Reinventing Minecraft world generation by Henrik Kniberg

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  • Опубликовано: 14 янв 2025

Комментарии • 711

  • @ShockMicro
    @ShockMicro 2 года назад +4107

    A really good look into the world of generation, I'm surprised this hasn't caught any traction.

    • @einootspork
      @einootspork 2 года назад

      Henrik Kniberg made his own RUclips video that's essentially the contents of this presentation. That version has 100K views. ruclips.net/video/CSa5O6knuwI/видео.html

    • @Xfrtrex
      @Xfrtrex Год назад +27

      shock micro jumpscare

    • @Treetrain1
      @Treetrain1 Год назад +3

      @@Xfrtrex boo

    • @Xfrtrex
      @Xfrtrex Год назад +2

      @@Treetrain1 TREETRAIN1 JUMPSCARE?!

    • @Osmiooo
      @Osmiooo Год назад +2

      @@Xfrtrex get scared

  • @DoubleBassX2
    @DoubleBassX2 Год назад +853

    Asking the audience to stand up is a brilliant way to generate terrain!

    • @HappyCappy69
      @HappyCappy69 Год назад +7

      LMAOOO

    • @kipchickensout
      @kipchickensout Год назад +31

      -He has to be at least 6 ft tall-
      He needs to be at most an erosion of -.2 and be far inland

    • @diamondsimon020
      @diamondsimon020 Год назад

      @@kipchickensoutlmao

    • @ThrarmAnimation
      @ThrarmAnimation 2 месяца назад +1

      that’s just random noise really

  • @_snowylil
    @_snowylil Год назад +219

    I really hope this was one of those recordings where the audience just isn't audible to the mic, because this was an incredible presentation and I hope he was getting all the little chuckles and stuff that he deserved, this was such a delightful watch

    • @ultimate_miner64
      @ultimate_miner64 Год назад +47

      Fortunately it seems to be, since you couldn't hear the audience when they were asking questions

  • @Corzappy
    @Corzappy Год назад +1072

    It's actually insane how while watching this I've had several moments where it all just clicks and terrain that I've seen 10,000 times before suddenly has meaning to it, like I understand how and why it generated that way instead of just going "Oh that's a weird little mountain, anyway.."

    • @orbatos
      @orbatos Год назад +41

      This a type of technique taught in most computer science and graphics since Perlin first published his noise formula, it's genuinely surprising you haven't seen similar things in the past.
      Notably, nothing in this video is really that different from Minecraft's original terrain generation aside from the fjords. I was expecting them to have cubic chunks, some optimisation and more realism instead of a poor recreation of "real terrain" mods from over 10 years ago.
      FYI most mods for Minecraft are open source, if you want to pay with this kind of thing, look there.

    • @aiexzs
      @aiexzs Год назад +9

      ​@@orbatos​reliable cubic chunks would leave the sea of children crying for a content update

    • @themechbuilder6171
      @themechbuilder6171 Год назад +1

      @@aiexzs yeah... they should improve what already exists in the game instead of making it bugier

    • @shadesoftime
      @shadesoftime Год назад +1

      @@orbatos not only that, but the fjords are terrible from a gameplay perspective and get old quickly anyway

    • @Anon1gh3
      @Anon1gh3 Год назад

      @@shadesoftime Exactly. Exploration is really annoying until you get an elytra and fireworks.

  • @ViktorSarge
    @ViktorSarge 2 года назад +1320

    As a developer who has always dabbled a little in game development on my own time this is really interesting. And honestly one of the best explanations of Perlin noise I've come across.

    • @nothappyz
      @nothappyz Год назад +43

      But there was no explanation of perlin noise, was there?

    • @bananasplit566
      @bananasplit566 Год назад +39

      ​@@nothappyzthere wasn't an explenation of how it's made, but there was an explanation of what it does

    • @terminalvelocity635
      @terminalvelocity635 Год назад +9

      @@nothappyzperlin noise is publically accessible maths, it would be an utter waste to cover it here

    • @nothappyz
      @nothappyz Год назад +7

      @@terminalvelocity635 did I ever imply that?

    • @ElfireII
      @ElfireII Год назад +10

      ​​@@nothappyzby saying there is no explination, you imply that you want an explanation... so... yes, you did imply it.

  • @jacobchurch7581
    @jacobchurch7581 2 года назад +2255

    This was utterly mind boggling. So insanely clever

    • @MiriadCalibrumAstar
      @MiriadCalibrumAstar Год назад +11

      then if u add those realistic terrain generation mods.... i wonder how they are coded and interact with the normal terrain generation.

    • @Corzappy
      @Corzappy Год назад +35

      @@MiriadCalibrumAstar It's probably just a different configuration of values for the pre-existing terrain generation framework, and then some more condition checks like x biome can't be next to x biome or x terrain feature can't generate unless this value is x and whatnot.
      Realistic terrain generation isn't that far off from the default terrain generation, which is what he said during the presentation, it's all based pretty much entirely off of these charts with basic number values.

