


INVENTORY MINECRAFT SHORTCUTS HOW TO
Let’s take a look at how to keep our inventory and perform other useful edits now.

If you die very far from home while exploring, for example, and you have no idea where you were when you died then your diamond armor and other hard earned loot is as good as gone.įortunately, it’s pretty easy to edit the in-game flag that specifies whether or not you keep your inventory upon death as well as several other very handy flags that change other game behaviors. While some people enjoy the challenge of such an arrangement, there are plenty of times when it’s just downright annoying. By default, when you die in Minecraft you lose experience (and some of that experience is dropped as experience orbs at the point of death) and you lose your entire personal inventory at that location too: all your armor, weapons, tools, and all the loot you’re carrying drop into a scattered pile (as seen in the screenshot below). One particular aspect of the default play scheme that many players find quite frustrating is the way player inventory is dropped upon death. We’re huge proponents of playing a game the way you want to play it and in the case of a game like Minecraft, the game is outright designed to encourage players to do just that: to build, create, manipulate, and outright edit the world to create the game universe and play experience they want.
