Dear reader, [[link]] I have a confession to make: [[link]] I never really got into Minecraft. Sure, I dabbled—but then I'd turn around to see the literal cathedrals folks were building with their blocks and I simply decided to go play something else. We're not all destined to be architects, and [[link]] I'm more than okay with that. Throw in a bit of redstone, and I'm happy observing others' creativity safely within the confines of my hardware writing lane.
One YouTuber called sammyuri has shared an especially extreme Redstone build, (via ). Dubbed CraftGPT, this version of the Large Language Model is decidedly compact as far as these things go, featuring only about 5 million parameters (as that's all the creator's "poor old laptop" could handle). However, translating that into Minecraft blocks took up a considerable amount of space.
Furthermore, CraftGPT is slooow. Even with an accelerated tick rate thanks to , "it can still take hours to generate a response." Granted, that's quicker than it takes me to get to some of my WhatsApp messages, but still! Without this multithreaded Minecraft server built for redstone, you're looking at a decade-long response time instead.
, but redstone ore remains essential to the Minecraft community's most ambitious creations. Case in point, that towers over the creator's teeny tiny Minecraft villagers and blots out the sun. But as impressive as that computer science project, sometimes Minecraft builds say it best when they say (or do) nothing at all—and what I mean by that is that I'm personally still quite partial to this .

1. Best overall:
2. Best budget:
3. Best 14-inch:
4. Best mid-range:
5. Best high-performance:
6. Best 17-inch:
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