ToyPack v1.13.6

Written: 2023-04-10 · Last Updated: Never

Starting out as "Toy's Pack" in early 2020 – around the time I founded ICCMC – ToyPack eventually went from a backport of Vanilla Tweaks to my main resource pack containing everything I need.

A bit of History

ToyPack started out as "Toy's Pack" sometime in March of 2020. It was a backport of a 1.14 set of Vanilla Tweaks resource packs I had made and wanted to use in my 1.6.4 Minecraft client.

My best recollection of the initial feature set was:

Alongside Vanilla Tweaks, I had a copy of the CodeCrafted resource pack overlayed. In 1.6, you couldn't stack resource packs, so I had to do everything by hand into one pack. I liked the Wool, Glass, and Redstone dust textures from CodeCrafted, and I also stole the Redstone Lamp texture to use for Glowstone.

Later on, I added more things, such as a few more Vanilla Tweaks packs (like Darker GUI), the rainbow block destruction from CodeCrafted, and some block textures from FVDisco's oCd.

The oldest version of the pack that survives is v1.5, which you can download here if you're curious.

Version 1.13

Version 1.13 of ToyPack was the update I brought ToyPack to 1.19, after I ported ICCMC from 1.6.4 to the brand-new Release 1.19. It's a 10-year difference nearly in game version, so the changes are pretty huge. I got rid of a load of textures, and updated tons of file names to their new block IDs and whatnot.

Screenshots

Redstone Utilities

Old Textures/Nostalgia

Old Colours

Unobtrusiveness/Fixes/Misc

Indicators/Highlights

Download/Main Page

ToyPack can be found on GitHub at toydotgame/ToyPack, with all latest releases found under the Releases tab on the right. You can click on "Source code (zip)" on a release to download a ZIP you can put straight into your .minecraft/resourcepacks/ folder.

As of writing, the current release is v1.13.6.

ToyPack never really had a feature list, it's more of just a changelog to infer features off of, which is why I made this page. This page isn't comprehensive at all, but it covers a good deal of the visual changes at least. (Most notably, I have not explained the sounds yet) If you really wanna read the changelog (which I do suggest you do), you can read it on the repository's README.