I can't believe I've watched so many videos with redstone and I've never heard of strong vs weak power. Thank you for making such an informative video!
For bedrock players , -Noteblocks cannot be detected by observers -you cannot right click to change the redstone dust -redstone wire automatically configures itself to point toward adjacent blocks or mechanism components -a transparent block can transmit redstone power downward -there is no quasiconnectivity -you can use piston to push dispenser -farms that are built using TNT may not be that effective in bedrock edition as tnt explosion does not give you 100% of items that are exploded -you can waterlog a redstone repeater
On Java the observer detects block state changes. On Bedrock it detects block updates. One thing that works on both versions is opening a barrel. I'm using barrels to activate a few things because of that...
Don't forget random block update order, which can make the same pattern of blocks do a completely different mess of unpredictable things every time you activate it. Definitely one of the killers for serious tech on Bedrock.
I learn something every single time. Never understood the target block's "solid block redirects power into itself" feature. I'd heard of it, but did not understand. Thanks for the visual.
I think a 'state of the world' type video would be cool at this point. Things like the storage system, slime farm, piglin farm, etc., were covered mostly in the videos, but then expanded off-camera. It would be cool to see how they ended up.
Will definitely be returning to this video soon. I do follow tutorials but sometimes I like to play around with the components by myself without any help and puzzle my way through, even though idk 90% of what I'm doing... But then again I do that with all life decisions so who's to say I'm doing things wrong, lol. My proudest achievement in doing this with creative mode redstone was making a pork farm that makes the pig fly with a shulker bullet before landing them on the ground to be collected by hoppers. Incredibly inefficient but makes up for it by being hilarious.
Yeah, that's my hope - people can use this as a reference guide if they get stuck with a specific component later. Sometimes I find it difficult to sift through all the information on the wiki :)
I know you decide on your own about what videos you want to make but I personally would love to see an episode about pandas- especially their personalities, genes and mutations. I want to get a brown panda but just can’t find any good explanations on yt about how their breeding actually works. Btw, loved this episode - finally I’m not a Redstone noob anymore!
We need to breed every mob in the game at some point, so I’m sure we’ll cover panda breeding. The wiki has lots of info in the meantime - it’s way more complex than I ever thought it would be 😅
This gives me a really good insight into Java redstone, always love seeing the differences between bedrock and java. Also I completely forgot daylight sensors are a thing, haven't used one for as long as I can remember.
@Samuel Werley tbh an observer is cheaper and more useful, since you need glass and three quartz for a sensor, but only one quartz and cobblestone for an observer
Barely into the video and already you've cleared up a major source of confusion for me--what the plus/dot of redstone dust even WAS. No redstone tutorial I've ever found before has ever explained such a basic but very important (if you want to be able to understand redstone) component! Thank you!
That might be because many of those redstone tutorials were created before Minecraft 1.16, when the redstone dot on Java edition was reverted to the + shape it had before (and always had on bedrock edition). That’s when the functionality was added to be able to shape the redstone dot. I think it was in no small part a concession to builders, who often use redstone dots and lines to resemble blood on the floor in horror themed builds.
If u can apply these knowledge, u'll remember the components individually. I've been messing with redstone for about 3 years and it comes naturally to me
Hands down, best redstone video I have seen on this site. Several others fails to mention interactions with components that don't have obvious redstone uses, such as hoppers and doors.
I would like to note that Redstone does behave a lot like electricity. The strength of electricity also decays over time which emulated in the game. On top of that you have voltage, similar to your "weak" and "strong" power think of that as high and low voltage; low voltage is normally used to power devices where as high voltage is normally reserved for traveling long distances and storage. The purposes are a bit different but it helps to tie that to a real world concept.
The most useful guide until now! Great job pixl, I was really really waiting for this vid for a really long time! Btw, the piston still not retracting after the power source is removed is a phenomenon called redstone budding.
This is literally the first redstone video I've ever seen that I actually understand and could follow along. (And i've seen a LOT) Pixlriffs the true survival guide!
