Java Edition Far Lands/Up to Infdev 20100325

Structure
In the February 27th build of Infdev, all generation past 33,554,432 blocks would be solid stone, continuing out to the 32-bit limit. This wall extends vertically from the bottom of the world to the height limit, and are the first truly visible appearance of the Far Lands, although very visually, behaviourally and positionally distinct from convention.

This stone wall may not always start at exactly 33,554,432 blocks out - it is not uncommon to see a rough, repetitive boundary at this point, visually resembling the ridges of a radiator or the fins of a heat sink, in a similar way to how the usual Far Lands can generate a few blocks earlier. On some seeds, the Far Lands don't have any rough appearance but are rather just smooth. Sometimes Far Lands on one axis can be smooth while on the other axis they're rough.

While occurring at exactly a power of two, this is not a hard limit, but rather due to the noise generator settings for these versions themselves also being a power of two, returning this overflow point in the calculations can lead to lag or even a crash on the game.

Distance effects
Walking to these Far Lands is impossible in normal gameplay as the game becomes unplayable well before this point due to a variety of distance effects. Even if a player could overcome the distance effects, beyond 16,777,216 blocks away blocks stop being solid (however, swimming in water is still possible), preventing the player from traveling any further.


 * X/Z: 512 - Clouds stop rendering
 * X/Z: -512 / 1,024 - The sky box stops rendering.
 * X/Z: 2,048 - The first noticeable jitter begins, with the hitbox appearing to flicker slightly around blocks.
 * X/Z: 16,384 - First noticeable world rendering issue begins, with the borders of chunks beginning to become visible and the chunks appearing to shake slightly.
 * X/Z: 32,768 - The world rendering bug present in Infdev 624 through Beta 1.7.3 begins to manifest, with the hitbox being slightly offset from the blocks.
 * X/Z: 65,536 - Particles begin to lose precision, appearing more blocky and stretched.
 * X/Z: 131,072 - Hitbox outline begins to deform and shake visually.
 * X/Z: >1,048,576 - The world rendering fails when looking at certain angles, causing the screen to flicker. It becomes very noticeable beyond X/Z: 2,000,000.
 * X/Z: 16,777,216 - Blocks stop being solid, causing the player to fall into the void. However, the player can still swim through water.
 * X/Z: 268,435,456 - The gaps between chunks start to become multiple blocks long, making the world look like stripes on one axis and a grid pattern on both axis.
 * X/Z: 2,147,483,647 - The world stops generating terrain and the map appears blank from here on out with only the Sun and Moon.
 * X/Z: Infinity - The largest achievable distance Java can render(1.7976931348623157e+308, any numbers larger than that are simply referred as infinity on NaN). The sun and moon are gone and everything is blank with the default sky color.

Intentional limits
In versions after Infdev 20100313, a world boundary was added at X/Z: ±32,000,000. After the boundary at X/Z ±32,000,000 blocks, the terrain no longer generates, and only air blocks that have the same textures as the surrounding terrain generate.

Infdev 20100227
The Far Lands in this version are difficult to observe due to many distance effects and blocks becoming non-solid at this distance.

Infdev 20100313 through 20100325
The Far Lands are no longer able to be viewed without modifying the game, due to the addition of a world barrier at +/- 32,000,000 blocks away from spawn. Most of the distance effects present in Infdev 20100227 have been fixed, so the player is able to walk around and interact with the terrain with little to no issue.