There really aren't "tips" we can give for making an MCVE. It's really all spelled out in the name. So do that.
Pretend you don't have access to your project, and everything you have access to is what you put into your question. Copy it into a new, empty project and run it. Does it run? If not, then it is not Complete; add stuff from your actual project (not just code, but data files, external library names/versions that it relies on, build options, etc) to your question until this process can be executed successfully.
Now that it is Complete, attempt to reproduce the bug. Can you reproduce the bug? If not, then it is not Verifiable. Add whatever is missing until you can reproduce the bug. This may include command-like data, external data files, or whatever.
Lastly, remove some stuff from your code and/or data files, either at random or based on what you think isn't the source of the problem. Is the bug still happening? If the bug stopped happening, put that stuff back and remove something else. If the bug is still happening, keep that stuff removed and then repeat this process by removing more stuff. Continue iterating on this until you cannot remove anything without affecting whether the bug is still happening. Now, your example is Minimal.
And as a side effect, you probably now know where the bug is and what is causing it, so you don't need to ask your question at all.