<p>Home News Survival Minecraft Minecrafter creates a huge Halo ring that actually freaking spins
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<p>Published by Lauren Morton, 4 January 22,
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<p>You'll need to alter it However, you can download it and play around with it.
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<p>If there's a thing a world made of cubes isn't supposed to do, it's making circles. However, some Minecraft players just love defying logic to create stunning round structures. One brave builder went even further and threw out every rule to create the world's first rotating ring. Yes, an entire moving Halo ring, complete with diverse biomes as well as a beam emitter and an exploding Pelican. Best of all, you can download and explore the ring yourself.
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<p>Reach the heights of Reach, an Minecraft YouTuber, claims his Halo ring was inspired by the design of another creator. https://telegra.ph/Minecraft-Adds-an-Online-Shop-For-Mobile-Add-ons-09-15 This smaller ring world is impressive, but the comments on that post suggested it could be even more impressive if it actually worked. Reach was up to the challenge using WorldEdit and Create to design and create a ring that actually moves.
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<p>It was a massive undertaking. He used the Clockwork Bearing blocks in the Create mod to control the ring's movements. A single clockwork bearing welded to the ring's rim could not do the job, it was discovered. "The first time I tried to move it and it wouldn't render due to the entity generated being too large for Minecraft to handle," he explains.
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<p>Reach decided to break it down into four parts using a rotating bearing, and an arm. Reach ended up with eight bearings attached to the sections of the ring as spokes. "I did think it wasn't going to work," he tells me, "but my stubbornness and wanting to make something unique for YouTube and my viewers was enough for me to pull through." After all that? Holy crap, it moves!
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<p>Planet Minecraft has the project available for download if wish to experience the beauty of a world-like ring. It requires Minecraft 1.16. Once inside the game, you'll manually turn on the bearings to get the machine running, but once you're on the ground, it'll keep on ticking.
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<p>It doesn't whirl around constantly which means you don't need to keep pace with the hamster wheel that spins forever. The entire ring spins in increments about every 30 seconds. All the better, because I was a bit disoriented and motion sick while exploring it as is. It's going to take me some time to find my space legs. Reach had to lock each block in order to spin the ring properly, so you won't be able build or build mine here. It's a diorama that's more than a playable world but still very amazing.
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<p>You can hear some more of Reach's process in the video on YouTube below, where he discusses the difficulties of designing the ring, as well as the various decorative choices he made while building to give the whole thing an Halo feel.
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<p>Bless the Minecraft builders. They never stop.
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<p>-- (opens new tab)
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<p>Lauren began writing for PC Gamer as a freelancer in 2017 while chasing the Dark Souls fashion police and took on the role of Chief Editor and Associate Editor Minecraft Liker in 2021. She originally started her career in game development, and is fascinated by how games tick in the modding and speedrunning scenes. She loves long books, longer RPGs and multiplayer encrypted games. She also loves crafting with co-op.
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