I am trying to get better with red stone so I really appreciate this 🤗 thank you Pix Edit: I play bedrock and cannot thank you enough for dropping some other creators to find and follow for help 😊
Thank you! I've started minecraft in november as a geeky 33 yo and I kinda want to build nice redstone things but boi. A lot of tutorials don't explain too well what's going on? And even then, you explained some aspects I swear I did not learn so far. I don't miss any of your uploads. This game is so relaxing, and it's been honestly a life saver for me cause the last few months were high in anxiety. Thanks for enriching that!
This is incredibly helpful for accelerating my functional understanding of redstone. I find that most redstone tutorials are extremely useful if you’re looking to compile a catalog of prefabricated designs, but this is far more useful for getting started noodling around with redstone to create custom contraptions.
Way to tackle such a complex subject in an understandable way! I've been playing for a long time and enjoy doing redstone myself but this was a great explanation of concepts I only sort of grasped and did not bother to try to lock in. I'm glad you decided to put this in this season of survival guide.
Based on comments in previous Survival Guide videos, I imagine you've been fretting about how to do a video like this well for a long time. Achieved👏. There is so much I finally understand after watching this. Well done.
It's worth noting that there are two different "power level" distinctions. Strong vs weak power, and hard vs soft power. A strongly powered block activates adjacent mechanism (output) components, while a weakly powered block only activates itself, if it is a mechanism component. There are two different types of strong power, being hard and soft. The only distinction is when redstone dust is involved. Redstone dust can only soft-power a block, and can only be powered by a hard-powered block. This is what's actually going on in the video at 6:51. The block of polished andesite here actually is strongly powered, but only soft-powered. That is, it can activate adjacent mechanisms, like any other strongly powered block, as well as repeaters and comparators, but not redstone dust. All other power sources that can strongly power a block, hard-power that block, meaning you can take power directly from that block with redstone dust. If a block is soft-powered, you need a repeater or comparator to pull the signal through.
Another projectile that can activate target blocks: a player crashing headfirst into one on their elytra! Always thought that was a fun one. I sorta knew that strong and weak power were a thing, but I never really understood them... and I'm not 100% sure I even do now, but I've certainly learned some new stuff about what will make something get powered which way.
I learned you can right click redstone dust to make it not connect to things from this video. And here I thought I had vanilla redstone systems pretty much down. Thanks Pix!
This series is genuinely one of the most helpful and simultaneously calming guides I’ve ever seen, thank you for spending so much time on this! We appreciate you!
Most of the time "weak power" in this video means activate adjacent mechanism component but doesn't power the solid block (therefore doesn't activate components adjacent to that solid block) . Redstone lamp acts as both mechanism component and solid block here. However,in the explanation of redstone dust, when pixriff said redstone dust weak-powered the block it placed on, it's actually a diffeent definition (often referred as soft-powered, which means the block cannot power redstone dust but can power mechanism components and repeater/comparator, actually the block it points at is also soft-powered)
Three things that I presume will come up in a later re-visit of the topic.. 1) The 12-block limit of pistons, 2) Behavior of redstone going up/down block-sides and slabs, and 3) The effects of solid vs. transparent blocks in cutting off/allowing signal to pass for the above.
you've set my brain from 'no thoughts, head empty' to 'many thoughts, head full' and i cannot wait for my redstone heavy escape room tower to be completed now >:3
Thank you so, so much for this video Pixlriffs!! I've been building redstone stuff from tutorials but since I never understood the basics, I wasn't able to build any designs of my own. This was incredibly helpful!!
This video will be useful to come back to for a quick explanation of things! I've had trouble conceptualising weak vs strong power, I found it useful to think of it as being like the power makes the block it connects to like a redstone block, and from what I see in this video it's a little more complicated than that but I think it mostly fits?
That’s a decent way of understanding it, as long as you know how a redstone block behaves in the first place 😅 Whatever works for you, really. Everybody learns and remembers stuff differently
Thank you so much for this video! I've been dying to get a comprehensive look at redstone rather than learning it piecemeal so I'm sure I'll be returning to this video again and again as I practice!
