChangeOfHearts39 I literally said computer engineering, final year
@ChangeOfHearts398 ай бұрын
@@mahjoubadam1742 so how do you have no idea how he made this? And its your final year ? Ask for your money back 😂👍 im just pulling your leg bro 😂
@Formulaeagle161 Жыл бұрын
This is by far the best terraria video I have ever watched, insane accomplishment, I knew people could make games inside of other games but the work that you put into this is unreal. Congrats and good luck making mini-terraria!
@jaredbecker3152 Жыл бұрын
This project is beyond impressive! The fact you made your own mod to improve the games performance just so you could create this is insane!
@SunnyKimDev6 ай бұрын
I just worked on a pipelined RISC-V CPU with verilog and bluespec for a project, but seeing it in terraria is wild. Amazing job.
@michaelheinrich5219 Жыл бұрын
There are few people that can actually do this. There are even fewer people who would do this. And only one person who actually did this. This touches skills on so many levels of difficulty and perseverance... This is nerd transcendence that requires Kardashev scaling to appreciate and understand. I salute you!
@SlushieDee Жыл бұрын
This is so insanely impressive, wtf. Would definitely love to watch a detailed breakdown of the more technical side of things!
@ddmac0 Жыл бұрын
Hey man. I'm a software dev, and this is hella impressive. I would love to see a more technical video. Keep it up man, you're pretty incredible!
@flinxsl Жыл бұрын
I'm an IC designer, and projects like this are like the early days when the "layout" was done by hand with only primitive tools to help.
@botondcsepan4 ай бұрын
This build is incredible, hats off to you! You are also really good at explaining things clearly. Here, have my sub!
@Dillbeet Жыл бұрын
This is incredible. 15 minutes of unique phd level content. Please continue posting naturally and organically
@ActuallyAwesomeName Жыл бұрын
If you think this is PhD level you've never been to a university
@MD-ji7dh Жыл бұрын
@@ActuallyAwesomeName I mean this in nothing "new", so it wouldn't qualify, but there are still not many Masters degree students who would be able to pull off something like this. Including myself.
@em3755 Жыл бұрын
@@ActuallyAwesomeName It may not be Ph.D level but totally Senior Undergraduate level or MS level. I'm a Senior electrical engineering student with a 4.0 GPA and this would of been a huge effort to do. Only in my final year did I learn enough about computer architecture to do something like this. What's crazy is that this high schooler who's like 4-6 years younger than me knows how to do it all XD
@leschopinesns100 Жыл бұрын
@@ActuallyAwesomeName This is not so far from phd level to be honest... I am in fifth year of university next year, and have many friends planning to do a Ph.D so I think I have a pretty good idea what it means.
@rdxzero Жыл бұрын
@@em3755"would of" + 4.0 gpa?
@flyinhigh7681 Жыл бұрын
Comp sci student here, this is absolutely incredible! Relogic is missing out if they dont pay you to bring your wiring optimisations to the base game
@noaag Жыл бұрын
"developer hire this man" is usually like totally unrealistic but i'll make an exception (ha-ha "exception"), this is amazing, re-logic hire this man
@benbrook469 Жыл бұрын
they probably wouldn't be able to offer a high enough salary
@julealgon Жыл бұрын
The optimization he did is very basic: he just introduced a cache to store wiring sources and targets. While the whole thing is very impressive (including the fact that he created his own mod), it would not make sense for any developer to hire the guy just because of this very trivial optimization alone. Also, it is likely that this wasn't done in the original game because it just wasn't needed: the original game was not necessarily designed for very long and many wiring connections in the first place, because that wasn't the whole point of the game, it was just a minor aspect of it all things considered. Optimizations are usually done after measurements show that a given area is a problem/ bottleneck, and in this case it really isn't for "normal" play.
@benbrook469 Жыл бұрын
@@julealgon ok but this is a better signal than anything you could uncover in a few interviews
@julealgon Жыл бұрын
@benbrook469 Sure, it shows practical experience, which is a good sign indeed. I'm just saying it is still a fairly simple optimization that most candidates should already be aware of.
