
Minecraft at TwitchCon 2026: What You Missed
Minecraft LIVE at TwitchCon 2026 delivered the kind of announcements that'll reshape how millions of players approach the game. Mojang dropped serious warnings about dangerous malware, revealed native console versions finally moving forward, and outlined new features heading down the pipeline. If you weren't glued to the livestream, here's what actually matters.
The Malware Warning That Caught Everyone Off Guard
Right out of the gate, the team addressed something that's been quietly devastating the community for months. McAfee researchers presented findings about WeedHack, a piece of malware that's infected thousands of PCs by disguising itself as Minecraft mods and launchers. Between 2,000 and 3,000 people are getting infected daily, which is terrifying when you think about the scale.
What makes this particularly dangerous is how it spreads. Hackers post slick, high-quality videos on YouTube targeting specific mod-related keywords, then slip in download links to the malware. The victims are usually younger players looking for cosmetics or gameplay improvements. And that free version alone can grab your Minecraft session ID, which means someone else owns your account. One premium version? It records every keystroke, watches through your webcam, and gives attackers remote access to your entire computer.
Mojang's take was straightforward: only download mods from trusted sources, and be skeptical of YouTube links. Period.
The community reaction split two ways. Some players said "yeah, we already knew this." Others admitted they'd been downloading from sketchy sites without thinking twice about it. The vibe in chat was part shock, part "oh crap, I should probably change my password."
Console Updates Finally Breaking Through
The PlayStation side of things has been frustrating for years. While Xbox Series X|S got native 4K 60fps support ages ago, PS5 players were still running the PS4 version. Mojang came back with an update that got the whole room excited.
A native PS5 version is actually happening. It's been in experimental testing, and they're planning a full release later this year. Performance will finally match what Xbox players have been enjoying, which is frankly overdue. Four years after PS5 launched and we're just now getting a proper port? Yeah, it took long enough.
No massive feature drops were promised specifically for the PS5 release, but achieving feature parity with current Xbox versions is the baseline. The team emphasized this as part of their broader push to make Minecraft run smoothly on every platform. With the latest Java release at 26.1.2 and snapshot 26.2-pre-4 currently in testing, the architecture is getting solid across the board.
Keeping Your Game Secure (and Your Data Safe)
Beyond malware warnings, there's something else worth understanding about staying safe in the Minecraft ecosystem.

One topic that came up was DNS reliability. Your connection to multiplayer servers, the launcher, and authentication all depend on stable DNS infrastructure. If you're running your own server or managing network stability at home, using reliable DNS services matters more than most players realize. The team discussed free DNS options that can give you better uptime and security than relying on your ISP's default settings.
This sounds technical, but the practical takeaway is simple: if you're having connection issues or you're paranoid about security (rightfully so after the malware segment), your DNS is worth checking. Better infrastructure means fewer points of failure.
Creative Tools Getting Attention Too
The announcements weren't all about safety and performance. Mojang spent time on tools that affect builders and content creators.
Text generation and custom text features came up. The team showed off improvements to how you can format and customize text in-game, which matters if you're building elaborate signs, command blocks, or decorative elements. You can check out some of the capabilities over at Minecraft Text Generator for inspiration on what's possible with these tools. Custom fonts and special characters are making their way into builds more smoothly than they used to.
It's one of those announcements that doesn't grab headlines the way major features do, but creators in the chat were clearly excited about it.
The Roadmap and What's Coming Next
Mojang laid out a rough timeline for the next few updates. New biome variations are in development. Mob behavior refinements are coming. Performance optimization across all versions remains a constant focus, especially for lower-end hardware.

They were deliberately vague on exact dates, which is their standard move, but the direction feels solid. Rather than chasing viral feature announcements, the team is clearly committed to making the foundational game better: stability, security, and performance first. Look, new cool stuff second.
The snapshot schedule will keep churning. If you want to test latest changes and break things early, snapshot 26.2-pre-4 is live for Java players right now.
Community Response and Reality Check
Post-event sentiment was mixed but mostly positive.
Security warnings are never fun to hear, but they're necessary. Younger players and their parents left with a clearer picture of what to avoid. The PS5 news finally gave PlayStation players something to look forward to after years of waiting. Console players overall got reassurance that Mojang hasn't forgotten them.
What nobody got was a flashy new dimension or a complete combat overhaul. Some people wanted more. But honestly, after the malware segment, the focus on stability and safety felt appropriate. You can't build cool stuff if your computer's compromised.
The event succeeded in doing what a good recap should: making the community feel informed, slightly concerned about threats they should be avoiding, and cautiously optimistic about where the game's heading. Minecraft's not going anywhere, and neither is the player base. Both just need to be a little smarter about what they download.


