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what makes potions last longer

Potions in most games and fantasy settings last longer when you either change the ingredients or the way the effect is delivered. In Minecraft specifically, the classic trick is to add redstone dust in the brewing stand to extend a potion’s duration instead of boosting its raw power.

Core idea: duration vs. power

  • Many systems make you trade duration for strength: a longer‑lasting potion is usually weaker, while a short one is more intense.
  • Game and story designers often define clear rules (e.g., “this catalyst = more time, that catalyst = more power”) so potion behavior feels consistent to players and readers.

In Minecraft: how to make potions last longer

  • Put your finished potion back into the brewing stand, and place redstone dust in the top slot; the result is a longer‑lasting version of that potion (like 3 minutes → 8 minutes for Swiftness).
  • You generally must choose: either extend duration with redstone or use other items (like glowstone) to make effects stronger, not both at once.

Other games & worlds

  • Some RPGs tie longer‑lasting potions to rare catalysts or special cauldrons that inherently increase duration when you brew there.
  • Mods and custom systems may use extra reagents (like “wine” in one modded Minecraft‑like setup) that extend the time of all active potion effects but add side effects you need to counter later.

Worldbuilding take: “what makes them last?”

When writers or GMs design potion rules, they often pick one or more “duration levers”:

  • Stabilizing ingredients: herbs, essences, or alchemical salts that keep magic from “bleeding off” too quickly.
  • Better vessels: enchanted flasks/cauldrons that slow decay, similar to high‑end cauldrons in some fantasy games that yield longer‑lasting brews.

-Usage limits: brews that can be sipped multiple times from one batch, effectively stretching a single potion into several long uses.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.