*builds an entire fucking computer for fun* "So anyways this is kinda the build guys"
@DanielLenrd7 ай бұрын
aye man, that what we Computer Engineers do
@redashes47537 ай бұрын
"aigh anyways..."
@Elldar1113 ай бұрын
AE2: Look what they need to mimic a fraction of our power
@AB-tl4er2 ай бұрын
@@Elldar111 Yeah, but I guess it's more about having fun making it than using it haha
@ayzekpie94327 ай бұрын
What a useful building! I think if I take down the Himalayas next to my base, I just have enough space for it.
@Chanpaiix6 ай бұрын
🤣
@borealis53796 ай бұрын
That may not be enough
@Flufflord_Puffball5 ай бұрын
the world goes down to -64, ground is usually around 70, there's enough place underground
@optic54532 ай бұрын
@@Flufflord_Puffballdo u understand how long it would take to dig out space to build this?😂
@juanquireyes67032 ай бұрын
@@optic5453 tnt duper: *i be poppin bottles*
@Ocvirk4206 ай бұрын
Watching this as a first time watcher was wild. In the first part bro was pondering seperate redstone mechanisms like he didn't know much, then made something that i have no clue how it works, then made a fully functioning computer without colored wiring, what a development
@lamfrancisco1546 ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly, he got to the first big block and I saw the comment about him making a computer and I was impressed there already…only to see what they were really referring to. Jaw dropped
@gleedl76773 ай бұрын
as mumbo jumbo says "its quite simple"
@matheusalvarenga7820Ай бұрын
that's a Factorio player for you, these guys are insane
@Spoon800857 ай бұрын
The uncolored wiring is a crazy flex for a computer
@stochastis7 ай бұрын
I have ascended and become one with the machine. Colors are of no use to me on this plane.
@stuckonaslide5 ай бұрын
thats why its a masterpiece and not just a cool build
@MrXontrosPanikosАй бұрын
@RobokiYT the real flex is that he showed us building every module from the ground up, explaining why it is necessary and how it works, making it understandable to the rest of us. After his explanation, everyone can build a reliable autocrafter for a single recipe. Everyone can DESIGN an autocrafter for his specific needs. That's the real flex. The rest is just weeks of work and dedication.
@B3UTYRАй бұрын
@@stochastis AE2 is free bro js use it 😭🙏
@0vercrafted7 ай бұрын
Was thinking this is ridiculously unnecessary and bulky for no reason. Until you pointed out that it deals with ingredients that are missing by also crafting those... Damn
@dark6.6E-346 ай бұрын
Was thinking this is ridiculously unnecessary and bulky for no reason. Until he pointed out that it deals with ingredients that are missing by also crafting those. And then I continued to think it is ridiculously unnecessary and bulky for no reason.
@stochastis5 ай бұрын
Teehee. What even is overengineering?
@gigaflynn_Ай бұрын
Mad skills bruh. The omnissiah has blessed your design.
@trollchristianjb12337 ай бұрын
Only building this redstone monstrosity out of white wool is diabolic💀
@crimson253526 ай бұрын
why wool? I always see redstoners using colored wool but why not concrete or something? is it just preference
@Rec0n_YT6 ай бұрын
@@crimson25352 just because its easier to automate in survival, and its been the block since before concrete and we dont change xD. we decided on wool years and years ago as its pretty easy to get for survival, and can colour code our redstone
@crimson253526 ай бұрын
@@Rec0n_YT i understood the color coding but never thought about how its easier than concrete for survival and how concrete was only recently added, thanks bro i know thats such a small thing but its lowkey been on my mind for a year or two
@Rec0n_YT6 ай бұрын
@@crimson25352 no problem and your welcome!
@trollchristianjb12336 ай бұрын
@@crimson25352 to be real. I think the only reason why we use wool is because it was the only option back then. And then it stuck ever since, I have no proof to back up this claim. But I think it’s quite possible. Think about it. Wool is a flammable block. Almost any other block would be a better alternative.
@BinxCraft7 ай бұрын
There’s a lot of comments talking about how this build is a little unnecessarily complex, but I think that’s what makes this video so good! Watching you learn how things work as you go is a nice change of pace.
@rynow19926 ай бұрын
I highly agree.. helping me learn too
@stochastis5 ай бұрын
Thanks, m8! Glad you enjoyed it! I really enjoyed learning along the way maself.
