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Minecraft ThemedMinecraft StuffMinecraft ModMinecraft RoomsMinecraft LoversAwesome MinecraftSimply MinecraftMinecraft ChannleEspecial MinecraftForwardMinecraft edition xbox 360 with a lime green controller. J would LOVE this. Probably only three made in the world . . .Not Enough Items Mod is a mod that adds recipes and other unique features into your game, and if you choose to do so, lets you use pre-loaded items in Cheat mode. With the ability to lock yourself into any mode you choose, you can prevent yourself from using cheats, or use blocks as a test build instead of always switching to creative mode. If you love to play with a lot of mods simultaneously, this mod can also solve any ID conflicts with its special ID Dump feature. This mode is the reason this mod is used so often. With tons of recipes at your fingertips, it allows you to easily search the recipes by name or ID. You can also search for items in the same way just to get a look at them. To keep yourself from cheating, you can just lock yourself into this mode, and not be able to actually load anything.

This mode adds two more features to the recipe mode function, allowing you to still search for recipes and items by name or ID.
kumbh mela backpackThe additional features include Magnet mode, allowing drops to come directly to you (like a magnet).
toontown gag backpackDelete mode gives you the ability to delete many options.
pelican u105 backpack Although it sounds like a bad thing to do, Cheat Mode in Not Enough Items can actually be pretty helpful, without actually cheating.
backpack masterwork pathfinderIf creative mode gives you problems, or you just hate to switch between modes all the time, then you might want to give this a try to test out builds or items.
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Cheat mode basically allows you the ability to cheat the game by giving you unlimited blocks and items, change the time, the weather, and save inventories.
f-stop tilopa camera backpackYou can also instantly switch into creative mode, or heal yourself to full health in survival. How to install Not Enough Items Mod? Download Minecraft Forge API and install. Download the mod and CodeChickenCore. Open the “mods” folder in %appdata%/.minecraft. Just put the mod files (.jar) in the “mods” folder. Download Link for Not Enough Items Mod for Minecraft 1.7.10 (stabile) Credit: chicken_bones – Original Thread on Minecraft ForumJump to: navigation, search There is currently no text in this page. You can search for this page title in other pages, or , but you do not have permission to create this page.It happens to even the most cautious explorer: you’re far from home, you die, and all your precious loot is left sitting in a pile far, far away.

Tired of losing your loot? Read on as we show you how to make your Minecraft inventory persist after death (along with some other handy game-changing tricks). Note: This tutorial is focused on the PC edition of Minecraft as, presently, neither Minecraft Pocket Edition or Minecraft Console Edition support the editing of the in-game variables required for enabling persistent inventory or the like. Should this change, we will update the tutorial with instructions for the other editions. We’re huge proponents of playing a game the way you want to play it and in the case of a game like Minecraft, the game is outright designed to encourage players to do just that: to build, create, manipulate, and outright edit the world to create the game universe and play experience they want. One particular aspect of the default play scheme that many players find quite frustrating is the way player inventory is dropped upon death. By default, when you die in Minecraft you lose experience (and some of that experience is dropped as experience orbs at the point of death) and you lose your entire personal inventory at that location too: all your armor, weapons, tools, and all the loot you’re carrying drop into a scattered pile (as seen in the screenshot below).

While some people enjoy the challenge of such an arrangement, there are plenty of times when it’s just downright annoying. If you die very far from home while exploring, for example, and you have no idea where you were when you died then your diamond armor and other hard earned loot is as good as gone. Fortunately, it’s pretty easy to edit the in-game flag that specifies whether or not you keep your inventory upon death as well as several other very handy flags that change other game behaviors. Let’s take a look at how to keep our inventory and perform other useful edits now. There are many commands you can execute in Minecraft via the in-game command console, but only around a dozen of them are persist changes to game variables. You can, for example, give yourself things in creative mode (or survival mode with the cheats turned on) using the /give command but doing so doesn’t alter the state of the game. For truly game altering modifications we need to change the “game rules” variables with the /gamerules command.