WOAH! A big fat thumb up!! But I do want to know how those different components interact with each together to build complicated red stone machines, such as item sort, ancient debris red stone machine, TNT machines and more! Thank you so much for the video!
Thank you for this whirlwind tour of redstone components! It's always helpful to understand how and why things work. Many are the times when I've tried to invent a redstone contraption and either couldn't get it to work the way I wanted or felt that it could be made more compact. This video is an eye-opener! You've reminded me about a few things that had faded in memory and a few other things that are new to me. What I've learned and re-learned today will be immediately and forever helpful!
This is such a comprehensive video. Explains so much. Wish I had this back level of detail when Minecraft first started introducing Redstone to the game.
THANK YOU SO MUCH i wanted a redstone video from you since you started using redstone in this series, and co incidentally i was stuck at a mechanism I'm making for mobs not entering my house which i can take care of now because you explained the reverse working of things when you place a redstone torch, once again thanks 😊
This was an excellent introduction video. If you are looking for more nitty-gritty details, I would recommend looking up LogicalGeekBoy and the Dissecting Minecraft series.
The technical community prefers game tick more than redstone tick because many events are not happening in unit of redstone tick. For example, water flows 1 block per 5 game tick (=2.5 redstone tick). Whenever they are explaining a design they are likely referring a tick to game tick rather than redstone tick. I think the only exception is when they make a tutorial and tell you how many tick you should set for a repeater.
This video comes to me with good timing. I just got done building an Ilmango Witch Farm design for my Vault Hunters world, and while I understand for the most part what it's doing (mainly from watching several other redstone tutorials mostly by Mumbo), it's good to get a refresher on the components. I highly doubt I'll be able to build anything of my own design anytime soon, but I know one day it will all just click for me.
It takes time, and it can be discouraging when it seems to come so naturally to other people - but stick with it! Observers were honestly the addition that kick-started my understanding of redstone.
What an excellent video. You're the best. This is also huge because redstone will have official codified in-game lore in 1.19 with the redstone labs in the Ancient Cities. I love redstone and this makes it less intimidating for newer players amazed by the works of Mumbo and the like. God bless
People who make complex machines like computers in minecraft and ram / memory storage use the repeater lock mechanism. Also it took me at least a week to wrap my head around the comparator
There are (at least) five useful resource packs for redstone on VanillaTweaks: Directional Hoppers, Directional Dispensers and Droppers, Directional Observers, Redstone Power Levels, and Sticky Piston Sides.
My strategy is to watch as many redstone videos it takes to garner a rudimentary understanding of how it works. It's been 4 years..... still don't get it. I'm still relegated to simply following recipes other cooks have developed. Which is fine, I guess. We can't all be Mumbo and Doc
Could you make a video individually on rarities like pink sheep or blue axolotls? I would also like if you did name tag easter eggs like jeb_ or Dinnerbone. Maybe also get another pet like a dog!
Trust me. Knowing one way of how a comparator works is more useful than trying to figure out what to do with the theory of it. Simply because you can modify the circuit around the comparator to make the output you receive do something else.
I just want to say that tripwire will emit redstone wheb the string is broken to circumvent this break the string with shears btw pretty sure quasi connectivity applies to dispensers and droppers
If you craft a firework with a firework star will it consume the firework star? and does a firework made with a firework star do more damage than a regular firework when fired from a crossbow?
I can't believe I've watched so many videos with redstone and I've never heard of strong vs weak power. Thank you for making such an informative video!
Right. I can say I learned something today from @pixlriffs
His strong vs weak power point was not really correct
Ditto
same xD
@@GreatTazGaming pixlriffs
For bedrock players ,
-Noteblocks cannot be detected by observers
-you cannot right click to change the redstone dust
-redstone wire automatically configures itself to point toward adjacent blocks or mechanism components
-a transparent block can transmit redstone power downward
-there is no quasiconnectivity
-you can use piston to push dispenser
-farms that are built using TNT may not be that effective in bedrock edition as tnt explosion does not give you 100% of items that are exploded
-you can waterlog a redstone repeater
Observers only detect when redstone dust is broken but not when it's placed
Also there’s no bud powering either
On Java the observer detects block state changes. On Bedrock it detects block updates. One thing that works on both versions is opening a barrel. I'm using barrels to activate a few things because of that...
