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The 8-bit Processor Built into Minecraft can Run its Own Games

Computer chips have become so small and complex that it's sometimes hard to recall the real physical principles that drive them. They're not just a collection of ever-increasing numbers. For a concrete (well virtual) example, look up the most recent version of a computer processor built exclusively within the Minecraft game engine.



Minecraft builder "Sammyuri" spent seven months building what they call the Chungus 2, an enormously complex computer processor that exists within the Minecraft game engine. This isn't even the first time a computer processor has been virtually rebuilt inside Minecraft however, the Chungus 2 (Computation Humongous Unconventional Number and Graphics Unit) might very well be the largest and the most complex, based on an 8-bit processor, with one hertz of clock speed and an adabyte of RAM.



Minecraft processors use the physics engine used in the game to recreate the architecture of real processors on a macro level using materials such as redstone dust, torches, pistons, repeaters and other machines. Kd76 To provide a sense of scale, each block in Minecraft is one virtual meter across. This means that it's about the same size as an airplane or a skyscraper if this build could be replicated in the real world.



When connected to an in-game 32x32 "screen" and "controller" (manipulated by the Minecraft avatar player jumping around on buttons of the size of blocks) Chungus 2 Chungus 2 can play interchangeable 2D games such as Tetris, Snake, or even a graphing calculator. Certain programs require the Minecraft server to be artificially accelerated in order to make the processor fast enough to run. Each program is also built in Minecraft and connects to the computer as a game cartridge of the size of an entire freight train.



The project is an amazing application of computer science, designed in an approach that makes its principles immediate and clear. The video that demonstrates the Chungus 2 is impressive enough. However, if you'd like to see it in action you can download it and run it on your server at mc.openredstone.org. If we hold off for a few years, we may get a Minecraft CPU that's powerful enough to run Minecraft and at that the universe could explode.


Here's my website: https://www.kd76.com/
     
 
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