    • @MiriadCalibrumAstar
      @MiriadCalibrumAstar Год назад +3

      @@Corzappy Thats quite true, ive theorized about it too. Though out of curiosity i want to know what kind of noises do they use and how are they implemented.

    • @happyruimi-u3n
      @happyruimi-u3n Год назад +5

      actually pretty simplistic, I was guessing trig waves and random noise would be used whilst watching and to my surprise they were.

    • @billcosta
      @billcosta Год назад +7

      don't wan't to be that guy but it's actually simple concepts

  • @badgoy8439
    @badgoy8439 Год назад +375

    this was a great talk. Henrik must have spent a lot of hours putting together all the footage of each step of the generation process

  • @ninjanoodle2674
    @ninjanoodle2674 Год назад +399

    What is insane is that there were at least a dozen concepts that Henrik only briefly mentioned while offhandedly saying that those concepts would take an entire lecture to get into properly. Things like local water levels that generate aquifers, placement of terrain features and structures, how biome placement is tweaked in the code to allow for more natural biome transitions, etc. are all potentially really interesting topics (that probably are only interesting to a select few who play Minecraft and have an interest in how it works). I’m still amazed that Mojang was able to make this work in less than 18 months and that they were able to make it work on all the various platforms that the game is available. On a side note, now that Henrik has recovered from seeing everything in 5 dimensions, hopefully he will return to Mojang again one day.

    • @Android480
      @Android480 Год назад +18

      The devil is totally in the details for this stuff. The basic terrain is the easy part.

    • @It-b-Blair
      @It-b-Blair Год назад +9

      Also not all these features were available in the initial release. This is many years and many snapshots surmised.

    • @luis-sophus-8227
      @luis-sophus-8227 Год назад +8

      If you as a professional Developer within a large development team can barely achieve that within 18 months, then there's something wrong with your scheduling

    • @sirllamaiii9708
      @sirllamaiii9708 Год назад +4

      ​@@luis-sophus-8227remember that the entirety of New Vegas was made in 18 months.

    • @kasamialt
      @kasamialt 11 месяцев назад +1

      It would have been neat if he had mentioned a bit about the original style of cave generation which as far as I know is still present near the surface. I believe it uses a technique called Perlin Worms which is basically a random walk but using Perlin noise for more gradual movement. It would fit in quite well following on from the explanation of the overall terrain shape.

  • @the11382
    @the11382 Год назад +292

    It shows that there is so much potential behind the terrain gen still. Like water placement + terrain offset variations creating lakes and rivers at different altitudes.

  • @mitchellozment9237
    @mitchellozment9237 Год назад +221

    as a consistent player I really want to see more spaghetti caves. Cheese caves are cool but a bit overwhelming when you see a ton of ores at once and they are on the cielling and talls walls that are not easily accessible. Not to mention the second you walk into a cheese cave you can see everything at once, a list of objectives trying to mine ores rather than blissfully exploring and coming across ores. Spaghetti caves are fun because you never know what your going to run into and when you come across an ore its easily accessible

    • @WhatIsMyPorpoise
      @WhatIsMyPorpoise Год назад +35

      I wonder if it’s a psychological thing. There still are inaccessible ores on the ceilings of spaghetti caves, but maybe they arent as noticeable since a spaghetti cave feels like a path and so you instinctively focus on the ground and walls around you.
      Meanwhile a cheese cave is huge, kind of aimless at times, and anything can fall on you from above. You end up looking at the ceiling, the walls, everywhere more often.
      Or maybe you completely light up your caves or use night vision. In those cases you aren’t going to have those biases.
      And I guess theres a size factor thing. Spaghetti caves often are smaller (I have seen really tall ones before though, so not always) and so the ceiling is going to be easier to reach.

    • @iveharzing
      @iveharzing Год назад +11

      I'm personally a *huge* fan of the new cheese type caves, because I think they're beautiful.

    • @w花b
      @w花b Год назад +15

      ​@@iveharzingtrue. The caves are way more beautiful now. There's always that feeling of awe when it's a beautiful cave but of course some parts are still "traditional" which is nice and there's that feeling of familiarity.

    • @smugless191
      @smugless191 Год назад +1

      I feel like all of the old caves were spaghetti caves.

    • @LevaniaMeyano
      @LevaniaMeyano Год назад +3

      I like the cheese caves, because they're very pretty to look at. My brightness and black balance on my screen isnt very high. So unless I use a night vision potion, I actually can't see the ores on the top of the cheese caves like you do. And even if I do see them, I ignore the ores unless its diamonds. So I just run around looking at the floor only. Spaghetti caves I look at the floor walls and ceiling since 1 torch will light up the whole section.

