Minecraft is truly an endless source of fun and creativity. From exploring to building, it is almost impossible to run out of things to do in this open-world sandbox game. One fan-favorite source of fun is decorating your base. That said, sometimes you’ll hit walls in your creativity and might need some ideas to get your brain moving. Here are some of our favorite decoration ideas for Minecraft base building.
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Creative decorations for Minecraft base building
Using stairs and slabs for cave entrances
A good entrance to your mines or underground base can give a memorable first impression to your friends visiting it. If you use stone slabs and stairs in a clever way, you can create quite a sight from your entrance alone.
When using this decoration idea in your Minecraft base, it can be easily adjusted to any size you’d want. Big or small, with the effective use of slabs and stairs you can definitely give off a wow factor for your base.
Floating library
Decorating your enchantment table can sometimes be troublesome, especially with the requirements needed to efficiently use your enchantment table. However, since Minecraft physics does not work like ours, you can easily make enchanting look more magical with this simple trick.
You can create a floating library complete with a floating stone staircase to really sell the magic of the work you do in your library. With this design, you can really put the word enchant in enchantment.
Broken magic towers
If you are a medieval lover then magic towers or castle towers are for sure your thing. How do you make something that’s been built so many times unique? You break it and fix it with magic.
Using Minecraft’s lack of physics, you can tear your towers to shreds and they’ll stay standing. You can even benefit from the gap from this tower whenever you want to fly in and out of your base with your Elytra. You can apply this design to houses and other buildings if you want to add some magic to everything you build.
The Upside Down
An underground paradise is for sure on all of our Minecraft base bucket lists, and with the Caves and Cliffs update, this is much easier to do. Once you find that huge underground open space, it’s often challenging to think about the next few steps you’ll need to take to spruce up your new underground base.
Why not turn the overworld upside down? With the help of moss blocks and the natural terrain of the underground roof, you can create a copy of what an overworld plains biome looks like but upside down. If you collect enough leaves and logs, you can make it into a forest, a jungle, or if you’re feeling the grind, an upside-down village.
Redstone and vine berries
If you’re looking for a more simplistic wall design, then add some red, delicious-looking berries to it. Perfect for creating mountainside walls with lush greenery or a wall of a medieval castle that’s been overgrown.
This simple design can be easily done with Redstone ore blocks and vines. Simply replace a few blocks on your walls with Redstone ore blocks and cover them with vines and you can create an illusion of a berry wall on the side of your base.
Interior reflection
If you think you’ve fully decked out your entire base interior but want more out of it then try polishing your floor until it reflects your base. With this design, it’ll look as if you have a glass floor that mirrors the inside of your base.
Doing this is simple, but it’ll take quite a long time to get the desired resort. You have to rebuild your whole interior upside down under your base’s floor (made out of black stained glass) to give off the illusion that your floor is squeaky clean.
from Gamepur https://ift.tt/Ag4HyeZ