Hi all! Today, I will be calculating how much weight Minecraft Steve can carry. Yes, I was supposed to be doing my media arts assessment, but instead, I did this.

Now, to truly find this out, we’re going to start start off with shulker boxes. A shulker box has 27 slots, and each slot can hold 64 items. So, 64 x 27 = 1,728. Each one can carry 1,728 items.

Let’s use the heaviest item: blue ice. Blue ice can be crafted from 9 packed ice, which is crafted from 9 regular ice. So, you need 81 regular ice to make 1 blue ice. To find out how much regular ice we can put in one shulker box, we need to do this: (27 x 64) x 81 = 140,288. That’s 140,288 regular ice in one shulker box.

Now, let’s multiply that by 37 (including the off-hand slot in the player’s inventory): 37 x 140,288 = 5,193,856.

So now, let’s take this to the extreme. A water bucket can hold 4 trillion pounds if you build a water pyramid from bedrock to build limit. So let’s do the math: 4 trillion x 140,288 = 561.152 trillion pounds or 254.513 trillion kg.

Now, let’s talk about the armor. We’re going to take gold armor into account. It takes 24 ingots for one set of gold armor, plus 4 for each trim. The average gold ingot weighs about 12.4 kg (27.4 lb). So, 28 gold ingots weigh 28 x 12.4 = 347.2 kg (765 pounds).

Finally, we add this to our previous total: 254.513 trillion kg + 347.2 kg = 254,513,000,000,347.2 kg (560,974,826,927,136.64 pounds).

Edit: to put this weight into perspective it is about 42,450 times the weight of the great pyramid of Giza or the weight of 42.42 trillion elephants

And that is how much Steve can hold! If you have seen any mistakes in my math or if I didn’t include everything, please flex your PhDs down in the comments.

  • JackbyDev
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    175 months ago

    All Minecraft items and blocks are less dense than water because they float. (This includes a bucket of water.)

      • JackbyDev
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        105 months ago

        That’s why I didn’t say lighter. I said less dense.

        • Grey Cat
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          15 months ago

          Something floating doesn’t mean it’s more or less dense than water. You can make a metal boat float but that same metal as a cube would sink.

          • JackbyDev
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            -15 months ago

            A metal boat filled with air is less dense than water, my dude.

            • Grey Cat
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              05 months ago

              That’s not density, that’s just the shape of the material. 100kg of metal in the shape of a boat or a cube is still 100kg, it doesn’t make it lighter. The buoyancy of something does not mean it’s more or less dense than something else.

              • JackbyDev
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                5 months ago

                https://www.jdpower.com/boats/shopping-guides/how-do-boats-float

                Think about a bottle, a cup, or a bowl (or any other similar dish). If you fill up your sink and place an empty container on the surface, it will float. However, as you add water to it, the heavier the object becomes, creating more displacement. Ultimately, there will be too much weight in the cup, and it will sink below the surface. That’s because the air is less dense than water, and it balances out the average density. The same applies to boats.

                • Grey Cat
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                  15 months ago

                  That’s the “average density” of the metal boat + air not of the boat itself, a material has a fixed density at fixed temperature and pressure.
                  For example at 20°C:

                  Gold has a density of 19.3 g/cm3

                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold)

                  • JackbyDev
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                    05 months ago

                    You’ll find a different density of the gold if you only measured the weight and space of the nuclei of the atoms the same way you find a different density of a boat if you ignore the air inside it.