  • @Gizrah
    @Gizrah Год назад +100

    I've just been looking in to terrain generation and how to stack noise values. This explanation is absolutely wonderful to visually understand what does what and why.

  • @johannesr8709
    @johannesr8709 Год назад +397

    Seems like pretty simple but smart concepts implemented in a clever way.

    • @log9705
      @log9705 Год назад +59

      I think you just encapsulated in 1 sentence, the proper approach to computer science.

    • @mercerwing1458
      @mercerwing1458 Год назад +27

      @@log9705 All science really

  • @hologirl
    @hologirl Год назад +105

    Awesome presentation! I am mind-blown also by the underground water generation ! It would be great to see another talk like this explaining how you did it :)
    BTW that was on of the best representation of 5D grid ever seen ahaha

  • @motiontempo7315
    @motiontempo7315 Год назад +16

    Jumped back into the game since last playing when ocelots were added. What a huge difference, the generation is so impressive. I flew for a couple hours in creative just exploring massive underground caves and rivers.

  • @nightlifekid7843
    @nightlifekid7843 Год назад +17

    By far one of the most interesting lectures i've ever seen. just so amazed by how everything works in a game that i play since 2011

  • @williamross6477
    @williamross6477 Год назад +28

    For anyone curious, the number at 4:30 is one duodecillion six hundred and twenty undecillion

    • @rsvdark_main
      @rsvdark_main 6 месяцев назад

      I got 1 undecullion 620 decillion

  • @suspection1333
    @suspection1333 2 года назад +31

    How does this only have 3k views?!?! That was the most interesting video i´ve ever seen

  • @samueldudley8028
    @samueldudley8028 Год назад +27

    This has given me so much inspiration to continue with my own generation, i hit s bit of a landmark with terrain when trying to implement biomes, specifically i was trying to make biomes change the terrain, rsther than calculate the terrain and make the biomes go where the terrain fits, im going to try this out immediately, especially the splines thats a reslly clever way of terrain manipulation that i eould have never thought of!! Very good video and beautiful explanation 👍

    • @ultimate_miner64
      @ultimate_miner64 Год назад

      I had the exact same mistake/issue haha, how'd yours end up going?
      Specifically, I had been using unique splines for each biome which multiplied the terrain height, but this meant you had MASSIVE 'jumps' between biomes rather than smooth blending

  • @IanZWhite00
    @IanZWhite00 11 месяцев назад +3

    26:43 I really love that they wanted to preserve the wacky character of the old Minecraft world gen, but there’s something so majestic about Minecraft with realistic terrain. I almost wish it was an option in the settings

  • @Toll99725
    @Toll99725 Год назад +30

    minecraft should make us be able to mess up some generation settings in the world creation menu again

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 Год назад +9

      Yeah with how dynamic those 5 parameters are, it'd be cool to have access to it without mods.

  • @brycecohoon
    @brycecohoon Год назад +35

    Let's not forget that for a short time, the simple player had pretty fine control of the terrain generation(1.12.2), nice to find out what those settings were doing.

    • @Saphintosh
      @Saphintosh Год назад +8

      It's a shame they removed that by the way. I don't play 1.12.2+ versions

    • @Schizopantheist
      @Schizopantheist 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, I am disappointed they removed that. When I came back to Minecraft to play it with my son I found I could no longer tweak the world.. damn

  • @fywq1649
    @fywq1649 Год назад +4

    Not first time I watch a video about terrain generation and perlin noise but this is really well explained and interesting, explaining well how many features generate. Saved for further reference!

  • @intifadayuri
    @intifadayuri Год назад +5

    This is amazing. Being both a long time minecraft fan and also an aspiring game developer, this just fills me with inspiration and admiration for those working on making videogames

  • @randomchshorts
    @randomchshorts Год назад +36

    It should be illegal just the fact that this has only 17K views! very underrated work!

  • @priceyindividual2995
    @priceyindividual2995 Год назад +7

    One of the best explanations for procedural terrain that I have ever seen.

  • @compechdev
    @compechdev Год назад +78

    As someone who loves all things procedural, this was quite interesting and useful!

    • @Zabiru-
      @Zabiru- Год назад +5

      yeah I had a bit of a mindfuck moment when he spelled it - Procedular - in the slide @ 6:00 though

  • @sachahjkl
    @sachahjkl Год назад +8

    Great explanation, this man structured his presentation in a really interesting way !

  • @ミニシュ
    @ミニシュ Год назад +7

    27:56 I'd want this as a fun generation setting

  • @huuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuhn
    @huuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuhn Год назад +5

    As a computer science student I'm just watching this in awe, so inspiring! Thank you very much for sharing.

  • @azaroth75
    @azaroth75 6 месяцев назад +1

    one of the most underrated undervoted video on yt

  • @zeotex2851
    @zeotex2851 Год назад +1

    I loved this, i would absolutely adore a whole lecture series that goes in-depth on (minecraft) procedural terrain gen, i love that particular combination of math, physics & gaming.

