I remember being 14, sitting in a dark room illuminated only by the glow of a monitor and the blue hum of a nuclear reactor. Back then, "advanced" Minecraft was a matter of physical logic— IndustrialCraft 2 cables snaking through walls, Logistics Pipes chattering as they sorted ores, and Railcraft tracks carving paths across frozen winter chunks to feed an insatiable appetite for power. It was a world of high-pressure steam and solar arrays, where the Quality of your work was measured by the efficiency of your automation.
But today, looking at the horizon of 2026, the game has become something more. We are no longer just building machines; we are growing the avatars that inhabit them.
World models
In the days of Logistics Pipes, a pipe the most intelligent software was a diamond pipe.
Today the latest World Models, like the Google’s Genie (https://deepmind.google/discover/blog/genie-generative-interactive-environments/), don’t just calculate paths; they simulate reality.
These models have ingested millions of hours of gameplay, developing an internal "feel" for the world's physics that far exceeds any old-school script. When a modern foundation model "dreams" a build before placing a single block, it isn’t just executing code—it’s engaging in digital visualization. It understands that a wall isn't just a collection of stone blocks to satisfy a schematic; it is a boundary against the dark.
I wonder how soon it’ll learn not to pur fingers into the power sockets also.
In Minecraft, the AI isn't just mining diamonds anymore; it's reflecting our own collective understanding of agriculture and industrialization and urbanization back at us through a neural lens.
An intentional regurgitation.
The Architecture of the automation
We used to think of automation as a solitary endeavor—one machine, one task. But we have entered the era of Multi-Agents. When you drop a thousand agents into a server today, they don’t just survive; they sivide and conquer .
In one of the papers i will reference, those agents develop specialized roles—the miner, the farmer, the builder—much like we once assigned different machines to different tasks. But they don’t do this because a programmer "wired" them to. They do it because they are built upon Voyager (https://voyager.minedojo.org/) it allows them to write their own internal software. They are self-correcting systems, honing their own craft through trial, error, and social friction. Bladerunner stuff.
Absolutely stunning work.
The winter chunks are still cold, and the solar panels still face the sun, but the heart of the game has shifted. Minecraft is now the laboratory where we are learning how to build "embodied" intelligence. It’s where the abstract math of a Large Language Model meets the hard reality of a gravity-defying gravel block.
Papers:
Skywork.ai
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