In Minecraft's randomly generated worlds, you are all alone. But you are free to create anything and to sculpt your environment to how you see fit.
The fact remains that you are…alone. No one to talk to, no one to help you, and no one to share your victories with. Anything you build will only be experienced by you and can only be appreciated by you.
Yet people still build and create art even though no one will see it. Massive castles in the sky, complex mines, roller coasters, cannons, farms…even pixel art and 3D sculptures in their voxelized glory never to be shared.
Humans have an innate desire to create and preserve…even if no one will see it, and sometimes especially if no one will see it.
Yes, there are multiplayer servers, and they can do fantastic work. But creations there are built to impress. They are made to gain the approval of others and let your work be preserved for the ages…or until a griefer stops by.
The real game is in the single-player survival. Multiplayer doesn’t have nearly the features and support single player does. At times, multiplayer feels like it is hacked together. Every release brings on new, game-breaking bugs despite fixing some of the old. I can't tell you how many times I’ve have had to tell people on my Minecraft server “no mine carts.”
One of the things that drives people to play Minecraft is the freedom from natural physics. Your mind is your only limitation. You want an impossibly huge hanging garden floating in the air? You can do that. But what draws me in is that you are alone.
Far from the noisy cities and busy roads, sometimes it feels that you are able to sense the breath of nature and to sense history…even be a part of it. To stop time and motion while gazing upon ancient mounds and majestic rocks, fathomless skies, endless valleys, swift rivers, and sharp mountains. How long have they been here? How long have you been here? Was anyone else ever here? But now that you are here, what do you do?
I was talking with a friend about Minecraft and creativity when I mentioned Sand Mandalas. For those of you who are unfamiliar with this, Tibetan Buddhist Monks spend countless hours creating beautiful and intricate pieces of art with colored sand. Then once the work is completed it is ritualistically destroyed. It is done to remind the monks that life on this material plane in fleeting and temporary.
Creating something for the sole purpose of destroying it intrigued me. It seemed fitting to try and apply this in Minecraft. And with a little convincing from my friend, I will hopefully bring you all along for the ride. Beyond here lie blueprints, logistics, musings, reflection, and self-discovery. Come join me — you may even learn something about yourself along the way.
First off, I needed a Mandala to recreate. I have chosen the one pictured above. In order for this project to have any meaning, it must be a challenge to complete and something I would be proud of. So I decided to pick one that is colorful and bright upon first look, but studying it deeper reveals hidden intricacies that draw you around the design.
That level of complexity is very difficult to pull off in Minecraft since you are given cubes to work with, so I would need to make my mandala big. From my (poor) calculations, I found this design to be 757 pixels in diameter. I could try for a 1:1 recreation but you wouldn’t be able to see it all as Minecraft has a view limitation of about 300 blocks. Instead, I created an arbitrary unit of measurement called a “cube-it” that is a 10×10 section of pixels. Plug in some numbers, and I am going to need just under 72,000 blocks of dyed wool.
With my math done and project idea conceptualized, it is time for me to start clear cutting, punching sheep, and harvesting dye. Updates on this next week!
William French is a writer for the site Nightmare Mode.