Minecraft Recovery Bundle

Yep, I’m an adult who enjoys playing Minecraft.  Now that this is out of the way…

I enjoy playing in survival mode and building farms for various resources, carving out a base into a mountain side, collecting hard to find items, building something of a fortress to house my resources and “pets.”  Sometimes my kids will join my “world” and help work with me on some project – or just want to do their own thing.  When they do, I like having enough resources so they can build whatever it is they want.  As I’m out exploring or gathering resources, sometimes I’ll end up in a bit of trouble or just be a few materials shy of accomplishing what I need.  For that reason, I have a special bundle I keep in my ender chest stocked with the kinds of things I might need to help me with some common problems or, in a pinch, get me out of a real jam.

Here’s what I keep in that bundle along with the uses for those materials:

# Item Uses
1 Hopper Helping unload, sort things
1 Arrow Using with bow enchanted with infinity
1 Crafting Table Easy access to crafting
1 Ender Chest Easy access to organized inventory
1 Chest Chest or, with the shulker shells, a shulker box
2 Shulker Shell Shulker box
1 String Making another bundle
3 Leather Bundle or ghast harness
1 Golden Apple Healing
1 Nametag Naming and preventing a mob from despawning
1 Anvil Adding enchantments to equipment or using a nametag
3 Spruce Wood Crafting many different things
2 Ice Portable water
1 Gold Block Crating gold boots to avoid piglin hassles
3 Glass Water bottles to duplicate water, ghast harness
2 Trap Door Entering end portals, crawl minding
3 Wool Bed or ghast harness
1 Respawn Anchor Creating a respawn location deep in the nether
2 Glowstone Powering the respawn anchor
1 Lodestone Marking a location for use with a compass
1 Lead Leading or trapping a mob
1 Pointed Dripstone Trap, mob farm, or duplicating water
1 Dripstone Block Duplicating water, making mud or clay
1 Redstone Block Compass
4 Iron Block Iron golem, iron tools, sheers, flint and steel, tools
1 Amethyst Cluster Spyglass, brush
2 Copper Block Brush, copper golem
1 Feather Brush
1 Pumpkin Iron golem, snow golem, copper golem, carved pumpkin, pumpkin seeds
2 Snow Block Snow golem
1 Dried Ghast Flying safely
1 Flint Flint and steel
1 Eye Of Ender Ender chest
1 Bone Block Speeding plant growth
4 Spruce Growing large spruce tree
4 Dirt Growing large spruce tree, food
1 Carrot Food, growing food
60 items total  

The most common things I’ll use this bundle for are:

  • Quickly get a hopper, ender chest, or make an extra bundle to help with inventory management
  • The crafting table for quickly crafting something
  • Using the one arrow with my “infinity bow

A bundle lets me store items, but I have to pull out everything placed into the bundle after the desired item, which can make rooting around deep inside something of a hassle.

It’s extremely rare for me to dig any deeper into this particular bundle past the string and leather … but, if you’re stuck far away, across treacherous territory, deep in the nether, deep in a hole, underground, lost, or need to save a location or mob, this would be a very good pack to have around.

FIXED: Minecraft Launcher Stuck / Won’t Download / Slow Download on Windows 10

Sometimes you just gotta roll up your sleeves and craft your own fix
Sometimes you just gotta roll up your sleeves and craft your own fix

I recently purchased Minecraft for the PC (Windows 10) and tried to install it.  It was brutal, but I got through it.  I’m documenting my experiences here in the hopes it helps someone else.

The download was incredibly slow, would time out, get stuck, would give me the message “queued in position X,” or would simply not work at all.  Sometimes it would download 10 or 50 MB and then stop.  It was pretty frustrating.  I tried a number of things and eventually found a constellation of things that ended up fixing the problem.