  • @SocktheWorm
    @SocktheWorm Год назад +1

    I watch lectures, videos, and talks about Minecraft terrain generation every year or two, and I always get something from it.

  • @bsdetector837
    @bsdetector837 Год назад +29

    I’d watch this for hours. Such a good presenter.

  • @seriyooow310
    @seriyooow310 Год назад +7

    So basically, Minecraft is a stellar masterpiece collection of ideas, formulas and codes. At least that's what it seemed to me as a civil engineer who strays away from coding apart from Excel spreadsheets.

  • @TabithaGonzales-o4z
    @TabithaGonzales-o4z Год назад +5

    Seems like pretty simple but smart concepts implemented in a clever way.. I’d watch this for hours. Such a good presenter..

    • @lastyhopper2792
      @lastyhopper2792 Год назад +1

      did you just copy a comment from 12 days ago, literally 2 comments away above yours? lol

    • @xd3athclawx554
      @xd3athclawx554 Год назад

      @@lastyhopper2792 this is a bot, it took 2 short comments and combined them together. The first one being "Seems like pretty simple but smart concepts implemented in a clever way" by johannesr8709, and "I'd watch this for hours. Such a good presenter." by bsdetector837." It then replaced added full stops to both comments before combining them causing it to be, "Seems like pretty simple but smart concepts implemented in a clever way.. I’d watch this for hours. Such a good presenter.." instead of "Seems like pretty simple but smart concepts implemented in a clever way. I’d watch this for hours. Such a good presenter."

  • @EuphoricPentagram
    @EuphoricPentagram Год назад +16

    ive been researching for making my own game. so seeing a lower level of how my favorite game does it, is like Amazingly helpful.

  • @colebot
    @colebot Год назад +14

    This is the most interesting video I have watched in a long time. I only wish he had talked more about the parts that he said were too complicated, even if the video ended up being 3 hours long

  • @Mrchingchingdingding
    @Mrchingchingdingding 11 месяцев назад +1

    Adding different shapes, irregular tesselated geometries, distinct noise patterns for the variance of shapes and playing with different bits of physics are just many ways these concepts can clearly be used to generate infinite varieties of dynamically generated and immersive ige's for most genres. This video is incredibly broadminded and extremely interesting.

  • @theaveragepro1749
    @theaveragepro1749 Год назад +10

    I'm surprised how much of this I've already done as a hobby, didn't think about splitting biomes up by continentalness though, I was instead trying to bias temperature and humidity with altitude, continentalness looks alot more controllable

  • @ImaginaryMdA
    @ImaginaryMdA Год назад +3

    As a near lifelong player I really enjoyed this insight into world gen!

  • @simonisenberg4516
    @simonisenberg4516 Год назад +3

    Finally a speaker that repeats the questions that were asked so we know what's going on.
    Yeah, I love noise. Some good memories playing around with different noises in texture creation sandboxes and terrain generators. And I still use them in my compositing job, making animated movies look good or creating FX for them. Maybe to add some fine surface detail like grainy sand that wasn't in the actual render or using 3d noise as a force field for wind strength in a snow particle system.
    Though with Minecraft, I'm still playing 1.12.2 for some mods I wouldn't want to play without and I use the Realistic Terrain Generation mod since I like my worlds more earth like than minecrafty with all it's weird floating noise bits. And I wish Minecraft had some more realistic terrain generation itself with tectonic plates and climate that follows the terrain shapes and climate bands instead of the random clouds. I currently use Geographicraft for that.

  • @galaxie836
    @galaxie836 Год назад +6

    This concept of reviewing minecraft is so unique compared to others, very cool!

  • @itsgyde
    @itsgyde Год назад +17

    This guy is a great presenter, very informative and entertaining lecture. Had my interest the whole way.

    • @luis-sophus-8227
      @luis-sophus-8227 Год назад +1

      wow really? I thought he was a brainrot just for how many comparisons he made at the beginning haha

  • @TooTRUEtoBeG00D
    @TooTRUEtoBeG00D Год назад

    12:42 Can imagine a multiplayer game mode where you have to build a tower on one of the islands by mining islands around it to get material. There are bonuses randomly generated at random heights and then the goal at the certain height.

