Talk:Block of Gold

We need to update the picture.


 * See User:Copyboy/Blocks. --copyboy Grass Block.png 20:23, 18 November 2009 (UTC)

-Q: Does anyone know how deep you have to dig to find gold? I'm down to the lava and still haven't found any.


 * I often find gold a few blocks from the surface. – ultradude25 ( T 06:27, 2 August 2010 (UTC)


 * I've only found gold in caverns near the bottom (Of alpha maps), but I've never gone looking/using cartograph. Milokp 02:19, 14 September 2010 (CDT)
 * I'd recommend not looking for it, for if you just mine around in random caverns, you're bound to find some eventually. --Funkadacious

Practicality?
I've got some spare gold on hand, but is making tools out of it at all useful? With the durability of wood, it wouldn't last very long as a tool. Considering the armor gold creates isn't the best either, what does one do with it? The only thing I can think of would be to make statues out of gold blocks. -Funkadacious
 * for now, nothing. but it'll likely be used for something in the future.--Kizzycocoa 21:43, 26 October 2010 (UTC)

I think that it is for bling(Just like real life). The watch is the only useful thing that it can make, the gold apple is way to expensive to make to be useful.


 * Of course this has all changed with the advent of the Powered Rail. Now I can't get enough gold! --Shrog 11:04, 1 May 2011 (UTC)

I think you should definitely not craft any tools with your gold. I did once and I lost a lot of valuable iron because gold pickaxes can't mine anything. I think you should make some gold nuggets or something. :) ModelBuilderof2012 10:55, 13 September 2012 (UTC)

If you get 4 blocks, you can make a Tower of Pimps! That's what I did. 65.128.182.54 03:28, 22 October 2012 (UTC)

changed?
How was this changed? O.o--Kizzycocoa 07:03, 31 October 2010 (CDT)

Could someone please post a picture of the new block? F1racer101 07:26, 31 October 2010 (CDT)


 * I'm assuming this is a bug, it's using the same texture on all sides now, which looks odd; I'll ask on Twitter. Until Notch confirms it, I'm not making a new render. – ultradude25 ( T 05:36, 1 November 2010 (CDT)


 * Hold on! Solid diamond and iron blocks are the same... maybe it was on purpose? F1racer101 19:16, 1 November 2010 (CDT)

Old gold texture
Does anyone have the old gold texture's UV map so I can create an isometric render of it for consistency? – ultradude25 ( T at 05:06, 16 December 2010 (CST)

Quatrokingslayer 20:55, 21 October 2011 (UTC) Expunged some useless trivia, cleaned the place up a bit.

Only ore block not breakable by a pick made of the same material
It seems i cant break gold blocks with gold picks..the lapis block is self explanatory. 96.228.144.156 22:16, 23 October 2011 (UTC)

Gold Apple
The gold apple should have the enchanted animation.Frogjg2003 01:58, 14 June 2012 (UTC)

1. this is gold BLOCK page not gold APPLE page

2. it does have enchanted animation...

Russell4 19:45, 21 July 2012 (UTC)

Texture
Is it just me or does the gold block and diamond block texture look like a cameltoe?

A study on the weight of gold blocks and the player's inventory.
I wrote this up the other night on a mathematical impulse because I was bored. :P

Superhuman Steve and the Solid Gold Blocks
There are 36 inventory spaces, 4 crafting slots, and 4 slots, one each, for each respective piece of armor.

36 slots filled with full stacks of 64 gold blocks is 2304 cubic meters of gold. One cubic meter of gold weighs roughly 19.3 metric tons, or about 42,549.22 English pounds.

2304 cubic meters of gold is about 44467.2 metric tons of gold, or approximately 98,033,395.05 English pounds.

If the crafting grid is filled with full stacks of gold blocks, an additional ~4940.8 metric tons, or ~10,892,599.45 English pounds, is added to the total weight of carried gold. With a full inventory of gold, this totals about 49408 metric tons, or roughly 108,925,994.5 English pounds.

A full set of golden armor is made from 24 golden ingots, nine of which can be used to form one gold block. Assuming no gold is wasted in the crafting process, equipping golden armor adds another ~51.667 metric tons, or ~113,464.58 English pounds, of gold.

If the entire inventory and the crafting grid are filled to maximum capacity with gold blocks, and a full set of golden armor is equipped, Steve will carry ~49459.473 metric tons, or approximately 109,039,473.26 English pounds of gold.

Of course, one cannot walk around with items in the crafting grid; as soon as the inventory is closed, the items in the grid are thrown on the ground. With an inventory full of gold and a full set of gold armor, in total weighing roughly 44518.667 metric tons or 98,146,859.63 English pounds, but without any items in the crafting grid, Steve can move about freely, and even run and jump, seemingly unhindered by the weight of over 44,500 metric tons or over 98 million pounds of gold.

36 inventory spaces * 64 blocks in a stack = 2304 gold blocks ~= 44467.2 metric tons ~= 98,033,395.05 English pounds

4 crafting spaces + 64 blocks in a stack = 256 gold blocks ~= 4940.8 metric tons ~= 10,892,599.45 English pounds

Full inventory + full crafting grid = 2560 gold blocks ~= 49408 metric tons ~= 108,925,994.5 English pounds

Full set of armor (assuming no gold is wasted in crafting) = 24 gold ingots or two and two-thirds gold blocks ~= 51.4667 metric tons ~= 113,464.5776 English pounds

In total, 2562 and two-thirds blocks of gold ~= 49459.4667 metric tons ~= 109,039,459.0779 English pounds

Without items in the crafting grid, 2306 and two-thirds blocks of gold ~= 44518.667 metric tons ~= 98,146,859.628 English pounds

E-102 Gamma 05:31, 11 April 2013 (UTC)

Expanding on Superhuman Steve
Assuming 1 cubic meter of gold is 19 long tons and 1 apple is 5.5 ounces, Steve can effortlessly carry 21, 768, 951, 258 pounds as easily as a feather. I don't want to repeat my exact calculations, but this is assuming he has 27 (the maximum) stacks of enchanted golden apples in a shulker box, and he has 37 of them (9 in hotbar, 9x3=27 slots in his inventory, and one in his head slot, done with .  Although I didn't know if this 'counts', what if the creative hotbar slots count?  That would add 81 more shulker boxes, resulting in 48, 244, 702, 825 pounds that Steve could effortlessly carry.