@emj-music Жыл бұрын
I study Computer Engineering in college and I'm impressed. It killed me (in a good way) when you showed that you even made a CI pipeline for the project. Also the fact that you had so much dedication towards the project is really cool! Great work, man. This is plain awesome.
@LeftToFate5 ай бұрын
SON! i am a janitor and WOW you just blew my socks off! after 47 years of cleaning up after kids i cant even reproduce 1% of what you have accomplished in this video! OUTSTANDING! Honestly this was incredible!
@marcelc2820 Жыл бұрын
Seeing shit like this made by geniuses like you is why I quit software engineering to become a lawyer. I can't even begin to express how impressive this is.
@low22xd Жыл бұрын
Im about to quit pursuing law to start learning software engineering
@Sorrelhas Жыл бұрын
"Your honor, the 32-page long document my client wrote thoroughly detailing a coordinated terrorist attack on his local DMV clearly had "in Terraria" written at the end of it, therefore my client is completely innocent"
@oxanis Жыл бұрын
@@Sorrelhas LMFAOOOO
@kallesamuelsson8052 Жыл бұрын
Language models are the new lawyers ;-) Sry... I could not resist ;-)
@kenarnarayaka11 ай бұрын
why is computer science to law such a common switch impostor syndrome is really making me consider this switch too
@mekafinchi Жыл бұрын
In real-world digital logic, these gates exist! They're called transmission gates. They have applications (mainly multiplexers iirc), but since they don't amplify their output like inverters do, they aren't found on their own.
@improat Жыл бұрын
🤯 Not only the project is really impressive! That alone is already enough, but you also did all the polishing and even modified the game it self to get it running faster. And you drove it home with a really good product video. The way you explained the cpu is understandable for everyone! Just 🤯
@yaniv200783 ай бұрын
Wow! Im studying computer engineering , One of my final project is implementing an Architecture of accelerator designed for AI (in system verilog) I understand everything you talked about , and yet I’m fully amazed by what you’ve done ! Great job !
@VorpalGun Жыл бұрын
A technical video would be interesting. You may be alone in the centre of that Venn diagram (I don't care much about devops) but embedded rust and computing in games is always interesting. I did some smaller scale stuff in Minecraft back in the days.
@built-from-scratch Жыл бұрын
Good to know! The stuff the Minecraft community has done similar to this is also super impressive
@TheMillyBays Жыл бұрын
They definitely aren't the only one at the center of the that venn diagram--- they do however have far more persistence than the rest of us!
@stumpzerd5921 Жыл бұрын
@@TheMillyBaysYou can say ‘he’ bub
@tangyboi386 Жыл бұрын
@stumpzerd5921 why do you care?
@dspivey_music Жыл бұрын
Yes I would love a deep dive into this
@Rybesh53210 ай бұрын
So, next step... can it play Doom?
@ellocokin54495 ай бұрын
THIS
@Cooter--l._.Y._.I Жыл бұрын
I don't even play Terraria, but as a novice programmer, this is impressive.
@Malam_NightYoru Жыл бұрын
as a novice programmer that plays terraria, that is even more impressive. Never knew that someone would push that simple wiring to the limit
@mikicerise6250 Жыл бұрын
This guy is American, right? (Can't tell the difference between American and Canadian accents). If so he had better be shortlisted for those new chip factories TSMC is going to be building there. They really need talent.
@fansignal Жыл бұрын
I don't play Terraria and don't program, but as an onlooker who enjoys seeing what people can program, his work is impressive. Would be good to see people keep adding: build another Terraria inside the game and another pong game inside that!
@Rxxx-jn6gi Жыл бұрын
you should try it y. you wont regret it
@kylesimone6140 Жыл бұрын
@@fansignal someone made minecraft in minecraft, and is working on making minecraft in minecraft in minecraft
@NikHem3436 ай бұрын
Filmmaker here. Completely ignoring that you bent spacetime in Terrarria, how is this such a good video? You can be real proud of yourself mate
@built-from-scratch6 ай бұрын
Thank you, I appreciate it!
