
Vane: Immersive Minecraft Without Abandoning Vanilla
vane (oddlama/vane)
Immersive and lore friendly enhancements for vanilla Minecraft
If you're running a PaperMC server and want to enrich vanilla without replacing it, Vane is worth your attention. It's a modular plugin suite that layers lore-friendly additions on top of the game you already know, from quality-of-life improvements to custom items and grief protection.
What Vane Does
Vane is a plugin suite for PaperMC servers that adds thoughtful enhancements designed to feel like they belong in vanilla Minecraft. The philosophy here's important: instead of introducing radical new mechanics or replacing core systems, Vane augments what's already there. You're getting custom items, new enchantments, better portals, and grief protection - but players shouldn't feel like they're running a modded server.
The project has 380 stars on GitHub and is built in Java.
This distinction matters.
Most server plugins either go vanilla-lite (barely adding anything) or swing hard into total conversion territory. Vane sits in the middle, which is the sweet spot for communities that want something more without losing that vanilla magic. Each feature is configurable, so you're not forced to enable anything that doesn't fit your server's vibe.
Why You'd Want This
Let's say you're managing a survival server for friends. Players want longer-distance travel options beyond just walking or boats. They want some basic grief protection without running a massive region system. They're interested in custom tools that don't feel like they're from a totally different game. This is Vane's lane - filling practical gaps in vanilla.
The portal system is the most impressive feature here. Actually, I'll come back to that.
Beyond portals, you get a region system for grief protection (it's simple, not overcomplicated), custom items carefully designed to fit vanilla aesthetics, enchantments for tools you actually use, and integration with map mods like BlueMap and Dynmap. Each of these solves a real problem server owners face without making the world feel foreign to new players.
- Quality-of-life improvements that don't break vanilla balance
- Custom items and enchantments that fit the Minecraft art style
- Long-distance travel via Vane's portal system (expensive to create, expensive to use)
- Grief protection without the learning curve of complex systems
- Full configurability to disable anything you don't want
Getting Vane Running
Installation is straightforward if you're already familiar with PaperMC. The latest version (1.21.1) removed the ProtocolLib dependency, which simplified setup significantly. Grab the JAR files and drop them into your plugins folder.
Here's the basic process:
# Download the latest release from GitHub
# https://github.com/oddlama/vane/releases
# Extract the plugin JARs into your plugins directory
cd your-server-directory/plugins
wget https://github.com/oddlama/vane/releases/download/v1.21.1/vane-core-1.21.1.jar
wget https://github.com/oddlama/vane/releases/download/v1.21.1/vane-admin-1.21.1.jar
# Restart your server
# The plugins will generate config files on first runVane is modular, so you can download individual feature JAR files instead of grabbing everything. If you only want custom items and not portals, you don't have to install the portal module. So this keeps your plugin folder clean and only loads what you're actually using.
One thing to note: Vane requires PaperMC. It won't work on vanilla servers or most other server software.
After restarting, check your logs for any warnings. Config files appear in the plugins/Vane folder. You'll want to read through these to understand which features are enabled and how they're tuned. The defaults are reasonable, but every server's different.
The Standout Features
Portals for Real Travel
Vane's portal system is actually impressive. Creating a portal is expensive (requires significant resources), using it's expensive (consumes items per trip), and they're beautiful. These aren't cheap teleportation gimmicks. They feel like something you'd genuinely invest in on a long-term server, and they support all entities including minecarts. I wasn't expecting the minecart support - that's the kind of detail that shows someone thought about how the feature actually works in survival gameplay.

Custom Enchantments
Beyond the vanilla enchantments, Vane adds new ones for tools you actually use regularly. These are properly balanced and don't trivialize the game. You're not getting god-tier enchantments that make everything instant; you're getting tweaks that make specific tasks less tedious in ways that fit the vanilla progression.
The Region System
Grief protection gets complicated fast. Most systems require players to memorize commands and understand complex claim hierarchies. Vane's approach is simpler. You define regions and set who can build in them. It's powerful enough for survival multiplayer without making someone spend an hour reading docs.
Custom Items Done Right
Several carefully designed custom items fit Minecraft's visual language. These aren't neon weapons or anime swords; they're things like a golden sickle for harvesting crops faster. They look like they belong.
Map Integration
If you're running BlueMap, Dynmap, or Pl3xMap, Vane integrates with them. Your map viewer stays updated with the latest changes, and features like regions can display on the map. It's a nice quality-of-life touch if you're already maintaining a map for your players.
What You Should Know Before Starting
Vane is fully configurable, which is great - but it also means you need to actually read the config files. Don't just drop the plugin and assume the defaults are perfect for your server.
Also, this is a plugin. That means it runs on PaperMC servers. If you want the features on a vanilla client, that's not happening. Your players connect to your server and experience the features there - but they don't need to install anything on their client.
If you're running other plugins, check for conflicts. Most survival plugins play nice with each other, but it's worth testing. The Discord community can help if something breaks.
Actually, one more thing - custom items and enchantments require players to interact with them through normal Minecraft progression. If you're playing pure survival, you'll actually have to find and craft them. That's intentional and good, but I wanted to mention it in case you expected instant access.
Where to Find Vane Skins and Server Status
If you're running a Vane server, you might want to check out the Browse Minecraft Skins page to find custom skins that match your server's theme. And if you're testing your server's stability, the Minecraft Server Status Checker is helpful for monitoring uptime.
Similar Projects Worth Knowing About
If Vane doesn't quite fit your needs, there are alternatives. Fabric server mods offer similar vanilla-plus experiences but require client-side installation. For pure plugin solutions, some communities use combinations of smaller plugins (like WorldGuard for grief protection) stacked together. The difference is that Vane is cohesive - everything works together by design rather than being bolted on.
Some servers run both Vane and other plugins. It's modular enough that you can mix and match if needed, though most people find the suite does what they want out of the box.

