Minecraft YouTuber creates playable version of the game inside a single chest

The creativity of the Minecraft (opens in new tab) community knows no bounds. Not content with the usual 3D version of the game, YouTuber SethBling has created his own, playable 2D version set entirely within a Minecraft chest, complete with crafting, jumping, and flowing water.

As you can see in the video above, blocks from the game are replicated inside the chest, and you can walk left and right across the world, breaking blocks as you go. You even have a separate inventory—a chest within a chest—where you can store blocks you've mined from the world and craft new tools.

What's essentially happening is that a slice of the normal Minecraft world is being rendered inside the chest. When you move the player inside the chest, an armor stand teleports around the world. Breaking blocks in the chest breaks them in the world, too. It's all done via a /loot command that figures out what blocks are around the armor stand and then renders the correct, corresponding block into the chest. 

"It's a very limited system, but it's enough to look pretty cool," says SethBling in the video, and I can't help but agree. He says he might expand the system with new crafting recipes and, potentially, even mobs. The system was inspired by this Reddit post (opens in new tab), which is basically the same idea but doesn't seem to have any moving parts.

If you want to download the world within a chest, you can do so here (opens in new tab) (clicking that link will immediately download a .zip file). If you're hopping back into Minecraft in 2019, check out our handy Minecraft update (opens in new tab) log to see what's new.

Samuel Horti

Samuel Horti is a long-time freelance writer for PC Gamer based in the UK, who loves RPGs and making long lists of games he'll never have time to play. He's now a full-time reporter covering health at the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. When he does have time for games you may find him on the floor, struggling under the weight of his Steam backlog.