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Then scale it to The Iron Golem, not The Ender Dragon.Edwardtruong2006 said:Actually, the Elder Guardian's stats are very similar to that of an Iron Golem's, so that could reflect the durability.
Then why not simply say Iron Golems? The Iron Golems are certainly not as strong as The Ender Dragon, so instead of misleading people by scaling to The Ender Dragon, simply say Iron Golem.Edwardtruong2006 said:Iron Golems are scaled to the Wither, who are scaled to the Ender Dragon though
think
Only Endermen dodge arrows, and only by teleporting.Moritzva said:Based on what we've discussed:
Then you can't scale any other mobs to the Enderman's arrow-dodging unless they too can teleport.Moritzva said:That's what I said.
The Player cannot control that.Edwardtruong2006 said:Law Manipulation: The different worlds of Minecraft have their own rules set on them, such as going to sleep in the Nether or End will cause the bed to explode despite it working in the overworld.
Nope. The Player's world is a small world within Markus' world, not the other way around.Edwardtruong2006 said:The Player is the progenitor of a small private world. The world created by Markus (aka Notch) is the Minecraft World itself, as it's described in a way Minecraft would be described, and it's just a singular world in the Player's small private world.
You need to prove that the Player can change the rules regarding beds, or your claim of Law Manipulation is false.Edwardtruong2006 said:I'll post my blog reply here
The bed stuff is showing that the Player's different worlds have their own different set of rules.
Are you saying that the Player's worlds don't exist inside Minecraft, which was created by Markus?Edwardtruong2006 said:Also read the scan, it says "The Player moves through a story, which is a forest of information planted by a man named Julian, on a flat infinite world created by Markus that exists inside a small private world created by The Player"
If The Player's world was inside the Minecraft world it would say "that exists in a small, private world created by The Player, inside a flat infinite world created by Markus". But no, it's the other way around, and if the flat infinite world created by Markus was bigger than the Player's small, private world then the "small private world" would be accessible to normal mobs when it's not as Markus's world clearly is a Minecraft world.
This is trueDeathstroketheHedgehog said:iirc The Player has Law Manipulation via the game options, such as the difficulty setting, which is basically the law version of weakening, strengthing, or outright erasing of hostile creatures.