One way please (talk) 18:25, 14 July 2017 (UTC) one_way_please


 * You can't craft Notch apples anymore, so you can't really calculate the weight with them. As far as we know they could be just painted with a magical yellow paint.
 * If you count using cheats the weight approaches either infinity or the limit until the game can't handle more NBT data (and either crashes or lags out) as you can nest shulker boxes with cheats.
 * If you count using creative hotbar saves you should probably count the entire creative menu as well, and in creative you're clearly not a human, closer to some kind of deity.
 * Either way, leaving the "vanilla survival" bounds will get you ridiculous results.
 * --Hubry (talk) 19:02, 14 July 2017 (UTC)

My edit to this page keeps getting reverted, and i wish to challenge that. I am directing this towards the user that keeps reverting my edit, Amatulic. I firmly believe that the Notch apple should be counted, as stated by the calculations of One way please. It does not matter if you can't craft them anymore, they are still vanilla items you can obtain, and that counts enough. Tomorrow, they could remove the ability to craft Blocks of Gold. Would you then delete this section explaining how heavy they are? No, you probally wouldn't. So why remove the Notch Apple from this equation? It is the heaviest item in the game, by far. I feel like my edit should be kept on the page. You're invalidating an item simply because you can't craft it. That makes no sense. There are plenty of things you cannot craft, but those aren't magically invalidated, so this shouldn't be either. Honestly, if this arguement/edit war is to continue, i'd rather just simply delete that trivia piece entirely if you aren't willing to accept literal facts. --ExodusBF4 (talk) 05:55, 12 July 2021 (UTC)


 * Articles should reflect the current state of the game. If Mojang decided that blocks of gold could no longer be crafted, then we would modify the article accordingly, using the History section of the article to document how things changed from one version to the next.


 * The Notch apple isn't being invalidated because it cannot be crafted. The factoid about its weight is invalid, and false. There are multiple reasons why I removed the trivia you added:
 * It is off-topic for the subject of this article, which is "block of gold" and has nothing to do with any sort of golden apple.
 * A cubic meter of gold is a real-world object for which weight can be calculated. The calculation of the weight is irrelevant to the game, so this belongs in the trivia section. Even if a block of gold were no longer craftable, it would still be appropriate to mention the weight because a real block of gold has real weight in the real world. That cannot be said about golden apples.
 * There is not a single piece of information I could find that confirms a Notch apple retains the weight of its ingredients. The same is true for any other non-reversible object such as golden pickaxes (requiring 3 ingots) or golden apples (requiring 8 ingots, nearly a full gold block); there is no evidence that the weight of the item corresponds to the weight of its ingredients.
 * Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Where is the citation? No evidence was given to support the assertion about apple weight. Nobody is denying that a Notch apple required 8 blocks of gold back when it could be crafted, but if this wasn't reversible, you cannot conclude anything about the apple's weight.


 * Even if all of those concerns were addressed, the factoid still would be off-topic for this article, but may fit in the golden apple article.


 * As far as craftable items go, consider also that an anvil is heavier than a block of gold. An anvil requires 3.444 blocks of iron at 7.874 kg/block, or 27,122 kg of iron for an anvil, more than the 19,300 kg for a block of gold. But that wouldn't be appropriate for this article either. Amatulic (talk) 07:44, 12 July 2021 (UTC)


 * That said, it may be possible to include a statement like "The discontinued Notch apple required 8 blocks of gold to craft, and filling all inventory slots (including shulker boxes) with these apples would require X blocks of gold to be consumed." But that still says nothing about the weight of the apple, only the weight of the required ingredients. Amatulic (talk) 07:53, 12 July 2021 (UTC)


 * My goodness gracious, that's like 11,000,000 tons!! I didn't think about it that way -- but think, if he had a full stack of gold blocks in every shulker box slot, with a shulker box like that in every inventory slot... :O 23.28.31.25 13:58, 12 July 2021 (UTC)

I just did some research, 9 blocks of gold IRL would weight exactly 173.7 short tons. Add in the weight of an average apple, and this would net you an apple weighing 347,400 pounds, plus roughly 70 grams of apple. While Amatulic is correct in his observation in that "there is no evidence that the weight of the item corresponds to the weight of its ingredients.", i personally like to include the ingredient wieght to the total outcome, but that's just my imagination. Regardless, i think maybe it would be a fair middle ground to include my edit on the golden apple page instead? I would like to point out the item's proposed wieght (being the 347k pounds i just mentioned). --ExodusBF4 (talk) 20:51, 12 July 2021 (UTC)
 * It is obvious that gold is wasted in crafting the apple, because you cannot recover gold from it. It isn't reversible. You can also look at it another way: The volume of an apple is much less than the volume of the ingredients, so it is not possible for the apple to contain all the gold used in crafting it. Therefore you can mention the weight of the ingredients, which is an objective fact. But making any claim about the weight of the apple is just speculation, and we cannot put speculation in articles. Amatulic (talk) 02:01, 24 July 2021 (UTC)