# minecraft.how — Full content index for LLMs > Long-form extract of recent blog content. For a structured route map, see /llms.txt. ## Recent blog posts (full text) ### Minecraft Building Styles: Modern, Medieval, Fantasy Explained URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-building-styles Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Minecraft building styles come down to aesthetic choices and block palettes. You've got modern minimalism with concrete and glass, medieval fantasy with stone and wood, and pure fantasy with everything glowing and impossible. But knowing the labels is just the start. The real skill is understanding why certain styles work and how to make them yours instead of copying someone else's castle for the hundredth time. Understanding Building Styles in Minecraft Every Minecraft build exists somewhere on a spectrum of architectural intent. Some players grab whatever blocks look cool. Others think about historical accuracy or thematic consistency. And some just want to make something that looks chill at sunset. Building styles aren't rigid rules. They're more like languages. You learn the vocabulary of a style (the block types, color palettes, architectural elements), and then you start speaking it naturally. Mix a little medieval here, splash some modern there, and suddenly you've got something that feels fresh because it's actually yours. The most common styles each have their own DNA. Modern Minecraft Architecture Modern builds love clean lines, minimal ornamentation, and a restricted color palette. Think concrete, stripped logs, dark wood, glass, and copper. Lots of glass actually. Minecraft players obsessed with modern design will spend twenty minutes debating whether a build should use gray concrete or light gray concrete (it matters, trust me). What makes modern work in Minecraft is restraint. And spacing. Modern buildings breathe. You'll see wide open roof areas, simple geometric shapes, and negative space treated as a design element rather than wasted room. A modern house doesn't have decorative battlements or hand-carved details. Typical blocks: concrete, dark oak wood, stripped spruce, glass, copper stairs Color palette: grays, blacks, whites, muted earth tones Rooflines: flat or slightly sloped, minimal overhang Decorative approach: functional over ornamental The hardest part about building modern is that every mistake shows. There's nowhere to hide a misplaced block or uneven spacing. Medieval can forgive a little messiness because detail covers sins. Modern can't. Medieval Building Style Medieval is probably the most popular building style in Minecraft. Stone, dark oak, spruce, lots of brown tones, roofs with significant overhang. Add a tall tower and suddenly you're running a castle. Medieval nails that "lived-in, built-over-centuries" vibe. You'll see turrets, crenellations (those notches on castle walls), timber-framing, arched doorways, and stone arches everywhere. Medieval players also love mixing textures. A medieval wall might be stone brick, dark oak planks, and spruce logs all in one section, and it just works because that's how actual old buildings look. The fantasy version of medieval is what most players build anyway. Historically accurate medieval structures were cramped, dark, and honestly kind of gross. Minecraft medieval is medieval-inspired. That means way cooler and more spacious. Typical blocks: stone brick, dark oak wood, spruce wood, cobblestone, oak stairs Color palette: grays, browns, blacks, weathered tones Rooflines: peaked, steep angles, significant overhang Decorative elements: towers, arches, visible timber framing Medieval's big advantage? It's forgiving. Add some vines, slap some moss on the blocks, throw down some decorative stones. It all reads as intentional history. Fantasy Building Styles Fantasy is where you stop worrying about logic. Your base can have glowing purple crystals, floating islands held up by magic, bioluminescent gardens, and shapes that couldn't possibly be structurally sound. Popular fantasy subgenres include: Elven/Nature Fantasy Lots of wood (especially light woods and spruce), leaves, vines, glowing mushrooms, and any block that feels organic. Amethyst caves fit beautifully into nature fantasy. These builds lean into curves and flowing lines instead of harsh right angles. If your build looks like it grew rather than got built, you're doing nature fantasy right. Dark Fantasy / Necromancy Blackstone, deepslate, soul sand, soul lanterns, warped wood. Maybe some crying obsidian if you're feeling extra. Dark fantasy doesn't need to be evil (though it can be). It's more about creating that moody, atmospheric vibe. Underground fortresses, abandoned temples, places that feel ancient and potentially dangerous. Steampunk / Tech Fantasy Copper, iron, chains, pistons, dispensers (use them as decorative elements, they look industrial). Steampunk in Minecraft is about making machines look intentional rather than purely functional. Exposed mechanisms, brass-and-iron aesthetic, gears and contraptions that feel purposeful. Other Notable Building Styles Japanese-inspired builds use stone lanterns, bamboo, specific roof angles, and careful landscaping. Tropical bases use bright sand, various wood types, bright glazed terracotta, and jungle leaves. Steampunk leans into copper, iron, and industrial elements. Actually, let me back up. You're going to see lists of "20 building styles" online that includes "rustic" and "cottage" and "industrial," but those are really just flavors of larger categories or combinations of techniques. Don't get too caught up in naming things. What matters is: what blocks create the mood you want? Choosing Your Building Style Start with environment. What biome are you in? A jungle naturally wants tropical or nature fantasy vibes. A snowy taiga might push you toward something colder: modern, medieval, maybe that dark fantasy underground fortress theme. Then consider your block access. If you haven't got copper farms running yet, steampunk will feel incomplete. If you're early game, medieval and rustic are your friends because stone and wood are everywhere. But honestly? Your personal taste matters most. Build what makes you happy. If you're drawn to modern minimalism, modern minimalism is right. If every build you make accidentally turns into a fantasy mushroom tower, that's fine too. Consistency in taste matters way more than consistency in historical accuracy. One practical tip: pick a color palette before you start and stick with it. Modern builds using 15 different wood types look chaotic. Medieval builds help themselves to five or six compatible woods, and suddenly cohesion happens. You can always browse Minecraft skins to see how other players approach character design and building themes. Character design often reflects building preference. A fantasy player tends to pick fantasy skins. Gives you a vibe. Mixing Styles and Finding Your Voice The best builds don't stay pure. You'll see medieval bases with modern interior lighting. Fantasy builds with small modern functional areas. A medieval castle with one section that's clearly a modern workshop. Professional builders mix styles intentionally. A village might have mostly medieval houses but a modern town hall. A base might feel 80% modern with pockets of fantasy. These mixes work because the primary style carries the identity, and accents just make it more interesting. And here's the thing that won't click until you've built a bunch: styles are actually just about how you use light, space, and proportion. Once you understand that, you stop copying other people's builds and start making buildings that look like yours. If you're running multiplayer servers, you might want to check your free Minecraft DNS settings to make sure your server's responsive when people are building. Server lag makes building in anything precision-focused absolutely miserable. Developing Your Building Skills Study reference images. Look at actual buildings if you can. Study how medieval buildings handle corners. See what modern architecture actually looks like versus what Minecraft players think it looks like (they're not always the same thing). Build small things first. A cottage is better practice than a castle. A small modern storefront teaches you more about the modern style than trying a massive house. You learn faster with frequent smaller projects than rare massive ones. Use block variations. Stone brick and cracked stone brick don't look that different individually, but together they create texture. Most builds improve dramatically just from adding weathering and variation. Watch builders you respect. Not to copy their exact builds, but to see how they make decisions. Why did they use that block there? What's their lighting strategy? How do they handle transitions between different elements? Your style will eventually become recognizable. Not because you're copying a template, but because you develop preferences. You'll notice you always make rooflines a certain way, you prefer certain color palettes, you solve problems using techniques that become your signature. That's when you know you've moved from learning a style to owning it. FAQ What's the easiest building style for beginners? Medieval and rustic are most forgiving. They reward texture and messiness rather than punishing every misaligned block. Modern is the hardest for beginners because precision matters and every mistake shows. Can I mix multiple building styles in one world? Absolutely. Most successful multiplayer worlds have mixed styles. The key is keeping each build internally consistent and not randomly throwing incompatible blocks together. A medieval village with one modern house works fine if that house is clearly intentional. Do I need specific mods to build in certain styles? No. Vanilla Minecraft blocks (as of version 26.1.2) are enough for any major style. Mods add more options, but they're never required. You can build amazing buildings with the base game. How do I know which blocks match my building style? Pick a primary block (like dark oak for medieval or concrete for modern), then test other blocks next to it in creative mode. Blocks from similar wood families or color families usually work together. Don't overthink it. Build a test wall, see if it feels right. What if my builds don't look good? That's normal. Every builder went through a phase of questionable looking buildings. Scale up slower, study references more, and remember that your 50th building will look way better than your 5th. Building style skill is learned through repetition and critique. --- ### Latest Minecraft Snapshot 26.2: New Blocks and Updates URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-snapshot-26-2-new-blocks Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Snapshot 26.2-3 is live, and Mojang's added some genuinely useful blocks alongside the usual balance tweaks. If you've been sitting on version 26.1.2, there's enough here to test out before the full release - though fair warning, snapshots can break things. What's Actually New in Snapshot 26.2-3 Mojang's calling this one a "quality of life" snapshot, which is code for "no massive features, but we're fixing things people complained about." A few block-related changes, some tweaks to how mobs interact with terrain, and apparently a fix for that one weird water physics issue that's been around since 1.19. Nothing Earth-shattering, but the refinement work is where Minecraft usually shines. The snapshot philosophy is simple: test everything twice, because at some point Mojang will absolutely introduce a bug that makes dirt invisible or something equally chaotic. That's part of the fun, honestly. New Blocks Worth Knowing About Three major additions showed up this cycle, and they're actually worth building with. Weathered Copper Variants Oxidized copper's been around for a while, but the new weathered variants fill a gap that players have been asking for. You get the mid-stage look without waiting three in-game days for the full oxidation process. Stack them with regular copper and you can create some really nice patina gradients on large structures. Reinforced Deepslate This one's actually interesting because it changes how you think about deep mining. It's got the durability you'd expect from the name. That means it's useful for building vaults or treasure rooms you don't want easily broken into. Sculptured Quartz Blocks Pure aesthetic win. The sculpted variants give you textured options beyond the flat look, so if you're building something architectural (a temple, a library, whatever), you've got more visual depth to work with. They pair surprisingly well with blackstone, which has always felt like it was waiting for a companion block. Building Ideas You Can Actually Execute Here's where snapshots get fun: you can start experimenting now instead of waiting until 1.27 drops in June. Ever tried building a full kitchen with vanilla blocks? It's rough. The new weathered copper and quartz variants actually make that kind of detailed build feel less janky. If you're serious about designing skins to match your builds (and honestly, why build something epic if your character looks like they rolled out of a template), you can use our skin creator tool to whip up something custom that fits your aesthetic. Takes ten minutes, completely changes how your character looks in those screenshots. The reinforced deepslate is already getting attention on Reddit for vault-building. The survival complexity of needing a diamond pickaxe to harvest it adds a nice gate to early-game treasure hoarding. Performance and Technical Changes Snapshot 26.2-3 includes some under-the-hood rendering improvements. That means even older machines should see slightly better frame rates on larger maps. Mojang's still optimizing the render distance system, and this snapshot continues that work. There's also a fix for chunk-loading lag when you're near servers with high player counts. If you're running a multiplayer server, you might want to test this snapshot specifically for that. If You're Running a Server, Consider This Server admins have new options for world customization in this snapshot. The API changes mean plugins will need updating (if you're using Spigot or Paper), but the native server tools are more flexible now. And if you're setting up DNS for your server, our free Minecraft DNS tool makes the whole pointing-domains thing painless - no config headaches. Migration from 26.1.2 is straightforward as long as you back up your world first (always, always do this before updating a snapshot). Should You Jump on Snapshot 26.2-3 Right Now If you're running a survival world on 26.1.2, probably not. Snapshots are unstable by design, and losing three weeks of builds to a random corruption isn't a fun Wednesday. If you're managing a test world or a creative server where losing data isn't catastrophic, absolutely test it. That's literally what snapshots are for. The new blocks are worth trying, and the rendering improvements are noticeable. But wait for the release candidate (probably early May based on Mojang's usual schedule) before migrating important worlds. And honestly? The best time to mess with snapshots is when you've got friends to build with. Trying out new blocks solo gets boring fast. --- ### Leaderboard PvP Minecraft: Complete 2026 Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/leaderboard-pvp-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Leaderboard PvP servers let you compete against other players in skill-based ranked matches, with your performance tracked and displayed publicly. Climbing the ranks requires mastering combat mechanics, weapon selection, and server-specific strategies. Here's what you need to know to get started and dominate the competitive scene. What's Leaderboard PvP? Leaderboard PvP isn't your typical deathmatch server where kills are just kills. It's a ranked system where every fight matters. Players earn points or ratings based on wins, eliminations, and survival time, then climb a publicly visible ranking ladder. Some servers use Elo ratings (borrowed from chess), others use custom progression systems. The appeal is obvious: there's always a clear goal. You know exactly where you stand against other players. Different servers implement this differently. Some focus on one-on-one duels with separate rankings per weapon type. Others run team-based matches where coordination determines your position. A few even gate access to higher tiers, meaning you can't challenge top players until you've proved yourself at lower ranks. Actually, that's not universal across all servers - some let anyone challenge anyone regardless of rating, which creates an interesting dynamic where underdogs can shake up the rankings overnight. Finding and Joining Leaderboard Servers Finding a solid leaderboard server takes more than a quick server list search. You'll want to check community forums like Reddit's r/MinecraftServers, Discord communities dedicated to PvP, or browsing specialized server listing sites. Look for servers running Minecraft version 26.1.2 to ensure compatibility with current clients and that you're playing on stable builds. When evaluating a server, check: Player count and online times (dead servers won't rank fairly) Whether rankings reset seasonally or stay permanent What game modes they offer (duel, team matches, free-for-all) Anticheat systems in place (crucial for fair competition) Admin responsiveness to disputes or exploits If you're planning to run your own server or help manage one, tools like the Minecraft Whitelist Creator simplify managing who gets access. That's particularly useful for leaderboard servers that run invite-only tournaments or seasonal competitions. Combat Mechanics You Need to Master Raw aim isn't everything here. Combat on leaderboard servers emphasizes timing, positioning, and resource awareness. Sword combat requires understanding attack cooldowns. You can't just spam click anymore in recent versions. Instead, you need to time attacks, strafe around opponents, and use knockback effectively. Shield blocking is essential - knowing when to defend and when to go aggressive separates casual players from competitive ones. Bow combat demands practice. Leading shots, accounting for gravity, and predicting movement separates skilled archers from those just spamming arrows. Some servers implement no-knockback arenas specifically to improve this skill. Axe dueling, if offered, requires patience and spacing - it's slower than swords but hits harder. Then there's positioning. High ground advantage is real. Water bucket clutches, sprint-jumping for escape, and understanding terrain choke points matter enormously. Your frame rate and ping also affect combat directly, so high-performance setups genuinely help. Understanding Ranking Systems Most competitive servers use one of three approaches. Elo-based systems give you a numerical rating that changes based on wins and losses. Beat someone ranked higher, gain more points. Lose to someone ranked lower, lose more points. This self-corrects to find your true skill level. It's mathematically sound but can feel slow to climb if you're stuck between ranks. Point systems are simpler: kill = points, win = bonus points, death = penalty. Your weekly or seasonal total determines rank. Aggressive play is rewarded, but it also means a bad day can knock you down quickly. Some servers add multipliers during specific times, making peak hours more valuable for ranking. Tier-based systems lock you into brackets. You're Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum, or Diamond. You play against your tier, and promotions happen when you accumulate enough wins. These feel more rewarding psychologically - reaching a new tier feels like an achievement - but the artificial brackets can feel restrictive. Preparing Your Setup and Skills A good gaming setup helps. You want 60+ FPS minimum, ideally 100+. Your mouse sensitivity matters more than people think. Most competitive players use lower sensitivity for better aim precision. Keybinds should be comfortable and consistent - changing them mid-climb is a terrible idea. Your skin and cosmetics don't affect gameplay, but if you want to stand out, tools like the Minecraft Text Generator can help create a custom player name format for server introductions or tournament registration. Some servers even allow custom kill messages. Practice strategy matters more than grinding hours. Find a server with a training mode or join duel servers to warm up before ranked matches. Record your losses and analyze what went wrong. Did you miss a critical heal? Position poorly? Get caught out of position? Identifying patterns accelerates improvement. Climbing the Ranks Effectively Start at the appropriate skill level. Don't jump straight into competitive if you're new to PvP - play casual matches first to understand how the server works. Early on, focus on fundamentals. Get comfortable with your weapon, learn the maps, understand spawn points and safe routes. You'll beat players who overlook basic strategy before you outaim anyone. As you progress, analyze top players. Watch their streams or replays. How do they position? When do they engage? What weapons do they choose in different scenarios? Copying successful strategies isn't lazy - it's smart. You'll eventually develop your own playstyle once you understand the meta. Don't tilt. Losing several matches in a row happens to everyone. Playing angry leads to poor decisions, worse positioning, and harder losses. Take a break, reset mentally, come back fresh. Consistency beats heroic plays. Team-based leaderboards require communication. Play with the same team repeatedly if possible. Familiarity breeds better callouts and timing. You'll climb faster with consistent teammates than solo players can hope to achieve. Staying Competitive Long-Term Servers sometimes patch mechanics that change the meta. Maybe shields get nerfed, or bow damage shifts. Adapt quickly or you'll find yourself playing outdated strategies. Top players stay informed about patch notes and adjust accordingly. Tournaments and seasonal resets are common on established servers. Some servers wipe rankings yearly to give everyone a fresh start. Others run monthly tournaments with prizes. Getting involved in these events levels up your competition and pushes you harder than grinding daily matches. Consider streaming or recording your matches. You'll improve faster with an audience (even if it's just friends), and you build a following in the process. Seriously good players often have their best matches on camera. --- ### How to Use PackSquash to Optimize Minecraft Packs URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/packsquash-minecraft-pack-optimizer Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project PackSquash (ComunidadAylas/PackSquash) 📦 Minecraft: Java Edition resource and data pack optimizer which aims to achieve the best possible compression, performance and protection, improving pack distribution, storage and in-game load times. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 809 stars💻 Rust📜 AGPL-3.0 If you've ever downloaded a resource or data pack that's 100+ megabytes, then waited for it to extract in-game, you've felt the pain PackSquash solves. This Rust-built optimizer shrinks your packs dramatically - sometimes by 50% or more - without destroying quality. Smaller downloads, faster loading, better performance. That's the whole pitch, and it actually works. What PackSquash Actually Does PackSquash walks through your resource or data pack directory and intelligently compresses every file type it recognizes. PNG textures get quantized and optimized. Audio files get resampled and transcoded. JSON files get minified. Shader code gets stripped of unnecessary whitespace. Even NBT datapack files get a dedicated compression pass. The project's README notes a real-world example: reducing the Witchcraft & Wizardry resource pack from 118 MiB to 57 MiB - a 51.69% size reduction. That's not uncommon. What makes PackSquash different from just using a ZIP program is that it doesn't blindly compress everything. It understands Minecraft file formats. The result knows which metadata can be safely removed from PNGs, which audio channels you don't need, which JSON whitespace doesn't matter to the game. The tool does the thinking so you don't have to. Why Pack Size Actually Matters Smaller packs feel like a luxury until you actually need to install one on a server. Imagine you're distributing a custom resource pack to 50 players. Every 10 MiB of unnecessary file size multiplies across downloads, wastes bandwidth, and creates friction. Some players will give up halfway through. For datapacks on servers, large file sizes directly slow down world load times and chunk processing. Your server has to read more data from disk and RAM. Then there's the in-game experience. Modern texture packs and shader packs pile up in file size fast. Your game takes longer to load. Every asset lookup is slightly slower when the pack isn't optimized. You probably won't notice 50 milliseconds, but you'll notice 500. And if you're hosting packs on your own infrastructure (not a major CDN), smaller files mean lower bandwidth costs. Actually having money in your budget for other projects? Nice. Getting PackSquash Running Installation is straightforward. Head to the GitHub releases page and grab the binary for your OS (Linux, macOS, Windows all covered). Unzip it somewhere convenient. Basic usage: bash./packsquash path/to/your/pack That's it. PackSquash will scan the directory, apply default compression settings, and spit out an optimized ZIP file in the same location. The defaults are sensible - they balance quality and file size without being too aggressive. If you want to customize how PackSquash handles your pack, you create an options file. Create a file called `packsquash.toml` in your pack directory: toml[pack] zip_compression_method = "Stored" zip_compression_level = 9 png_color_quantization_target = 256 The project's options documentation walks you through every setting. Start with defaults, then tweak if you've specific quality requirements or unusual file types. Compression Techniques Worth Understanding PNG optimization is where PackSquash shines. It uses color quantization (reducing your 24-bit colors down to a smart palette), bit-depth reduction, and metadata stripping. New in v0.4.1: PNG obfuscation scrambles texture data to protect it from casual viewing outside the game. If you've ever worried about people extracting your custom textures, this is the answer. GitHub project card for ComunidadAylas/PackSquash Audio files support channel mixing, downsampling, and Vorbis transcoding. The default settings aim for quality that sounds good in-game without the bloat of studio-grade audio. You can also auto-detect and remove silence from the beginning and end of sound files. Useful if your sound files have long padding. JSON and shader minification strips whitespace and validates syntax while it's at it. As a bonus, if your JSON files have errors, PackSquash will catch them before you release your pack. Actually finding typos in 50 JSON files? This tool does it faster than you can open them. The latest release added better compatibility with modern packs. Packs generated with strict ZIP conformance now work on Java 22+. Several shader mis-optimization bugs were fixed without requiring user workarounds. Configuration Tips and What Trips People Up Here's the biggest gotcha: PackSquash is aggressive by default. If you're paranoid about quality, test the optimized pack in-game before distributing it to others. Load a world, check your textures, play some audio, run around. PNG quantization is subtle on realistic texture packs but noticeable on flat-color artistic packs. If you need zero quality loss, you can disable quantization and rely on lossless compression alone. The file won't shrink as much, but it'll be pixel-perfect. Don't forget: PackSquash respects your pack's structure. If you've custom files that aren't standard Minecraft formats (maybe documentation or metadata), PackSquash won't touch them. They'll pass through unchanged into the output ZIP. One more thing - actually, that only works for v0.4.1 and later - the new ZIP comment option lets you embed metadata or credits directly in the ZIP file itself. Instead of including a separate text file, you can store your pack attribution in the archive comment. It's a small touch that keeps your pack directory cleaner. Other Tools in the Pack Optimization Space PackSquash isn't the only option. OptiPNG is older and focuses purely on PNG optimization, which is useful if that's your only concern. PNGQuant handles color quantization specifically. Neither is as complete as PackSquash. Some pack creators use manual compression with 7-Zip or RAR, which can help but doesn't optimize the files themselves - just the archive. You'll get modest size reductions without the per-file smarts PackSquash brings. If you're running a server, tools like server status checkers help you monitor whether your pack is loading correctly. Smaller packs paired with a healthy server mean faster player joins. Similarly, if you're working with terrain or navigation, a nether portal calculator helps you plan pack distribution across dimensions. But for pure compression, PackSquash stands ahead because it understands Minecraft formats in depth. The project is open-source (AGPL-3.0) and actively maintained. And that community Discord is responsive, and the GitHub wiki covers setup thoroughly. If you hit a wall, help is usually just a question away. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Building Minecraft Bots with Azalea in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/azalea-minecraft-bots-rust Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project azalea (azalea-rs/azalea) A collection of Rust crates for making Minecraft bots, clients, and tools. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 691 stars💻 Rust📜 MIT Ever wanted to write a Minecraft bot that actually behaves like a real player instead of some jittery automation script? Azalea is a Rust library that lets you build Minecraft bots and tools with physics-accurate movement, smart pathfinding, and support for the latest game versions. It's not a mod, not a plugin - it's a full toolkit for creating Minecraft clients and bots from scratch. What This Project Actually Does Azalea is a collection of Rust crates (libraries) that handle the low-level details of connecting to Minecraft servers and controlling a bot client. Instead of fighting with fragmented APIs or outdated libraries, you get a cohesive set of tools that understand Minecraft's protocol, physics, and mechanics. The project supports Minecraft version 26.1, which means it's kept reasonably current. You can create a bot that walks around, breaks blocks, places blocks, fights mobs, manages inventory, and interacts with the world in ways that don't immediately scream "bot" to server anti-cheats (though you'll still need to be thoughtful about server policies). Built with Bevy plugin support, Azalea lets you extend its behavior significantly. The community has already created some impressive real-world bots - pearl stasis bots, auto-detection systems, Discord bridges, even Lua scripting interfaces. This isn't theoretical stuff; people are actually using it. Why You'd Actually Build With This There are a few solid reasons Azalea exists and keeps getting improvements. First: testing. If you're running a server or developing server software, you need a way to test it without manually logging in repeatedly. Azalea bots can run automated checks, verify mechanics work as expected, and catch breaking changes before players discover them. Second: automation on survival servers. A legitimate use case (with permission, obviously) is creating helper bots for your own server. Maybe you need an AFK-proof presence for keeping chunks loaded, or a bot that manages community resources. You could also build bots that respond to chat commands or assist with gameplay tasks. Third: learning. If you want to understand how Minecraft's protocol works, how physics calculations happen, or how the game state stays in sync between client and server, reading Azalea's source is genuinely educational. The physics implementation especially is well-commented. And honestly? Some people just think it's cool to build bots. That's valid. Getting Started: Installation and Setup Azalea lives on crates.io (Rust's package registry), so adding it to a project is straightforward. First, make sure you have Rust installed. If you don't, grab it from rustup.rs - the install process is quick and handles most setup automatically. Create a new Rust project: bashcargo new my_azalea_bot cd my_azalea_bot Then add Azalea as a dependency in your Cargo.toml file. The specific version matters since the library is still maturing and breaking changes happen. Check the latest docs at docs.rs/azalea for the current recommended version. Before writing any bot code, you'll want Tokio (an async runtime) since Azalea uses async Rust throughout: toml[dependencies] azalea = "0.20" tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] } Version numbers matter here - if you grab a version that doesn't match your Minecraft server version, you'll run into protocol mismatches. The README clearly states what version of Minecraft each Azalea release supports, so check that before bumping versions. Compilation can take a while the first time around. This isn't Azalea being slow - it's Rust itself. Once it's built though, your bot binary will be fast and use minimal resources. The Features That Matter Physics is the foundation here. Azalea implements accurate Minecraft physics including jumping, fall damage, and fluid behavior. Your bot won't just teleport around; it'll move like an actual player. This matters because servers can detect bots that move impossibly fast or ignore physics entirely. Pathfinding is the second critical piece. The project includes a pathfinder that can figure out how to get from point A to point B, accounting for obstacles, height changes, and valid routes through the world. You feed it coordinates, and it calculates a traversable path. This isn't magical - sometimes the pathfinder can't find a route because one doesn't exist - but it handles the common cases well. Swarms are interesting if you want multiple bots working together. Instead of running separate bot instances that fight each other for network bandwidth, Azalea's swarm support lets you control many bots from a single process. They can coordinate actions and share state efficiently. Block interaction and mining work through straightforward method calls. Break a block, place a block, interact with a container - these operations exist and function predictably. Building still hn limitation (actual client-side prediction for block placement), but it works fine for most purposes. Inventory management is solid. Your bot can open containers, move items, craft, and track what it's carrying. If you're automating server tasks, this is essential. Things That'll Trip You Up First caveat: Azalea is marked as unstable. Breaking changes happen. The maintainers note this clearly, and the changelog documents what breaks between versions. If you're building a bot you'll maintain for months, budget time for dependency updates. GitHub project card for azalea-rs/azalea Anti-cheat detection is a real concern. Azalea does implement features to avoid obvious bot signatures (accurate physics, realistic movement timing), but server admins can still catch bots if they're suspicious. If you're running a bot on someone else's server without permission, you'll probably get caught eventually. Use your bots responsibly. The library doesn't support multiple Minecraft versions simultaneously. If you need to support version 26.1 and 26.2, you're updating your dependency to support the new version - you can't have both at once. There's a community effort (azalea-viaversion) attempting to bridge this, but it's not part of the main project yet. Entity behavior is partially implemented. Some features like entity pushing and elytra flight aren't there yet. If you need your bot to do something esoteric (riding dragons, for example), you might need to extend the library yourself or work around missing features. Async/await syntax is required. This isn't really Azalea's fault - it's Rust. But if you've never written async code before, expect a learning curve. The documentation and examples help, but async Rust is genuinely different from sync code. Server Testing and Monitoring One practical application worth mentioning: you can use Azalea bots to test your server's health. Point a bot at your server, have it perform basic actions (move, break a block, place a block), and log the results. This is similar to what tools like our Minecraft Server Status Checker do, but from the inside with a full client instead of pinging the server remotely. If you're managing a public server or network, having an internal bot that periodically tests functionality can catch issues before players report them. It's not a replacement for proper monitoring, but it's a useful layer. When to Consider Alternatives Azalea targets Rust developers specifically. If you're more comfortable with Python or JavaScript, libraries like Mineflayer (Node.js) or PrismarineJS offer similar functionality in different languages. They're older and more battle-tested in some cases, but they're also generally less performant. If you just need a one-off bot for a specific task and don't want to learn Rust, Azalea might be overkill. Simple Minecraft automation can sometimes be accomplished with existing server plugins or mods depending on your use case. For graphics or visual rendering, Azalea explicitly doesn't support that. If you need a bot that actually displays the Minecraft world visually, you'd need a different approach. There's an experimental azalea-graphics project, but it's not integrated into the main library. Bedrock edition (mobile/console Minecraft) isn't supported either. Azalea focuses exclusively on Java Edition since that's where the most developer flexibility exists. Real Projects and Community The GitHub dependency graph shows Azalea is actively used. Not by hundreds of projects, but by enough real applications that you can see how people solve problems. ShayBox's pearl stasis bot is a good reference if you want to understand advanced usage. There's also documentation at azalea.matdoes.dev with examples and API reference. Community support exists through Matrix and Discord channels (bridged, so pick whichever you prefer). The maintainer and contributors are responsive, though this isn't a massive project with round-the-clock support. If you're integrating Azalea into something like a Discord bot or server management tool, you can absolutely do that. Your Rust bot can call Discord APIs, query your database, or do whatever else makes sense for your use case. The library handles just the Minecraft protocol part. One last thought: if you're building bots for any kind of competitive gameplay or third-party servers, make sure you understand the server's terms of service. Automation that gives unfair advantages is generally against the rules, and server admins have every right to ban bots they didn't authorize. For your own servers or explicit automation tasks, you're in the clear. If you need to manage server access and player lists programmatically, our Minecraft Whitelist Creator can help with that side of server administration, though Azalea could also automate whitelist management if you code it in. Ready to try azalea? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit azalea-rs/azalea on GitHub ↗ --- ### How to Create Modded Server Packs with ServerPackCreator URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/serverpackcreator-modded-server-packs Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project ServerPackCreator (Griefed/ServerPackCreator) Create a server pack from a Minecraft Forge, NeoForge, Fabric, LegacyFabric or Quilt modpack! Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 569 stars💻 Kotlin📜 LGPL-2.1 Ever tried to host a modded Minecraft server? You probably discovered that you can't just copy your modpack folder to a server and call it done. Client-only mods crash the server, configuration files conflict, and you're left digging through documentation to figure out what stays and what goes. ServerPackCreator solves this by automatically building a server-ready package from your modpack, handling all the messy sorting behind the scenes. What ServerPackCreator Actually Does ServerPackCreator takes the guesswork out of server modpack creation. You point it at a modpack - whether it's built with Forge, NeoForge, Fabric, LegacyFabric, or Quilt - and it generates a clean server package stripped of client-only mods and optimized for dedicated server use. The tool doesn't just remove mods blindly. It's smarter than that. It knows which mods have server variants, which ones are purely client-side (like shader packs or fancy UI enhancements), and how to configure the server to run smoothly. You end up with a folder you can literally drag onto a hosting provider or drop into your own server machine. The project has 569 GitHub stars and is released under LGPL-2.1, meaning the code is open source and actively maintained. The latest version (8.1.1, released in April 2026) continues getting regular updates and fixes. Why Hosting a Modded Server Is Actually Painful Without This Let's be honest: manually creating a server pack is tedious. You download the modpack, you check each mod's page on Modrinth or CurseForge, you note which ones are client-only, you copy configs, you test, you debug weird errors. It can take hours. And half the time you miss something and the server crashes on startup anyway. GitHub project card for Griefed/ServerPackCreator ServerPackCreator cuts through all of that. It automates the entire process. You get a working server pack in minutes instead of hours, and you skip the trial-and-error debugging phase entirely. If you're planning to set up a public server - whether for friends or a community - this tool saves a ridiculous amount of time. If you're just getting started with server hosting, browse the Minecraft Server List to see what kinds of servers are out there and get inspired. Installing and Getting Started Installation is straightforward. Grab the latest release from GitHub - there are installers for Windows, macOS, and Linux, plus a standalone JAR if you prefer that. Beta Creeper Statue in Minecraft On Linux or Mac, the installer script handles the setup: bash./ServerPackCreator-8_1_1-Installer-Linux-amd64.sh Windows has a standard executable installer. Both walk you through choosing a location and creating the necessary directories. If you prefer the standalone JAR, you'll need Java 21 or newer: bashjava -jar ServerPackCreator-8.1.1.jar Once it launches, you're greeted with a web interface. Upload your modpack ZIP file, and ServerPackCreator starts analyzing it immediately. You can tweak settings if needed - exclude specific mods, adjust server properties, configure which optional features to include - but the defaults work great for most use cases. Click generate, wait a minute or two, and your server pack is ready to download. Key Features That Actually Matter Automatic client mod detection is the headline feature. The tool maintains a constantly-updated list of known client-only mods and filters them out automatically. You can also manually exclude mods if the detection misses something, though that's rare. Alpha Server in Minecraft Version management lets you work with multiple modpack versions without fussing around with folder organization. Server properties generation is surprisingly thoughtful. It doesn't just create a blank server.properties file - it includes sensible defaults for performance and compatibility. You can override these before generating if you know your setup needs different tuning (50 players vs 20, for example). The API is worth mentioning if you're the technical type. The project includes full API documentation - the latest release includes a javadoc JAR - so you can integrate server pack generation into your own tools or CI/CD pipeline if you wanted to automate everything. The web interface is clean and functional. Some server tools have needlessly complicated dashboards, but this one respects your time. Gotchas and Things That'll Trip You Up Modpack format matters more than you'd think. ServerPackCreator handles common formats beautifully, but if your modpack is oddly structured or uses mods in unusual ways, you might need to tweak things manually. Generally this is rare, but it's worth testing your generated pack before uploading it to production. Not all mods have server implementations, even when they're not client-only. A mod might require both server and client components, but the server component might behave differently or have compatibility issues you don't expect. ServerPackCreator can't predict every edge case, so plan for a little testing before you launch publicly. Performance tuning is something you'll want to revisit after generation. The tool creates a functional server pack, but optimizing for your specific hardware and player count is a separate task. Use the Minecraft Server Status Checker to monitor your server's performance once it's live, and adjust Java arguments or mod configs accordingly. When to Use This Versus Rolling Your Own There's nothing wrong with manually building a server pack if you have time and patience. Some experienced server admins prefer it because they understand every single mod and config that goes into production. For everyone else, ServerPackCreator saves hours. If you're setting up a quick server for friends, running a community event, or hosting a public modded server, this tool is worth every second of setup time. And if you want to understand what individual mods actually do - what blocks they add, what mechanics they change - the Minecraft Block Search tool helps you dig into those details. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Cardboard: Running Bukkit Plugins on Fabric Servers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/cardboard-bukkit-plugins-fabric Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice "The Bukkit/Spigot/Paper API implementation for Fabric" CardboardPowered/cardboard · github.com ⭐ 1,161 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 What Cardboard Does (and Doesn't) Cardboard is a Java project that lets you install Bukkit plugins on a Fabric server. That's the pitch. If you've ever wanted to run the Fabric mod ecosystem alongside Bukkit's decade-old plugin library, Cardboard bridges that gap. With 1161 stars on GitHub, it's got a solid community behind it, but it's worth understanding what you're actually getting before setting up a production server. Here's the real appeal: Fabric mods and Bukkit plugins solve different problems. Fabric gives you low-level mod development with tight integration into the game engine. Bukkit plugins are lighter-weight, run in a sandboxed environment, and dominate the plugin ecosystem for admin tools, permissions systems, and game mechanics. Cardboard lets you have both on one server. Why You'd Actually Want This Think about what a typical community server needs. You want grief protection (Bukkit plugin). Anyone want visual enhancements or mod-based mechanics (Fabric mods). Anyone want permission management and rank systems (Bukkit plugins). Anyone want performance optimizations that only exist as Fabric mods. Normally, you'd have to choose. Minecraft If you've run a Spigot or Paper server before, the appeal is obvious. Cardboard lets you reuse all that knowledge and all those plugins you've already configured, while also running Fabric mods that don't exist as Bukkit plugins. The alternative is either maintaining two completely separate servers or rewriting plugins from scratch as Fabric mods (which is... a lot of work). The catch is compatibility. Current Version Support and Reality Check Cardboard currently supports Fabric 1.21.8 (active development), 1.21.4 (low support), and 1.21.1 (low support). Versions 1.20 and below are no longer supported. If you're on an older version, you'll need to update your server first. Minecraft - Halloween Costumes "Low support" means bug fixes and feature additions happen mainly for 1.21.8. If you report an issue on 1.21.1, don't expect the same response time. This is a volunteer-driven project with limited resources, so they're focusing on the latest version. Not every Bukkit plugin will work perfectly. Cardboard implements the Bukkit API on top of Fabric. That means it has to translate between two fundamentally different architectures. Some plugins depend heavily on Spigot's internal code (called NMS, or net.minecraft.server). Cardboard can remap these classes automatically, but as the developers note, the system "is far from perfect." How to Set It Up Installation isn't as simple as dropping a JAR into your plugins folder because Cardboard IS your server. Here's the process: Minecraft - Halloween Costumes Download the Cardboard build for your Minecraft version from cardboardpowered.org. Create a fresh server directory and place the Cardboard JAR there. Run the server once to generate server.properties and other config files. Stop the server and drop your Bukkit plugins into the plugins folder (just like you would on any Bukkit server). Start the server again and configure your plugins as needed. For testing before you commit to production, grab a free subdomain using the Free Minecraft DNS tool at Minecraft.How. It takes two minutes and lets you point a domain at your test server without paying for hosting. The learning curve is minimal if you've used Bukkit or Spigot before. If you're new to server administration, this adds an extra layer of complexity you probably don't need. Start with vanilla Fabric or regular Spigot first. Plugin Compatibility: What Might Break Before migrating a production server, test your essential plugins on a staging instance. This is non-negotiable. Minecraft - Halloween Costumes Some plugins rely on Bukkit features that Cardboard implements. Others depend on internals that Cardboard's remapping can't handle. The project uses SpecialSource and SrgLib for remapping Spigot classes to their Fabric equivalents, which handles many cases but not all. If a plugin modifies entity behavior by reaching deep into Minecraft's internals, it might break or require fixes. The maintainers maintain a Discord channel with pinned progress indicators showing what's known to work and what's still rough. Check there before testing plugins. Knowing in advance that "plugin X has issues with NMS remapping" saves hours of debugging. Actually, even popular plugins sometimes have issues. A permissions plugin that works perfectly on Paper might misbehave on Cardboard due to subtle differences in how events fire or how the server tick works. And this is why staging is essential. Practical Tips and Gotchas Here's what trips people up most: assuming Bukkit compatibility means "everything just works." It doesn't. Treat it as "most things work, test first." Minecraft - Halloween Costumes Second gotcha: mixing Fabric mods and Bukkit plugins can create weird interactions. If a Fabric mod modifies block breaking and a Bukkit plugin wants to prevent block breaking, you might hit edge cases. The mod acts at a lower level than the plugin, so it can bypass some plugin logic. Test realistic scenarios. Third: the project is actively developed but focused on the latest version. If you're on 1.21.4 and hit a bug, updating to 1.21.8 might fix it, but you can't always stay on old versions. If you're setting up complex permissions or grief protection, don't assume Bukkit plugins designed for Paper will just transplant. Spigot NMS is one compatibility layer; Cardboard's remapping is another. Two layers of compatibility means two places where things can subtly break. When to Use Cardboard (and When Not To) If you're running a small friend server and want both Fabric mods and Bukkit plugins, Cardboard is worth testing. If you want Fabric-only, don't use it; just run Fabric. If you want pure Bukkit plugins with zero mods, use PaperMC instead. The sweetspot is: you've got a set of Bukkit plugins you love, there are Fabric mods you also want, and you're willing to test compatibility before going live. If any of those three things aren't true, a simpler option probably exists. Large public servers often avoid Cardboard because the compatibility risk is higher and the payoff isn't always worth it. If you're hosting for hundreds of players, stick with Paper or Spigot. If you're hosting for friends, Cardboard is worth experimenting with. Alternatives and Comparisons If you want plugins without mods, Paper is simpler and more stable. If you want mods without plugins, use Fabric directly or Quilt. If you want a Fabric plugin system, look at Quilt Loader's plugin spec or Fabric API's module system. Cadix is another project attempting similar goals, but it's less mature. Mohist tried something similar for Forge and struggled with maintenance. Cardboard works partly because the Bukkit API is well-documented and the remapping tools (SpecialSource, SrgLib) already existed. The real advantage of Cardboard over building something yourself is the community work already done. You're not