@ThatsCyrus3 ай бұрын
watching Redstoning in the making is refreshing, I love the efficient and gorgeous circuitry from experts, but a lot of people don't intuitively understand how certain circuits work, so watching those über-efficient machines being built and how each part works is lost on a lot of people BUT having inefficient machines that seem bulky makes them easier to understand. Sure they're not the prettiest thing, but that's also how computers were initially developed! Massive machines taking up whole offices only capable of calculating arithmetic, now in the palm of your hand.
@FloopieWorld5 ай бұрын
"I dont wanna have to use a 9 long redstone line" *proceeds to make a much more complicated redstone setup consisting of repeaters, comparators and lecterns taking up like 20 blockss*
@fuuryuuSKK7 ай бұрын
for your "put a single item into a hopper chain on a rising edge" usecase, the Dropper is exactly what you want.
@stochastis7 ай бұрын
That would’ve literally been perfect! How did I not think of that? Smh. 🙄
@ilyatka44017 ай бұрын
@@stochastis maybe you LOVE overcomplicating things?
@RustyhairedLamialp95757 ай бұрын
@@ilyatka4401 or maybe the dropper is one of minecraft's neglected blocks
@wiggletonthewise21417 ай бұрын
Ah yes, droppers exist
@PyroYeet7 ай бұрын
0:01 FACTORIO REFERENCE RAHHHHH THE FACTORY MUST GROW
@tytustaksobie7 ай бұрын
YEAH POLLUTION MEANS PRODUCTION
@AJ_Artisans_7 ай бұрын
WE "Making peace" WITH THE NATIVES WITH THIS ONE
@max-wi7xf7 ай бұрын
when the farming wins the grinding:
@d3vitron7797 ай бұрын
New minecraft achievement: beat the game using minimum amount of crafts
@linkmon127 ай бұрын
TRAINS ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN THE OCEAN
@macadelic89237 ай бұрын
close enough welcome back mumbo jumbo
@bennyk3847 ай бұрын
I love how you decided to automate crafting you learned so much basic/intermediate level redstone. And I'm not being sarcastic here, im genuinely impressed you bit off so much and learned along the way. Edit: 10:20 ok nvm what the fuck. You cooked so hard you burnt down the kitchen 💀
@stochastis5 ай бұрын
Teehee. Yeah, learning the specifics of Minecraft redstone was interesting for sure, but after I got the basics down, a lot of my CS background helped push things forward quickly.
@farpurple3 ай бұрын
@@stochastis when you let programmer into minecraft, he makes object oriented redstone..
@PapaLurts7 ай бұрын
This is so ridiculously complicated and large.... I LOVE IT!
@stuckonaslide5 ай бұрын
"We have applied energistics 2 at home" applied energistics 2 at home:
@milkman44074 ай бұрын
AE2 devs watching someone make an AE2 setup with red stone:
@cecilrhodes21537 ай бұрын
This is the most inefficient way this problem could possibly have been solved. Congratulations.
@tbush66577 ай бұрын
Imagine a tree farm and iron farm feeding into an autocrafter to make all iron and wood products. Plus every other type of farmable items to make every type of item without you needing to leave your home. Your storage chest just fills itself up automatically with rarely even needing to push a button since your farms are almost always on and producing
@durjam37342 ай бұрын
@tbush6657 This what what my fantasy minecraft base is like in dreams lol
@W1KTORiousАй бұрын
@@durjam3734 oh boy do I have a game for you Satisfactory
@Eraisuithon7 ай бұрын
Placing the supply of items in the opposite order and just letting the hoppers push them one at a time would prevent you from having to decode which step of the craft you were on, you would just have to trigger all the suppliers once at the same time and distance from crafter in hoppers would decide ordering
@stochastis5 ай бұрын
So glad you made this recommendation! I actually tried implementing that in the livestream I did a while back and I like it a lot better than the step-decoding method. Thanks!
@Evalinco7 ай бұрын
my favourite part of this video was when I accidentally skipped to the end of the video and watched as the crafter with 9 pieces of restore hooked up to it transformed into a nasa supercomputer you are a genius
@sky5gaming7 ай бұрын
Amazing, a few things I could recommend though. Using binary instead of signal strength is a lot faster because you only need a repeater every 15 blocks instead of a comparetor every other block. You can also "store" recipes in crafters by having more of the item in the slot than is needed to craft the item, kind of like how item filters work. I am currently on a trip but when I get home I am definitely going to try and recreate this monstrosity myself with some upgrades.
