Minecraft vs $7000 Apple Mac Studio



Minecraft Viki (video wiki) āžœ https://minecraft.viki.gg

In this Mumbo Jumbo Minecraft, I put my new Max Spec M1 Ultra Apple Mac Studio that cost $7000 to the test, with Minecraft. Can you play Minecraft on a Mac? I guess this is the ultimate answer to that question. This M1 Ultra Mac Studio with 20 cores and 64 GPU cores gets tested with Minecraft Single Player worlds, Minecraft TNT explosions and even gets trialed on the Hermitcraft server.

WHY DID I GET A MAC STUDIO?
I’m not just a Minecraft YouTuber. I’m a filmmaker who works on commercials, narrative and documentaries. I also love to travel, and be out in remote places to shoot photos, hike and explore.
I wanted a desktop powerhouse that could fit into a single flight case and be transported to any location in the world, allowing me to live and work wherever I want.

The system needed to:
1. Run Minecraft at a good enough level to record videos
2. Handle colour graded cinema camera files, and edit with them no dropped frames.
3. Have a large number of high speed I/O ports to deal with multiple large data transfers at once.
4. Be silent for recording audio in potentially small places (This is what ruled out most gaming laptops!)
5. Fit in a flight case, with the system, display, and flight case combination weighing under 20KG to be within the weight allowance for checked luggage on flights.
6. Be durable enough to be thrown on a plane, in the back of a van, in my backpack.

Filming channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/ThatMumboJumbo2
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialmumbo/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThatMumboJumbo

source

34 thoughts on “Minecraft vs $7000 Apple Mac Studio”

  1. It's kinda disappointing how poorly the game runs on a 7k workstation. This is pretty educational, I defenetly will not be investing in a Mac as a gaming platform.

    Reply
  2. Mumbo vs Regular people:

    Mumbo: sells his kidneys to buy a new laptop THEN IMMEDIATELY TRIES TO KILL IT.

    Regular people: buys $1000-$1,500 device for gaming then immediately installs sodium and other optimizing mods to avoid any lag.

    Reply
  3. I play minecraft on a mac pro (one of the much older versions, without the touch bar) as I'm saving up for a good pc and 60 fps is average to good on most servers šŸ’€šŸ’€

    Reply
  4. There is actually a very easy and guaranteed way to crash Minecraft on ANY PC.
    Put this command:
    /execute at @e run summon minecraft:chicken ~ ~ ~
    Inside of a repeating command block that is always active.

    Reply
  5. Honestly for the money you spent I would've much prefered to see you get a puget system. You can get thim in a mini case, and you get better performance and render times if you're just using adobe anyways. I'm personally of the belief that there are only 2 reasons to own a mac other than simply liking them. Music, because the midi devices and complex audio setups just work unlike windows which is pretty finicky at times. That, and graphic design, because apple has better cmyk support which most graphic design work is done in. I personally do music so I do have a macbook, butt for everything else it's just worse than the windows laptop I spent less money on. That being said, if you like working on mac, valid reason. I just think if someone is going to get one purely for performance and work power, you can do way better way cheaper.

    Reply
  6. This video was highly entertaining. In other news I'm almost positive that the music used at the end is the same as one of the tracks used for a fiction podcast I listen to. Nice touch.

    Reply

Leave a Comment