You must try to install and download this Sphax PureBDCraft 1.6.4 Texture Pack. This is really like cartoon, so when you try this packs you feel on cartoon world. All of the interior and exterior in this packs made by hand like cartoon handwritter, the feel is different with other packs that use photoshop or corel to make. This texture packs made by someone namely Sphax84 and all of the credit go to him we really thank you. Many people ask and looking this Sphax PureBDCraft 1.6.4 Texture Pack and you just download and read installations below. Select the version which works best for your computer.
Although the pack that’s gets updated and fixed for all resolutions from x16 to x512, I am recommended for you to make 128×128 resolutions, but if your computer can run x512, you can try its. The resolutions of this texture pack from 16×16 up too 512×512. Sphax PureBDCraft 1.6.4 Texture Pack – Download Sphax PureBDCraft Texture Pack for Minecraft 1.6.4/1.6.2. Each of the audio and video tracks are synchronized too so that everyone's audio and video lines up and don't accidentally overlap or lag too far behind.Sphax PureBDCraft 1.6.4 Texture Pack Minecraft 1.6.4/1.6.3 We'll typically do this even when we're all in the same room just because it's easier to make sure everyone's audio is being captured.Īll the recordings are then pulled into a single Screenflow project and we sit and re-watch everything and figure out whose screen had something interesting going on, put them in the forefront then add things like the "GRIMM-CAM ACTIVATED" overlay and fade-in/fade-out transitions so the camera views switch over nicely. This lets us hear people that aren't in the same (physical) room, or talk to people who parachute in mid-recording to see what's goin on. To consolidate our Audio we all log into something like Discord or Teamspeak and join a private channel. This setup is expensive but the rotating system of drives means we don't have to worry about people running out of HDD space on thier computer or not having a thumb drive big enough to transfer all the files.
Once a drive is full, or a major recording session is over, everyone gives thier hard drives to Ingrimmm who swaps them out for empty ones, and pulls all the recordings onto a LaCie 2big Dual Thunderbolt-2 USB 3.0 2-Bay RAID Hard Drive 6TB (9000437U) to consolidate and archive them. To keep track of when/whose recording each file is/was we name them something like Ingrimmm - LEGENDS - YYYYMMDD - 001 so that everything stays organized over time. We each have our own copy of the recording software, and we each have a LaCie Rugged Thunderbolt and USB 3.0 1 TB 9000488 drive that we each save our recordings to. This can actually get pretty complicated so I put it as it's own section - click here. File sizes tend to run heavy - about 2 GB for a 30 minute file - so we have a 20 Mbps upload pipe from Comcast. We upload to YouTube with a minimum quality of 1080p. We found out the hard way that it will just record a solid blank screen. Also Camtasia Studio could NOT handle MC running in full-screen. So play for one hour, save to avoid crashing from huge file size (which CS didn't like), wait 30 min for Camtasia to finish, rinse and repeat.
We used have to wait for upwards of 20-30 min for a one-hour recording to save.
In the past (when Ingrimmm used to record on his PC) we used Camtasia Studio but stopped for two reasons - 1) no one else had a PC so the file formats didn't match and, 2) Camtasia is great but SUPER slow at saving files. We all use Screenflow (MAC) by Telestream. We use the Sabrent Mic/Headphone to USB dongles cuz they look sexy, are well-built, and are friggin perfect. If you have a laptop (like the new Macs) you'll need something to convert the Mic and Headphone lines to something your computer can recognize with some headsets (like the Sennheiser, or even some of the Turtle Beaches). It's way too sensitive if there are other people in the room tho so when there's a group of us we use the Sennheiser Game One (PC) Headphones.
When Ingrimmm is rocking solo he uses the Blue Yeti Pro because it's a phenomenal mic at a (relatively) low cost. We've used a number of headphone/mic combos over the years. This tends to pose a problem when we're recording in the same room if someone doesn't have a mic with noise-cancelling. We all record on Apple Macbook Pros and don't (right now) use any other hardware or interfaces.