@stochastis5 ай бұрын
Thanks for the recommendations! I absolutely agree that binary signals would've been muuuch faster. The issue I ran into though was that binary, of course, can't store as much data as simply as signal strength can. There were a couple different kinds of wires I could've used that would've significantly sped up the data transfer speed on the wires, but I was too lazy to implement them. Lol. I am curious though, did you ever recreate this monstrosity? Haha. If you did, I'd love to know about any upgrades you made!
@sky5gaming5 ай бұрын
@@stochastis No, I got busy building wordle and forgot all about it
@Super-727 ай бұрын
Restone is harder than being an actual nasa engineer
@Shaju97517 ай бұрын
*builds an entire computer* Also: I’m a lazy bum
@harckoof2217 ай бұрын
Mom, can we have Mumbo Jumbo? No, son, we have Mumbo Jumbo at home. Mumbo Jumbo at home:
@stochastis5 ай бұрын
._. aM mUmBo JUmob
@cinnamoncat89503 ай бұрын
@@stochastis this feels like the type of comment you make where when someone replies to it 5 years later you dont remember making it at all
@kns77175 ай бұрын
If you wish to autocraft an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.
@dedmaxim997 ай бұрын
As a redstone computing fan, I really like that you went this approach, even making the system infinitely tileable. However, it is EXTREMELY slow - one item in a few minutes, it just completely destroys the point of having autocrafting. Not to mention that the thing is huge and wasteful in terms of how much is required to build it. There are a few nice things tho - it can quite easily be connected to some other computing systems, allowing better automation and stuff but it's really not a solution for a regular player, sadly
@brutexx27 ай бұрын
We need more autocrafting tech
@Akeirbuah7 ай бұрын
No shit
@fontajo7 ай бұрын
As a regular player myself, I see no reason to use the crafter at all, except at my gold farm to turn nuggets into ingots for bartering
@felipepadilha47377 ай бұрын
Yeah, at this point, just install applied energistics 2
@stochastis5 ай бұрын
Oh it's for sure suuuper slow. I did a livestream a while back where I implemented a couple changes that sped it up a little but, even after that, it's still much more of a Proof of Concept as opposed to an actual, practical thing that you'd build in survival. Lol. Thanks for the compliments about the tileability and connective capabilities! I love tileable stuff.
@matusbuzgo83663 ай бұрын
At 10:02 "with all of these stacked on top of each other" cracked me up. Also love how you color code your redstone, makes it even more confusing for an average redstoner. 😂 Also you know the machine is good when you need to use teleportation command blocks for its demonstration.
@matthewkendrick82807 ай бұрын
And most people are just gonna use the crafter for turning iron ingots into iron blocks
@dylanmahoney11207 ай бұрын
@@matthewkendrick8280 the realest thing I’ve ever heard
@matthewkendrick82807 ай бұрын
@@dylanmahoney1120 not to mention gold nuggets->ingots->blocks
@BLET_55artem555 ай бұрын
@@matthewkendrick8280 because, uhh, why not?
@Mcbuzzerr3 ай бұрын
The build up in complexity was executed so well. It perfectly illustrated how you can just keep making simple steps/iterations towards a complex goal and it's not this insurmountable accomplishment
@PNorthwest_Hoosier3 ай бұрын
Bravo, this is impressive! I think the storage solution could be improved in a way that would make coding recipes easier. If you tie a binary value to each possible ingredient, coding recipes becomes inputting the correct binary sequence. A simple example would be a crafting bench, with wood having an assigned 4-bit value of 0010, you would input 0010 four times and receive a crafting bench, a piston becomes 0010 three times, then the id for cobble, lets say 0001, then iron 0011, 0001, 0001, red-stone 0100, 0001 makes a piston.
@silverseergriclav7 ай бұрын
One thing I can think of, though don't have anywhere near the technical ability to implement, is bulk item transportation instead of single items. Using shulker boxes would be highest throughput, though minecarts might be easier to manage? But that would pretty drastically speed up the whole process since instead of the signals going back and forth through the computer for one craft, it would be for a whole box of 'em. Which is very useful when you need 27 stacks of stonecutters.
@Ckema6 ай бұрын
I'd recommend you check out cubicmetre's autocrafter which does exactly that whilst also being pretty realistically doable in survival. Only "downside" is that it doesn't store the recipes (Meaning you need to input each one) but that's really not a downside consider its U.I. is like a chunk wide compared to the monstruosity seen in this video. Don't get me wrong this video's autocrafter is still interesting but nowhere near practical nor realistically buildable in an actual survival world.
