Editing House of Boom

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==Origin==
==Origin==
[[File:Piston.gif|thumb|left|300px|A player moving a piston in ''Minecraft: Java Edition''.]]
[[File:Piston.gif|thumb|left|300px|A player moving a piston in ''Minecraft: Java Edition''.]]
In ''Minecraft'', pistons are crafted with three wooden planks, four cobblestone blocks, one iron ingot, and one redstone dust. They can push other blocks, mobs, and players around when given a pulse through a redstone circuit, although whatever they push only travels 1 block away rather than the launching that is seen in ''Super Smash Bros.'' The giant piston seen in ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'' does not appear in ''Minecraft'' and exists only as part of Steve's final smash.
In ''Minecraft'', pistons are crafted with three planks of wood, four cobblestones, one iron ingot, and one redstone. They can push other blocks, mobs, and players around when given a pulse through a redstone circuit. The giant piston Steve summons in ''Smash'' does not naturally occur in ''Minecraft'', and exists solely for the purposes of the Final Smash.


While the House of Boom does not naturally generate in ''Minecraft'' worlds, it bears a strong resemblance to both strongholds and jungle temples, structures that naturally generate in the Overworld. The former serve as the only entrances to the End dimension, where the fight against the Ender Dragon takes place (although unlike the House of Boom, strongholds are found underground rather than on the surface) and the latter contain chests guarded by traps. There are other structures in ''Minecraft'' that contain harmful traps, such as desert pyramids, structures which contain rooms with chests filled with valuable loot and a pressure plate that can activate TNT hidden underneath, should an unsuspecting player fall onto it.
While the House of Boom does not naturally appear in ''Minecraft'', it bears a strong resemblance to both strongholds and jungle temples, structures that naturally generate in the Overworld. The former serve as the only entrances to the End dimension, where the fight against the Ender Dragon takes place (although unlike the House of Boom, strongholds are found underground rather than on the surface) and the latter contain chests guarded by traps. There are other structures in ''Minecraft'' that contain harmful traps, such as desert pyramids, structures which contain rooms with chests filled with valuable loot and a pressure plate that can activate TNT hidden underneath, should an unsuspecting player fall onto it.


[[Masahiro Sakurai]] stated that the Final Smash was inspired by seeing players create buildings filled with traps to harm their opponents, which consists of an act called "[https://minecraft.wiki/w/Tutorials/Griefing_prevention Griefing]": intentionally irritating another player. The first-person perspective seen just before the explosion resembles ''Minecraft'''s default camera mode, with the irregular movement characteristic of a computer mouse. Steve's crouching after the Final Smash is a common gesture in the ''Minecraft'' community used as a sign of friendship or, in this case, to mock a losing player as a form of teabagging.
[[Masahiro Sakurai]] stated that the Final Smash was inspired by seeing players create buildings filled with traps to harm their opponents, which consists of an act called "[https://minecraft.wiki/w/Tutorials/Griefing_prevention Griefing]": intentionally irritating another player. The first-person perspective seen just before the explosion resembles ''Minecraft'''s default camera mode, with the irregular movement characteristic of a computer mouse. Steve's crouching after the Final Smash is a common gesture in the ''Minecraft'' community used as a sign of friendship or, in this case, to mock a losing player as a form of teabagging.

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