  • @MMT--Games
    @MMT--Games Год назад +35

    The simplified terrain generation really created some cool and interesting terrains. i mean like i have never seen a lake like this 24:38 in minecraft. sure, there is some lakes but they are never as cool as this. i can just run this simplified terrain generation code without any additions like grass and trees, only stone, air and water and it will still be much more interesting than the current terrain generation. Man i can spend hours just looking at what kind of weird shapes this code will give me, unlike minecraft's more basic terrains (its ironic since this code is the "basic" version)

    • @xd3athclawx554
      @xd3athclawx554 Год назад

      I think the "boringness" of minecraft's current generation is due to how much they have configured the noise, and how many rules they have set in place. It is still possible to see some really wacky generation like that in todays minecraft, but it is waaaaay rarer because of the fine tuning. If they were to unconfigure it a bit, their test chunks would look less like they want it to look like, but also allow for more wacky stuff to happen more often. The problem is balancing the tuning of generation of millions of worlds and their 100s (at most) of test worlds. It makes it very hard to tune it to allow for wacky and "fantasy" generation and also allow for the flatlands and mountains of consistent quality and consistency.

  • @hwg6986
    @hwg6986 Год назад +13

    It was incredibly revealing. Especially for someone who is learning to program and has had contact with minecraft, hats off!:)

  • @mattpolz3418
    @mattpolz3418 Год назад

    This was really fascinating! I'm going to see all these details as I walk through Minecraft worlds now.

  • @Zytron
    @Zytron Год назад +2

    I feel like I'm listening to a lesson in school but it's actually on something that interests me, both as a minecraft player and as a programmer

  • @neey3832
    @neey3832 Год назад +20

    Definitely a very useful video to start learning terrain generation, it is very useful as an introduction. explains everything in a simple and visual way with examples.

  • @TheEhrnberg
    @TheEhrnberg Год назад +2

    Been doing some basic procedural generation, nice to see they also seem to be looking at desmos graphing calculator to visualyze there formulas :D

  • @Danger_N00dle
    @Danger_N00dle Год назад +1

    I'm mind blown by the fact we still use interlaced video today in a world with essentially no CRT TVs
    I hope I'm not the only one who think this is really distracting?

    • @kajmak64bit76
      @kajmak64bit76 10 месяцев назад

      It has uses
      It's easier to send 60 half frames then 30 full frames
      Atleast this is for cable TV stuff

  • @thibw638
    @thibw638 Год назад +2

    amazing talk, great job! makes me appreciate minecraft even more

  • @vif3182
    @vif3182 Год назад +2

    23:56 "...you don't need to write tons of code, you can move these dots around."
    Oh man if only everything was THIS simple...

  • @avanittersum2156
    @avanittersum2156 Год назад +1

    Having played minecraft for over 8 years and having watched maybe a yearsworth of youtube videos about minecraft and it's innerworkings, i am glad to say that i learned something, though i knew most of this.

  • @leonardomurgia4959
    @leonardomurgia4959 Год назад +2

    15:29 this would be so cool in desert biomes

    • @lumbagoboi1649
      @lumbagoboi1649 Год назад

      I also think it would be cool if the sandstone in deserts went down deeper so you can get unique desert caves, maybe even a few new variants of current mobs in them.

  • @Nick-s-f
    @Nick-s-f Год назад +1

    Minecrafts terrain generator has always been the one feature that puts it above other survival games for me. Its insanely complicated, yet well tuned.

    • @kajmak64bit76
      @kajmak64bit76 10 месяцев назад

      And it's still kinda meh compared to some modded ones

  • @beond.
    @beond. Год назад +8

    I don't understand anything about coding or developing but i loved this video because Henrik explained everything in a fun way that anyone can enjoy it.

  • @arceyplayz
    @arceyplayz 5 месяцев назад

    I never thought that a presentation was on RUclips purely about the way minecraft generates it's terrain, and it is made by the person who made the minecraft terrain generation! Can't wait to use this on my own game! The way the "spaghetti" caves work is genius.

  • @FourthLast
    @FourthLast Год назад

    Such an informative presentation and even though I was somewhat familiar with noise maps it was broken down so effectively that I really gained an understanding and appreciation for the level of problem solving programers go through.

  • @JadenAllen
    @JadenAllen 11 месяцев назад

    As somone thats tried to code minecraft clones in unity i would always get as far as terrain generation, 3d terrain and biomes but when it came to understanding plateaus and valleys, or even ravines i never truly understand how i could pull it off without just stamping a set structure into the generation. I now understand how i could implement the ravines and other things into the terrain generation. This was a very useful and helpful video for understanding terrain generation. Thank you

  • @mattiamartinelli3838
    @mattiamartinelli3838 19 дней назад

    Thanks for this beautiful video ☺️

  • @kachelstacktus
    @kachelstacktus Год назад +1

    This is a 10/10 talk. Its both entertaining and a perfect explanation of the subject matter.
    Also, 22:12 took me completely by surprise. Up to that point I was still looking at this as a generalized explanation of how to generate terrain like minecraft. But this is where I realized that he is just straight up explaining one of the core features of a game I have spent 1000s of hours playing.
    I knew a decent amount of the compontents going in, but for example layering different noise maps to get realistic worlds was such a cool way to use them.

  • @APDesignFXP
    @APDesignFXP Год назад +1

    Damn Henrick is just amazing!