@MILK08C7 ай бұрын
wait till he hears about create, this guy would be dangerous
@FATFATTY2BY43 ай бұрын
Oh god don't let him know!
@MattiAntsuK7 ай бұрын
Now that you've done all recipies. You should do a video of beating the Ender Dragon starting from scratch and you're only allowed to use the crafter (to craft of course)!
@Ethan13371Ай бұрын
Craftorio
@ArraxShadowfang7 ай бұрын
Within this realm of blocks and ore, A Redstone maze, forevermore. With auto-crafters, stacked and tall, This miner's built a master hall. For years he toiled, with circuits bright, Designing systems, day and night. From humble pickaxe to delight, He's automated every crafting site. The furnaces roar with rhythmic beat, While droppers dance, a symphony sweet. No recipe escapes his fleet, Of Redstone wonders, oh so neat. So is he lazy? Well, perhaps, He lets the circuits handle all the flaps. But in this world of Redstone traps, He's found a way to take a nap. And as the diamonds gleam so bright, The ender dragon takes its flight, This miner rests with all his might, A Redstone genius, shining light.
@paladinkhan6 ай бұрын
Beautiful, ive always been a builder but i can really appreciate this kinda jazz. I would love to incorporate both things together and see some kind of crazy machine like this in a neat building to match
@eshleyyy2 ай бұрын
Technically you could just passivize crafting a double chest of every item in the game so you dont have to wait 10 minutes for each item to be crafted and can just grab whatever is in the chest and have the system craft it passively on the side, but as an exercise in computers this is cool ASF and diabolical 😭🙏
@Ethan13371Ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly. Make the machine give you the items now, and craft them later. It’s like time travel!
@metallbaumitmaxАй бұрын
The fact you sound exactly like the @thelibrarian makes it so weird but also fascinating
@milkman44074 ай бұрын
To be fair to you, once you get a degree, basic arithmetic actually gets a 20x difficulty boost
@RoxGamingPL40803 ай бұрын
First part of the video: bro just found out that redstone exist Second part of the video: bro made the most complex crafting computer in the entire minecraft history
@ItsLeery6 ай бұрын
Me opening the video to try to replicate it thinking of doing it in survival...
@michellegodwin65672 ай бұрын
A sufficiently insane redstoner could hook up some auto farms and smelters and never have to do anything in Minecraft ever again
@caitlynburks80447 ай бұрын
WOW! So much time has been put into this. GREAT VIDEO!!!
@Cptn_Candy2 ай бұрын
Ah yes a fellow engineer who will do a disproportionate amount of work to be able to do less.
@kluttglutt6648Ай бұрын
Why does bro only have 5k subs i watched this and tought he had like hundreds of thousands or something like that keep up the good content
@James_Dolensky7 ай бұрын
I haven't yet, but I plan on using the autocrafter to take the sugarcane from my sugar farm and the gunpowder from my creeper farm to make fireworks
@sergeykononov16733 ай бұрын
Love that the crafter waited for crafting table to be crafted and nod just expexted it to be in stock I have an idea. How about implementing top-sorting the item recepies into this so the omnicrafters could be in a row. Great video!!
@prizegotti6 ай бұрын
My guy, just put the items in the crafter before connecting the hoppers to fill it. That way the slots are already filled and new items can only stack on themselves. Let your automatic farms fill your system and then start using it. As long as your don't use up every single item in your storage it will continue working indefinitely. If you're automatic farms put out at a fast enough rate, it will never stop.
@El_Presidente_53377 ай бұрын
If I would build what I'm seeing at the 10 minute mark on my SMP it wouldn't only be the biggest thing in the world but also partially out of the render distance.
@Fixti0n5 ай бұрын
Have anyone told him you can point droppers into a hopper to only send one item into it, then stack that to make something that sends items down the hopper in order? Its an old brewing stand automation, should work with crafters.
@taterbullock40304 ай бұрын
I love everything about this. I have absolutely zero need for any bridge in any scenario but now I will be attempting making this as soon as I get home (please make tutorial for the blueprint 🙏) to make multiple bridges everywhere for absolutely no reason whatsoever
@4louisMC2 ай бұрын
Through this insanity, I can really appreciate AE2 and how easy crafting and automation is... damn!