@RgY_Taken Жыл бұрын
I used to think Terraria was solely a 2D building and fighting game. It's incredibly exciting to witness the remarkable creativity you've poured into crafting something this extraordinary! Please continue your fantastic work.
@Ghi102 Жыл бұрын
What impresses me the most is the dedication you have to make it a truly complete project, not just a hobby one. RISC-V compliance, the whole dev ops pipeline, regression testing, just simply amazing
@nullcline_ Жыл бұрын
i remember being blown away by this project when you first showcased it but the quality of this video is equally as impressive, excited for more stuff and or things to be built
@N7sensei Жыл бұрын
Yeah. Great video production quality as well.
@ZaudunyaniАй бұрын
Brother. As a devops guy and the father of a 16 year old, each with 1000+ hours in Terraria, you're the absolute man. Incredible stuff, son.
@alexcromar7643 Жыл бұрын
As a 4th Year Computer Engineer Student building a 16-bit computer using an FPGA to run a crude version of Doodle Jump I am speechless. This is one of the coolest projects I have ever seen and I can only imagine the difficulty especially when limited by the logic gates. I was impressed from the beginning but blown away when you casually mentioned rewriting the wiring engine. I will probably check out your project and see if I can maybe create something cool with it.
@built-from-scratch Жыл бұрын
Thank you! FPGAs are super cool, would like to use one in a project at some point.
@MohsenAliTalb11 ай бұрын
Can I contact you, I need advice from you
@fran13r Жыл бұрын
Bro this is so awesome. People making computers inside of games might be my favorite thing in gaming tbh.
@apex9478 Жыл бұрын
1:20 You just pissed us off but we're too amazed by this computer to do anything about it
@unknown-tq2yx Жыл бұрын
I still gonna give him that dislike
@asmorr87785 ай бұрын
You are amazing! So much work is done. Keep going, that is really impressive
@jamescarrico1233 Жыл бұрын
This is incredible. Most people watching this may not recognize how significant this achievement actually is. You have absolutely cemented your place in the programming hall of fame. It’s truly beautiful. And to top it off, your video production is top tier quality. I’ll be following you closely because you are clearly destined for great things.
@Spectral-Spiff Жыл бұрын
But can it run doom?
@jack-h8s4v7 ай бұрын
This guy is asking the important questions
@Gzt_twn7 ай бұрын
Oh yes it can my friend ( I hope)
@personeater7477 ай бұрын
Doom originally runs on 32 bit, so theoretically yeah. I don't know how you'd go about programming it though,
@chaostheultimayt7 ай бұрын
“Ferb, I know what we’re gonna do today!”
@bacon54817 ай бұрын
Did you even watch the video
@webbiess6 Жыл бұрын
This is hands down one of the best videos I've ever seen. The amount of work and detail is just unmatched.
@Shugas.Kitchen5 ай бұрын
The fact that you continued after it didn’t work and found that one wire that wasn’t right and debugged the whole thing is what sets you apart from most ppl. Others would have just quit. Bravo 👏🏼 well done 👍
@LoblueHaze Жыл бұрын
This guy uploads a first video to his channel, designs a gate for the CPU, engineers and optimizes the algorithm for the CPU, develops a mod to massively speed up the wire mechanics for Terraria, and, most importantly, uses Rust. Your work is marvelous, please keep up the good work!
@Samitat Жыл бұрын
Senior Devops Engineer here with 10 years working IT, definitively interested in seeing more detailed video essays like these. You remind me of myself at your age just must smarter :D Really impressive work you've done here, couldn't believe it when you went on saying you'd rewrote the entire wiring system lmfao. Keep it up kid
@MohsenAliTalb11 ай бұрын
Can I contact you, I need advice from you
@LexysHereAfter Жыл бұрын
Not only were you able to do this crazy feat but you made a very interesting well edited video to explain it in a manner that is easy to follow a both simple and complex concept. Well done doesn't touch it, incredible stuff. Keep up the great work.
