in our first post, we talked about the problem. Supply chains are slow. Parts ship across the world. Weeks pass. Carbon burns. Sometimes the manufacturer doesn’t even exist anymore.
We asked: what if supply chain worked like Minecraft?
Now let’s show you what we mean. (no, its not the same picture)

Think about how Steve plays Minecraft.
Steve needs a diamond sword. He doesn’t call a supplier in another country. He doesn’t wait for a ship. He finds the recipe, gathers materials, walks to his crafting table, and makes it. If he needs something far away, he uses a portal – instant.
Now think about CraftPortal.
A customer needs a part. Instead of ordering and waiting for shipping, they log into the Portal and post a request: “I need this part, these specs.”
IP Owners see the request. We call them Wandering Traders. They don’t ship physical parts – they sell recipes. Digital blueprints. They bid on the request.
Customer picks a recipe. Downloads it through the portal. Instant – like Steve stepping through a Nether portal.
Now the customer has two options:
Option 1: They have their own 3D printer – their Crafting Table. They print the part locally. Done in hours.
Option 2: They can’t print it themselves. They order from a Manufacturer – a Villager with better equipment. The Villager crafts it for them from a local facility.
Either way: recipe travels through the portal, part gets made locally.

No ships. No planes. No weeks. No carbon.
The Tech Behind It

The Portal is Power Pages – the marketplace. Recipes live in Dataverse. Copilot and AI Builder handle automation and intelligence. Azure IoT connects the Crafting Tables. Model Driven App runs the back office. Teams keeps everyone talking.
And LogiQraft? We’re the Redstone Engineers. We build the wiring that makes it all work.