@maligma83212 ай бұрын
I loved the “Alright” counter 🤣
@KallanEverden6 ай бұрын
Pretty neat. Looking forward to seeing more
@isimndisimnd7 ай бұрын
ok now we have to wait mumbo jumbo or someone else make this as small as possible (this is a good idea but 60 blocks of space for 1 recipe cant fit into any storage systems)😅
@stenson13537 ай бұрын
I struggle with understanding redstone concepts; Despite that, I found this video very easy to comprehend and entertaining at the same time. Keep it up man!
@StressedOut-cl5ne7 ай бұрын
Another way this could have been achieved is if you used ROM for all the items, and only having the necessary items to craft a result, allowing for only one crafter being necessary and then having some dummy item, to be filtered out when releasing an item. For items with multiple steps like a dispenser, you could have a temporary storage that would store the item, and then release at the proper time.
@Arcanidge4 ай бұрын
I used to be a Redstoner. Things got insane. This is an amazing machine. I think making a 9 slot variant and loading it for spefic bulk projects is already plenty. Crazy build scale
@rynow19926 ай бұрын
What a great building montage! I genuinely laughed a couple times 😂
@alpacasmafia92657 ай бұрын
Only 2 videos, but quickly becoming one of my favorites! This was awesome. Great concept and execution
@baitornot46973 ай бұрын
Very cool, but I’ll just download applied energistics instead.
@jasonmarbach6 ай бұрын
What a journey this video is. Masterful
@SamTehSquirrelАй бұрын
Alright I just finished watching the video, wow you are a redstone wizard.
@SneakWeak7 ай бұрын
You knew this was controversial but you still did it ... daibolical
@nasc53767 ай бұрын
Was expecting a mumbo jumbo like video, but i got a whole other level of crazy 🤣
@MrMaksibon7 ай бұрын
I was thinking about wireless signals and portal delivery, but in fact this needs optimization starting from "regular resources", you need to statistically analyze each recipe of the game and calculate which crafting resources are the most common, so the most common resources will always be nearby and can be sent very quickly whereas less common ones are slower. But this is just a theory. Thanks for reading.
@abbenylund3 ай бұрын
For moving signal strengths over distances, I know of two ways, only one of which is realistically viable to my knowledge. There might be more, I don't play around with redstone myself much so I only know these two options by chance from watching videos. The first and older is by converting the signal strength to pulses (pulse length modulation), then reading those pulses and converting them back into a signal strength. This is a lot faster as the pulses can travel 15 blocks before needing a repeater and thus getting a short delay. This is the viable option. I only even mention this second option for fun, because it seems horrible, but I believe you can use calibrated sculk sensors. They were added in 1.20 and allows you to send signal strengths at the "speed of sound". Of course, in Minecraft, sound vibrations move pretty slow, but it's a lot faster than what you have already. I'm not sure if it's faster than 1 repeater per 16 blocks though. And there is also the downside of needing to prevent several lines from interfering with each other, as sculk sensors are very sensitive and prone to error if it recognizes sounds from somewhere unintended. You're also more limited, since some of the sounds required to pass a signal strength can't be automated. Such as a signal strength of 1, output when the sensor "hears" movement. Or 5, when the sensor "hears" the dismounting of a mod or equipping of gear. Or 14, a mob spawning. Or 15, a mob or player dying, or an explosion happening. Some of these can technically be automated, but to my knowledge (which I admit is limited) it would be far more effort than it is worth. Obviously the first is more optimal and viable in every way. But I still think seeing the second used would be more fun and cool. Sound powered redstone has always fascinated me since the sculk sensors were introduced.
@absolutelynobody123453 ай бұрын
Mom, I want Factorio. We have Factorio at home. Factorio at home:
@averyzielnicki74506 ай бұрын
This man right here. This man is a genius.
@wongmanwaihehe6 ай бұрын
You: Male a very complex redstone machine. Me: Crafting book
@Ckema6 ай бұрын
The way you did the wiring at 1:10 triggered me so hard. At first I was like "Why is he putting the signal in a second comparator when he could directly put it into the first comparator?" And then I saw that that second comparator was in substract mode and was "Huh?" And then I saw the tomfoolery with the repeters and the other comparator (again in substract mode for some reason) in the back and I lost it. How could a single mind could come up with a solution so complicated to such an easy problem? 💀. Cool video still but the space optimisation enthusiast that I am definitely was hurt in the process of making it.