Don't forget random block update order, which can make the same pattern of blocks do a completely different mess of unpredictable things every time you activate it. Definitely one of the killers for serious tech on Bedrock.
@@Wenmo85 he that's not true
I learn something every single time. Never understood the target block's "solid block redirects power into itself" feature. I'd heard of it, but did not understand. Thanks for the visual.
I think a 'state of the world' type video would be cool at this point. Things like the storage system, slime farm, piglin farm, etc., were covered mostly in the videos, but then expanded off-camera. It would be cool to see how they ended up.
Will definitely be returning to this video soon. I do follow tutorials but sometimes I like to play around with the components by myself without any help and puzzle my way through, even though idk 90% of what I'm doing... But then again I do that with all life decisions so who's to say I'm doing things wrong, lol.
My proudest achievement in doing this with creative mode redstone was making a pork farm that makes the pig fly with a shulker bullet before landing them on the ground to be collected by hoppers. Incredibly inefficient but makes up for it by being hilarious.
Yeah, that's my hope - people can use this as a reference guide if they get stuck with a specific component later. Sometimes I find it difficult to sift through all the information on the wiki :)
One of, if not THE best “general” redstone videos ive seen. Very well done. I will be referencing this in the future!
Same.
I know you decide on your own about what videos you want to make but I personally would love to see an episode about pandas- especially their personalities, genes and mutations. I want to get a brown panda but just can’t find any good explanations on yt about how their breeding actually works. Btw, loved this episode - finally I’m not a Redstone noob anymore!
We need to breed every mob in the game at some point, so I’m sure we’ll cover panda breeding. The wiki has lots of info in the meantime - it’s way more complex than I ever thought it would be 😅
This gives me a really good insight into Java redstone, always love seeing the differences between bedrock and java.
Also I completely forgot daylight sensors are a thing, haven't used one for as long as I can remember.
I mostly use daylight sensors in ceilings, because they have a really unique texture on the bottom of the block
@@Pixlriffs I agree, they are a great block for building with the textures.
@Samuel Werley tbh an observer is cheaper and more useful, since you need glass and three quartz for a sensor, but only one quartz and cobblestone for an observer
Barely into the video and already you've cleared up a major source of confusion for me--what the plus/dot of redstone dust even WAS. No redstone tutorial I've ever found before has ever explained such a basic but very important (if you want to be able to understand redstone) component! Thank you!
That might be because many of those redstone tutorials were created before Minecraft 1.16, when the redstone dot on Java edition was reverted to the + shape it had before (and always had on bedrock edition). That’s when the functionality was added to be able to shape the redstone dot.
I think it was in no small part a concession to builders, who often use redstone dots and lines to resemble blood on the floor in horror themed builds.
Definitely the episode which I learned the most from so far.
Now the hard part comes: remembering and application!
If u can apply these knowledge, u'll remember the components individually. I've been messing with redstone for about 3 years and it comes naturally to me
Hands down, best redstone video I have seen on this site.
Several others fails to mention interactions with components that don't have obvious redstone uses, such as hoppers and doors.
I would like to note that Redstone does behave a lot like electricity. The strength of electricity also decays over time which emulated in the game. On top of that you have voltage, similar to your "weak" and "strong" power think of that as high and low voltage; low voltage is normally used to power devices where as high voltage is normally reserved for traveling long distances and storage. The purposes are a bit different but it helps to tie that to a real world concept.
Oh?! A redstone video that doesn’t give me the headache nor the boredom! Great video, Pixl! I feel I can finally understand redstone and circuits now!
The most useful guide until now! Great job pixl, I was really really waiting for this vid for a really long time!
Btw, the piston still not retracting after the power source is removed is a phenomenon called redstone budding.
This is literally the first redstone video I've ever seen that I actually understand and could follow along. (And i've seen a LOT) Pixlriffs the true survival guide!