All game commands, including the /gamerules command are entered into Minecraft via the chat box (which functions as a command console when input is preceded by the “/” character). Before we proceed it’s important to note that the /gamerule command and other powerful command options only work on servers if you are the administrator or one of the operators, and they only work on single player/open-to-LAN multiplayer games if you have enabled cheats either in the game creation menu when you first created your world or temporarily when via the open-to-LAN trick. Open the chat box by pressing T (alternatively you can use the “/” key as a shortcut which will open the chat box and preseed it with the “/” character). The format for the /gamerules command is as follows. The
is always single variable (no spaces in between multi-word rule names) and is always case sensitive. The [value] is always Boolean value of “true” or “false” to toggle the game rule on except in the case of a single game rule;

the game rule “randomTickSpeed” which allows you to increase or decrease the number of random game clock ticks that cause plant growth and other changes by integer based adjustment (0 disables the random tick, any positive integer will increase it by X amount). One of the most useful game rule tweaks you can make, by far, is to toggle the “keepInventory” rule. As we mentioned above (and as you’re well aware if you’ve taken the time to seek out this tutorial) when you die you drop all your items and loot around you, like so. In the above screenshot you can see clearly that our quick access inventory bar is empty and all our loot is laying on the ground around us. That’s unfortunate (and if you die in a lava pit you’ll never get that loot back). Let’s fix that now by editing the “keepInventory.” Pull up the chat window in your game and enter the following command (remembering that it is case sensitive). Now look what happens when we die with the keepInventory flag set.

We’re dead but we’re still holding our sword, the armor indicator above our toolbar indicates we’re still wearing our armor, and the toolbar itself is still loaded with our supplies. As an added bonus, above and beyond keeping our precious loot, you’ll also notice that there are no experience orbs floating around. When the keepInventory flag is on you don’t drop experience orbs either. (We wouldn’t mind a way to tweak this so you lost experience but not your loot, but as of now there isn’t a game rule for that). In addition to the very handy keepInventory game rule, there are fourteen other game rules you can easily edit in game. While some of the game rules are very specific to server administration (like the “commandBlockOutput” flag that specifies whether or not game administrators should be notified when command blocks perform game commands), many of them are very useful in local single player and simple local multiplayer games too. You can read the full list of game rule commands in the Minecraft wiki, and you can also type /gamerules and hit the Tab key to list off all the available game rules as seen in the screenshot above.

While we’re not going to list and explain all of them, here are our favorite useful-in-single-player commands. We’ve all been there. You build your first house. You set up a working fireplace with lava or netherrack. You pat yourself on the back at a house well built and then the next thing you know, the roof is on fire. Unless carefully and properly contained fire in Minecraft will spread. Lava, netherrack, and lightning strikes can all start and spread fires, so if you don’t want to come back from your mine to find that your entire house has burned down this is a very handy command. Disable the spread of fire with the following. In addition to keeping lightning strikes and other natural fire sources from damaging things, it’s also very handy if you want to incorporate fire and lava into your designs without worrying about nearby flammable structures going up in smoke. With the fire spread disabled you can do improbable things like build a checkerboard made from wool and lava blocks as seen above.

“Mob griefing” in Minecraft is the ability of game mobs to interact with in-game objects. Every time a zombie picks up an item and carries it, an enderman pulls a block from the surrounding landscape and zips off with it, or other any other mob interacts with an item or block, that’s a form of mob griefing. If you would prefer that zombies can’t run off with your loot or enderman will never be able to pluck a block out a structure you carefully crafted in survival mode, you can turn off mob griefing with the following command. Be forewarned that turning off mob griefing disables all mob-on-block interactions including those that are benign or beneficial. For example, sheep will no longer destroy grass blocks while grazing (a relatively benign activity) and the villagers’ ability to replant crops (a beneficial activity) will vanish. When you’re playing a survival game, the day/night cycle adds interest and challenge to the game. When you’re build, however, the constant cycling of day and night (and the difficulty of working in semi-darkness) can get real old.