The user uploads an image into a Power App.
From that image, we extract structure—not artistic detail, but shape, proportions, and key elements.
That structure becomes data.
The model is then:
• Scaled to real-world dimensions
• Broken into building components
• Calculated into materials and estimated cost
At this point, the image is no longer just inspiration. It’s something you can reason about.

From data to Minecraft
Minecraft is not where decisions are made.
A deterministic MCP-server receives structured instructions from the Power Platform model and builds the house in Minecraft block by block.
Power Platform is the system of record.
Minecraft makes the result visible.

Where Copilot fits
Copilot Studio acts as the conversational layer.
It explains assumptions.
It answers “what if” questions.
It helps users adjust before anything changes.
Copilot doesn’t build.
The system executes.

Why this matters
This isn’t a game demo.
It’s an example of how Power Platform, pro-code, and Copilot can work together when:
• assumptions are explicit
• rules are data
• consequences are visible
Minecraft is just the proving ground.