Automate character movement in Minecraft. Works on Vanilla Minecraft. NOT a mod. Forge not required. This is a stand-alone program.
Nobody likes to see Steve standing still. When we take a break from playing, wouldn't it be nice to give Steve something to do? ...Now you can. With Kontrol49's AutoM8, you can have Steve move a random amount of blocks, in any of 8 random directions. When Steve stops moving, you can even have him place an item.
Is Steve an Artist? Give him a stack of torches and let him randomly place them. Got a SuperFlat world that needs a forest? You could plant every sapling by hand, or, let Steve take care of it.
...and yes, this is an anti-AntiAFK movement generator that actually works. If using this program to steal claim blocks, you're on your own. I will not be responsible for lost claim blocks, or banned accounts.
You may download the EXE file or Installer.
Special Thanks to BDcraft.net for permission to use their Command Block images
Features
- Select 2, 4, or 8 directions of travel to randomly move.
- Select a maximum time to wait between movements.
- Select minimum and maximum distance to travel.
- Place an item at each stop point.
- Automatically create forests or art.
- Defeat anti-AFK
- No mods to install, works Vanilla.
- 32/64-bit compatible.
Follow Kontrol49's AutoM8
User Reviews
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4/5 stars for the following reasons: I've tested this with different "situations", such as the placing torches/saplings mechanic. The title "Make Art" is a bit misleading, but it's not hard to understand. I've "tested", per say, things such as setting Steve in a 1x1 area and seeing how he moves around-- And I'm sure that it would still work as an anti-AFK program even if Steve were to be enclosed to where he'd have to jump, considering he is still moving around. For Multiplayer servers, I just played around with how it would work, and it works fine. Overall, I enjoy how users can have MineCraft running on half (or less) of the screen, just with it unpaused, and it still works. I could also see how it could be beneficial that users can quickly pause and tweak the program and re-start it. Though, as stated in the ReadMe, the program does (occasionally) crash, it works most of the time I've been playing with it. It's easy to start and stop, with minimal and easy settings, and a quite user-friendly interface, considering it does not have to be over other program tabs to work. One thing that (might) be nice, or so I could think, would be somehow implementing a "save settings" feature? Though it's not all that important, if the program does crash in the middle of running, and the user tweaked variables to what they liked the most, it could be nice to have. However, as stated, there are minimal settings so it wouldn't be hard re-setting them to what the user prefers. Despite this, this program is useful and does work. It does its job, and that's what matters, no? TL;DR: The program works as it should, has a user-friendly interface, and is easy to use. The few crashes are easy to get past-- just start it back up and re-do the settings.