@gR224016 ай бұрын
As a game developer with 18 years of experience, I hope you choose a different career. You do you, of course, but brains like yours should be solving problems that will benefit humanity beyond just entertainment.
@metaljay77 Жыл бұрын
This is incredible. Please become one of those people that creates incredible things the benefit the world. You've got the sheer brilliance to do it and all the time in the world to make it happen. I hope I see your face on something world changing in the future.
@stuart6478 Жыл бұрын
everything benefits the world silly Billy
@Gobbler. Жыл бұрын
well what if I somehow manage to delete the world from existence that doesn't benefit it very much
@notcraig25510 ай бұрын
@@stuart6478 I wouldn't say everything
@abbrown810 Жыл бұрын
I'm seriously starting to tear up about how wonderful and beautiful this is. You are incredible
@yellowdeli10 ай бұрын
This is beautiful. I’m a Senior Software Developer like many of the other comments here, remember exploring things like this in Minecraft years ago but nowhere near this advanced. Great job! 😎
@michaellk22543 ай бұрын
I've written a CPU before in VHDL, but I never wrote a game for it, let alone even recreate it in Terraria or find ways of optimizing it such that the programs run on Terraria. Brother, good work. This is nuts
@sathuria_pendragon Жыл бұрын
Red needs to see this. I’m 100% sure he would gladly introduce and item or just anything to resemble such an achievement for the Terraria community. Great job!
@Metroidam11 Жыл бұрын
I got my bachelors of science in computer and system’s engineering, and I don’t think I could pull this off. Truly impressive!
@freiabereinsam- Жыл бұрын
That’s because your degree is worth shit Greetings a former engineer bachelor
@ghostoflazlo Жыл бұрын
Oh wow The state of your education
@julealgon Жыл бұрын
You most likely could, given enough time.
@parham6676 Жыл бұрын
maybe you should go back to school?
@effigy42 Жыл бұрын
education and iq are completely different things
@letsb3nameless665 Жыл бұрын
as a terraria vet with 2900 hours, this is the most glorious thing i have ever seen
@soap6994 ай бұрын
same i could never do this (currently at 26 thousand hours)
@Urani_umАй бұрын
@@soap699 thats like 1000+ days bro. Damn
@soap699Ай бұрын
@@Urani_um been playing the game since i was 8 and i am now 17
@nathanix10124 ай бұрын
Hi, i really appreciate the effort you put into this video. Not only the computer made inside my favorite game, but also the serious tone and preparation for the recording. I also like the funny bits and jokes. Awesome video.
@johnm4048 Жыл бұрын
10:00 for this there are options at the left of your inventory for toggling certain wire colours on and off
@alexpeak1008 Жыл бұрын
This is incredible, I was really impressed, but when you showed that you wrote your own wiring optimization plugin, I was completely blown away
@Jericho.109 Жыл бұрын
In case anyone was wondering the pop-up at 1:46 says 8,372.3 hours.
@evilhamsters08 Жыл бұрын
Had to check the comments first to see if anyone already helped with this
@soap6994 ай бұрын
rookie numbers
@agentholmes369Ай бұрын
this is what internet and KZbin exist for Your dedication ,hard work and patience is on whole another level
@mellow3995 Жыл бұрын
Okay we need an item in the game to celebrate this video and this man. This is freaking incredible!
@storytellerjack22 Жыл бұрын
Computer item where you can pack all these wires into a single item... I have never played Terraria
@vxpdx Жыл бұрын
Next Terraria patch should have: "Fixed logic gate timings and significantly improved wire logic"
@eggnogisdead Жыл бұрын
ping pong paddle
@BreeBree-s6s Жыл бұрын
Vote passed.
@ElJuanoVideos Жыл бұрын
This is the perfect mix between hard work, incredible talent, determination, problem solving, outstanding imagination and just enough insanity to truly make it work. I'm impressed (and a little bit jealous, not gonna lie) by this work!