  • @deithlan
    @deithlan 4 месяца назад

    I LOVE talks like this, where a very complicated concept is explained to noobies thanks to following step by step a very simple example that encompasses the bases of the subject at hand!

  • @basketcaseface813
    @basketcaseface813 Год назад +183

    It's crazy how they did all this, but never kept any of the cool, insane generation that they showed off here or in the snapshots.

    • @matejnovosad9152
      @matejnovosad9152 Год назад +53

      for real. Some of the terrain they made looked amazing but it felt like they settled on something very average. My best guess is that they did not want it to be realistic

    • @ignacioruiz-oriol1182
      @ignacioruiz-oriol1182 Год назад +40

      @@matejnovosad9152they don’t want a truly realistic world they want a world with the same characteristics form the reality but at the same time want to be fun, if the make a real world 71% of the world would be water, so the chances to get a great map will be low, also if the will be consistent mountains will be around 1000~8000 blocks (1 block 1 meter ) and like that a hundred more things, the extract the main characteristics that make a world look like a world but adapted to a game

    • @Golgito
      @Golgito Год назад +42

      What are you going on about? The only examples that were not implemented are the ones that have generation with basic functions. Every other picture they showed im pretty sure I've seen something just like it recently. Like, just go look at any number of crazy seeds people post online, some of them (if not most) are more interesting than anything they showed here.

    • @just-mees
      @just-mees Год назад +10

      As much as you think you want to play on a 3d sine wave world, do you really? Rolling out features is hard, you know

    • @matejnovosad9152
      @matejnovosad9152 Год назад +4

      @@just-mees I think they were mostly taking about 22:36

  • @TheVoidIsBees
    @TheVoidIsBees Год назад

    The Hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy reference was a delightful surprise in such an interesting talk

  • @ibisskb
    @ibisskb Год назад +43

    This is cool to watch, but my issue with vanilla gen remains, as the generation is still a bit too continental, and therefore aimless in a high scale perspective. Many will call bigger oceans a waste of space, but that's what gives purpose to continents in a first place. Looking at fanmade gens such as Terraforged I still believe that a lot can be done to make the world generation feel satisfying to explore.

    • @pagatryx5451
      @pagatryx5451 Год назад +11

      Agree and disagree to a certain extent.
      Current minecraft vanilla gen feels like the worst of both worlds in regards to terrain generation. Being too 'realistic' to allow for some of the more grand and mystical generation we got in the early versions (pre-adventure update) but not realistic enough to allow for generation to feel 'different' and unique. Or worth exploring.
      Random/aimless works very well, again, looking at the earlier versions of the game. But only if it's truly random. And not so overly engineered and rule based that you always tend to get the same generation in the end.
      In a certain way it's like stable diffusion/AI generated imagery. Give it too many prompts and you'll get the same image over and over again. Be more loose and restrained in your use of prompts, and you can get a much more interesting and unique output each time. Current minecraft world gen is both too restrictive to allow for everything to feel 'fresh' and different (it kind of all feels same-y) but at the same time the lack of continents or maybe 'tectonic biomes', leads to random blobs of terrain generation that, again, feel same-y in their generic randomness.

    • @ibisskb
      @ibisskb Год назад +7

      @@pagatryx5451 Yeah. Making generation more island-like would actually be amazing if paired with proper optimization, and it would be the way to make everything look distinctive. Sure, the water may feel empty but we could have a proper overhaul of how water biomes feel. Plus, it's a clear tendency for people to have better specs over time, so why not take advantage of that by optimizating it so we can make large render distances something worth it?

    • @frodolon
      @frodolon Год назад

      @@pagatryx5451Hmm, imo all the problems I had with the world gen were pretty much solved with the caves and clifs update (cellular automaton style biome placement etc)

    • @puppergump4117
      @puppergump4117 Год назад +1

      @@ibisskb If they ever figure out how to use nanite, all of the performance will be put on the data side instead of the rendering side. Lighting might be wonky but it's still the best option.

    • @dubl33_27
      @dubl33_27 Год назад +1

      @@ibisskb not everyone gets better specs every year, I still have my 5 year old pc and don't plan on upgrading anything anytime soon, minecraft is one of the only games i have problems with in newer updates.

  • @storm000
    @storm000 Год назад +2

    I like this Chad joined Mojang Studios, completely fixed and changed the world generation making it so much more fun and cool, and then departed from Mojang.

  • @Loki-
    @Loki- Год назад +1

    I'm thinking about how much smoother it can run with 3D chunks. Exciting questions and possibilities raised in here that made me think of potential mods up and coming programmers could try out for themselves.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind 5 месяцев назад

      Not much. Chunks are already split up into 16x16x16 cubes for rendering. If a chunk section isn't in view, it isn't rendered. And while generation eats a huge chunk of CPU time, it only matters the first time you move into range of those chunks. Then they are there.
      Also, you have to think about calculation distance. You still want the wheat in your garden to grow when you're in the basement. Horizontally it's, by default, 192 blocks (12 chunks). If you were to apply this vertically, too, you'd have to climb some of the highest peaks for the lowest bit of the chunk to not be within it anymore. So there'd very rarely be any savings from doing that instead of calculating the whole chunk.

