I was just going based off of how entity radars are banned on most other servers for putting you at an unfair advantage, but right after I said that, I went to the mod wiki to see what mods were banned.
These are pictures of when I semi-accidentally spilled water on my staircase to build limit. Wow, that was some incredible frame rate lag I got there! Then, cleaning it up gave me the same. I will have to look out to not do that ever again. Can't keep up
Want more lag? do a staircase like that with lava, and put a bucket of water over it, everything will chance to cobble
Nah, I actually don't really want more lag I also wouldn't want to put lava, because I have hundreds of trees and a giant wooden platform there
World's biggest bonfire . Then you could try to put it out with world's laggiest waterslide. But I guess then you'd have world's biggest cobble mess :/
I have another 8 old screenshots from my older accounts, so I made an album to make it easier for the viewers and me http://imgur.com/a/nr3Tx#VvEWLJ2
One of the things which really got me hooked on Minecraft is redstone. Or better put: the redstone circuitry and all the potential attached to it. I'm by far a redstone expert, but I do know my way around and really like to tinker. So it shouldn't come as a surprise that my residence has a redstone experimentation room: Lava walls (light), sandstone floor (mostly slabs) and redstone; what's not to like? What you see here are 2 simple circuits: the structure on the left is a so called toggle switch. Hit the button and the block between the pistons is moved. Right above a redstone torch which will power it ("on" situation). Click again and the block moves away ("off situation"). The signal is send to the structure in the background; a redstone memory module. What it basically does is sent the incoming signal through an infinite loop, thus retaining the original redstone power value. Clearing the device is done by moving the upper right block away by using a sticky piston. And the comparator in front (which should have been set into subtraction mode) allows the redstone block to act like an on/off switch (so; no output is sent but the original value is still retained). As said; its a simple build but it does show some of the interesting features of Redstone circuitry (at least I think so ).