@SpencerYonce Жыл бұрын
As a factorio player, and a programmer, I absolutely loved this video. You have an extreme amount of dedication and determination. You earned yourself a new subscriber for sure!!
@LastElf42 Жыл бұрын
"The game engine is too slow so I made it better" is literally what made Factorio the top 3 game on Steam at launch. The devlogs going into bit level optimisations just to get a little bit more performance was insane (I started playing back when belts moved physical objects and 1k SPM was a dream, now that's the starting point for an end game base).
@bny.05 ай бұрын
This is absolutely mind-blowing! The level of creativity and technical skill required to pull this off is incredible.
@thedizzytoast11 ай бұрын
My god what a lot of work there, and you made me understand it perfectly. Subbed can't wait till I see your next endeavor
@josiahscott386410 ай бұрын
As someone who knows nothing about programming, but watches a lot of these types of videos, you did an excellent job at breaking the process down into an interesting and easy to understand step by step, far better than any other video ive seen like this
@xotmatrix Жыл бұрын
I was not expecting something so thoroughly implemented including a toolchain. Amazing work.
@garfindlhopemacher35597 күн бұрын
You are outstanding. The tech knowledge mixed with super sympathetic storytelling and cutting skills. Great video!
@Grooth Жыл бұрын
Wow this is insane man. Reminds me of those old videos of people building computers in minecraft but this is even more difficult since you're limited to two dimensions. And then to put all your work into a well made and succinct video? Really good stuff dude!
@Mustafa-099 Жыл бұрын
As a terraria player and an aspiring software engineer this is mind boggling ha ha You are very talented sir! Massive respect :)
@seowlfh3731 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure I'm not the only one who would love to hear about how you organize yourself, and are able to work on so many large scale projects during your university years! It's insane to see what you're able to do, and the amount of work you put into these things, truly an inspiration for a CSE student. Cheers
@TNTspazАй бұрын
The logic gate design is so simple and useful that I feel like an idiot for not thinking of it. Love the way you represented it as an actual door opening and closing as well. That was clever.
@dagoonite Жыл бұрын
I was linked this by a friend and had it on in the background. I had no desire to watch it, but I at least put on stuff that my friends share with me, because I'm nice like that. I just happened to switch back to my browser just as you mentioned syphilis, and saw the wiki article. One quick google later, and I restarted, actually watching this time. You taught me something way cool, you deserved my full attention to the whole thing.
@btaha5526 Жыл бұрын
I really believe you are going to achieve a lot of things with this level of dedication and skill 🔥
@TheLuckyShepherd Жыл бұрын
🎉 You're going to do some amazing things in your life. This is brilliant and it required a lot of hard work, patience, dedication and realization of long term gratification. Can't wait to see what you do next. ❤
@Zei335 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed how you rewrote the wire system. Makes total sense and it's amazing that the original devs never thought about optimising it in such a way.
@adinrichter6034 Жыл бұрын
I can't believe this is your first video. This is absolutely incredible and I can't wait to see other stuff you make!
@makdavian3567 Жыл бұрын
How are you so good at making videos? The editing, audio, camera charisma, SFX are all on point! Did you have a channel before this as well?
@lukkkasz323 Жыл бұрын
I think if you have the intelligence to create all this incredible shit in Terraria, you will also be good at making videos.
@snessub Жыл бұрын
@@lukkkasz323 no you dont. Being a great enineer is a differnet skill, from being a great video editor. It is also a different skill from being a great project manager. Actually you can even design great software architecture, but still write shody code. Don't downplay the enormous feat, that is the combination of all these mastered skills AND his intelligence.
