Cheaper TNT Addon
- Today, 14:44
- 26
Cheaper TNT mod — blow stuff up without blowing your whole stash on one sad block of boom.
This addon does exactly what you want: TNT stays the same strength, but the crafting becomes way less painful thanks to small gunpowder piles you can make and undo whenever you need. You craft a batch of the tiny piles, use them in the new TNT recipe, and if you overcraft by accident, you can convert the leftovers back into normal gunpowder so nothing goes to waste. That one little change flips how you use explosives in survival. Instead of saving TNT for “special occasions,” you can actually plan projects around it: clearing a quarry, carving a tunnel, flattening a build pad, or running a quick mob-den pit without spending a whole night grinding creepers. The trick is learning control. Line your charges along the rock you want gone, leave a two–three block gap between TNT if you’re chaining it, and light from one end so the blast wave walks forward instead of nuking your own feet. I keep a water bucket on hotbar to kill fires and a stack of cheap blocks to patch walls, and I always stage a little “safe kit” chest just outside the blast zone with food, spare pick, and a bed so a bad boom isn’t a full reset.
On Realms, treat TNT like a community tool, not a grief button. Mark a blast yard away from town, post times for “demo hours,” and put a signboard where folks can request help clearing terrain. If your server runs claims, make sure you’ve got permission before you light anything; unannounced explosions get old fast. For co-op mining, one player measures and places, one handles ignition and countdowns, and a third sweeps drops so nothing despawns. In the Nether, go extra careful—chain shorter runs, keep fire resistance handy, and pre-dig escape pockets in case lava decides to say hi mid-sequence. For PvP nights, TNT’s more about pressure than pure kills. Use it to deny space, flush campers, or open new sightlines; a single well-timed boom in a narrow lane can break a stalemate, but remember friendly fire is real and loud. Builders can still go crazy with it if they box smart: surround the target with blast-resistant stuff like obsidian to keep craters contained, or flood the area to control fire spread while you test patterns.
Performance-wise, spaced charges are your friend—don’t spam a hundred blocks at once on a phone and then wonder why your frames cry. Light, listen, loot, reset. If you’re posting clips or downloads, tag them straight so people can find it: “Cheaper TNT mod for Minecraft Bedrock,” “MCPE TNT recipe,” “Bedrock survival explosives.” Craft your piles, stack your charges, and make the loud jobs quick instead of miserable.
Installation:
— Download McPack
— Use the Minecraft
— Install McAddon or McPack files, just open it for this;
— Select new textures in the settings;
— Done.
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