I am trying to get better with red stone so I really appreciate this 🤗 thank you Pix
Edit: I play bedrock and cannot thank you enough for dropping some other creators to find and follow for help 😊
Thank you! I've started minecraft in november as a geeky 33 yo and I kinda want to build nice redstone things but boi. A lot of tutorials don't explain too well what's going on? And even then, you explained some aspects I swear I did not learn so far.
I don't miss any of your uploads. This game is so relaxing, and it's been honestly a life saver for me cause the last few months were high in anxiety. Thanks for enriching that!
The description of strong and weak powering helps SO MUCH! I now realize that was a huge source of my confusion and frustration.
This is incredibly helpful for accelerating my functional understanding of redstone. I find that most redstone tutorials are extremely useful if you’re looking to compile a catalog of prefabricated designs, but this is far more useful for getting started noodling around with redstone to create custom contraptions.
Way to tackle such a complex subject in an understandable way! I've been playing for a long time and enjoy doing redstone myself but this was a great explanation of concepts I only sort of grasped and did not bother to try to lock in. I'm glad you decided to put this in this season of survival guide.
Based on comments in previous Survival Guide videos, I imagine you've been fretting about how to do a video like this well for a long time. Achieved👏. There is so much I finally understand after watching this. Well done.
YES!! This clears up my confusion on some circuits I have worked on. You clearly explained Redstone better than I have heard before.
I had many lightbulb moments watching this video. Thank you
Where has this game changing info been all my MC life!?!? Thank you for the way you broke this down and the chapter set up. Saving this for ever!!
It's worth noting that there are two different "power level" distinctions. Strong vs weak power, and hard vs soft power.
A strongly powered block activates adjacent mechanism (output) components, while a weakly powered block only activates itself, if it is a mechanism component.
There are two different types of strong power, being hard and soft. The only distinction is when redstone dust is involved. Redstone dust can only soft-power a block, and can only be powered by a hard-powered block. This is what's actually going on in the video at 6:51. The block of polished andesite here actually is strongly powered, but only soft-powered. That is, it can activate adjacent mechanisms, like any other strongly powered block, as well as repeaters and comparators, but not redstone dust. All other power sources that can strongly power a block, hard-power that block, meaning you can take power directly from that block with redstone dust. If a block is soft-powered, you need a repeater or comparator to pull the signal through.
This may just be the best redstone video on RUclips at the moment. Thanks @Pixlriffs for amazing content and a basic redstone education! 😅
Another projectile that can activate target blocks: a player crashing headfirst into one on their elytra! Always thought that was a fun one.
I sorta knew that strong and weak power were a thing, but I never really understood them... and I'm not 100% sure I even do now, but I've certainly learned some new stuff about what will make something get powered which way.
I've been Minecrafting for 9 years now and somehow didn't know that you could trigger tripwire with an arrow?? OMG I learned something. Thank You Pix
I learned you can right click redstone dust to make it not connect to things from this video. And here I thought I had vanilla redstone systems pretty much down. Thanks Pix!
Ever since this series started I've been patiently waiting for Pix to explain Redstone in his special Pixlriffs way. Today was that day, awesome.
Didn't know what some of the redstone components are until now! Thanks for the guide pix.
This series is genuinely one of the most helpful and simultaneously calming guides I’ve ever seen, thank you for spending so much time on this! We appreciate you!
Most of the time "weak power" in this video means activate adjacent mechanism component but doesn't power the solid block (therefore doesn't activate components adjacent to that solid block) . Redstone lamp acts as both mechanism component and solid block here. However,in the explanation of redstone dust, when pixriff said redstone dust weak-powered the block it placed on, it's actually a diffeent definition (often referred as soft-powered, which means the block cannot power redstone dust but can power mechanism components and repeater/comparator, actually the block it points at is also soft-powered)
Three things that I presume will come up in a later re-visit of the topic..
1) The 12-block limit of pistons,
2) Behavior of redstone going up/down block-sides and slabs, and
3) The effects of solid vs. transparent blocks in cutting off/allowing signal to pass for the above.
Yes, yes, and indeed yes!