@mrfoldmyshirt4404 Жыл бұрын
@snessub almost as if you can achieve those skills if you are intelligent. In the end the comment still stands true
@snessub Жыл бұрын
@@mrfoldmyshirt4404 the comment sounds like: if you are intelligent enough, you can achieve this too. I think this Statement draws the wrong picture. You need Intelligence (creative thinking, open mindedness, ability to concentrate, transferring knowledge etc.) and skills (memorizing workflows, knowing where to look things up, doing stuff routinely and in good quality) in a lot of different fields and certainly a lot of time to achieve all these skills and in the end achieve stuff like this terraria computer
@minekrafines Жыл бұрын
what a legend. i saw the intro and thought wow, that's really complicated. then i saw the rest of the video and proceeded to execute five consecutive backflips. this is stupidly well done.
@dreygotz3 ай бұрын
There is a lot more to unpack here then I think folks understand. Sure, he ingeniously used video game building tools as a form of code, which he then used to write code, functionally replicating a PC and then instructing it to allow the creation of the atari game pong. Yes, he then identified weakness in the original video game he did this in and their server capacity, so he developed a mod to increase the original games capacity to process and at higher speeds. Effectively, he added RAM and storage. He then used this mod to be more productive on his PC build within the game and obtain more advanced results in adjustments on his journey to develop a more complex video game on this PC. Okkkayyy, so he used his buddy's code to effectively transmit 2D visuals into a 3D perspective...after modifying it to be able to do so... BUT the real gem her to me is this, he did this all digitally! He did not use real tangible material like a motherboard, nodes and a soldering iron. He did not build and house this PC, where he then used that scrap to build an atari and is now repurposing that scrap to build a nintendo. He built it all with nothing tangible but still built them all digitally! Inside of a tangible thing like this video games software and coding platform. It's ground breaking, it's earth shattering, it's mind blowing and it's exactly the kind of thing that will intrinsically change the future of technology and subsequently our world as we know it. History is unfolding in front of our eyes people and we are at the pinnacle of humanity's intelligence as we merge into the singularity.
@michaelrall8142 Жыл бұрын
OMG, as a SW-Dev with 25 years of experience, I can't stress enough how insanely impressive this project is !
@stefanosdris4240 Жыл бұрын
I was once proud of my 10ish year old self for learning spectrum basic and being able to code simple games on my rubber keyed spectrum 48k. That was before I watched this video. Now I feel stupid. You should be proud of what you have done here. Not just on a technical level... You're presentation is impeccable. I say this at a time when the video is sitting at around 84k views: you'll be a superstar engineer one day. Just remember to also take it easy and enjoy everything you do in life. Wow. Just wow.
@bobedwards8896 Жыл бұрын
Comparison is the thief of joy
@NunoMaia Жыл бұрын
@@bobedwards8896 also a source of.
@Flairis Жыл бұрын
@@NunoMaiaexample?
@Ascended55 Жыл бұрын
@@Flairisliterally if you are better than someone, you are joyful
@school6268 Жыл бұрын
This is so cool, I have so many questions- Is it von neumann or harvard? How any operands? With terraria's pulse-based wiring, how do you store data in memory? Is there any sort of pipelining implemented? Is there any sort of branch prediction? How is io handled, is it memory mapped or something else? This is all I can think of for now, but I'm sure there's loads of terraria-specific technical details that would be super interesting, super cool project!
@built-from-scratch Жыл бұрын
1. It's von neumann, there's no ROM since it's easier to copy existing RAM blocks than recreate something similar without right capabilities. 2. Everything defined in rv32i, so around 40 or so depending on how you count distinct operands 3. It's a bit more complicated than that. Individual tiles store persistent data, so for example the state section of logic gates remember what state they're in. The thing about pulses is that the wires themselves don't have an intrinsic "on" or "off" state. So you can do stuff like memory using the tiles that do remember they're state, but you have to be quite careful to keep everything in sync with everything else. 4. No, pipelining turns out to be completely useless in this case. This is because for Terraria I'm completely lag limited, not clock limited. So for example if I did everything in parallel, the game would just lag out at half the frequency it used to and it would be no speedup. 5. No for the same reason as 4 6. Yes I use memory mapped IO, actually surprisingly easy to get working since all you have to do is hook it up a peripheral to your existing RAM implementation. These are interesting technical questions so if you have any more I'm happy to answer!