• Inventory Split Incoming

    MassiveCraft will be implementing an inventory split across game modes to improve fairness, balance, and player experience. Each game mode (Roleplay and Survival) will have its own dedicated inventory going forward. To help players prepare, we’ve opened a special storage system to safeguard important items during the transition. For full details, read the announcement here: Game Mode Inventory Split blog post.

    Your current inventories, backpacks, and ender chest are in the shared Medieval inventory. When the new Roleplay inventory is created and assigned to the roleplay world(s) you will lose access to your currently stored items.

    Important Dates

    • April 1: Trunk storage opens.
    • May 25: Final day to submit items for storage.
    • June 1: Inventories are officially split.

    Please make sure to submit any items you wish to preserve in the trunk storage or one of the roleplay worlds before the deadline. After the split, inventories will no longer carry over between game modes.

Mekket Architecture?

"Mekett architecture revolves around the physical hive, something which Mekett actually call I'kaya, or home. The use of the word hive is an external construct equating them with insects. Most Mekett hives began with the sleeping chambers from which they emerged. Collectively, these were called the Constellation. Post-emergence, these subterranean structures acted like nurseries for the new communities that provided shelter, storage, and defense. Hives have typically branched out from the Constellation node.

It is not correct to characterize a Mekett hive as an underground structure since most large buildings exist above ground. However, entrances are almost always below ground, and few roads exist on the surface. Mekett typically travel using below-ground streets (these are not narrow tunnels). There, buildings have entrances like any other. There are rarely windows near ground-level, and even those above are small and utilitarian. One may enter a building without ever even realizing they have traveled above ground. If it was economical for large structures to be built below, they likely would be. A side benefit of this is security. Entrances that go to the sub-streets are wide, well secured, and few.

The Mekett style is actually fairly decorative and attractive. This is not so much a matter of natural tendency, nor does it reflect their usual efficiency, rather, they are mimicking the Meraic designs that they see in illustrations and on murals. Meraic design favors strong contrast, surface ornamentation, and often employs shapes that flow with, mimic, or stand out from the land around them."

https://wiki.massivecraft.com/Mekett_Economy_and_Technology