It is not possible to turn magma blocks directly into a block called "lava bedrock" in standard Minecraft gameplay. There is no known block officially referred to as "lava bedrock". Bedrock is a separate, unbreakable block, and lava is a fluid.
However, there is a process involving magma blocks and lava extraction that results in a different block.
Understanding the Process Involving Magma Blocks
While you cannot create "lava bedrock," you can interact with magma blocks using a bucket to obtain lava. According to documented information:
- 2-3 magma blocks + empty bucket = lava bucket. The former magma blocks become netherrack.
This means that when you use an empty bucket on a formation of 2 or 3 adjacent magma blocks, you can collect a lava source block, and the magma blocks that formed it are consumed and replaced by netherrack.
The Resulting Block
As the reference states, the blocks that were magma blocks become netherrack after the lava is extracted.
- Starting Block: Magma Block
- Action: Use an empty bucket on 2 or 3 adjacent magma blocks.
- Outcome 1: You get a Lava Bucket.
- Outcome 2: The original magma blocks are replaced by Netherrack.
This is the known transformation involving magma blocks and buckets, and it results in netherrack, not "lava bedrock."
Summary of the Magma Block Transformation
Starting Material | Action | Resulting Items | Resulting Blocks |
---|---|---|---|
2-3 Magma Blocks | Use an Empty Bucket on them | 1 Lava Bucket | Netherrack |
There is no process in the game to create a block called "lava bedrock" from magma blocks or any other material. The process you might be thinking of results in netherrack.