  • @dotdankory
    @dotdankory Год назад

    i watched all of this, was interested every step of the way

  • @somebodyyoudontknow2663
    @somebodyyoudontknow2663 Год назад

    omg this is phenomenal, cant wait for the next update

  • @ronboprime
    @ronboprime 5 месяцев назад +1

    ngl... I'm at home, and I stood up.

  •  Год назад +1

    I like how they recognize weird stuff around minecraft world is a thing and they go for it, incredible speech by the way.

  • @BusinessWolf1
    @BusinessWolf1 Год назад +1

    The jungle with high hills terrain was aweso.e

  • @Danone_Xd
    @Danone_Xd Год назад +1

    YES YES I NEED THIS NEW WORLD GENERATION NOW

  • @oddjarb
    @oddjarb 11 месяцев назад

    This was awesome i woulda been cheering and whistling when he finished

  • @Lebensgott
    @Lebensgott Год назад +3

    i remember a minecraft version where you were able to edit the world generation algorithm before creating a new world and i think this was a great feature... sadly it got removed with the next major update :c

    • @mkDaniel
      @mkDaniel Год назад

      I have never understood the values...
      You can still do that in CubicChuncks mod.

    • @ReddStrider
      @ReddStrider Год назад +1

      I miss old customized and buffet.
      At least they gave us a whole lot more with datapacks but its just not easy anymore.

  • @SpikeTheSpiker
    @SpikeTheSpiker Год назад

    This is a fantastic video, thank you for sharing.

  • @MenkoDany
    @MenkoDany Год назад +3

    it's not enough to say that once you hit enough coldness, you get a savannah instead of a desert. Plants trap humidity, they make surroundings both colder & more humid. A way to generate this would be to have the humidity noise function be layered with a set function which will add steep rises/"jumps" at certain intervals, same for temperature. Then, adjust the biome determination fn

    • @MenkoDany
      @MenkoDany Год назад

      it'd make a rather large difference

    • @MenkoDany
      @MenkoDany Год назад +1

      Deserts can definitely border snowy mountain peaks, for example there's San Pedro de Atacama, Chile

    • @MenkoDany
      @MenkoDany Год назад

      Wait I thought this is Henrik's channel based on the description, but it's the conference's

  • @paulpurington8637
    @paulpurington8637 11 месяцев назад

    What a great video! I play Minecraft and always wondered how the world was built. Now I know!

  • @Salo_FC
    @Salo_FC Год назад +4

    What a job you made friends! Thank for all this stuff with new versions

  • @EsinaViwn9
    @EsinaViwn9 Год назад

    great presentation, technical minecraft videos like this catch my breath every time

  • @Everett-xe3eg
    @Everett-xe3eg Год назад

    Fantastic video! I really liked it. You have done a very good job with your team.

  • @hurricane31415
    @hurricane31415 Год назад +1

    Very interesting explanation of the world generation.

  • @tubelitrax
    @tubelitrax Год назад

    Thanks for the insights. Very cool.

  • @canberkcakr230
    @canberkcakr230 Год назад

    Great talk :) It really made my day and expanded my perspective so... thank you a lot a lot like... really!

  • @afriendlyfox
    @afriendlyfox Год назад +1

    I play Minecraft a lot and I'm a developer, so this video is a jackpot for me. I would love to see him break down everything, including features and structures and also the Nether and End as well. Does anyone know, are there other talks on how these are generated?

  • @MladenMihajlovic
    @MladenMihajlovic Год назад +1

    Very interesting. What's cool is that anybody interested in this kind of procedural generating should play around with Blender and creating materials and geometry nodes. The users there use all kinds of noises and algorithms to manipulate random generation of 3d models. It's quite a nice way of visualising these things and gives the brain a good stretch.

  • @D_4_N_
    @D_4_N_ Год назад

    fascinating. i've played minecraft since 2012(ish) and it's really cool to understand the process behind the worlds i play in!

  • @Moai_rocc
    @Moai_rocc Год назад

    The first part makes it seem like every chunk is being randomly generated as you explore it, but what actually happens is it uses the world seed to calculate what should be there, which is how one seed will always be the same

    • @palmberry5576
      @palmberry5576 10 месяцев назад

      It’s almost like they were showing an example of a bad world generation method, and slowly adding on more factors to demonstrate how Minecraft’s terrain gen works

  • @JaMaMaa1
    @JaMaMaa1 Год назад +1

    If more people saw this they would appreciate the update being split more.

