It's easy to forget that computer chips are based on genuine physical principles since they've gotten so small and complicated. They're not merely a series of ever-increasing figures. Check out the newest version of a computer processor developed entirely within the Minecraft game engine for a realistic (well, virtual) demonstration.
Minecraft builder "Sammyuri" spent seven months creating the Chungus 2, a very complicated computer processor that lives almost entirely within the Minecraft game engine. This isn't the first time a computer processor has been digitally created inside Minecraft, but the Chungus 2 (Computation Humongous Unconventional Number and Graphics Unit), which simulates an 8-bit processor with a one hertz clock speed and 256 bytes of RAM, is likely the largest and most complicated.
Minecraft processors make advantage of the game's physics engine to reproduce the structure of genuine processors on a macro scale, using redstone dust, torches, repeaters, pistons, levers, and other small devices as materials. For some context, each "block" in the game is one virtual metre on each side, therefore constructing this structure in real life would be around the size of a skyscraper or cruise ship.
The Chungus 2 can play replaceable 2D games like Tetris, Snake, or even a graphing calculator when linked to an in-game 32*32 "screen" and "controller" (manipulated by a Minecraft player avatar leaping on block-sized buttons). In order to utilise the 1Hz CPU, certain apps require the Minecraft server to be artificially sped up. Each software is likewise created digitally in Minecraft, and it plugs into the computer like a freight train gaming cartridge.