As the world shifted from 1.12 to 1.17, Gukken became a site of "Architectural Vertigo."
Kael, a lone cartographer, was the first to see the . High above the build limit of the old world, jagged shards of purple crystal began to pierce the clouds. The landscape was evolving. The mountains he once mapped at 256 blocks were suddenly stretching, their roots diving deep into "The Deepslate Void"—a place that shouldn't exist according to the old laws. The Convergence Gukken - 8000x8000 | 1.12 - 1.17 | Landscape &...
Should the next chapter focus on the beneath the old 1.12 ruins, or the political struggle between the two builder factions? As the world shifted from 1
These are the new lands. Floating islands held together by copper veins and guarded by the first Axolotls found in the shimmering lush caves beneath the frost. The Conflict of Eras The mountains he once mapped at 256 blocks
Kael now stands at the border where the old grass meets the new moss. He realizes Gukken isn't just a map; it’s a bridge between what Minecraft was and what it has become. The 8,000x8,000 territory is no longer a cage, but a massive canvas where the deep dark meets the infinite sky.
A schism has formed. The refuse to use the new materials, fearing that copper will rust the soul of Gukken. Meanwhile, the Aether-Seekers use the increased height limit to build "The Spire of New Heights," a tower intended to touch the very ceiling of the universe.
The mist over doesn't just sit; it breathes. Spanning a massive 8,000-block expanse of jagged peaks and bioluminescent valleys, this realm was born from a glitch in the primordial code of the 1.12 era—a world that refused to be flat. The Legend of the High-Yield Spire