  1. Things That Helped / Worked:  From Simplest to Most Complicated
    1. Making sure I was on a speedy wifi network.
      1. The easiest first step was to get off the wifi extended and onto the main wifi network.
    2. Ended all Minecraft processes / programs that were running.
      1. Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open the Task Manager.  (Right clicking on an empty space on the task bar can also bring this up as an option in the context menu.
      2. Right click on any “Minecraft” processes as select “End task.”
    3. Sign out of the Microsoft Store app.
      1. You should see a two letter (probably your first and last initials) circular icon in the top menu bar for this app.  Click “Sign out”
    4. Reset the Microsoft Store app.
      1. Start / Windows Button -> ⚙️Settings -> Apps
      2. Scroll down until you see “Microsoft Store,” select it and click “Advanced options”
      3. Click “Repair,” let the computer do it’s thing, then click “Reset.”
    5. Make sure the time zone and clock are up to date.
      1. This sounds kinda crazy, but it’s a legit reason why Minecraft might not be installing.  Many programs try to synchronize and authenticate each other across the internet – using agreed upon times as a basis.  An incorrect time might be used by a malicious person or program to breach a system.
      2. Anyhow, here’s how you apply this fix:
        1. Start / Windows Button -> ⚙️Settings -> Time & Language
          1. Turn on “Set time automatically” and “Set time zone automatically” and click “Sync now”
    6. Check to make sure you didn’t cripple the download speeds yourself.
      1. Start / Windows Button -> ⚙️Settings -> Update & security -> Delivery Optimization -> Advanced options
      2. When setting up my PC I had crippled Windows download speeds to 0.1 Mbps.  While this helps my day-to-day computer usage and prevents Windows from chewing up all my bandwidth to update itself, it also crippled anything I wanted to download through the Windows Store app.  I’d recommend removing all bandwidth caps while trying to download Minecraft.
    7. Notes:
      1. I can’t be sure, but Windows does a lot of stuff behind the scenes, but having checked the installed apps after Minecraft was fully installed, I noticed several other apps were also installed.  I believe the Windows Store needed to install a bunch of other programs and app / dependencies before it would actually allow Minecraft to download.  You may or may not see these pop up.
  2. Things That Did Not (Seem To) Help
    1. Restarting the computer didn’t seem to help.  I suppose it’s worth trying.
    2. Trying to install a prior version of Minecraft for Windows 7/8 didn’t work either.  They seemed download fine – but wouldn’t run at all.
    3. Trying to install the Minecraft Java version first.  I ended up uninstalling all versions and all launchers and starting from scratch.

I hope this helped.  If you’ve got some other fix that worked or idea how to help, I’m sure plenty of others would want to know.  Feel free to leave a comment.

Multiplayer MineCraft on the PlayStation

Minecraft friends!
Minecraft friends!

I’ve been trying to get MineCraft on our PlayStation to work with multiplayer for ages without any success.  I could see friends, but my kids couldn’t see or add friends and couldn’t join any remote multiplayer games.  They kept getting messages like:

You need permission.  You cannot add friends because of how your Microsoft account is set up.  This can be changed in your privacy and online safety settings on aka.ms/accountsettings.

It was, in a word, frustrating.  However, after a lot of searching and setting fiddling, I finally got it to work.  Basically, a parent needs to create accounts email addresses for kids, then PlayStation accounts for those kids, then Microsoft accounts for them as well.  Then the parent sets up a “family account” and adds the children.  In any case, even after setting up all these various accounts…  once the parent is logged in they need to adjust their “Xbox” settings from within their Microsoft profile!

The process that eventually worked for me was this:

  1. Go to: https://account.microsoft.com/account/privacy
  2. Scroll down to other privacy settings, next to the Xbox icon look for:
    1. “Adjust your Xbox privacy settings on either your console or by signing in to Xbox.com” there should be a hyper text link that will take you to online safety and privacy
  3. Under Xbox one/Windows 10 online safety, check the setting
    1. “You can play with people outside of Xbox Live” make sure it is set to “Allow”

Even after doing all this, it still didn’t work. I still had to fiddle with additional Xbox settings to “Allow mutliplayer” and then log in/out/restart.  I had to log the kids out of the Playstation and Microsoft accounts on the laptop, log the kids out of their Microsoft accounts in Minecraft, restart Minecraft, and log their Minecraft account back into the Microsoft account.  I’m not sure which of these were strictly required – I just know that it took one or more of these steps to get this to work.

I hope this helps someone else.