Been playing this game for 8 years, and I have NEVER heard of Locked Repeaters. Mind blown
I'm sure this is your "play freebird" pix, thanks so much for the deeper dives. You are a font of knowledge.
Ooh and a huge props for the shout out/deference to other creators!
Very informative, can't wait to use some of the more quirky mechanics!
you've set my brain from 'no thoughts, head empty' to 'many thoughts, head full' and i cannot wait for my redstone heavy escape room tower to be completed now >:3
Thank you so, so much for this video Pixlriffs!! I've been building redstone stuff from tutorials but since I never understood the basics, I wasn't able to build any designs of my own. This was incredibly helpful!!
This video will be useful to come back to for a quick explanation of things! I've had trouble conceptualising weak vs strong power, I found it useful to think of it as being like the power makes the block it connects to like a redstone block, and from what I see in this video it's a little more complicated than that but I think it mostly fits?
That’s a decent way of understanding it, as long as you know how a redstone block behaves in the first place 😅
Whatever works for you, really. Everybody learns and remembers stuff differently
That's a lot of redstone info, must rewatch. Thanks Pix I've learnt so much and it's answered loads of questions 😄
Thank you so much for this video! I've been dying to get a comprehensive look at redstone rather than learning it piecemeal so I'm sure I'll be returning to this video again and again as I practice!
This is the first time comparators have made any sense to me, thanks for the video!
Comparators are the most complicated to master for me. Thank you for the explanation!!
WOAH! A big fat thumb up!! But I do want to know how those different components interact with each together to build complicated red stone machines, such as item sort, ancient debris red stone machine, TNT machines and more! Thank you so much for the video!
We've already covered item sorters in an earlier episode! We'll do more advanced redstone machines and sorting systems as the series continues :)
Thank you for this whirlwind tour of redstone components! It's always helpful to understand how and why things work. Many are the times when I've tried to invent a redstone contraption and either couldn't get it to work the way I wanted or felt that it could be made more compact. This video is an eye-opener! You've reminded me about a few things that had faded in memory and a few other things that are new to me. What I've learned and re-learned today will be immediately and forever helpful!
we need a part 2 on how to use this theory in action. like one example from each farm or system on things you explained. would be great!
This is such a comprehensive video. Explains so much. Wish I had this back level of detail when Minecraft first started introducing Redstone to the game.
THANK YOU SO MUCH i wanted a redstone video from you since you started using redstone in this series, and co incidentally i was stuck at a mechanism I'm making for mobs not entering my house which i can take care of now because you explained the reverse working of things when you place a redstone torch, once again thanks 😊
An entire video on rails and minecarts in the future? Happy days!
It's also fun to have a trapped chest hooked up to a bunch of noteblocks arranged to play the Zelda chest opening fanfare whenever I open it
Thank you. It’s been a while since anyone has done this type of overview. Very helpful.
This was an excellent introduction video. If you are looking for more nitty-gritty details, I would recommend looking up LogicalGeekBoy and the Dissecting Minecraft series.
Yay an episode tonight I’m glad you take your time doing your episode to make them the best as can love the content keep it up ❤️
Finally, a redstone video I can understand! I feel like I could actually make something myself now! Thank you so much!
The technical community prefers game tick more than redstone tick because many events are not happening in unit of redstone tick. For example, water flows 1 block per 5 game tick (=2.5 redstone tick). Whenever they are explaining a design they are likely referring a tick to game tick rather than redstone tick.
I think the only exception is when they make a tutorial and tell you how many tick you should set for a repeater.
This video comes to me with good timing. I just got done building an Ilmango Witch Farm design for my Vault Hunters world, and while I understand for the most part what it's doing (mainly from watching several other redstone tutorials mostly by Mumbo), it's good to get a refresher on the components. I highly doubt I'll be able to build anything of my own design anytime soon, but I know one day it will all just click for me.
It takes time, and it can be discouraging when it seems to come so naturally to other people - but stick with it!
Observers were honestly the addition that kick-started my understanding of redstone.
watched so many redstone tutorials but the best one was yours thanks pixlriffs
I'm a bedrock player, thanks for the suggestion for the RUclipsrs for redstone!
great video Rixlpiffs :p these are so good to have out there for reference!
