Infinite Craft has a peculiar way of steering your expectations in many directions, from turning water into wine to merging so many items that you create an apocalypse. For now, we’ll focus on making some ice and figuring out how you can use this in future combinations.
How to make ice in Infinite Craft
Below are the exact combinations to use to make ice in Infinite Craft using the beginning four elements:
- Earth + Earth = Mountain
- Mountain + Wind = Avalanche
- Avalanche + Water = Ice
That’s all there is to it. With just three combinations, you can turn three of your four starting elements into ice, allowing you to create snow, blizzards, and even penguins. From here onward, the more you merge, the wackier your results will be.
Making these items can also help you unlock more combinations. For example, the mountain helps make lakes, oceans, and even Pikachu. Your options are limitless, and it’s just a matter of trying something new.
However, if you discovered snow before unlocking ice, you can quickly make ice by combining two snow nodes. Likewise, if you already have items like winter or snowman, you can merge these to bring your result down to snow and ice.
How to use ice in Infinite Craft
With ice, you can make some wild combinations in Infinite Craft, as is natural to the game. Here are some combinations you can use with ice:
- Ice + Ice = Snow
- Snow + Ice = Snowman
- Snow + Wind = Blizzard
- Ice + Continent = Antarctica
- Ice + Island = Igloo
- Ice + Fish = Fishstick
- Ice + Water = Iceberg
- Ice + Planet = Snowball
- Ice + Star = Comet
- Ice + Iceberg = Penguin
You can use these ten items to expand your word combinations list further. Below are some extra merges you can make:
- Penguin + Iceberg = Titanic
- Blizzard + Snowman = Snowstorm
- Blizzard + Snow = Avalanche
- Snow + Star = Snowflake
- Snowflake + Planet = Snow Globe
While these are items you can make right now, you can merge ice with almost anything to make bizarre combinations or return to ice, snow, and water. Most of my experimental merges resulted in these three, with a few going beyond once I began using odd combinations. While I’ll avoid spoiling the fun, let’s just say I got a laugh out of combining ice with a black hole.