Obsidian

Obsidian is a deep purple block that was first released into the game in version 0.30. Obsidian may be found on rare occasions, when there is flowing Water and source Lava blocks nearby. Obsidian is created when flowing water hits a lava "source block"; when water and runoff lava collide, cobblestone is created. Obsidian never actually spawns with the chunk, but is created by the environment. Obsidian can only be successfully mined with a diamond pickaxe. Each obsidian block takes 15 seconds to mine when using a diamond pick. It can be broken with a non-diamond pickaxe, but this takes 50 seconds and will not yield a collectible block.



Obsidian in the wild is somewhat rare and difficult to mine since it usually rests on top of a Lava block. Obsidian farming is thus the preferred way to acquire large quantities. A basic Obsidian farm is composed of a trough seven blocks long into which seven blocks of Lava are poured using the Bucket. A water block is then placed on top of one end of the trough so that it flows onto the lava and converts it into Obsidian.

As of the Halloween Update, Obsidian can be used to create portals to The Nether. This requires at least 10 blocks of Obsidian (14 for a full frame) and a Flint and Steel.

Current Uses

 * Portals to The Nether
 * Decoration
 * Bunkers. At 6,000, Obsidian's explosion resistance rating is second only to Bedrock.  It is therefore an exceptionally desirable construction material for making defensive structures, in both PvE or PvP, as it is effectively impervious to both lava and explosions.

History
Obsidian was available for use since Classic mode. It is generally used for making dark things, or the black lines of Pixel Art.

In Survival Test mode, Obsidian was extremely tough to break and would drop one or two Cobblestone blocks when broken.

Obsidian was removed in Indev and brought back in Infdev. Obsidian was used to mark the positions of the cardinal directions. This created two intersecting planes extending just above the surface of the solid material that surrounds them. This has since been removed.

Possible Future
Notch has mentioned he may require floating islands to have obsidian in the future:

Later, when asked about making floating blocks fall, he answered:

Farming and Casting
On the 16th of March 2011, a new way to farm obsidian involving redstone as the only irretrievable source (rather than lava) was discovered. The process involves having a row of running water with a line of redstone next to it and pouring the lava onto the redstone, in-turn, replacing it with obsidian. This is currently the only known way to create numerous blocks of obsidian without using multiple buckets of lava. It is apparently a glitch that will most likely be patched.

Redstone-to-Obsidian Converter basic tutorial Obsidian generator diferent building method

Obsidian can also be easily farmed through the creation of nether portals. Since a portal is created in the Nether to mimic the overworld, by creating pairs of portals one can destroy the first portal and run back through the second.

Basic Obsidian Farm

Structures can be constructed out of Obsidian without the use of a diamond pickaxe by creating a mold and placing the lava source within it, then running water over the lava. This will form the obsidian in place, but without diamonds it is quite hard to get rid of.

Safe(er) Mining
Obsidian, if found in the wild, is typically directly above a lava source block, making it dangerous and difficult to mine. This can be overcome, however by placing a water spring block directly over the block you are currently mining. This will convert any lava around the obsidian block into more obsidian, so it's less likely to fall into lava.

An equally effective way is to find the edge of the obsidian "lake", dig a one block deep hole under which there is no lava, and place the water source in this hole. Then, start mining the obsidian bording the water spring. When it breaks, the fast-moving water will fill the void faster than the liberated obsidian block can drop into the lava. The player can continue mining outward from the spring as far as the water will travel. This method relies on the same properties of water as the first strategy, but does not require the player to battle against running water while mining.

Trivia

 * Even though Obsidian is the second hardest block to destroy, in reality, obsidian is glasslike, made by volcanoes, and is actually quite fragile. The misconception is probably due to obsidian being able to reach a sharpness comparable to diamond while being easier to produce, therefore being a favored material during the Stone Age for use as blades and arrow tips.

Obsidian Obsidiaan Obsydian