What a fantastic video, both for now and to use as a future reference guide, ty!
What an excellent video. You're the best. This is also huge because redstone will have official codified in-game lore in 1.19 with the redstone labs in the Ancient Cities. I love redstone and this makes it less intimidating for newer players amazed by the works of Mumbo and the like. God bless
even just knowing the simple stuff is really helpful, thank you for this video!
i knew i needed this video but i didnt know i needed it SO MUCH
pix you are amazing, thanks a lot!!!!
Saved into my Minecraft Useful RUclips folder, informative as ever, thank you! 👍
People who make complex machines like computers in minecraft and ram / memory storage use the repeater lock mechanism. Also it took me at least a week to wrap my head around the comparator
Your the most knowledgeable minecraft ytber ik thx alot for your videos
This is getting saved to my Minecraft reference list. Thanks.
I didn't know you can right click Redstone dust. That's so useful
This is perfect! I'm planning to be a redstone master someday.
I'd like to mention that breaking a tripwire also causes a signal, unless you're using shears
I didnt know about lock repeaters, this is great!!!
Absolutely brilliant! However, my brain is now mush and will have to be reset with a redstone torch....errr...coffee!
This video is everything I've been looking for
For Beginner Redstoners, I would suggest a resource pack ' Redstone Tweaks ' found on Curseforge to help them in Redstone.
There are (at least) five useful resource packs for redstone on VanillaTweaks: Directional Hoppers, Directional Dispensers and Droppers, Directional Observers, Redstone Power Levels, and Sticky Piston Sides.
@@StarshipToMars Ok my bad. The name is Redstone Tweaks and it can be found on Curseforge.
@@sujataaroskarpatil1395 Nice! Didn't know about that one. Thanks!
I'd like to see what you could do with a redstone coder. Recently I've been thinking about a daylight sensor used with coder.
My strategy is to watch as many redstone videos it takes to garner a rudimentary understanding of how it works. It's been 4 years..... still don't get it. I'm still relegated to simply following recipes other cooks have developed. Which is fine, I guess. We can't all be Mumbo and Doc
ooh my, that was sssooo confusing to me. But since I've watched you for 4 years, I will persevere.
Excellent vid! thank you, it really increased my understanding of redstone :)
Thank you for this Redstone explanation!
I wanted to build a big auto sorter but kept doing it wrong this has helped much thanks pix
NOTIFICATION GANG UNITEEE!!!!
Also, I Needed this video SOO much! Thank You Pix!!!!
Assemble!!! xD
assembled
@josiah IDK I just said it lol
Very cool vid Pix. learnt a lot in this tut thanks for all your TUT's!!!
Woohoo, Been waiting for this one!. Thanks Pixlriffs!
Someone else here has already gone over some Bedrock differences, but a slight difference is that repeaters and comparators can be waterlogged.
Information Uppercut! Beautiful work!
Thank you for this, feels like a masterclass.
very interesting and informative! explanation of minecarts will be also very interesting
Could you make a video individually on rarities like pink sheep or blue axolotls? I would also like if you did name tag easter eggs like jeb_ or Dinnerbone. Maybe also get another pet like a dog!
Love the content pix! Keep up the good work!
I feel like I need a red stone class with a lab component where I build things according to instructions and then build something myself
Trust me. Knowing one way of how a comparator works is more useful than trying to figure out what to do with the theory of it. Simply because you can modify the circuit around the comparator to make the output you receive do something else.
#1 here letts goo pixelriffs man your series is the high light of my day
I just want to say that tripwire will emit redstone wheb the string is broken to circumvent this break the string with shears btw pretty sure quasi connectivity applies to dispensers and droppers
If you craft a firework with a firework star will it consume the firework star? and does a firework made with a firework star do more damage than a regular firework when fired from a crossbow?
Great vid pix! I love it!
Great series. Thank you!
Can you please do a mob spawner tutorial for skyblock or just in general? The new update is making the old plus design worthless
Thank You I needed this.
26:06 why did this make laugh 😂