  • @lucaswk
    @lucaswk Год назад +1

    If you look at the views curve on the timeline of this video it looks a lot like Perlin noise.

  • @angulinhiduje6093
    @angulinhiduje6093 Год назад +1

    the silence from the crowd was so loud

  • @lishhhhmm
    @lishhhhmm Год назад

    Mojang Headquarters: I want better and bigger Minecraft worlds.
    Mojang Developers: What about noise? Some more? Just a little more? Perfect.
    Very interesting to watch and learn/understand, time worth spent!

  • @xd3athclawx554
    @xd3athclawx554 Год назад

    This was a very good talk on how the Minecraft world is generated. I think there is definitely some major parts he left out especially after hearing him say some small parts would take entire talks to properly discuss. I think the details are the parts which definitely would take an enormous amount of learning and discussion to get right, the devils in the details as they might say.
    I have seen some people in this comment section talk about how the new world generation is boring comparatively and doesn't bring much in terms of "fantasticalness" or outstanding generation.
    I think the "boringness" of Minecraft's current generation is due to how much they have configured the noise, and how many rules they have set in place. It is still possible to see some really wacky generation like that in todays Minecraft, but it is waaaaay rarer because of the fine tuning. If they were to unconfigure it a bit, their test chunks would look less like they want it to look like, but also allow for more wacky stuff to happen more often. The problem is balancing the tuning of generation of millions of worlds and their 100s (at most) of test worlds. It makes it very hard to tune it to allow for wacky and "fantasy" generation and also allow for the flatlands and mountains of consistent quality and consistency.
    This generation is definitely limited by biome too however. They were mentioning how they might go back and add 3d biomes to surface biomes as they have done with cave biomes, that would only really work with mountains and could serve to allow for more wacky mountainous generation, like a swamp instead of a meadow at y200, or maybe a jungle at build height, who knows. But one thing that definitely is limiting, is the amount of biomes. As you add more biomes it increases the reason to explore, but also makes it harder to get a certain material. Think about it this way, there is a world with 2 biomes, desert and jungle, in 50% of the world you will get jungle blocks; jungle wood, jungle saplings, grass, etc. In the other 50% you will get desert blocks; sand, sandstone, cactus, etc. Now if you increase the amount of biomes... Lets say you add 100 biomes to a world, only 1% of your world will be 1 biome, rather than the 50% earlier, so now only 1% of the world you can get jungle blocks, only 1% you can get desert blocks, etc. It makes it harder to get certain blocks of your choice without travelling possible 10s of thousands of blocks. One very good example of this is Terralith. It is a datapack which completely revamps Minecraft's generation and it looks stunning for what it can do with the basic blocks don't get me wrong. But it is not very practical to play on. Sky islands with diamond ore, deepslate for volcanoes, emerald peaks (a biome which is a normal deepslate peak but with increased emerald spawn rates, etc. It also makes it very hard to get large amounts of sand for example, whenever I play a world on Terralith I will always have a shortage of sand when I need sand. This is down to the fact that Terralith does 2 things wrong, it adds a disproportionate amount of biomes without sand, and also doesn't add enough sand into the desert biomes, despite not tinkering with default biomes at all, just making them spawn less often. For example there are some desert biomes that are mostly clay, water, dripleaf, wood and sandstone, an oasis biome. It also adds sandstone peaks, mini mountains in desert biomes, made entirely of sandstone. This is fixed in modpacks with the natures compass obviously, however it is not in vanilla and it shows.
    If Mojang were to circumvent this issue, they would need to think about adding more desert based biomes, or more biomes with sand in them. They could also increase the spawn chance of deserts by a flat percentage amount by increasing their spawn requirements chances, This would lead to more Jungles, Badlands and other wet and humid environmental biomes aswell which is a not so nice side effect of the biome continuity features they have implemented. Another way is what they have already done, make it so that their only spawn requirements are on high humidity and/or erosion. When erosion is high land is flat, deserts are majority flat, and when from the table, when humidity is 5 it HAS to be a desert, there is nothing else it can be. Right now it is to make deserts absolutely massive, which is a more realistic take on how deserts are right now too.

  • @aryafeydakin
    @aryafeydakin Год назад +1

    If you have some basics in geology and geomorphology you'll know that Earth procedural generation is a thousand time more fun and insane that minecraft.

  • @luczztem
    @luczztem Год назад

    what a great presentation!

  • @arcm4210
    @arcm4210 Год назад

    this is amazing i was always wondering how youd get such nice world generation

  • @grapesandsand3816
    @grapesandsand3816 Год назад +3

    this is a really interesting look into how minecraft terrain is generated, i wish id seen this earlier. and wish that theres more videos getting into technical details that were glossed over in this video, although i understand if some of that is trade secret

  • @MBeckers
    @MBeckers Год назад +4

    I already knew most of the technical information but it was presented in an interesting way so I did enjoy the video :)