@stevegrahams46184 ай бұрын
@@Ckema yeah but, that was called a prototype, so more about function then form
@theguythatsaidbruh45486 ай бұрын
Close enough, welcome back fundy voiceover
@josepescudefont39357 ай бұрын
thankyou, i can finally build somethin usefull and simple on my base
@BLET_55artem555 ай бұрын
Don't forget the 9x9 0 tick piston door
@netyrsgamer92537 ай бұрын
ME system in vanilla minecraft, lets gooo
@Hhtgmjtfbn7jhttgb7 ай бұрын
This is beautiful! I hope your channel grows from more awesome content like this!
@jonnevitu49795 ай бұрын
Forget about the rainworld custom map, thats already an iterator lol
@matveytsarichansky89537 ай бұрын
3:16 you said "alright" but didnt count it :(
@bastiallwin85767 ай бұрын
Crazy impressive but damn I don't wanna wait 5 minutes until I have the item
@SillyNinja6 ай бұрын
Alright, that’s awesome.
@ilizun6 ай бұрын
AE2/RS: Look what they need to mimic a fraction of our power
@SkyBlueEnzo6 ай бұрын
Add a few farms, an auto sorter and a storages unit for sorted items and you done, minecraft has been 100%
@elconejitopandrosito49717 ай бұрын
Could we get a tutorial for some farms? Like theianxofour wither farm, I could use the crafter to transform the bones into bone block! Besides that, holy macaroni, amazing video hahaha
@LazeCrazeTV6 ай бұрын
this is crazy 💀💀💀 amazing project man
@QQueTV6 ай бұрын
you're awesome, I'm following you on twitch!
@stochastis6 ай бұрын
Thanks, m8!
@jtdownes4 ай бұрын
After seeing this, I feel better about the 6 hours I spent trying to build a compact crafter module. Couldn’t find any good videos. I got a 2 item input crafter in a 6x6x9 module and a 3 item crafter in a 6x6x10 footprint.
@JasperMarique6 ай бұрын
1:43 if you power the hopper it will not continue flowing in the crafter so you could put other items in
@faithcreed5570Ай бұрын
Imagine this: He built this entire thing, just to build torches... ONLY torches
@Letnam5 ай бұрын
it seems to me that your build crafts every component needed to build more complex ones, which is very good, but makes it really slow if you don't have a stock of those. I guess you could maybe make it craft most used component like sticks or planks in great quantities and store them somewhere so the machine can get them faster. Maybe the machine could check its stocks and craft what it needs whenever nobody's using it. I don't know if i explained myself clearly but i hope so Wonderful build tho, it's truly impressive
@charadremur3337 ай бұрын
So make it connect automatically to farms that make raw ingredients, a storage system to automatically keep the chests full of items, be able to smartly tell what is wrong and how to fix it or if its easier to just blow it up, and a quarry that the crafter can turn on or off. Then you can be truly automatic.
@bmanpura5 ай бұрын
I am a lazy gamer. _Spent weeks automating tasks that takes at most 5 minutes_ You'll make a fine engineer one day. Good job.
@artronino_46405 ай бұрын
I feel like this guy is eventually make a sentient AI in minecraft. Bro made a machine that searches for what he has and doesnt have when crafting
@SkyfireAnthem267 ай бұрын
BABE WAKE UP! New Stochastis vid is out!
@fruitless-loops7 ай бұрын
Yo man!! great video!!! You're super underrated, dropped a sub and hope to see more like this!
@2016_nba7 ай бұрын
Bro you are way too underrated Dont forget me when you get famous
@ItsLime5 ай бұрын
It would honestly be more efficient to just use a regular crafting table
@memor227 ай бұрын
You sure know how to build redstone but HOLY COW do you need to learn how to optimize the circuits!
@sleepyaf15963 ай бұрын
Imagine hooking this up to all your biggest farms
@kenryy925 ай бұрын
Imagine having every autofarm, building that monstrosity, after adding a chunk loaders and tubes in that system. I think crafting by hand is much easier 😅
@Endersgamejp7 ай бұрын
I've got a modded world on bedrock that uses vatonage's refined storage and bedrock armour mods. Refined storage allows me to input cobblestone into a compression crafting chain that compresses it into sextuple compressed and then into bedrock blocks. Mostly just block compression for easy storage... Gold diamonds coal, ect.
@hamzamotara43042 ай бұрын
Forget AE2 vs RS, this is peak crafting.
@candybluebird7 ай бұрын
there are definitely better ways to do this (like only using one autocrafter for every recipe to reduce latency and size), but this machine is beautiful and very impressive. Good job dude
@BenjaminWheeler05106 ай бұрын
Create mod enjoyers: “look what they need to mimic a fraction of our power”