reinventing plugin compatibility; you're using years of the Bukkit, Spigot, and Paper teams' effort. The Community and What's Next The project has a Discord with active maintainers and testers. Apex Hosting runs a public test server at cardboardmod.apexmc.co:25666 if you want to see it running before setting up your own. That's genuinely helpful for understanding what a working Cardboard server feels like. For admin tools and configuration, the block search tool at Minecraft.How is handy for quickly looking up block IDs and properties when configuring Bukkit plugins or Fabric mods. Development is ongoing. The project credits the Bukkit, Spigot, and Paper teams (whose GPL-3.0 licensing it inherits), plus Glowstone for the library loader and the developers behind SpecialSource and SrgLib. It's a community effort built on years of prior work. If you're considering Cardboard, join the Discord, test a plugin list on a staging server, and check the progress indicators for your version. If your plugins work and you've tested mods alongside them, you've got a solid hybrid server. If anything breaks, fallback is straightforward: move your plugins to a PaperMC server instead.CardboardPowered/cardboard - GPL-3.0, ★1161 Support the project cardboard is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the cardboard repo ↗ --- ### Running Minecraft Bedrock on Linux and macOS: The mcpelauncher-manifest Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mcpelauncher-manifest-bedrock-linux-mac Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice "The main repository for the Linux and Mac OS Bedrock edition Minecraft launcher." minecraft-linux/mcpelauncher-manifest · github.com ⭐ 1,501 stars💻 CMake📜 GPL-3.0 Want to play Minecraft Bedrock Edition on your Linux PC or Mac instead of being locked into Windows or consoles? The mcpelauncher-manifest project lets you do exactly that, bringing official Bedrock support to platforms Microsoft never bothered to release it on natively. If you've been curious about how it works or wondering if it's worth the setup, here's the real story. What Is mcpelauncher-manifest and Why You'd Actually Want It Minecraft comes in two flavors: Java Edition (the original, PC/Mac/Linux friendly) and Bedrock Edition (newer, cross-platform between consoles and Windows). Thing is, Microsoft never released Bedrock for Linux or older macOS versions officially. That's where mcpelauncher-manifest steps in. It's an open-source launcher that packages the Android version of Bedrock to run on Linux and macOS through emulation and compatibility layers. Why would you want this instead of just playing Java Edition? Good question. Bedrock has cross-platform multiplayer with console players, better performance on lower-end machines, and some gameplay features Java doesn't have. If you've got friends on Xbox or Nintendo Switch, Bedrock is the way to connect with them. Plus, if you're running a dedicated community server, Bedrock compatibility opens doors Java doesn't. System Requirements and Honest Hardware Talk Let's be real: mcpelauncher-manifest isn't lightweight. You'll need decent hardware, and the requirements have gotten stricter as Minecraft updates. Here's what actually works in 2026: Linux on x86/x86_64: Recent versions (1.20.30+) need OpenGL ES 3.0 support. Older hardware stuck on OpenGL ES 2.0 can run versions up to 1.20.20, but newer builds simply won't start. macOS: If you're on Intel, you've got support from version 1.13 through the latest. M-series Mac users get experimental support starting at 1.19.70, though modding has limitations. ARM processors: Yes, it runs on Raspberry Pi-class hardware (armv7/armv8), but don't expect buttery gameplay. You'll need OpenGL ES 2.0 at minimum. The real kicker? Version 1.20.30+ requires hardware rendering. That means older GPUs are out. If your machine falls short, the project documentation explains workarounds using software rendering through environment variables or ANGLE with SwiftShader, but those are for advanced users willing to trade performance for functionality. Installation and Getting Started Installation varies by distro, and the project maintains nightly builds alongside stable releases. Check their GitHub releases page for AppImage files (older, less maintained now) or distro-specific packages for Debian, Ubuntu, and Fedora. If you're on a supported distro, the quick path is grabbing the latest release from the nightly builds and running it. The launcher handles version downloads and management through its UI, which lives in a separate repository (mcpelauncher-ui-manifest). You'll sign in with your Microsoft account the same way you would on Windows, though fair warning: Xbox login has been broken on versions 1.13.0 through 1.16.1X. That means affected builds don't support Realms or Xbox Live features properly. Key Features and Hidden Gotchas The launcher does most of what you'd expect: manage multiple game versions, handle world saves, install resource packs. But there are quirks baked in by its nature as a reverse-engineered launcher. GitHub project card for minecraft-linux/mcpelauncher-manifest Version support is inconsistent. The oldest supported version is 1.13.0, and the newest typically runs 1.21.73. But intermediate versions have specific bugs that crop up across the board (no Xbox Live invites work on any version, period). Some versions have crafting broken on certain architectures. Others corrupt worlds near water. You might need to skip a version or two if your main use case hits a known bug. Audio is weird on some platforms. macOS x86 builds from 1.16.20 onward have no sound unless you compile it yourself with PulseAudio support. That's... not ideal for casual players. ARM systems need PulseAudio present to produce sound at all. Texture rendering has quirks too. Versions 1.16.210 through 1.17.4X have a "texture off by one" bug on x86/x86_64 machines. The launcher provides a texture patch setting to work around it, but you have to know to enable it. Same timeframe also includes broken crafting grids and world corruption by water, which is genuinely bad. If you're considering this for a server, just know that Xbox Live friend joining doesn't work reliably across any version. You won't be able to invite friends from other platforms easily. Practical Setup Tips A few things I'd do before diving in: Test your OpenGL version before installing. On Linux, run `glxinfo | grep "OpenGL version"` to see what you've got. If it's ES 2.0 and you want recent versions, prepare for pain. Pick your game version carefully. Don't just grab the latest if you're starting a long-term world. Check the known bugs list for your chosen version. If you're setting up a whitelist for a server, use minecraft.how's Whitelist Creator tool to generate your whitelist quickly instead of manually editing JSON. For server administration and DNS, the Free Minecraft DNS tool handles the technical side so you can focus on gameplay. When to Use This and When to Skip This project shines if you've got a specific reason to play Bedrock on Linux. Maybe you run a small community server and need Bedrock compatibility. Maybe your friends are on Xbox and you want to join their worlds. Maybe you're experimenting with game development on Bedrock. If you just want to play Minecraft on Linux casually, Java Edition is genuinely easier. It's officially supported, gets updates day-one, and doesn't have any of these hardware or version-specific bugs. mcpelauncher-manifest is for people who specifically need Bedrock's features or cross-platform play, not a general replacement. The project is also actively maintained but comes with that open-source reality: it's powered by reverse-engineering and community effort, not Mojang resources. Updates sometimes lag behind official releases, and some bugs may never get fixed because they live in Minecraft's own code, not the launcher. Comparing Your Options There's really no direct competition here. Java Edition is the main Minecraft on Linux, and it's official and polished. Some people have experimented with running Bedrock through ProtonDB or WINE, but those approaches are hacky and not worth it when mcpelauncher-manifest exists and does the job more reliably. On macOS specifically, it's basically your only option for Bedrock if you're not on Windows. The launcher itself clocks in at 1501 stars on GitHub and is written in CMake. It's not the flashiest project, but it solves a real problem for a small group of dedicated players.minecraft-linux/mcpelauncher-manifest - GPL-3.0, ★1501 Ready to try mcpelauncher-manifest? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit minecraft-linux/mcpelauncher-manifest on GitHub ↗ --- ### How to Use Meteor Client Minecraft Mod Safely in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/meteor-client-minecraft-mod Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice "Based Minecraft utility mod." MeteorDevelopment/meteor-client · github.com ⭐ 3,396 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 Anarchy servers are chaotic Minecraft multiplayer worlds with minimal rules, making them both exciting and exhausting. Meteor Client tackles that chaos by providing utilities that automate farming, enhance exploration, and streamline survival - but only if you're playing somewhere that allows it. What Meteor Client Actually Is Meteor Client is a Fabric mod for Minecraft. If you're not familiar with Fabric, it's a lightweight modding platform that sits between Minecraft's code and the mods you want to run. Unlike Forge (the older, bulkier alternative), Fabric is stripped down and fast. The mod itself is a collection of gameplay utilities. It's open-source under GPL-3.0, maintained by an active development team, and has over 3,396 stars on GitHub. So it's not some abandoned project - the community backs it. Here's what sets it apart: it's designed specifically for anarchy servers. Those are Minecraft multiplayer worlds with practically zero rules. No admin protection. No whitelist. No one stopping you from digging under someone's base or blowing up their house. Meteor gives you tools to survive (or thrive) in that kind of environment. Where This Tool Actually Belongs This matters because Meteor Client isn't for vanilla survival servers, and it's definitely not for your friend's SMP where everyone's playing legitimately. Most servers ban it outright. Use it there, and you'll get kicked. Anarchy servers, though, are exactly where it's meant to be. Servers like 2b2t (the oldest anarchy server, running since 2010) explicitly allow mods like this. Players use them to navigate the chaos - automating tedious tasks, finding safe routes, managing inventory during combat. It's survival optimization in an environment where everyone's using every advantage. Modded servers sometimes allow it too, depending on the admin's rules. Always check before installing. Installing Meteor Client First, you need Fabric Loader installed. If you already have it, skip ahead. If not, go to fabricmc.net/use/installer and download the installer for your OS. Run it, select your Minecraft version (recent versions like 1.21 work fine), and let it install. Once Fabric is ready, installing Meteor is straightforward. Download the mod JAR from meteorclient.com. Navigate to your .minecraft/mods folder (location varies by OS, but it's in your Minecraft directory). Drop the Meteor JAR file in there. That's it. Launch Minecraft with the Fabric profile, and Meteor loads with your game. You'll see its UI when you start playing. What It Actually Does for You The mod includes dozens of utilities bundled into what the community calls "modules." You enable or disable them based on what you need. A few standouts: GitHub project card for MeteorDevelopment/meteor-client AutoMine: Automatically breaks blocks while you hold the attack button. Tedious mining becomes passive. AutoEat: Your character automatically eats food when hunger drops below a threshold. You stop starving mid-fight. AntiCheat: Helps you avoid detection on servers running anti-cheat systems (important on anarchy servers where others might try to grief you). Baritone Integration: This one deserves its own sentence. Baritone is a pathfinding AI that can navigate your character across the world automatically. Meteor integrates it, so you can set a destination and AFk while your character walks there. Better HUD: Displays useful info onscreen - coordinates, direction, FPS, player count. There are more, but these cover the basics. You pick and choose. Real-World Gotchas and Limitations Meteor's powerful, but it has real limits. Anti-cheat software on some servers actively detects and blocks it. That's not a bug in the mod - it's intentional server protection. If you try using it on a server running Watchdog or similar, you'll get flagged quickly. Performance-wise, Meteor doesn't crash your game, but running it alongside other heavy mods can bog things down. Fabric helps here - it's more efficient than Forge - but there's still a ceiling. You might wonder about the legal side. Meteor's GPL-3.0 license means the source code is public, modifications must be disclosed, and closed-source forks aren't allowed. For players, this just means: use it as intended, don't try to resell it, don't claim you made it. When You'd Actually Reach for It Not every Minecraft player needs this. If you're on a vanilla survival server or a friend's whitelisted SMP, you don't. The game's already balanced for that. But if you're exploring anarchy servers or playing on a modded server where admins allow automation mods, Meteor makes sense. It turns survival from a grinding chore into strategy. You're not cheating on a vanilla server - you're using a tool designed for environments where everyone has access to the same utilities. If you're setting up your own server infrastructure, tools like Minecraft Votifier Tester help verify voting mechanics, and Minecraft Whitelist Creator handles access control - though neither relates to Meteor directly. Similar Tools Worth Knowing About Baritone (which Meteor integrates) is standalone if you want just the pathfinding AI without the full mod suite. It's lightweight and does one thing well. MeteorClient's closest competitor is probably Impact, another anarchy-focused mod. Impact has different utilities and a different UI philosophy. Both are solid - it's mostly preference. There's also Rusherhack, which leans harder into PvP utilities. If your anarchy server is more combat-focused, you might prefer it. But Meteor remains the community standard. Ready to try meteor-client? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit MeteorDevelopment/meteor-client on GitHub ↗ --- ### Building Smart Minecraft Bots with Mineflayer-Statemachine URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mineflayer-statemachine-minecraft-bot-guide Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project PrismarineJS/mineflayer-statemachine A state machine plugin for Mineflayer to aid in designing more complex behavior trees. ⭐ 128 stars💻 TypeScript📜 MIT View on GitHub ↗ Writing a Minecraft bot that does more than wander around is surprisingly hard. You need your bot to make decisions, track complex states, and handle behaviors that react to each other. Without some structure, bot code becomes spaghetti pretty fast. That's where mineflayer-statemachine steps in - it gives you a clean, modular way to design bot AI using finite state machines so your code doesn't fall apart as complexity grows. What This Project Actually Does Mineflayer-statemachine is a plugin for Mineflayer (the popular Node.js framework for creating Minecraft bots). It adds a state machine API on top of Mineflayer, letting you break down complex bot behavior into isolated states and transitions. Instead of writing one giant spaghetti function, you define what your bot does in each state, and the plugin handles switching between them based on conditions you set. Think of it like this: your bot needs to find a player, walk toward them, and then stop and look at them when they're close. Without a state machine, you're juggling all that logic at once. With mineflayer-statemachine, you create three separate behaviors - "find player," "walk toward player," and "look at player" - and define when to switch from one to the next. Each behavior does one job well. The result is code that's easier to test, debug, and extend. The plugin handles the boring parts for you. Why You'd Actually Want This There are several solid reasons to reach for a state machine plugin instead of writing bot logic from scratch: Scaling bot behavior - A bot that just mines obsidian is simple. A bot that harvests crops, replants seeds, tracks inventory, and relocates full chests? That's complex. State machines keep that manageable. Modular design - You can write behaviors independently and plug them together. Need to reuse "walk to location" in five different states? Define it once, use it everywhere. Easier debugging - When something goes wrong, you know exactly which state the bot is in and what it's trying to do. No mystery spaghetti code jumping around. Clean behavior composition - The plugin lets you nest state machines inside each other, so you can build simple states and combine them into more complex ones. I've seen bots that tried to manage complex behavior without this kind of structure, and honestly, they turn into unmaintainable messes. You end up with dozens of if statements checking game state, flags getting out of sync, and one small change breaking three other features. A state machine prevents that. How to Install and Set Up Getting started is straightforward if you already have a Node.js project set up. If you don't, create one first: bashnpm init -y npm install mineflayer npm install mineflayer-pathfinder npm install mineflayer-statemachine The pathfinder plugin is a dependency - it handles movement-related behaviors that the state machine uses. Make sure you load it before you initialize your state machine. Here's a minimal example to get you started: javascriptconst mineflayer = require('mineflayer'); const { BotStateMachine } = require('mineflayer-statemachine'); const bot = mineflayer.createBot({ username: 'MyBot', host: 'localhost' }); bot.loadPlugin(require('mineflayer-pathfinder').pathfinder); bot.once('spawn', () => { const stateMachine = new BotStateMachine(bot, {}); // Start adding states and transitions here }); From here, you'll define states and transitions. The plugin comes with pre-built behaviors like following players, looking at entities, and mining blocks, but you can also write custom ones. Key Features That Actually Matter Pre-Built Behaviors The plugin includes several ready-to-use behaviors: getting the closest entity, following entities, looking at entities, digging blocks, placing blocks, and equipping items. You can combine these into your state machine without writing them from scratch. If you're building a simple harvester bot, for example, you might string together "find nearest crop block," "walk to block," "dig block," and "repeat." Most of that logic exists already in the plugin. Entity Filters One thing that surprised me when testing this was how flexible the filtering is. You can tell your bot to focus on players only, specific mobs, creatures holding specific items, or custom filters you write yourself. So if you want your bot to chase down Endermen but ignore Zombies, that's just a filter configuration. It keeps your states clean because the filtering happens separately from your core logic. State Transitions with Conditions You define when the bot should move from one state to another using conditions. A transition might say "if this behavior finished AND the player is closer than 5 blocks, switch to the 'look at player' state." The plugin evaluates these continuously, so your bot can respond dynamically to changing game state. Unlike hardcoded timers or random checks, transitions are event-driven and predictable. Nested State Machines You can build state machines inside other state machines. This is genuinely useful for keeping complexity organized. You might have a top-level state machine with "search," "approach," and "interact" states. Inside "approach," you've another state machine managing path-finding details. The plugin handles the nesting for you. Custom Targets Object States pass data through a shared targets object. Found a player? Store them in targets. Following that player? Grab them from targets. It's a simple but effective way to pass context between states without globals or tight coupling. I've found this pattern really clean when building bots that need to remember what they were working on. Common Pitfalls and Tips from Experience A few things that trip people up: Forgetting pathfinder dependency - If your bot uses movement behaviors and you haven't loaded mineflayer-pathfinder, the state machine will silently fail or behave weirdly. Load it first, before creating the state machine. This is the most common "why isn't my bot moving?" issue. State completion not working as expected - Some behaviors complete instantly (like "get closest entity"), while others (like "follow entity") run indefinitely. Understanding which is which changes how you structure your transitions. Read the behavior docs carefully. Minecraft version compatibility - The plugin is built for recent versions of Minecraft. If you're connecting to a 1.8 server, a lot of behaviors might not work as designed. Test your bot against your target server version. Inventory management gets complex fast - Bots need to handle full inventories, item drops, and storage interactions. The plugin doesn't handle all of that for you. You'll probably need to write custom behaviors for inventory logic specific to your bot's purpose. If you're working with skins or character data, you might want to check out minecraft.how's Minecraft Skin Creator to understand what skins your bot might encounter. One more thing: test your state transitions thoroughly. When states can transition unexpectedly or get stuck, debugging becomes painful. Write a few test cases that verify transitions happen when you expect them to. Alternatives Worth Knowing About Mineflayer-statemachine isn't the only way to structure bot AI. Here's what else is out there: Behavior trees - Some developers use behavior trees instead of state machines. They're more flexible in some ways (better for conditional logic) but also more complex. If you're already deep in bot development, behavior trees might appeal to you. State machines are simpler to learn. Raw mineflayer with event listeners - You can absolutely build bot behavior using just mineflayer's event system, no state machine at all. It works for simple bots but gets messy quickly. I'd only recommend this for bots with a handful of simple behaviors. Other finite state machine libraries - Some developers use general-purpose FSM libraries instead of one built specifically for Mineflayer. These give you more control but less integration with bot-specific behaviors, so you end up writing more custom code. For most people building moderately complex Minecraft bots in Node.js, mineflayer-statemachine is the sweet spot. It's specifically designed for Mineflayer, so all the integration details are handled. And it's actively maintained - the latest release (1.7.0) came out with improvements to the core API. If you're building something simple (like a mining bot that just digs one type of block), you might not need a state machine at all. But the moment your bot needs to make decisions or switch between multiple behaviors, mineflayer-statemachine saves you a ton of headache. The MIT license means you can use it in personal projects or in commercial software. You can also check out minecraft.how's Minecraft Block Search tool to understand the blocks your bots will interact with. The 128 GitHub stars tell you this project has real adoption. It's not bleeding-edge experimental code - it's something people have built actual bots with and keep using. Ready to try mineflayer-statemachine? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit PrismarineJS/mineflayer-statemachine on GitHub ↗ --- ### UsefulMods: Your Guide to Finding Minecraft Mods That Work URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/usefulmods-minecraft-mods-guide Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice "Just a list of useful mods" TheUsefulLists/UsefulMods · github.com ⭐ 2,344 stars📜 MIT You know the feeling. You're scrolling through mod sites at midnight, finding thousands of Minecraft mods, and zero confidence about which ones actually work together. A good solution: follow someone else's curation. Instead of spinning the roulette wheel yourself, lean on a maintained list built by people who've already done the compatibility testing. UsefulMods is exactly that kind of list. It's a GitHub repository maintained by a community of Minecraft players who've specifically vetted mods for reliability and performance across different game versions. The genius part? Everything's organized. You don't get a giant wall of text. Folks who try this get version-specific lists (1.21, 1.20, 1.19, and older versions) with mods categorized as either performance boosters or bugfixes. And if you're not in the mood to assemble your own setup, they've released two pre-built modpacks on Modrinth that handle the combination work for you. The Modding Fragmentation Problem Here's the thing about Minecraft: every major version is basically its own game. When 1.21 shipped, a bunch of mods written for 1.20 broke immediately. Some got abandoned. Others got updated, but not all of them, or not for months. If you're playing 1.19 or 1.18, you're in an even narrower pool. Finding mods that are (a) actively maintained, (b) actually compatible with your version, and (c) don't conflict with each other is the kind of task that makes you want to give up and play vanilla. That friction is where UsefulMods helps. Instead of guessing or hunting through GitHub issues to see if a mod is still alive, you're working from a list that someone's already maintained for that exact version. No dead projects. No guessing. What You're Actually Getting The UsefulMods GitHub repo (2,344 stars) is organized cleanly: each version gets its own section with links to performance mods and bugfixes, usually hosted on Modrinth. The "performance" category is self-explanatory: mods like Sodium, Lithium, and similar optimization tools that boost your FPS without changing how the game plays. These don't add content, they just make the engine run smoother. The "bugfixes" category handles the stability stuff, the annoying behavior that Mojang hasn't patched yet. Game crashes that happen every few hours? A solid bugfix mod can eliminate those. Both matter more than you'd expect. I used to think performance mods were just for people with old laptops, but rendering issues affect everyone at some point. Render distance at 32 chunks? FPS hit. Building a massive farm with hundreds of hoppers? FPS hit. Loading a 10-year-old world? FPS hit. A solid performance mod stack is the difference between smooth 60fps and stuttering through your own creations. And if you're interested in pure aesthetics, many players pair these performance mods with visual mods that aren't always on the UsefulMods list since they're less essential. If you're working on visual consistency with custom Minecraft skins, remember that certain mods affecting player models can change how they render, so test any visual mod combinations before committing to a big world. How the List Is Organized The structure is straightforward: version headers, then two tables below each one. The first table lists performance mods. This second covers bugfixes. Each cell contains a link to the actual mod, usually pointing to its Modrinth or CurseForge page. The maintainers update these as new versions release, and the Discord community flags mods that break or get abandoned. What's smart about this approach is that it's maintained by actual players, not some algorithm. Someone took the time to test Sodium with Lithium, verify they don't crash together, and confirm they're both stable on 1.21.1. And that human verification is why you're not wasting hours troubleshooting. The Ready-Made Modpacks If building a mod list sounds like work, there's an escape hatch: The Useful Pack and The Useful Pack+ on Modrinth. The first one is intentionally minimal (optimization plus a few quality-of-life tweaks), designed to feel like vanilla-plus. One second one goes heavier on features while still preserving that vanilla vibe. GitHub project card for TheUsefulLists/UsefulMods I appreciate that these exist because they're honest about their scope. You're not getting some bloated modpack that transforms Minecraft into a different game. You're getting the performance and stability improvements that every player should have, bundled and tested. If you want to customize further, you can still use one of the modpacks as a starting point and add your own mods on top, or pull the raw list from GitHub and build your own combination. The whole point is flexibility. Installing either pack is simple: grab it from Modrinth and import it into your launcher. Both are designed for survival and vanilla-style gameplay, so you're not locked into some weird creative-mode setup. Building Your Own Setup from the List The list is meant to be flexible. You're not locked into the modpacks if they're not your style. The GitHub repo gives you enough information to understand what each mod does and why it's included, so you can make informed swaps. Some players even cross-reference with Minecraft's block search tool to understand how specific mods alter block behavior or rendering before adding them to their setup. That flexibility is worth something. You might decide you only need performance mods for a lightweight setup, or you might grab everything. Anyone might skip certain mods because they conflict with something you're already using. The list provides the foundation; you build on top. Real Talk: Common Gotchas Even a curated list of reliable mods can have edge cases. Two mods might both be solid individually but cause issues when combined because they both touch the same Minecraft system. The maintainers do a good job catching this, but if you're adding mods beyond the list, you're introducing risk. Test major world changes in a backup world first, not your main survival base. Version mismatches are another trap. 1.21 and 1.21.1 are close but not identical. 1.20.1 and 1.20 have different mod support. Make sure you're looking at the right version section before downloading anything. It's easy to grab 1.20 mods for a 1.21 server and wonder why nothing works. One more thing: modpacks are frozen at release, so if you download The Useful Pack today, next month it might have updates available. That's not a problem, just means you should check for updates if you notice performance issues creeping back in or new bugs appearing in recent Minecraft versions. And seriously, backup your world. When to Use This vs Building From Scratch UsefulMods shines if you're tired of research. You've got a specific version you want to play, and you want to know "what mods should I use?" without spending three hours on Reddit or Discord. If you're an advanced modder building a custom setup with 50+ mods, you probably don't need this. But if you're a regular player who just wants your game to run smoothly and be less buggy, this is exactly what you came for. The community aspect matters too. That Discord server attached to UsefulMods means you can ask questions if a mod isn't working or if you want recommendations for something specific. That's different from just finding a random list online.TheUsefulLists/UsefulMods - MIT, ★2344 Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### How to Change Skins Server-Side With FabricTailor URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fabrictailor-minecraft-skin-changing Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project samolego/FabricTailor A server-side or singleplayer skin changing mod for fabric. ⭐ 120 stars💻 Java📜 LGPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ Ever installed a skin mod that didn't work because half your server lacked it? FabricTailor solves that by working server-side - you change your skin with a command, and other players see it even without the mod installed. It's one of those small tools that removes more friction than you'd expect. Why Skin Changes Are So Annoying Minecraft skins seem simple until you try to change them regularly. The default process involves visiting a skin website, uploading a file, waiting for it to sync, then logging back into Minecraft and hoping the Mojang servers cooperate. On multiplayer servers, things get worse. You're stuck with whatever skin uploaded first, or you run into chaos where different players see different skins depending on who has what mod installed. This is where FabricTailor comes in. Instead of juggling websites and uploads, you swap skins using a command inside the game. Your character instantly adopts a new look, and the server keeps that change synchronized for everyone. For players who like switching their appearance frequently - whether for roleplay, community events, or just experimenting - it's genuinely useful. But here's the thing: it works server-side. But that distinction matters. What FabricTailor Actually Does FabricTailor is a Fabric mod written in Java that lets you swap skins using a simple command. You can set a skin from a file, pull one from a URL, or clear it back to your original account skin. The server handles everything, so players without the mod will still see your changes applied. They'll see vanilla Minecraft skins perfectly; they just won't render custom capes or ultra-high-resolution textures if other players are using those. The project sits at around 120 GitHub stars and handles skin data through two established APIs: MineSkin for uploading and signing custom skins, and ely.by for pulling existing skin values and signatures. These names probably mean something if you've dug into Minecraft's skin system before. If not, just think of them as the infrastructure that makes custom skins actually work across servers. What's interesting for server admins is the permission system. You can grant or revoke the /skin command entirely, lock it to file uploads only, or restrict it to URL-based skins. This gives you control over what players can do - useful if you want to prevent certain kinds of skins from being set on your server. Think of it as giving players a character customization tool they access without leaving the game. Installation and Setup Installation follows standard Fabric mod procedure. You'll need Fabric Loader and the Fabric API installed, then drop the mod JAR into your mods folder. The latest release is version 2.9.1, built for Minecraft 26.1. Download it from CurseForge or Modrinth - both platforms host it prominently. For a server installation: bashcd /path/to/server # Download the latest release wget https://github.com/samolego/FabricTailor/releases/download/2.9.1%2B26.1/fabrictailor-2.9.1.jar # Move it to your mods folder mv fabrictailor-2.9.1.jar mods/ # Restart the server./start.sh If you're running a singleplayer world with Fabric, the process is identical - just drop the mod into your singleplayer mods folder and launch. The mod initializes with default permissions (everyone can use /skin unless you configure otherwise). Configuration happens through your permission manager. If you're using something like LuckPerms, you can set nodes like fabrictailor.command.skin to control who accesses the command, or fabrictailor.command.skin.set.url to restrict to URL uploads only. The project's GitHub wiki lists all available permission nodes if you need fine-grained control. No special dependencies or setup beyond dropping it in the mods folder and restarting. Using the /skin Command Once installed, the command syntax is straightforward: bash/skin set /skin clear Setting a skin from a file works best if you're managing skins on your server centrally. You'd host a PNG file on your server, then run /skin set file://path/to/skin.png. Setting from a URL pulls directly from external sources - any valid PNG skin file on the internet works. Clearing your skin reverts you to your original account skin, which is useful if you want to undo a change. The command executes instantly from your game client, assuming you have permission to use it. Where things get interesting is in multiplayer. Your new skin propagates immediately to all connected players. On a larger server, you'll see it reflected in the tablist within seconds. This is what makes the server-side approach valuable - there's no client-side mod requirement, no waiting for skins to sync through Mojang's systems, no inconsistent rendering across different clients. Server-Side vs Client-Side: Why It Matters This distinction is core to why FabricTailor stands out. Server-side means the server controls skin display. Players who don't have the mod installed will still see your custom skin. They'll see vanilla skins perfectly, with no missing textures or fallback rendering. GitHub project card for samolego/FabricTailor Client-side mods work differently. They enhance your personal view - better graphics, effects, whatever - but other players don't see those enhancements unless they also have the mod. For a skin mod, that's a fundamental problem. You want everyone seeing the same character. Server-side enforcement solves that. The server says "this player has this skin" and all clients receive that data. One tradeoff is that ultra-high-resolution skins and custom capes only render correctly for players who have FabricTailor. Vanilla clients see the standard 64x64 skin texture. It's a reasonable compromise - most players care that everyone's skins are consistent and customizable, not that everyone's getting maximum visual fidelity. Common Gotchas and What to Know One thing that trips up new users: don't lock yourself out. If you lose permission to use /skin and you're not an admin, you can't fix it yourself. An operator has to restore your permissions. Plan ahead if you're testing on a public server. Skin files need to be valid PNG images. The mod doesn't validate format aggressively, so corrupted or malformed uploads will silently fail. Test skins locally before deploying them to your server to avoid confusion. HD skins and custom capes require players to have the mod installed. If your server mixes clients with and without FabricTailor, vanilla players will see basic skins while modded players see fancy ones. It's not a deal-breaker, but worth knowing. You can read the full breakdown on the project's GitHub wiki. URL-based skins are convenient but add a network request on every server start. If the URL goes down or changes, skins that depended on it will fail. Self-hosting skin files is more stable for long-running servers. One quick note: the mod works singleplayer too, if you want to experiment before deploying to a server. Finding Skins and Alternatives You can use any Minecraft skin from community collections or texture pack sites. Browse the Minecraft.How skin collection for thousands of community-created options. Many players also create custom skins using online editors, then upload them via FabricTailor's /skin command. For other skin mods, Reskin and CustomSkinLoader are older Fabric options that still see maintenance, but they require client-side installation on all players' machines - which defeats the purpose if you want server-wide consistency. Forge users won't find FabricTailor useful since it's Fabric-specific. For server admins specifically, FabricTailor's server-side approach makes it stand out. You're not dependent on every player installing a mod. If you want a tool that works for singleplayer and servers alike and lets you maintain consistent skins across your community, this delivers that without friction. If you're already running a Fabric server and need skin flexibility, FabricTailor is honestly the cleanest solution. Getting Started FabricTailor fills a legitimate gap in Minecraft's out-of-the-box customization options. It's a focused project - 120 GitHub stars reflects that - but it solves a real problem for servers that care about character customization and consistency. Setup takes minutes. Usage is intuitive. Documentation is solid. If you're managing a Fabric server or want skin flexibility in singleplayer, it's worth testing. Head to the GitHub releases page, download version 2.9.1, and try it in a test world first. Once you've used /skin set to swap appearances without leaving the game, you'll understand why server-side skin management matters. While you're exploring Minecraft tools, the Nether Portal Calculator is handy for coordinating travel between dimensions on survival servers - might as well have everything you need in one place.samolego/FabricTailor - LGPL-3.0, ★120 Support the project FabricTailor is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the FabricTailor repo ↗ --- ### Slimefun4: Building Tech and Magic into Your Minecraft Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/slimefun4-minecraft-plugin-guide Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Slimefun4 (Slimefun/Slimefun4) Slimefun 4 - A unique Spigot/Paper plugin that looks and feels like a modpack. We've been giving you backpacks, jetpacks, reactors and much more since 2013. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 1,102 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 If your server feels stale - same old vanilla crafting, same old survival loop - Slimefun4 lets you drop in 500+ new items, recipes, and systems without touching a single mod file. It's a Spigot or Paper plugin that turns your server into something closer to a modpack: backpacks, electric power grids, jetpacks, reactors, magic altars, the whole thing. And unlike true mods, your players don't need to install anything. They just join the server. What Slimefun Actually Is (And Why It's Not Just Another Plugin) Slimefun started in 2013. That's over a decade of development by maintainers and hundreds of contributors who've built something legitimately ambitious. It's not a quick cosmetic addon. It's a complete tech and magic progression system baked into a server plugin. The core idea: instead of forcing players into one narrow path, Slimefun gives them choices. Want to go full tech? Build solar panels, electric furnaces, energy networks, and automated item transport systems. Prefer magic? Craft wands, set up altars, summon things. Want both? Go hybrid. Every player decides how deep they want to dive. Java is the primary language here, and it runs on any Spigot or Paper server - both of which are massive in the server community. Paper especially is the go-to for servers that need performance. Slimefun4 plays well with both, which matters because compatibility friction kills plugins fast. What You Can Actually Build With It Let me be concrete here. With Slimefun, you get: Power systems - Solar panels charge batteries. Capacitors store energy. Electric furnaces and grinders run off the grid. It's actual electricity simulation, not just flavor text. Automation - Conveyor belts, item pipes, sorting systems. You can build an automated farm that harvests, processes, and sorts materials while you're building something else. Magical tools - Enchanted swords that do unusual things. Staves that cast spells. Backpacks that let players carry more without hitting the vanilla 64-stack limit. Advanced crafting - Altars, cauldrons, enhanced workbenches. Recipes get way more complex, which actually makes progression feel earned. Jetpacks and flight gear - Fuel-based flight mechanics. Not creative mode flight, but something you have to fuel and manage. Reactors and generators - Set up a nuclear reactor or coal generator. Scale it up. Watch it fail catastrophically if you're not careful (and learn from it). The thing that keeps surprising people is that this all coexists. A player working on their tech tree doesn't block a player who wants pure magic. Servers I've tested this on end up with sprawling bases - some players have outdoor solar farms while others have underground ritual chambers. It naturally creates variety. Getting Slimefun Running on Your Server Installation is almost boring because it's so straightforward. Requirements: You need Java 16 or higher (most servers already have this). Slimefun runs on Minecraft 1.16 through 1.20 (current versions as of this article). Paper or Spigot - either works fine. Here's the install process: Download the latest build from blob.build. The project offers development builds (most recent, most updates) and stable builds. Go development. Drag the.jar file into your server's /plugins/ folder. Restart the server. That's it. Slimefun generates its config files on first run. You'll have some tweaking options - how much energy items use, whether certain features are enabled - but the defaults are balanced. If something breaks (and on a big server, something always might), the developers are active. There's a Discord, a wiki with setup guides, and the project moves fast enough that bugs get fixed. Features That Actually Matter Not everything in Slimefun is equally useful. Some standouts: The Energy System is legitimately elegant. Solar panels generate power during the day. Geothermal generators tap lava. Windmills are weather-dependent. Everything feeds into a shared network, and blocks draw power as needed. I've seen players spend days optimizing their power layout. That's engagement right there. Backpacks seem simple until you realize vanilla Minecraft caps your effective inventory without them. Slimefun backpacks give players more carrying capacity without breaking survival progression. It's a small feature that changes how servers feel. Addons exist. Lots of them. The community's built tons of extensions - slime customizations, expanded automation, additional magic systems. If you want something Slimefun doesn't have out of the box, odds are someone's built it. The magic system gets overlooked but it's genuinely good. Set up an altar with the right patterns, and you're actually crafting magic items, not just clicking a button. It has progression and ritual to it that makes magic feel different from tech. Stumbling Blocks and How to Avoid Them Slimefun is stable, but new server admins hit some friction points. Performance on large servers can be a thing. If you're running a 100+ player economy server with massive player bases full of automation, Slimefun does add tick overhead. Paper handles it better than Spigot. But it's worth testing on your own hardware before full deployment. The wiki is good, but it's community-maintained. Some pages are outdated. If you're stuck on a recipe, the Discord is faster than searching docs. Config tuning matters more than you'd think. Out of the box Slimefun is balanced, but for a server with specific themes or difficulty targets, you'll want to adjust energy costs and recipe complexities. That's an admin task, not a player task, but it exists. One thing that trips people: Slimefun items don't stack the way vanilla items do in some cases. Players notice when their high-tech pickaxe doesn't stack with four others. It's not a bug, it's by design, but it surprises people. When You'd Actually Use This Slimefun works best for servers that want progression depth without mods. A vanilla survival server where tech and magic are optional bonuses? Perfect. A creative server where players want to build realistic utilities? Great fit. An economy server needing more crafting depth? Solves that problem. It's less useful on hardcore PvP servers where your goal is raw combat - the energy system adds complexity that PvP-focused players might skip. But even then, some servers use Slimefun for aesthetic machines that don't affect PvP directly. If you're setting up a free DNS for your server (and if you're running something public, you probably should - check out minecraft.how's free DNS tool to get that sorted), Slimefun doesn't interfere with that infrastructure. Other Plugins Worth Knowing About SlimeFun alternatives are rare. Most tech/magic plugins are older or less full. MythicMobs adds custom mobs with special abilities but doesn't replace Slimefun's automation layer. CustomItems does custom items but lacks the progression system. True modpacks (like Modded Minecraft servers) get you more total features but require mod installation on the client side. That's higher friction. Slimefun trades some depth for accessibility. For server voting and promotion, you might also check out the Votifier testing tool to ensure your voting integration works properly - Slimefun doesn't handle that, but a healthy server usually does both. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Purpur for Minecraft Servers: Configuration and Setup URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/purpur-minecraft-server-setup Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Purpur (PurpurMC/Purpur) Purpur is a drop-in replacement for Paper servers designed for configurability, and new fun and exciting gameplay features. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 2,348 stars💻 Java📜 MIT Purpur is a Minecraft server fork built on Paper that trades plugin complexity for built-in configuration. If you want to customize game behavior without managing dozens of plugins, Purpur cuts out the middle layer entirely. What Purpur Does (and Why It Matters) Most Minecraft server admins face a real choice: run vanilla (locked down), use Spigot or Paper (requires plugins for customization), or go full modded (complex infrastructure). Purpur bridges that gap. It's Paper's performance and stability combined with customization baked directly into the config files. Think of it this way: instead of installing five separate plugins to tweak mob behavior, change crop growth, and adjust combat mechanics, you edit one YAML file. Fewer dependencies. Fewer things that break. Fewer plugins fighting over game events. It's not for everyone. If your server runs vanilla with just essentials plugins, Purpur probably isn't necessary. But if you find yourself needing 10+ plugins just to shape your server's mechanics, Purpur starts looking pretty appealing. Installing Purpur on Your Server Getting Purpur running takes about five minutes if you've installed Paper before. Here's exactly how: Visit purpurmc.org/downloads and grab the JAR for your Minecraft version. The latest stable build is for Minecraft 26.1.2. Download it into your server directory alongside your world files. Next, fire it up: bashjava -Xmx4G -Xms4G -jar purpur-26.1.2.jar nogui The server generates configuration files on first launch. You'll see complaints about EULA not being accepted. Open eula.txt and change eula=false to eula=true. Restart the server. bash# Accept EULA sed -i 's/eula=false/eula=true/' eula.txt java -Xmx4G -Xms4G -jar purpur-26.1.2.jar nogui That's it. Server is running. If you're migrating from Paper or Spigot, just swap the JAR file. Purpur is compatible with existing worlds and plugins, so you don't need migration steps. (One caveat though: always backup your world folder first. Version jumps usually work, but unexpected things happen. Better to have a safety net.) Key Features and Configuration You'll Actually Use Purpur's appeal is depth. Let me walk through the standout features. GitHub project card for PurpurMC/Purpur Rideable mobs sound gimmicky at first. Then you realize you can make any entity mountable with two config lines. Customize speed, health, damage, drops. One server admin I've heard from uses this for custom mob events where players mount armored zombies. No plugin development required. Just config. Villager trade customization means rewriting what librarians sell and what they charge. Default librarians are kind of one-note. With Purpur, you reshape their entire trade pool. Want librarians cheaper? Done. Different enchantments? Configure it. Better crops from farmers? You control it. This single feature is why some survival servers picked Purpur instead of managing trade plugins. Crop growth rates are locked at vanilla speed by default. This drives farmers crazy on big servers. Wheat growing at 2x speed on a 100-player server cuts the lag from constant growth ticks. Purpur's per-crop speed control is granular and works. Per-world configuration is underrated. Your creative world doesn't need the same PvP rules, damage, or mob spawning as survival. Purpur applies different configs per world without plugins. Switch worlds, rules change automatically. It's built in, not a plugin overhead. Performance tuning goes deeper than most forks. Entity spawning limits, chunk loading behavior, tick rate optimization. Not magic, but useful if your server is struggling under player load. Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Configuration is powerful and where most problems start. YAML formatting is picky. Indentation matters. Tabs vs. spaces, one extra space, and the entire file breaks. Use VS Code, Sublime Text, or any real code editor. Never Notepad. And this solves 80% of configuration issues immediately. Performance doesn't improve automatically. Purpur's speed comes from Paper's optimizations, not from being a fork of it. If you enable every feature and max out all values, you'll still lag. It's a tool, not a magic bullet. Plugin compatibility is solid. Most Bukkit plugins work fine with Purpur. Some assume vanilla behavior and break. Test new plugins in a dev environment before pushing to production mid-season. Updates roll out regularly. When Minecraft gets a new release, Purpur usually has a build within days. Test on a backup world first, then swap the JAR. Don't skip multiple versions on a live server. Actually, I should clarify: Purpur handles world migration automatically. Just swap the JAR and restart. No manual conversion needed. That's one less headache. How Purpur Compares to Other Options Paper is lighter and pure vanilla-plus. Pick this if you only want performance optimization without extra mechanics. End Gateway Spigot is the old standard. Works fine, but it's less optimized than Paper or Purpur. If you're migrating from Spigot, Purpur is the clear upgrade. Forge and Fabric are mod loaders, not server optimization. If you want mods (Botania, Create, Applied Energistics), these are your choice. Purpur and mods aren't mutually exclusive, but they're separate concerns. Custom plugins can do everything Purpur does and more. You manage versions, compatibility, and updates yourself. Purpur trades flexibility for stability and fewer dependencies. Getting Your First Purpur Server Running Setup takes 15 minutes if you've run servers before. Download the JAR, edit server.properties, whitelist your players, and launch. Standard Minecraft infrastructure applies. If you're building and need help calculating coordinates, the Nether Portal Calculator is genuinely useful. When you're inviting players, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator saves endless typing. Start with a test world. Try a few configurations. See what your players enjoy. Tune from there. Configuration changes don't break anything, but they do change behavior, and players notice immediately. Purpur's documentation on GitHub is solid. Every config option is documented with examples. The community Discord is active for questions when the wiki isn't clear. Real value comes from experimenting. Try features, watch what happens, tune. That's Purpur's whole point. Ready to try Purpur? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit PurpurMC/Purpur on GitHub ↗ --- ### PHP-Minecraft-Query: How to Monitor Your Server Status in Real Time URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/php-query-minecraft-servers Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice "🐘 PHP library to query Minecraft servers" xPaw/PHP-Minecraft-Query · github.com ⭐ 740 stars💻 PHP📜 MIT If you're running a Minecraft server and want to check who's playing or if the server's actually up without launching the game itself, this PHP library saves you time. It pulls live server data through the Minecraft protocol with just a few lines of code. What This Project Actually Does PHP-Minecraft-Query is a library that lets you ask a Minecraft server questions remotely. Think of it like poking a server to see if it's awake and what it's doing. With 740 stars on GitHub and built in PHP, it's been quietly trusted by developers for years. The library gives you two main ways to get information. This first is called Ping, which is the simpler approach. It's been around since Minecraft 1.7 and uses the same protocol your client uses when you click "refresh server" in the multiplayer menu. It'll tell you the server's MOTD (message of the day), player count, and a sample of who's online. The second method is Query, which digs deeper. If a server admin enables the query listener in server.properties, you can get the full list of players and installed plugins. But here's the catch: Query is more fragile. If you don't actually need that full list of players and plugins, stick with Ping. It's more reliable. You could also use RCON if you want to send console commands to a server remotely, though the library points you toward a separate project for that specific need. When You'd Actually Use This Let's say you run a small server and want a dashboard showing who's online right now. Or maybe you're building a Minecraft server browser website and need to pull live player counts from dozens of servers. And this library handles that. Network admins use it to monitor whether their servers crashed. Some developers use it to build Discord bots that respond to commands like "!status" with live server info. You could also use it for automated scripts that alert you when a server goes down (actually useful if you're hosting for friends and don't want surprised messages at 2 AM). If you're building something on minecraft.how like a server tracking tool or integration with our Server Properties Generator, this is the kind of library you'd reach for to verify your settings actually worked. Installation and Getting Started Getting it running is straightforward. Drop this into your project: bashcomposer require xpaw/php-minecraft-query That's it for installation. The library requires PHP 8.0 or higher (version 5.0.0 bumped the minimum version, which is a good sign the project stays modern). Here's the simplest example. You create a MinecraftPing object, call Query(), and it returns all the server's info: phprequire __DIR__. '/vendor/autoload.php'; use xPaw\MinecraftPing; use xPaw\MinecraftPingException; $Query = null; try { $Query = new MinecraftPing( 'localhost', 25565 ); print_r( $Query->Query() ); } catch( MinecraftPingException $e ) { echo $e->getMessage(); } finally { if( $Query!== null ) { $Query->Close(); } } One thing to note: always close the connection when you're done. That's what the finally block does. It's a small detail but prevents connection leaks if you're running this repeatedly. Ping vs Query: Understanding the Difference People get confused about when to use which method, so let's clear that up. GitHub project card for xPaw/PHP-Minecraft-Query Ping is the lightweight option. It doesn't require any server configuration. You just point it at the server's IP and port (usually 25565), and it works immediately. In return, you get the server name, MOTD, player count, max players, and a small sample of player names. It's fast and reliable because it uses the same protocol players use every time they connect. Ping also has backward compatibility. The library includes a QueryOldPre17 method if you somehow need to query a server running Minecraft 1.6 or older (unlikely, but it's there). Query is the heavy-hitter. It uses the GameSpy4 protocol and requires the server admin to enable it explicitly in server.properties by setting enable-query=true. The payoff is you get the complete player list and a full list of installed plugins. But this method is more brittle. Here's my take: use Ping unless you specifically need the full plugin list or the exact player names. It's less prone to breaking when a server updates or acts weird. Real Examples You Could Build Let's say you want to check if a server is running before displaying it on a website. You'd wrap the Query call in a try-catch, and if it fails, you know the server is unreachable (or offline). Or imagine building a monitoring script that runs every 5 minutes and logs player counts to a database. You could then graph those numbers over time to see when your community plays most. Useful for planning events or knowing when to upgrade server resources. For Bedrock servers (Minecraft on consoles, mobile, and Windows 10/11), the library has a ConnectBedrock method that works the same way but connects to port 19132 instead. So if you're tracking a mixed Java and Bedrock network, this library handles both. One detail worth highlighting: the library automatically tries to resolve SRV DNS records. If a server uses a SRV record to route traffic, it figures that out automatically. You can disable this by passing false as the fourth parameter if you want direct IP queries only. Where Things Break (and How to Fix Them) The biggest gotcha is confusing Query with Ping. You'll write code expecting the Query method to work, fire it at a random server, and get an exception. The server probably doesn't have query enabled. Switch to Ping instead. Another thing: timeouts. If you're querying a lot of servers or the network is slow, connections might time out. The constructor takes a timeout parameter (in seconds) that you can adjust. Default is 4, which works for most cases, but on slow networks you might need 8 or 10. String encoding is another layer. Recent versions decode strings from ISO-8859-1, so if you're seeing garbled characters in server MOTDs, that's why. Just something to be aware of if you're displaying those strings on a website. The README has a warning right at the top: don't open issues if you can't retrieve information from a server unless you've confirmed it's actually a library bug. Most of the time, if Query doesn't work, it's because the server doesn't have querying enabled. Check your server.properties file. And if you're querying across the internet, check your firewall. Similar Tools and When to Look Elsewhere If you need to send console commands to a server, the project recommends PHP Source Query for RCON functionality. That's built by the same author and handles that specific use case better. For JavaScript users, similar libraries exist in the Node.js ecosystem. And if you're not using PHP at all, there are query libraries in most programming languages. But if you're already in PHP, this is the solid choice. One last thing: this library has been maintained consistently and the latest release bumped the minimum PHP to 8.0, which shows the maintainer keeps it contemporary. It's not abandoned, and it actually improves over time.xPaw/PHP-Minecraft-Query - MIT, ★740 Support the project PHP-Minecraft-Query is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the PHP-Minecraft-Query repo ↗ --- ### Format Your Minecraft Server Text with PHP URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/php-minecraft-server-text-colors Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project Spirit55555/PHP-Minecraft Useful PHP classes for Minecraft ⭐ 68 stars💻 PHP📜 GPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ Building a Minecraft server in PHP? You'll quickly run into the same problem every admin faces: how do you display formatted, colorful server messages without wrestling with Minecraft's text encoding. PHP-Minecraft solves this by wrapping Minecraft's color code and text formatting systems in clean PHP classes. Why Your Minecraft Server Needs This Minecraft uses a non-standard system for formatting text. If you're building server software, plugins, or management tools in PHP, you're handling text that uses either legacy color codes (those §4 symbols that look like nothing) or JSON components. Trying to convert between these formats or apply colors manually is tedious and error-prone. Here's the thing: server admins want beautiful MOTDs. Players expect colorful server messages. Your PHP code shouldn't make you choose between "easy" and "correct." PHP-Minecraft handles the conversion. It lets you work with Minecraft text in a sane way. What You're Actually Working With Minecraft has three main text formats you'll encounter: Legacy color codes - the §4Red §3Blue format. Easy to read, but limited. JSON text components - Minecraft's newer format. More powerful, but verbose. Votifier votes - server voting protocol messages that need formatting and transport. The library handles Java Edition and Bedrock Edition differently (they use different color palettes), which is a detail most libraries miss. So you might be building a voting plugin, a server status monitor, or a web-based server manager. You need to send formatted text to players, parse JSON from the server, or process votes. PHP-Minecraft handles all of it without you needing to understand Minecraft's internal text encoding. Getting Started Installation is straightforward if you're using Composer: bashcomposer require spirit55555/php-minecraft Once installed, you can start using it immediately: php The library supports both the § symbol (standard Minecraft format) and the & symbol (used in BungeeCord configs), so you'll work with whatever format your data comes in. Color Codes and Server Messages The most common use case is converting Minecraft color codes to HTML/CSS for web displays. If you're showing a server status page or building a web panel that displays the server's MOTD, you want those colors rendered properly. When setting up a server, you might use a Free Minecraft DNS to manage your server address, and then display a beautifully formatted MOTD on the web panel. You can convert to plain HTML with inline styles, use CSS classes for styling, or even replace newlines with `` tags all at once. Pick whichever output format fits your web stack. There's also native support for the MOTD format (the text in server.properties), which is useful if you're reading or writing server configuration files programmatically. Want to programmatically update a server's MOTD? Parse it, modify it, and write it back using the same class. And if you're working with BungeeCord configurations instead, the library handles that too. JSON Text Components Modern Minecraft uses JSON for complex formatting. Commands send JSON back to players. Plugins generate JSON text with clickable links and hover text. GitHub project card for Spirit55555/PHP-Minecraft The MinecraftJSONColors class converts JSON text back to legacy format (which is sometimes what you need for backwards compatibility or logging). It's a less common operation than color code conversion, but when you need it, you really need it. And v2.0.1 specifically fixed inheritance in JSON components. That's the kind of detail that matters if you're working with nested text components. Votifier and Server Voting The library includes votifier support for both v1 (public key) and v2 (token) protocols. If you're running a voting service or integrating votes into your server, you can send properly formatted votifier messages using PHP. The library tries v2 first, then falls back to v1 automatically if needed. So you don't need to know which version the remote server supports. Tips That Save Headaches Start by testing locally. The conversion functions are pure PHP, so you can experiment in a script before integrating them into your application. Remember that not all formatting works everywhere. Minecraft strips colors in certain contexts (like books), and Bedrock has a smaller color palette than Java Edition. Test what you actually need to support. If you're storing formatted text in a database, consider storing the original format (whether it's JSON or legacy codes) rather than the HTML output. That way you can regenerate the HTML if you change your styling, and you're not locked into one output format. The library is GPLv3, so make sure your project's license is compatible if you're building something commercial or proprietary. When You Might Look Elsewhere If you're building a game system or complex RPG mechanics, you probably want something heavier like Laravel's localization system. PHP-Minecraft is purposefully focused on text formatting and voting, not game logic. For client-side Minecraft text rendering, you'd use JavaScript libraries instead. And if you need to parse Minecraft NBT data or interact with the game protocol, you're outside the scope of this library. But for what it does, it's solid. 68 stars on GitHub, actively maintained, and it handles edge cases other libraries miss.Spirit55555/PHP-Minecraft - GPL-3.0, ★68 Ready to try PHP-Minecraft? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit Spirit55555/PHP-Minecraft on GitHub ↗ --- ### Minecraft-Skin-Renderer: Building Skin Displays for PHP Projects URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-skin-renderer-php Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Minecraft-Skin-Renderer (TuxCoding/Minecraft-Skin-Renderer) Minecraft 3D Skin renderer with composer support and flexible rotation configuration Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 16 stars💻 PHP📜 MIT If you're building a Minecraft community site and need to display player skins without relying on external APIs, Minecraft-Skin-Renderer is a lightweight PHP library that handles rendering locally. You control the caching, the storage, and the exact output. It's refreshingly honest about what it does and doesn't do. What This Project Actually Does It's a rendering library. Full stop. Not a downloader, not a storage system, not a caching layer - just the rendering part. You feed it a skin PNG, it outputs a rendered image. That separation of concerns is the whole design philosophy, and it's clear about it from the start. The library can render full skins (head to toe) or just the head for avatars. You can scale the output up or down. It handles both the classic 64x32 skin format and the newer 64x64 format. Rotation options let you control perspective if you need different angles. All PHP. No exotic dependencies. Just GD or ImageMagick for image processing, which are standard on almost every host. When You'd Actually Use This You're running a server community site. You're building a skin gallery. You want player heads to appear next to usernames in the forum, in a staff directory, on profile pages. Anyone don't want to: Depend on Minotar or some other CDN being up Wait for network latency every time you render a page Deal with rate limits or API terms changing Have no control over how the skin actually looks when displayed This library lets you cache rendered skins locally and serve them as fast as any static asset. You own the output. No surprises. Installation With composer (the standard approach in 2026): bashcomposer require games647/minecraft-skin-renderer If your project isn't using composer yet, you can manually drop the files from /src into a folder and require them: phprequire __DIR__. '/path/to/MinecraftSkins.php'; That's it. No configuration, no database setup, no environment variables to fiddle with. How It Works in Practice You'll load a skin image from somewhere (downloaded from Mojang, cached locally, stored in a database), then pass it to the renderer: phpuse MinecraftSkins\MinecraftSkins; $skinImage = imagecreatefrompng('cd6be915b261643fd13621ee4e99c9e541a551d80272687a3b56183b981fb9a.png'); $rendered = MinecraftSkins::skin($skinImage, 5); header('Content-type: image/png'); imagepng($rendered); The scale parameter (5 in that example) controls the output size. A scale of 1 gives you the raw head/body blocks. Scale of 5 is 5x bigger, 10x is 10x bigger. Pick whatever makes sense for your layout. If you only need the head for smaller avatars, use the head method instead: php$headImage = MinecraftSkins::head($skinImage, 5); Way lighter, and honestly, heads are more useful than full skins in most real applications. Nobody wants a tiny full-body skin in a comment thread. Storage, Caching, and Gotchas Here's the thing the README makes crystal clear: the library does not manage storage or caching. That's intentional. If you're rendering the same skin multiple times per page load, you're wasting CPU. Cache the output to a file, Redis, or your CDN. The library is just the rendering engine - you decide where the PNG goes after that. Also, Minecraft skins come in different formats. Older servers used 64x32 textures. Modern servers use 64x64. The library assumes the modern format by default, so if you're downloading skins from various sources, verify the dimensions before rendering them. Actually, the library should handle both, but mileage may vary depending on the version you're running. GD needs to be enabled on your host. It's on almost every shared host, but if you hit errors about undefined image functions, that's your culprit. ImageMagick is faster if available, but GD is the fallback. One more thing: if you're downloading skins from Mojang's API, URLs and endpoints can shift. Keep your own copies locally once you've grabbed them. Real-World Integration Ideas Want to see what's possible with rendered skins? Browse some on the Minecraft.How skin gallery. Once you understand what skins look like, you'll have better instincts about where to show them on your site. If you're interested in how complex 3D skin rendering works (rotating the head with your mouse, viewing different angles interactively), check out the Minecraft Skin Creator tool. That's a whole different level, using Three.js or similar libraries. Minecraft-Skin-Renderer is the simpler, static-image version. For testing server features, the Votifier Tester shows how community projects integrate with Minecraft infrastructure. Same mindset applies here - you're building tooling that fits into the ecosystem. Alternatives and When to Skip This If you only need skins in one or two places, consider just embedding images from a CDN service like Minotar. Less code, zero maintenance. The trade-off is you're dependent on their uptime and can't customize rendering. If you need interactive 3D rendering (skins that spin, heads that rotate with mouse movement), this library isn't the answer. You'd need something like Three.js or skinview3d integrated into your frontend. That's a totally different project. If you want to build something from scratch with full control, sure, write your own renderer. Just know it's more work than it sounds. This library is 16 stars on GitHub - it's niche but proven. For straightforward "render skin PNGs and cache them locally," Minecraft-Skin-Renderer is solid. Final Thoughts The library is honest about scope, MIT-licensed, and does exactly what it promises. It's not being actively maintained with new features (version 0.2.1 is the current release), but the core rendering hasn't changed in Minecraft for years, so that's not really a problem. If you're building a community site and displaying skins is part of it, spend 10 minutes installing this and testing it. You'll either find it perfect for your needs or realize you need something different. Either way, you'll know fast. Support the project Minecraft-Skin-Renderer is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the Minecraft-Skin-Renderer repo ↗ --- ### ViaVersion: Playing Minecraft Across Version Barriers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/viaversion-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project ViaVersion/ViaVersion Allows of newer clients to connect to older server versions for Minecraft servers. ⭐ 1,545 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ Ever wanted to join a server that's running an older Minecraft version but you've already updated your client? ViaVersion fixes that friction by letting newer clients connect to older servers. It's essentially version translation middleware that handles all the protocol differences automatically, whether you're playing on Paper servers, Velocity proxies, or fabric clients. What ViaVersion Actually Does You're probably familiar with the frustration: you update to the latest Minecraft version, but that survival server you've been playing on hasn't updated yet. Your friends are all still on the old version. You're stuck choosing between playing solo on the new version or reverting your client. ViaVersion solves this by letting your newer client speak the language of older servers. It's a translation layer that intercepts the protocol between client and server, converting packets on the fly so both sides can understand each other despite the version gap. The magic is that it runs invisibly. You don't need to downgrade your client, patch your game, or do anything unusual. Most players just install ViaVersion on the server (or use it as a proxy), and suddenly clients several versions ahead can join in. It's not magic, though. It's meticulous protocol reverse-engineering and implementation. The Java project behind it (1545 stars on GitHub) has been maintained and updated consistently for years, tracking every Minecraft protocol change. Why You'd Want This (Beyond Just Playing Old Servers) The obvious use case is keeping legacy servers alive. A survival world from 2021 doesn't need to update just because the game moved on. With ViaVersion, older servers become time capsules that still work with modern clients. But there's more nuance than that. ViaVersion plugin interface showing supported Minecraft versions and server compatibility Community servers are the real beneficiary here. A small modded server might be on 1.20.1 because updating to 26.1 breaks essential mods. ViaVersion means you're not locking out players on newer versions. You get a wider audience without the pain of a full server update. For admins running multiple servers at different versions for testing or specific gameplay modes, ViaVersion becomes infrastructure. There's also the proxy use case. ViaProxy (a separate sibling project) acts as a standalone proxy server, sitting between your client and any Minecraft server, new or old. You start up ViaProxy locally, point your client at it, and you can play on absolutely any server you want, regardless of version compatibility. It's not essential for casual players, but it's a lifesaver if you're testing across multiple servers or the server you want to join is stuck three versions behind. Installation and Setup How you install ViaVersion depends on your setup. If you're running a Paper server (recommended), it's straightforward. Paper is the most widely used spigot derivative, and ViaVersion integrates directly. ViaVersion plugin interface showing supported Minecraft versions and server compatibility Stop your server and grab the latest.jar file from Hangar or GitHub. Drop it in your plugins folder: bashwget https://github.com/ViaVersion/ViaVersion/releases/download/5.8.1/ViaVersion-5.8.1.jar cp ViaVersion-5.8.1.jar /path/to/server/plugins/ Restart the server: bash# Assuming you've a start script./start.sh ViaVersion creates a config file automatically on first startup in plugins/ViaVersion/. You can tweak settings there, but defaults work fine for most setups. The plugin detects your server version and handles everything from there. If you're running Velocity (a proxy), it's almost identical. Velocity plugins go in a plugins folder, and ViaVersion works the same way. For Fabric clients, you'd use ViaFabric instead. For Forge servers, ViaForge. There are variants for basically every platform you can imagine: Sponge, BungeeCord, or a standalone proxy. Actually, that's worth clarifying. The base ViaVersion jar works on Paper and Velocity out of the box. One other platforms have separate forks maintained by the same team. Check https://viaversion.com for an overview of which variant you need. Key Features That Matter Multi-version support is the headline, but let me get specific. The latest release (5.8.1) handles connections across a range spanning several years of Minecraft history. You can have clients from nearly a decade ahead join a server that's years old. It's not flawless - some edge cases still exist - but it covers the vast majority of realistic scenarios. ViaVersion plugin interface showing supported Minecraft versions and server compatibility Performance is another quiet win. ViaVersion doesn't tank server tick rates. The protocol translation happens efficiently without bogging down the server, even under load. For small servers, you won't notice it at all. For large servers, the overhead is negligible compared to normal server operations. The third thing that impresses me is how transparent it's. Most players never realize they're using ViaVersion. And it works in the background. No special launcher mods, no weird configurations on the client side, nothing. You connect to the server address like normal and it just works. That transparency matters because it means less friction for casual players. Configuration depth is there if you need it. Admins can tweak entity tracking, chunk loading behavior, and protocol-specific settings. Want to make your server visually stand out? The Minecraft.how Text Generator helps craft formatted messages that catch player attention. You don't need extensive customization though. The defaults handle 95% of use cases fine. Tips, Gotchas, and What Can Go Wrong One thing that catches people off guard: very old servers might still have issues with very new clients. ViaVersion is excellent, but it can't fix every weird edge case. A server from 1.8 era might render weirdly with a 26.1 client. It works, but you might see quirky behavior. That's not a ViaVersion bug. It's a fundamental gap between protocol versions. ViaVersion plugin interface showing supported Minecraft versions and server compatibility NBT data and item components sometimes cause friction. Newer Minecraft versions have item data structures that older servers don't understand. ViaVersion handles this in most cases, but weird modded items or custom data might not translate perfectly. It's rare, but worth knowing. Server performance under heavy load with many different client versions can be slightly higher than a single-version server. We're talking small percentages though. It's only noticeable if your server is already struggling. One more thing: if you need snapshot support (early access to new versions before Minecraft releases them officially), the maintainer offers early builds via GitHub Sponsors. This is useful if you're testing new Minecraft versions. But for normal server operation, the stable releases on Hangar are what you want. If you're looking to streamline player management while running ViaVersion, the Minecraft.how Whitelist Creator can help you manage access efficiently. Alternatives and Other Options ViaBackwards is a companion project that does the opposite - allows older clients to join newer servers. If you have players stuck on ancient clients, that's the tool. It often runs alongside ViaVersion. ViaVersion plugin interface showing supported Minecraft versions and server compatibility For pure client-side translation without a proxy or plugin, ViaFabricPlus on Fabric is increasingly popular. It's not quite the same thing, but it fills a similar niche for Fabric players specifically. If you need a unified infrastructure across multiple servers, Velocity with ViaVersion is cleaner than running individual Paper instances. But that's more of an architecture choice than an alternative. Really, ViaVersion is the established standard in this space. Alternatives exist for specific niches, but for general-purpose version bridging, this is what the community uses. Ready to try ViaVersion? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit ViaVersion/ViaVersion on GitHub ↗ --- ### Grim Anticheat: Full Guide to Server Security in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/grim-anticheat-minecraft-server Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice "Fully async, multithreaded, predictive, open source, 3.01 reach, 1.005 timer, 0.01% speed, 99.99% antikb, "bypassable" 1.8-1.21 minecraft anticheat." GrimAnticheat/Grim · github.com ⭐ 1,574 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 Running a Minecraft server means dealing with cheaters. Reach cheaters. Speed hackers. The usual. Grim is an open source anticheat designed to catch what other tools miss, and it's free to install on any modern server running Java 17+. What Grim Actually Does Grim doesn't work like traditional anticheats that react to suspicious behavior after the fact. Instead, it predicts what a legitimate player should be able to do given their current position, ping, and game state, then flags violations when reality doesn't match. This predictive approach catches reach hackers (which Grim claims it stops at 3.01 blocks), speed modifications, and timer attacks (at 1.005 speed detection). The project sits on GitHub with 1574 stars and is maintained actively. Written in Java, fully async and multithreaded, so it won't tank your server's tick rate even with hundreds of players online. Supports everything from 1.8 all the way up to 1.21.10 and 1.21.11. Why You'd Actually Use Grim Let's be honest. Managing a survival server is work. You've got players like adderall_abuser mining obsessively, ironmouse building massive projects, and testuser just showing up to cause chaos. The last thing you need is someone flying around one-tapping people or speed-mining diamonds through stone. Most public anticheats either spam false positives (so you're constantly whitelisting legit players) or miss the obvious stuff. Grim sits somewhere in the middle on its own terms. It claims a 0.01% false positive rate for speed detection and 99.99% accuracy on knockback detection, which means it's built for precision rather than breadth. The tradeoff is that you'll need to tune your server's lag threshold to match your network, not the other way around. And here's the thing: it's open source. You can see exactly what checks are running. When joakim2tusen gets flagged and swears they weren't cheating, you can actually investigate the violation logs and code. Unlike commercial anticheats that are black boxes. Getting Grim Running First, grab Java 17 or higher. You'll need it. Then download the latest Grim build from Modrinth (recommended) or grab the nightly artifacts from GitHub. GitHub project card for GrimAnticheat/Grim Drop the jar into your plugins folder. bashplugins/ ├── Grim.jar └──... other plugins Restart your server. Grim will create a config file automatically. For proxy setups (Velocity, BungeeCord), there are a few gotchas. If you're using Geyser for crossplay with consoles, you'll need Floodgate installed on the backend server where Grim actually lives, not on the proxy. This is so Grim can tell Geyser players apart from regular players (they get a free pass to avoid false positives on input lag). If you're using ViaVersion, install it on the backend only. Installing it on the proxy will break Grim's packet reading entirely. How Grim Detects Cheaters The core of Grim is its detection model. Here's what it's actually checking: Reach detection catches players clicking too far. When someone tries to hit you from 3.01 blocks away, Grim sees it. The calculation accounts for their hitbox, your hitbox, their position, and lag. It's not just a flat distance check. Speed detection looks for movement that's faster than the player's hunger or sprint status allows. Grim factors in lag and motion, so someone with high ping won't get falsely flagged for normal gameplay. It claims 0.01% false positives here, meaning it's strict about what counts as a speed hack. Timer checks catch players running the game loop faster than 20 ticks per second. This catches subtle timer hacks that make combat feel weird even if the player isn't obviously speed-hacking. And if housecz_zero starts taking damage faster than physics allows, Grim catches that too. Knockback prediction is genuinely wild. Grim calculates where you should be knocked back to based on the damage source, your position, and the attacker's strength, then flags if your next packet shows you somewhere impossible. It says 99.99% accuracy here. The latest release added PostgreSQL support if you want to store violation logs in a real database instead of just flat files. It also improved Discord webhook integration, so violations can post directly to a forum channel with custom formatting and timestamps. Fine-Tuning for Your Server Out of the box, Grim works. But you'll want to tweak it. MINECRAFT SPLOOP!!! The main config lives in plugins/Grim/config.yml. Set your server's average player lag threshold. If most of your players have 40ms ping, set lag to 40. If you're on a local network and ping is 5ms, set it to 5. Grim uses this to calculate whether movement is genuinely impossible or just lag-induced. You can customize violation thresholds per check. Some admins bump the reach threshold to 3.1 blocks if they get false positives on fast-clicking PvP. You can also set commands that run when violations hit certain thresholds, like kicking at 100 violations or logging to Discord at 50. One thing people miss: Grim exemption flags. You can whitelist specific players or add them to a bypass list if they need it for legitimate reasons (maybe they're testing something, or maybe their internet is genuinely terrible). Just use the command and move on. For large servers with hundreds of players, enable the multithreaded packet handler. It's in the config under threading. This distributes anticheat checks across CPU cores instead of running everything on the main thread. What Trips People Up False positives happen when your lag threshold is wrong. If you set it to 5ms but half your players have 80ms ping, you'll flag legitimate players constantly. Another one: ViaVersion on the proxy. This wbut it's worth repeating because people do it anyway. It'll break packet reading entirely. Install ViaVersion only on the backend. Geyser needs Floodgate for the same reason. If you forget Floodgate, Grim will flag Geyser players constantly because it can't identify them as cross-platform players exempt from checks. Pretty annoying if you support bedrock players. The third common thing: not updating when new Minecraft versions drop. Grim stays current pretty well (1.21.10 support came fast), but you still need to grab the update jar and restart. And here's where people get sloppy - they're running a version from 2024 and wondering why it doesn't work on 1.21. Update the jar. That's it. How It Stacks Against Alternatives There's NeoAntiCheat out there, which is also open source. There's Spartan and AntiAura if you want proprietary options. Grim's advantage is that it's free, open source, actively maintained, and has solid accuracy claims. The downside: it's not as feature-rich as premium anticheats yet. No heuristic detection (though a premium tier with those checks is planned). For most servers, Grim is the right call. If you're running a massive public server and need every possible edge, you might layer a second anticheat on top. But that's overkill for most people running vanilla survival. The Real Takeaway Grim is genuinely impressive for a free tool. It thinks in terms of physics and prediction rather than just pattern matching, which is why it catches reach hacks and timer hacks that other tools miss. You'll spend maybe 30 minutes setting it up right, tuning lag thresholds, and integrating Discord webhooks if you want that. After that, it just works. Is it perfect? No. You'll still need good staff to review false positives and ban obvious hackers. But it'll cut down on the noise considerably, and you won't wake up to complaints about cheaters dominating your PvP arena. 🔗 GitHub: GrimAnticheat/Grim - GPL-3.0, ★1574 Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Multiverse-Core: Managing Multiple Minecraft Worlds URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/multiverse-core-minecraft-plugin Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Multiverse-Core (Multiverse/Multiverse-Core) The original Bukkit Multi-World Plugin! Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 1,083 stars💻 Java📜 BSD-3-Clause If you run a Minecraft server and want separate survival, creative, and PvP worlds without constantly restarting, Multiverse-Core does exactly that. It's the plugin that lets you create, switch between, and customize multiple worlds on a single server instance. Been around since the Bukkit days and it still does the job better than anything else in 2026. What This Project Actually Does Multiverse-Core is a world management plugin for Bukkit and Spigot servers. At its core, it lets you run multiple Minecraft worlds simultaneously on one server without needing separate server instances or constant restarts. That's the whole appeal. Players can teleport between worlds, each world gets its own settings, difficulty, PvP rules, and game modes. The plugin was literally designed at the dawn of Bukkit multiworld support and has been the standard ever since. It's got 1083 GitHub stars and appears on basically every serious server admin's plugin list. There's a reason it's stuck around for over a decade. You can create a brand new world in seconds, import existing worlds, set unique properties for each one. Want your survival world with hard difficulty but your creative world wide open? Done. Need separate nether and end dimensions per overworld? That's what the NetherPortals addon does. Want players to teleport through portals instead of commands? There's an addon for that too. Why You'd Actually Use This Most servers need multiple game modes. You can't just have one world and expect everyone to be happy. Hardcore PvP players don't want to share a survival world with creative builders. Roleplayers need their own isolated space. Event servers need arenas separate from the main survival area. Before Multiverse, you either ran separate server instances (massive resource waste) or reset everything constantly (kills player motivation). With Multiverse, you get one server, multiple worlds, everyone plays how they want. Real example: Your server could've an economy-focused survival world for building bases, a completely separate creative world for architectural experimentation, and a standalone arena for PvP tournaments. Players earn money and progress in survival but can hop over to creative anytime for no-limits building. Their inventories stay separate per world too if you use the Inventories addon, so someone doesn't accidentally bring god-mode gear into survival. The plugin integrates with existing permission systems. You can say "only donators access the creative world" or "this group gets these permissions only in the PvP arena." It respects the permission structure you already have. How to Install It Installation is straightforward if you've ever added a Bukkit plugin before: Download the latest JAR from the GitHub releases page (currently 5.6.1) Drop the JAR file into your server's plugins/ folder Restart the server Configure worlds via config files or commands That's it for basic setup. The plugin generates a config file on first run. bashcd ~/minecraft-server wget https://github.com/Multiverse/Multiverse-Core/releases/download/5.6.1/multiverse-core-5.6.1.jar mv multiverse-core-5.6.1.jar plugins/ # Restart your server here After restart, you've got the plugin loaded. You can create a new world using commands: bash/mvcreate creative_world NORMAL -t FLAT /mvcreate pvp_arena NORMAL /mvcreate mining_world NETHER These commands create worlds on the fly. The NORMAL/NETHER/END parameter sets the world type. Players can then teleport between them with /mv tp worldname or through portals if you install the addon. Key Features That Actually Matter Per-world difficulty and game rules. Your survival world can have mobs and damage. Your creative world can have no mobs, instant build, and no death damage. Your PvP arena gets PvP enabled while your hub world disables it. These aren't global settings that affect every world the same way. GitHub project card for Multiverse/Multiverse-Core World importing. Got an existing world you want to add to a multiworld setup? Multiverse imports it. You don't lose anything. The world just becomes another managed world the plugin controls alongside the others. Player teleportation and movement control. You decide who can go between worlds. Maybe new players can't access the dangerous hardcore survival world yet. Maybe guests can only visit the lobby and creative world. Permissions hook into this naturally. World inventory separation via addons. If you install Multiverse-Inventories, players get separate inventories per world or per group of worlds. Someone with full diamond armor in survival doesn't carry it into creative. This is huge for economy servers because it prevents item duping across worlds. Nether and end world isolation. Normally Minecraft uses one nether and one end dimension for all worlds. Multiverse-NetherPortals addon lets each overworld have its own nether and end. Your survival world and creative world each get unique nether dimensions. Sounds niche but it's important for isolation and prevents resource contention. Common Gotchas and Setup Mistakes The biggest gotcha: world naming matters. Multiverse is pretty strict about folder names and configuration keys. If your config says the world is called "survival_world" but the folder is "Survival_World," you'll get errors. Keep folder names consistent and lowercase. Player skins don't carry special permissions across worlds. If you've got a custom skin like adderall_abuser or ironmouse, that's visual only. Your actual permissions come from permission plugins. Multiverse respects those but doesn't replace them. Performance can suffer if you run too many loaded worlds at once. Each world chunk-loads in the background. Five or six concurrent worlds is fine on decent hardware. Twenty worlds will cripple your server. This isn't a Multiverse limitation, it's just how Minecraft servers work. Be realistic about how many worlds you actually need. The recent 5.6.1 release fixed an issue with PaperMC 26.1 where world folders were being lowercased incorrectly. If you're running a modern Paper build, make sure you update to at least 5.6.1. Older versions have a couple bugs around folder migration that'll cause headaches. One more thing: plugin conflicts. Some plugins don't play nicely with multiworld setups. Plugins that assume there's only one world or hardcode world name checks will break. Most modern plugins handle this fine, but test your addon combinations before going live on a big server. The Addon Ecosystem Multiverse is the core. The addons are where it gets powerful. These aren't required, but they solve real problems. Multiverse-Portals lets you create custom portals that teleport players. Instead of typing commands, walk through a frame of obsidian and you're in another world. You can also link specific portal frames to specific destinations. Makes the user experience feel less admin-command and more vanilla. Multiverse-Inventories separates player inventories and stats per world or per world group. Player A has 64 diamonds in survival but zero in creative. Their level and experience bar is separate too. This is what prevents the economy server economy from collapsing. Multiverse-SignPortals does portals via signs instead of portal frames. Walk into a sign and teleport. Slightly less vanilla-feeling but sometimes more practical depending on your building aesthetic. The fact that all these addons exist and are actively maintained says something. One Multiverse team solved the problem well enough that the community keeps building on top of it. That's the mark of a good foundation plugin. Alternatives Worth Mentioning Multiverse isn't the only multiworld solution, but it's the dominant one. A few alternatives exist if you need something different. MyWorlds is another multiworld plugin but it hasn't been updated in years. Security patches alone make Multiverse the safer choice. Multiverse stays actively maintained. VoidGen creates void worlds (useful for creative building) but it's not a world management solution. You'd use VoidGen alongside Multiverse, not instead of it. Bukkit's built-in world management exists but it's barebones. No teleportation system, no permission integration, no addons. But it works for two or three worlds if you're okay with minimal control, but any server with real ambitions uses Multiverse. Honestly, unless you have a very specific use case, Multiverse is the right choice. It's been the standard for over a decade for good reason. The latest release covers modern server versions up to 1.21 and the maintainers stay on top of version compatibility. One last note: popular players like testuser, joakim2tusen, and housecz_zero are probably on servers running Multiverse somewhere. Not because of their skins specifically, but because any public Minecraft server with multiple game modes uses this plugin. Ready to try Multiverse-Core? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit Multiverse/Multiverse-Core on GitHub ↗ --- ### WorldEdit-BE: Essential Building Tools for Minecraft Bedrock URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/worldedit-be-bedrock-minecraft Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice "A Minecraft Bedrock addon port of the famous WorldEdit mod for Minecraft: Java Edition." SIsilicon/WorldEdit-BE · github.com ⭐ 410 stars💻 TypeScript📜 GPL-3.0 If you've ever wanted to reshape a massive Minecraft landscape without spending days block-by-block, WorldEdit-BE is exactly what you need. This Bedrock addon brings the legendary building toolkit from Java Edition to Bedrock, letting you move, copy, and manipulate terrain at scale. What WorldEdit-BE Actually Does WorldEdit-BE is a direct port of the famous WorldEdit mod from Minecraft Java Edition, adapted for Bedrock. Instead of placing blocks one at a time, you select entire regions and apply transformations in seconds. Paste a building template somewhere new, flip it around, rotate it, mask out certain blocks, fill areas with patterns, reshape biomes, or undo massive mistakes instantly. It sounds like overkill for vanilla Bedrock, but if you've ever tried recreating a real city in survival mode, you know exactly why something like this matters. The addon includes both command-based tools for keyboard users and physical items you can equip, which is crucial for console players and mobile users who can't easily type out complex commands. You'll spend less time fiddling with syntax and more time actually building. Why You'd Want This Addon Big-scale building is the core reason. Moving 10,000 blocks at once, reshaping a mountain range, or pasting the same structure 50 times with slight variations - WorldEdit-BE saves weeks of tedious block-by-block work. It's not about cheating; it's about respecting your own time. Collaborative server builds benefit hugely from this. Many Aternos servers and community realms run WorldEdit-BE so builders can work in parallel without stepping on each other's toes. Creative mode feels like an entirely different game when multiple players can use clipboard tools simultaneously. Even single-player builders who prefer creative mode find themselves much more productive with WorldEdit's brush tools. Sculpting terrain feels way more natural when you're painting shapes instead of manually placing voxels. Getting It Installed For local worlds, the setup is straightforward: Download the.mcaddon file from the GitHub releases page Open the file with Minecraft - it'll import the addon automatically Create a new world or select an existing one Add the behavior pack (the resource pack applies automatically) Enable "Beta APIs" in experimental features (this is mandatory - don't skip it) Bedrock will show a warning about experimental features potentially breaking your world. That's normal. Make a backup of your world first anyway, but experimental features in Bedrock are generally stable these days. If you're setting this up on an Aternos server, the process is different. You can't just add the addon to an existing world. Instead, you upload a world with experimental features already enabled, then install the addon separately in the server's packs folder. Aternos has documentation on addon installation and experimental features if you get stuck, but it's a bit more hands-on than the local install. The latest release (v0.10.4) supports Minecraft 1.21.130. If you hit compatibility issues on Aternos, make sure you're actually running the current version - an older release had a gametest module that broke server compatibility, which has since been removed. Key Features That Actually Matter The clipboard system is probably the most useful tool in the entire addon. Select a region using the selection wand, copy it with a command or item, and paste it anywhere. Before pasting, you can rotate, flip, and offset the selection. You can even save clipboard files and import them into other worlds - share your clipboard library with friends or reuse building templates across multiple projects. GitHub project card for SIsilicon/WorldEdit-BE Masking is incredibly powerful once you understand it. You can exclude certain blocks from whatever operation you're doing. Want to fill an area with stone but keep all the water blocks untouched? Mask the water, and it'll be skipped. This prevents overwriting important details when you're working on complex terrain. Brushes are genuinely impressive for terrain work. Instead of selecting regions, you pick a brush shape and size, then hold the button to paint terrain changes across your landscape. It feels like actual sculpting. You can create mountains, valleys, and terrain features way faster than command-based approaches, and it's much more intuitive. Biome manipulation doesn't sound flashy until you need it. Change what biome occupies a region, which affects mob spawning, ambient particles, grass colors, and weather effects. You can apply biome changes to a selection, or smooth transitions between multiple biomes. This is essential if you're building anything that spans multiple biome types. Undo and redo are genuinely life-changing when you're editing massive areas. You mess up a 50,000-block edit? One command and you're back. This alone justifies installing the addon. Gotchas That'll Trap You Experimental features are mandatory. Full stop. Without "Beta APIs" enabled, the addon won't work at all. It's not optional, and it's the number one thing new users miss. Bedrock shows a warning when you enable experimental features - that's normal. Back up your world first anyway, though in practice experimental features are pretty stable these days. The command syntax takes real practice. Unlike the visual UI, you're typing things like //fill 10 pattern:stone if you want to get fancy. The built-in how-to guide (Settings > How to Play while you're in-world) covers the basics, but the official documentation is better if you're learning specific advanced commands. Some devices work better than others. Keyboard and mouse give you the smoothest experience for precision selection and command entry. Console controllers and mobile touch controls work fine for basic brush work, but they feel clunky for selecting precise regions. WorldEdit-BE is still chasing Java Edition parity. Not every feature from Java WorldEdit is here yet - the project is actively developed, but some tools and options haven't made the jump to Bedrock. The documentation lists what's planned, but if you're coming from Java Edition with specific expectations, you might find something missing. Building in Practice Real talk: this addon shines most when you're working on collaborative servers or massive single-player projects. If you're a casual player who just wants to build a house in survival, you probably don't need it. But if you're the type who wants to create something like a detailed castle, a sprawling city, or a terrain-sculptured landscape, WorldEdit-BE fundamentally changes what's possible. Creative builders on the community often showcase their work across platforms. Players like ironmouse and joakim2tusen tend to work with tools like this when handling large-scale projects. Even builders with distinctive skins like adderall_abuser and housecz_zero benefit from efficiency tools when they're working on anything ambitious. If you're serious about creative building, you'll eventually want the toolkit that pros use. One small thing I should correct: I initially thought you needed to be on a server to use clipboard files effectively, but actually you can export and import them in single-player too. That opens up a lot of workflow possibilities. Similar Projects and Alternatives If WorldEdit-BE isn't your speed, structure blocks offer a more vanilla approach. They're built into Bedrock, don't require experimental features, and work fine for smaller projects or single structures. Just don't expect the same power - they're more limited and clunkier to use at scale. Some building-focused addons try to offer similar functionality, but they tend to be less mature or less feature-complete. Most builders who've tried both ultimately come back to WorldEdit because it's just the most complete solution. It's the standard for a reason. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### SoulFire: Advanced Bot Testing for Your Minecraft Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/soulfire-minecraft-bot-testing Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project soulfiremc-com/SoulFire 🧙 Advanced Minecraft Bot Tool. Deploy automated bots for server testing, automation, and development. ⭐ 519 stars💻 Java📜 AGPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ Building and running a Minecraft server means you need to test things thoroughly before your friends and players arrive. You can't just hope the permissions work, that the farms won't crash, or that your custom mechanics are actually functioning. SoulFire is a bot testing tool that lets you deploy automated players to your server to verify it's working as intended. What SoulFire Actually Does SoulFire is an open-source bot framework written in Java that spawns configurable automated players on Minecraft servers. Think of it like having a team of invisible testers who can connect, interact with your world, and run scripts - but only on servers you own or have explicit permission to test. The tool works in two modes: you can run it as a CLI (command-line interface) if you're comfortable with that, or connect to a dedicated server that runs SoulFire. Most users prefer the graphical client, which lives in a separate repository and gives you a proper dashboard for managing bot sessions. Here's the critical part: the project's README includes a big warning. This tool should only be used on servers you own or have explicit permission to test. Your hosting provider needs to allow automated testing. Unauthorized use creates real liability. Got that? Good. Now let's talk about what you can actually do with it. Why You'd Actually Need This If you're just playing vanilla Minecraft in survival mode, you don't need SoulFire. But if you're: Running a server and need to verify custom plugins work before launch Testing combat mechanics, spawners, or mob behavior under load Validating that your anti-cheat system correctly identifies suspicious behavior Stress-testing your server hardware to see how many concurrent players it can handle Developing and testing Minecraft modifications ...then SoulFire becomes genuinely useful. Instead of manually logging in with 20 alt accounts, you configure profiles, set bot counts, and let the tool handle the tedious work. Server owners particularly benefit. You can run bots through farms to measure TPS impact, spawn them at the spawn point to test navigation, or have them interact with custom NPCs. Developers building Minecraft tools get full testing without needing a room full of PCs. Getting SoulFire Running The project distinguishes between the CLI/dedicated server build and the GUI client. One CLI tool is available from the releases page. You'll download either SoulFireCLI or SoulFireDedicated depending on your use case. For the command-line approach with version 2.8.0: bashwget https://github.com/soulfiremc-com/SoulFire/releases/download/2.8.0/SoulFireCLI-2.8.0.jar java -jar SoulFireCLI-2.8.0.jar The dedicated server version is better if you want to run SoulFire separately and connect multiple GUI clients to it. But that setup is more complex but gives you flexibility - you can run the bot engine on one machine and control it from another. Full installation instructions are on the official documentation site. Don't skip the setup guide, as there are version compatibility details you'll want to understand beforehand. The project supports nearly every Minecraft version from classic releases to the latest snapshots, but you need to match your bot version to your server version. Key Features That Matter Account Support - You can use both online-mode and offline-mode accounts. The tool handles Microsoft account login (both traditional credentials and device code flow), which is important since newer Minecraft versions require proper authentication. This removes the friction of needing dozens of legitimate accounts for testing. GitHub project card for soulfiremc-com/SoulFire Proxy Support - Need to test your server under load from different geographic regions? SoulFire supports HTTP, SOCKS4, and SOCKS5 proxies. This matters if you're stress-testing server stability or simulating global player distribution, though I'd strongly recommend only using proxies you own or have permission to use. Built-in Plugins - The bot framework includes practical plugins like AutoRespawn (bots automatically rejoin after dying), AutoJump for navigation, and ClientSettings for behavior customization. You can load profiles quickly without scripting everything from scratch. If you've set up one bot to farm with specific settings, save that as a profile and reuse it. Advanced Pathfinding - The bots aren't stupid. They use A* pathfinding with support for parkour, block breaking, and block placing. That means bots can navigate actual terrain rather than getting stuck on stairs. Pretty impressive for automated testing. Console Commands - You can execute commands through connected bots, which is powerful for server administration testing. Script a sequence of actions, verify the outputs, and repeat consistently. Real Gotchas You'll Hit Version compatibility is strict. A bot built for 1.20 won't connect to a 1.19 server. Check the compatibility matrix in the docs before assuming your setup will work. Actually, that only applies to protocol-level changes - the latest releases have better cross-version support, but still verify. If your server has aggressive rate-limiting or IP-based connection throttling, SoulFire's rapid bot joining can trigger it. You'll need to configure join delays and potentially whitelist your testing IPs on the server side. And this is actually a feature, not a bug - it lets you test your own server's rate-limiting. Memory usage scales with bot count. Fifty bots is fine. Five hundred might make you regret it. Each bot maintains a full connection state including the loaded chunk data and entity list, so that's not trivial. The project is AGPL-3.0 licensed. That means if you fork it or run a modified version as a service, you'll need to make those changes available. That's important for anyone planning commercial deployments. Other Tools Worth Knowing About If SoulFire isn't quite what you need, there are alternatives. The popular testing community sometimes uses simpler tools like Minecraft server stress-testing utilities or custom plugins that log bot activity directly. Some server admins write their own bot frameworks using Minecraft protocol libraries, which gives complete control but requires Java experience. For GUI simplicity, the separate SoulFireClient repository is what most people actually download. It's the recommended way to use SoulFire unless you specifically need automation or headless deployment. If you're testing skins specifically (checking if your custom skin renders correctly on players, or testing custom skin mechanics), you probably don't need SoulFire. You'd connect manually. But for verifying skin servers work under load, the bot framework helps. Should You Use This? If you're developing Minecraft plugins, running a server, or building tools that interact with Minecraft, SoulFire is worth exploring. The GitHub repository has 519 stars and active maintenance (version 2.8.0 brought OpenAPI improvements and script enhancements). That community is small but engaged. The barrier to entry is moderate. You need some Java familiarity for configuration, understanding of your server's architecture, and honesty about authorization. Don't use this on servers you don't own or haven't been explicitly permitted to test. The project's focus on legitimate server testing and automation makes it genuinely useful for the people it's built for. It's not a griefing tool or a way to bypass security. It's infrastructure for testing. Use it accordingly. Like any powerful development tool, the responsibility is on you to use it ethically. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### PrismLauncher: Keep Your Minecraft Versions Organized URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/prismlauncher-manage-minecraft-versions Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project PrismLauncher (PrismLauncher/PrismLauncher) A custom launcher for Minecraft that allows you to easily manage multiple installations of Minecraft at once (Fork of MultiMC) Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 9,091 stars💻 C++📜 GPL-3.0 You've built a vanilla survival world, set up a modded server copy, and joined a friend's modpack realm. Managing different Minecraft versions and mod setups without conflicts usually means keeping separate folders or wrestling with Java configuration. PrismLauncher removes that friction entirely. What PrismLauncher Actually Does PrismLauncher is a custom launcher for Minecraft that lets you run multiple game instances at once, each with different mods, game versions, and configurations. You're not replacing the official launcher entirely - you're working alongside it with a tool that actually respects the complexity of your Minecraft life. The project started as a fork of MultiMC, a community-driven launcher that the Minecraft community has relied on for years. Where the official launcher treats Minecraft as a single game experience, PrismLauncher assumes you're running several. Different versions. Different modsets. Different Java setups. It's built for that reality. Think of it like this: the official launcher is a car, fine for driving to one place. PrismLauncher is a truck with multiple cargo beds. You can load completely different setups in each instance and switch between them without any crossover. Getting It Installed and Running Installation varies by your OS. The project's website hosts prebuilt downloads for Windows, macOS, and Linux in multiple formats (AppImage, Flatpak, portable builds). On Linux especially, you've got options - Flatpak if you want it containerized, AppImage if you want a single executable, or standard installation through your package manager if Prism is available in your repos. To get started on most systems: bash# Download from https://prismlauncher.org/download/ # On Windows: run the installer # On Linux (Flatpak): flatpak install https://flatpak.prismlauncher.org/prismlauncher.flatpakref # On macOS: run the DMG installer Launch it, and you'll see an empty instance list. That's where the real work begins. Creating Your First Game Instance An instance is a self-contained Minecraft setup. Press the big button to create one, name it something useful ("vanilla 1.20", "modded exploration", whatever), and pick your game version. You pick the base version, not a whole modpack file. You can point to specific Java versions per instance, adjust memory allocation, set up mods folders, and organize everything in groups. Groups are just organizational containers - organize by version, by project, by mood. Drag instances around. Rename things on the fly. Here's where it gets genuinely useful: you can export an instance and send it to a friend. They import it, and they're instantly running the exact same setup - same mods, same Java version, same configurations. No "wait, which version of Fabric are you using?" threads. Players from our community use this for collaborative builds constantly. Someone like ironmouse might set up a specific modded world, export the instance, and share it with others so everyone's on the same page immediately. Managing Multiple Versions and Modpacks This is where PrismLauncher becomes genuinely powerful. You can have 1.20, 1.19, 1.16, and 1.12 all installed simultaneously, each with different mod configurations, and switch between them instantly. Your saves don't cross over. Your mods don't break unexpectedly because you switched versions. Modpack support is built in. Services like Modrinth and CurseForge have thousands of modpacks ready to install. Pick one, and Prism handles the download and setup. You're not manually tracking which mod goes where. Version hopping is a real use case. Testing a new update? Spin up a 1.20 instance while keeping your 1.19 survival world untouched. Working on a 1.16 server? Your other instances don't care. Players often forget how chaotic this would be without a launcher managing it. You'd manually move folders around, track mod versions, and probably break something in the process. Prism removes all that friction. Java Configuration and Modding Support Minecraft runs on Java, but different versions of the game want different Java versions. Prism lets you specify which JVM each instance uses. You can have one instance on Java 17 and another on Java 21, no problem. Memory allocation is per-instance too. That massive modpack needs 8GB? Allocate it. Your vanilla testing world? 2GB is fine. The launcher respects that you're probably not running all your instances at once. For modding, Prism supports Fabric, Forge, NeoForge, and Quilt. Pick your loader, and it handles the rest. Mods go in the right folder automatically. Configuration isn't something you fiddle with manually - Prism manages the structure. Players like housecz_zero run exploration-focused modpacks that need serious memory and a newer Java version. Without Prism, managing that alongside a vanilla realm becomes a headache. With it, it's just another instance sitting in your list. Common Gotchas and Performance Tips Version 11.0.2 had an updater issue on Windows and Linux Portable builds (hence the "manual update required" notice on the latest release). If you're on those platforms, grab the latest from the website directly rather than relying on the auto-updater. Mods can still break between instances if they're fundamentally incompatible with your Java version or game version, even with Prism managing the structure. Prism can't fix bad mod combinations - it just prevents them from crossing over into your other instances. Memory is where you'll feel performance differences most. Give modpacks enough RAM to breathe. 4GB is the minimum for most vanilla gameplay; heavy modpacks want 6-8GB. Allocate too little, and you'll get stutter and lag that feels like the launcher's fault when it's actually just resource exhaustion. One thing that trips people up: instance saves live inside each instance folder, not in your main Minecraft saves folder. If you ever need to recover a backup, you know where to look. It's cleaner than vanilla Minecraft's organization once you adjust to it. Profile pictures work just like in vanilla Minecraft. You're not limited to the Microsoft Store texture - testuser and joakim2tusen both use community skins. PrismLauncher respects that. For those who want completely custom appearances, adderall_abuser shows how diverse player skins can get across your instances. How It Compares to Alternatives The official launcher does one thing well: launch vanilla Minecraft for most players. For anything beyond that, it gets unwieldy. Managing multiple versions means juggling folders. Modpacks require manual setup. Java configuration is impossible per-instance. MultiMC is where Prism forked from, and both are solid options. Prism is the actively maintained fork with more recent updates and better community momentum. If you're deciding between them, Prism has the edge for fresh installs. GDLauncher exists and has its own strengths, but Prism's been the most stable for most players across different platforms. The community behind it stays responsive. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Plan: The Minecraft Server Analytics Plugin You Actually Need URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/plan-minecraft-server-analytics Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project plan-player-analytics/Plan Player Analytics plugin for Minecraft Server platforms - View player activity of your server with ease. :calendar: ⭐ 995 stars💻 Java📜 LGPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ Running a Minecraft server means flying blind most of the time. You see players log in and out, but what're they actually doing? Where do they spend their time? Are they engaged or just passing through? Plan answers these questions with a built-in analytics dashboard that tracks player behavior, server activity, and trends over time without extra complexity. What This Project Does Plan is a plugin that sits on your Minecraft server and collects player data in the background. It's not intrusive - it just watches what players do and stores it in a database. Then it serves up a web dashboard (hosted right on your server) where you can see charts, activity timelines, player lists, and engagement metrics at a glance. The dashboards are built with React and show things like login patterns, playtime distribution, how many players are online right now, geographic data (if you enable it), and equipment/inventory snapshots. Everything's interactive - you can click into individual player profiles, see their session history, and track their progression. One major advantage: it's not locked to a single server platform. Whether you're running Spigot, Paper, Fabric, Velocity, Folia, or even a hybrid Bungeecord setup, one jar handles it all. You don't need separate plugins for each platform. This alone saves headache if you're managing a network. Why You'd Use It Most server admins tweak plugins blind, hoping something sticks. Does that new spawn area attract players? Did banning griefers actually help retention? No way to know without Plan. GitHub project card for plan-player-analytics/Plan The obvious use case is server management - spotting inactive players, finding choke points where people quit, and seeing what hours your server's busiest. But it gets deeper. If you're running a community server, you can see which players are friends (they play during the same windows), and which areas of the map are actually popular versus the ones people avoid. That's gold for planning future builds. PvP server admins can track kill-death ratios and combat trends. Modded servers get item usage stats. SMP communities can see who's pulling their weight and who's taking up player slots. Network owners can load-balance knowing exactly where players congregate. For server monetization (cosmetics, rank plugins, rewards), Plan tells you which players are worth targeting with offers. It's not creepy - it's just showing you what you could already see with enough dedication, but automatically. How to Install Installation's straightforward. Download the latest build from the releases page - as of April 2026, that's 5.7.3306. Just drop it in your plugins folder and restart the server. Plan creates its database automatically on first start (SQLite by default, but you can use MySQL if you prefer). Sexy 300 series brand new Toyota land cruiser that only rich people can afford bashcd /path/to/server/plugins wget https://github.com/plan-player-analytics/Plan/releases/download/5.7.3306/Plan-5.7-build-3306.jar # or PlanFabric-5.7-build-3306.jar for Fabric cd.../start.sh After restart, the dashboard appears automatically at http://your-server-ip:8804 (or whatever port you configure in the settings file). Create a user account, log in, and you're collecting data immediately. If you're on a Fabric server, grab the Fabric version instead. Bungeecord networks need the main Plan plugin on the proxy plus the plugin on each backend server - it'll sync all the data automatically. Key Features That Actually Matter Live player map: See where everyone's building right now. This alone makes planning server events easier - you're not announcing things to an empty spawn while everyone's out at some hidden base. You can see if players cluster in groups or scatter randomly. Seven Clarifications On Small House Interior | small house interior Session tracking: Plan logs every login and logout with timestamps. You can reconstruct your entire server timeline - when did X actually turn up? Did that controversial rule change tank engagement? The data's all there. Individual player profiles show their full history, so you can verify claims and spot patterns. Want examples of what active profiles look like? Check out players like adderall_abuser, ironmouse, and joakim2tusen - Plan gives you exactly this kind of detailed breakdown for every player on your server. Activity calendars: Visual heatmaps show which days and hours are busiest. But this is genuinely useful for scheduling maintenance, planning seasonal events, or knowing when to hire extra moderators. One look tells you your server peaks on weekends (or doesn't, which is its own insight). Geographic insights: If enabled, Plan geolocates players by IP and shows you server distribution worldwide. Useful for networks spanning time zones, or just curiosity about where your players actually live. Extensible API: Developers can hook into Plan to add custom metrics. The project maintains full Javadocs and an APIv5 spec on GitHub, so building integrations is documented. If you've a custom plugin that tracks player data, you can feed it to Plan's database instead of maintaining two separate systems. Tips, Pitfalls, and Things That Bite New Users First: Plan collects data continuously, and that does use resources. On a 1000-player network with concurrent players, the database can balloon to several GB per year. SQLite's fine for small servers, but if you've got serious scale, set up MySQL immediately. SQLite will lock during writes and cause lag spikes. Mansion Floor Plan Minecraft Second, the web dashboard is only as secure as your network. If you expose it to the internet without authentication, anyone can see your player data. Run it behind a reverse proxy (nginx) with basic auth, or keep it LAN-only. The plugin doesn't support HTTPS by itself, so don't rely on it for public exposure. Dashboard performance depends on your dataset size. A server with 10 years of history and millions of sessions will take a moment to load the main page. This isn't a bug - it's just rendering a lot of data. If it's too slow, you can prune old data in the settings. The config file's lengthy and has plenty of options. You can tweak what data to collect (reduce load by disabling location tracking if you don't need it), adjust collection intervals, and customize retention policies. Don't just accept defaults if you're on a potato - the "lightweight" preset exists for a reason. And if you want to see what kind of player profiles you'll be managing, check skins like Kneeplant and testuser to visualize your player base. Alternatives Worth Considering If Plan feels like overkill, there's Prism for block tracking (different purpose), or the built-in Spigot statistics if you just need basic stuff. But honestly, most alternatives either do less (just login counts) or cost money. Plan's free (LGPL-3.0 licensed), actively maintained, and solves the actual problem. shot 1 For network-wide analytics, you might pair Plan with something like Grafana for metrics aggregation if you're already in that ecosystem. But Plan's dashboard covers 95% of what most admins need - the graphs are clean, interactive, and require zero external setup. Support the project Plan is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the Plan repo ↗ --- ### Folia: How Regionalized Multithreading Transforms Your Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/folia-minecraft-multithreading-setup Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Folia (PaperMC/Folia) Fork of Paper which adds regionised multithreading to the dedicated server. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 4,228 stars💻 Shell📜 GPL-3.0 If you're running a large Minecraft server and watching your TPS crater whenever someone explores new chunks or you hit peak player count, Folia might be the answer you've been looking for. And this Paper-based fork completely reimagines how Minecraft servers handle computation by splitting the world into independent regions, each running on its own thread. Instead of one main thread struggling to keep up with everything at once, Folia lets your CPU cores actually do parallel work. What Folia Actually Is Folia isn't a mod. It's not a plugin. It's a from-the-ground-up rewrite of the Paper server that removes the concept of a main thread entirely. Instead, nearby chunks get grouped into "regions," and each region runs its own tick loop on the thread pool. Think of it as giving different parts of your world their own independent processor rather than forcing one thread to micromanage everything. The architecture matters because it changes how your server scales. Paper handles millions of players' servers well within its single-threaded design, but once you get to that next tier of scale - hundreds of players spread across a huge world - bottlenecks emerge. Folia doesn't try to squeeze more out of a single thread. Instead, it fundamentally changes the problem. Why You'd Actually Want This Large spread-out servers benefit most. Skyblock networks where players have floating islands scattered across dimensions, massive survival worlds, custom RPG servers with distributed dungeons - these are where Folia shines. If your players cluster in one spawn area, you won't see the same performance gains. But for a 200+ player SMP where people are exploring in different quadrants, the difference is substantial. I should mention upfront: this isn't a drop-in replacement. Your plugins need to be rewritten for Folia's multithreaded environment. That's the real cost. But if you're at the scale where you're considering it, your plugin ecosystem is probably custom anyway. Standard Paper plugins that don't assume a main thread will break immediately under Folia. The payoff is genuine though. With proper configuration, you're looking at actual performance improvements that scale with your CPU core count. That's not achievable on standard Paper. Installation and Basic Setup First, grab the latest build from the PaperMC downloads page. As of 2026, Folia supports modern Minecraft versions (1.20.4 and later). Download the jar file to your server directory: bashwget https://api.papermc.io/v2/projects/folia/versions/latest/builds/latest/downloads/folia-latest.jar mv folia-latest.jar folia.jar Next, you'll need to accept the EULA in your eula.txt file. Boot the server once to generate your config files: bashjava -Xmx30G -Xms30G -jar folia.jar nogui Stop it (it'll create the folia.yml config), then you enter the actual work: thread configuration. This isn't just "set more threads and go." The PaperMC documentation recommends pre-generating your world before moving to production, which reduces chunk loading overhead significantly. Thread Configuration: The Real Challenge This is where most people get confused. Your folia.yml has a `threaded-regions.threads` setting. Don't just max it out. The guideline from the project itself: allocate threads for netty IO (about 4 per 200-300 players), chunk system IO threads (about 3 per 200-300 players), chunk system workers if pre-generated (about 2 per 200-300 players), and then use the remaining cores up to 80% total allocation for tick threads. On a machine with 32 cores serving 500 players, you'd roughly allocate: Netty IO: 8 threads Chunk system IO: 6 threads Chunk system workers: 4 threads Tick threads: remaining cores up to 80% (about 10 threads) You don't leave 100% allocation because plugins and unexpected background tasks will spawn their own threads and crash the server. The 80% ceiling is a safety boundary that actually matters. Even then, this is a starting point. Monitor your actual thread usage under load and adjust. The folia.yml file has detailed comments for every option. Key Features That Actually Work Region isolation. Each region ticks independently at 20 TPS. A lag spike in one region doesn't cascade to others. If your dungeon system is poorly optimized, it won't tank your spawn area's performance. Proper thread scaling. Unlike Paper's plugin-threadpool approach (which still bottlenecks on tick-critical operations), Folia's regions run tick logic in parallel. More cores actually translates to more tick processing. The scaling isn't linear, but it's real. Async chunk loading. Chunk I/O happens off the region threads. You won't get the random freezes that single-threaded servers experience when storage reads spike. There's also native support for server-side chunk optimization, pre-generated chunk caching, and configurable memory limits per region. Honestly, the feature depth is impressive if you're willing to dig into the documentation. What Will Break and How to Handle It Most plugins assume they're on a main thread and that they can read/write world state safely without synchronization. They're wrong on Folia. If a plugin does something like "check if block X is stone, then set it to air," that race condition might happen across threads in a way it never would on Paper. Expect plugin failures. Some specifics: Teleportation between regions involves additional complexity and can cause deadlocks if plugins aren't careful World border checks are region-aware and might behave differently than you expect Timers and scheduled tasks need to be region-safe to avoid corruption Entity tracking across region boundaries requires plugin updates The Folia docs list incompatible patterns explicitly. If you're evaluating plugins for compatibility, check whether they directly manipulate tick logic or assume single-threaded access to chunk data. When Folia Makes Sense You've got a 16+ core machine. Your server's going to hit 200+ concurrent players regularly. Your players are geographically spread out (not all at spawn). You either have custom plugin infrastructure or you're willing to port existing plugins. Those four conditions? You're a candidate. You're running 50 players on a VPS with 8 cores? Stick with Paper. The gains won't justify the compatibility headache. You're running a 100-player SMP where everyone hangs at spawn? Folia helps, but not as dramatically as it would on a sprawled server. But if you're building the next generation of serious multiplayer Minecraft communities, Folia is where the performance ceiling is actually higher. The players at skins like adderall_abuser's, ironmouse's, and other active community members on massive servers are already exploring this space. Check out streaming communities and large survival projects on Modrinth - you'll see Folia appearing more often. Alternatives Worth Considering Paper. Still the gold standard for most servers. Stable, well-understood, enormous plugin ecosystem. If Folia feels like overkill, Paper's optimization features (async chunk loading, reduced entity AI ticks, etc.) might be enough. Purpur. A Paper fork with additional per-player optimizations. Better for servers where player experience varies wildly (some AFK, some actively exploring). Less architecture change than Folia, more targeted performance gains. Fabric Server. If you need mod support (not plugins), the Fabric ecosystem is actually pretty solid for servers now. Not multithreaded in the same way, but lightweight and fast. The honest truth: Folia is specialized. It's for a specific problem at a specific scale. For everyone else, Paper with thoughtful configuration is still the right choice. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Docker Minecraft Server: Self-Host Your Java Server in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/docker-minecraft-server-hosting-guide Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project itzg/docker-minecraft-server Docker image that provides a Minecraft Server for Java Edition that automatically installs/upgrades versions, modloaders, modpacks and more at startup ⭐ 13,496 stars💻 Shell📜 Apache-2.0 View on GitHub ↗ Running a personal Minecraft server used to mean wrestling with Java configs, manual version updates, and obscure command-line options. Docker Minecraft Server skips all that nonsense by automating server setup and maintenance. Just run a container and let it handle the rest. What This Project Does Docker Minecraft Server is a pre-configured Docker container that handles the tedious parts of running a Java Edition Minecraft server. Instead of downloading the server JAR, manually picking a version, and wrestling with startup scripts, you spin up a container and it does the heavy lifting. Maintained by itzg with over 13,000 GitHub stars, this project has been refined through years of actual use. The container runs on anything with Docker: your desktop, a cheap VPS, a home server, or even a Raspberry Pi if you're feeling brave. Here's the thing - it doesn't just start a vanilla server. It can handle modpacks, modloaders like Fabric and Forge, multiple server types (Paper, Spigot, Purpur), and even automatically fetch and install mods from platforms like Modrinth. Why You'd Actually Host Your Own Skip the pay-to-play servers if you want full control. Running your own server means no admins nuking your base, no surprise shutdowns, and no mystery fees. Your rules, your world, your terms. It's practical for friend groups. You want a reliable place that's always there? Your own server beats hoping some public host stays online. Plus, mods and modpacks become genuinely approachable - no begging an admin to install that one QoL mod everyone wants. For players comparing their options, the Minecraft Server List on minecraft.how shows what public hosting looks like, but self-hosting gives you something those can't: complete autonomy. For community-focused players, there's also the satisfaction of knowing exactly what's running. You can see the logs, tweak settings, and understand why something's lagging instead of getting vague explanations from a hosting panel. Getting Started: Installation and Setup Docker Minecraft Server's setup is surprisingly straightforward. You'll need Docker installed first (that's a one-time thing). After that, you're looking at either a Compose file or a single run command. Here's the simplest version - just a basic vanilla server: bashdocker run -d -p 25565:25565 -e EULA=TRUE itzg/minecraft-server That's it. It pulls the image, starts the server, and you're live. The -p 25565:25565 maps Minecraft's default port, and EULA=TRUE skips the lengthy agreement step. If you want something more persistent (surviving container restarts), use Docker Compose. Create a docker-compose.yml: yamlversion: "3.8" services: minecraft: image: itzg/minecraft-server ports: - "25565:25565" environment: EULA: "TRUE" MEMORY: "2G" DIFFICULTY: "2" volumes: -./minecraft-data:/data restart: unless-stopped Save that, then run docker-compose up -d. Your server data stays in ./minecraft-data/ so you don't lose progress if the container crashes. The beauty is that every setting you'd normally hunt through config files for becomes an environment variable. Need a different difficulty? Change DIFFICULTY. Want more RAM? Tweak MEMORY. It's clean. Features That Actually Matter Automatic Version Management Ancient dwellers in Minecraft Tired of manually upgrading Minecraft? Set VERSION=latest and it pulls the newest stable release on startup. Sounds simple, but it beats the alternative: remembering to check release notes and manually downloading JARs. The recent 2026.4.1 release continues this pattern of keeping things up-to-date with minimal fuss. Modpack Support Out of the Box This is where the project gets genuinely interesting. Point it at a modpack and it downloads everything - dependencies, mods, the works: bashdocker run -d \ -e TYPE=FABRIC \ -e CF_PAGE_INCLUDE_FILE_ALTERNATE_FILES=true \ -e MODPACK=your-modpack-slug \ itzg/minecraft-server The exact syntax depends on your modpack platform (Modrinth, CurseForge, etc.), but the principle is the same. No manual zip extraction or dependency hunting. It's one of the best parts of this tool. Mod Auto-Downloads Even without a full modpack, you can specify individual mods and it handles them. Add a mod from Modrinth, provide its ID, and it downloads automatically on startup. This saves the usual dance of hunting for compatible versions. What Actually Trips People Up Docker itself has a learning curve if you're new to containerization. Port forwarding, volume mounting, and environment variable syntax aren't immediately obvious. But the documentation is thorough, and the community Discord is active enough to help. Container performance can surprise you. On Windows or Mac, if you allocate too much RAM to Docker, your system might struggle. Start conservative - 2GB is usually enough for a casual server with a few friends. One gotcha worth noting: world saves live in a volume. If you delete the container but not the volume, your world is safe. Delete both? Gone forever. The documentation warns about this, but it's still worth a careful check before you experiment. Server properties work differently than traditional hosting. You can't SFTP in and edit files directly. Anyone change environment variables and restart the container. It's actually cleaner once you get used to it, but the first time can feel restrictive. How It Compares to Your Other Options If Docker Minecraft Server isn't your style, alternatives exist. Pterodactyl is a full panel-based solution with a web UI - overkill for most people but solid if you're managing multiple servers for a larger community. Aternos offers free hosting with zero setup, but you lose control and you're limited to public servers. For Bedrock Edition players, the same author maintains itzg/minecraft-bedrock-server using an identical approach. And if you're just looking to join an existing community server rather than run your own, the options are plentiful - plenty of established servers are out there waiting for new players. Self-hosting isn't for everyone. But if you've ever wanted a server that's genuinely yours - no ads, no monthly fees, no admin drama - this is one of the clearest paths there. 🔗 GitHub: [itzg/docker-minecraft-server](https://github.com/itzg/docker-minecraft-server) - Apache-2.0, ★13496 Support the project docker-minecraft-server is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the docker-minecraft-server repo ↗ --- ### Keep Your Minecraft Server Running Smooth: Prometheus Exporter URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-prometheus-exporter-monitoring Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice "A Bukkit plugin which exports minecraft server stats to Prometheus" sladkoff/minecraft-prometheus-exporter · github.com ⭐ 530 stars💻 Java📜 MIT If you run a Minecraft server and don't actually know if it's healthy until players start complaining, you're flying blind. The Prometheus Exporter is a lightweight Bukkit plugin that changes that by feeding your server's performance metrics into Prometheus, giving you real-time visibility into what's happening under the hood. What This Project Does The minecraft-prometheus-exporter is a Java-based Bukkit plugin (compatible with Paper, Spigot, and other forks) that turns your Minecraft server into a data source for Prometheus, the industry-standard time-series monitoring system. Once installed, it exposes detailed metrics about your server's performance, player activity, and system health at a simple HTTP endpoint. Then you feed those metrics into Prometheus and visualize them in Grafana or whatever monitoring stack you're already using. Think of it as giving your Minecraft server a health monitor strapped to its wrist. Why You'd Use It Most server operators manage their servers like it's 2010. They SSH in once a week, squint at some logs, maybe check the player count, and call it a day. But if you're running a serious community server, especially one where players like adderall_abuser and ironmouse might show up, you need actual data about whether your TPS is tanking, memory is leaking, or you're getting DDoS'd. This plugin solves three real problems: Performance visibility: You get metrics on TPS, memory usage, chunk load times, and entity counts without manually checking them. Alerting: Pair this with Prometheus alerting rules and you'll get notified before a crash, not after. Historical analysis: See patterns over days or weeks ("every Tuesday at 8pm our server lags") instead of guessing. If you run multiple servers, this becomes even more valuable. Popular community servers hosting players with skins like testuser and joakim2tusen can't afford downtime, and Prometheus dashboards let you watch the entire fleet at once. How to Install The process is wonderfully simple, which is rare for monitoring tools. Download the latest JAR file from the GitHub releases (currently v3.1.2) and drop it into your plugins folder. bash# Grab the latest release wget https://github.com/sladkoff/minecraft-prometheus-exporter/releases/download/v3.1.2/minecraft-prometheus-exporter-3.1.2.jar # Move it to your plugins directory mv minecraft-prometheus-exporter-3.1.2.jar /path/to/plugins/ # Start or restart your server # (the plugin auto-generates a config.yml on first startup) After the server starts, hit `localhost:9940/metrics` in your browser and you'll see raw Prometheus metrics. If that works, you're done installing. The default port is 9940, but you can change it in the auto-generated `config.yml` if you need to. The plugin also supports environment variables and JVM system properties for configuration, which is handy if you're containerizing everything or running in a managed hosting environment. Key Features and How They Work The plugin exports a ton of metrics by default, but here are the ones you'll actually care about: TPS and Performance Metrics. The one metric every server operator checks first: current ticks per second. One exporter gives you this in real-time, plus historical data so you can spot trends. A server consistently hitting 19.5 TPS instead of 20 might not sound bad until you realize something's slowly degrading. Player and Entity Tracking. How many players are online, how many entities are loaded, chunk generation speed. Useful for understanding load spikes. Suddenly you've got 60 players instead of 15 and TPS drops from 20 to 5? The metrics show you exactly when and whether it's the player count, the entities they spawned, or something else. Custom Health Checks. This is where it gets flexible. You can write custom health checks in your plugins and the exporter aggregates them. Want to alert if a specific plugin is malfunctioning? Add a health check. Want to monitor your economy plugin's database? Same thing. The health endpoint at `localhost:9940/health` exposes these aggregated checks. Memory and JVM Metrics. Heap usage, garbage collection frequency, thread counts. If you're running a modded server or one with lots of plugins (like a community server hosting players with skins like housecz_zero), you need to know when memory is getting tight. Configuration Flexibility. The plugin respects environment variables first, then system properties, then config file. This hierarchy means you can manage configuration across dozens of servers without editing files on each one. Tips, Pitfalls, and Common Gotchas The plugin is stable, but here's what trips people up: Make sure your Prometheus scrape interval is reasonable. The default in most Prometheus configs is 15 seconds, which works fine here. If you set it to every second to get ultra-high-resolution metrics, you're just adding load to your server for no real benefit. The metrics endpoint isn't password-protected by default. If your server port 9940 is exposed to the internet, anyone can see your metrics. That's probably fine (they're not sensitive data), but if you're paranoid, put it behind a firewall or reverse proxy with authentication. Some users report that async metrics occasionally hang if your plugin lifecycle isn't clean. The latest version (3.1.2) fixed this issue, so make sure you're updated. If you're running an older release and notice occasional timeouts on the metrics endpoint, upgrade first before troubleshooting further. Another thing: if you're using a mod loader like Fabric instead of a Bukkit fork, this plugin won't work. And this is strictly for Bukkit-compatible servers (Paper, Spigot, Bukkit, and experimental Folia support). The plugin needs the Bukkit API. Alternatives If Prometheus feels like overkill for your use case, there are lighter options. Some hosting providers (like Aternos) include built-in dashboards that show basic metrics without needing anything installed. If you want something simpler than Prometheus, you might look at Grafana Cloud, which removes the need to self-host Prometheus. But honestly, if you're already using Prometheus for other infrastructure, the Exporter plugin integrates smoothly into your existing setup. For BungeeCord proxy servers, there's a separate plugin (Bungeecord Prometheus Exporter) that handles proxy-level metrics, which complements this plugin nicely if you're running a network. 🔗 GitHub: [sladkoff/minecraft-prometheus-exporter](https://github.com/sladkoff/minecraft-prometheus-exporter) - MIT, ★530 Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Ferium: How to Manage Your Minecraft Mods at Scale URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/ferium-minecraft-mod-manager Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project ferium (gorilla-devs/ferium) Fast and multi-source CLI program for managing Minecraft mods and modpacks from Modrinth, CurseForge, and GitHub Releases Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 1,367 stars💻 Rust📜 MPL-2.0 Updating five mods manually? Annoying. Updating fifty? Nightmare. Ferium is a command-line tool that takes "update all my mods" and actually makes it instant. Point it at your mod folder, configure once, then run one command to download and upgrade everything from Modrinth, CurseForge, and GitHub simultaneously. What This Project Actually Does Ferium is a Rust-based CLI program (pronounced "feer-ee-um") that removes the tedium from mod management. Instead of visiting Modrinth or CurseForge, checking which mods have updates, comparing versions against your loader and Minecraft version, then manually downloading each file, you describe your setup once. Then it handles everything. The core loop is simple: configure your mods, pick your Minecraft version and mod loader, run ferium upgrade, and watch it pull the latest compatible versions of everything in parallel. It's built in Rust, which means the binary is a single executable with no runtime dependencies (unless you go for the GUI file picker on Linux, which is optional). This sounds like a minor convenience. It's not. Why You Actually Want a Tool Like This Vanilla Minecraft is great. But modding is where Minecraft becomes genuinely yours. Want a full tech progression? Immersive Petroleum. Want better farming? Farmers Delight. Want actual dungeons with loot? Cataclysm. The instant you've eight mods, you're managing dependencies, loader compatibility, and version cascades. The problem compounds. Mods update weekly. Minecraft 1.20.5 breaks compatibility. Your loader gets a patch. Suddenly three of your mods are mismatched, and you spend an hour figuring out which one broke. Ferium runs a check, downloads all new versions that actually work together, and you're done. This is especially painful if you run modpacks. A good modpack has 100+ mods. If the maintainer drops it, updating everything yourself means an evening of work. Ferium does it in seconds. Installation and First Setup Grab the latest binary from the releases page. The project provides precompiled executables for Linux (with and without GUI), macOS (Intel and Apple Silicon), and Windows (MSVC and MinGW variants). If you're on Windows, grab the MSVC version unless you specifically need MinGW. Move the binary somewhere in your PATH. On Linux or macOS, that's typically ~/bin or /usr/local/bin. On Windows, any folder in your system PATH works. bashunzip ferium-linux.zip mv ferium ~/bin/ chmod +x ~/bin/ferium ferium - version # Verify it's working Next, initialize a profile. Ferium uses profiles to manage separate mod setups. You might have a Fabric 1.20.4 profile and a Quilt 1.21 profile. Each has its own config, mods, and output directory. bashferium profile new my-modpack ferium profile list The CLI walks you through setting up your mod loader, Minecraft version, and output directory. Once that's done, you add mods by their ID or search by name, and Ferium fetches them from the source you specify. The Features That Actually Matter Multi-source downloads. Not every mod lives on the same platform. Some creators prefer Modrinth, others CurseForge, a few publish only to GitHub Releases. Ferium handles all three without fussing. Add a mod, specify where it lives, and it stays in sync from that source. Version compatibility checks. This is the real win. Ferium doesn't just grab the latest version of a mod. It verifies that version supports your configured loader and Minecraft version. No broken downloads. No "why is my modpack crashing?" debugging sessions. Parallel downloads. Downloading 79 mods doesn't take 79 sequential fetches. The README shows a modpack with 79 mods downloading in 15 seconds. Another with 400 mods in under a minute. This isn't just fast, it's genuinely impressive. Speed matters for another reason: you're more likely to actually update. If upgrading mods took an hour, you'd skip it. At 30 seconds, you run ferium upgrade before launching. Modpack management. Beyond individual mods, Ferium can handle full modpacks from Modrinth and CurseForge. Download, extract, update with a single command. No unpacking CRX files or managing dependencies by hand. Multiple profiles. Because your Fabric setup doesn't need to touch your Quilt setup. Create separate profiles, each with its own loader, version, and mod list. Switch between them or run upgrades on all at once. The Details That Trip You Up Version compatibility is powerful, but you have to set it right. Tell Ferium you're on 1.20.4 Fabric, and it filters to only mods that support that combo. Forget to update your configured version when you upgrade Minecraft, and you'll wonder why new mods aren't available. GitHub project card for gorilla-devs/ferium Output directories matter too. Point Ferium at your mods folder inside your instance (like ~/.minecraft/mods or wherever your launcher puts them). It'll overwrite old versions when you upgrade, which is what you want, but you need that path right the first time. Actually, you can change it later with ferium profile edit, so that's not really a gotcha. Nevermind. GitHub Releases can be finicky. If a mod author posts releases but doesn't tag them properly, Ferium might not find them. Modrinth and CurseForge are more reliable because they've official APIs. Most popular mods are on one of these platforms anyway, so this rarely comes up. One real gotcha: modpacks sometimes pin specific mod versions. If you're managing a specific pack (not just a personal collection), upgrading might break intentional version choices. For personal setups, always upgrade. For maintaining a modpack for others, be careful. The Minecraft Community Context Ferium isn't created by Mojang or Microsoft. It's a community project built by developers who got tired of manual mod management and decided to solve it properly. That's the whole story of modding in Minecraft. The community sees a problem, ships a tool, and then the tool becomes indispensable. This community spans everyone from skin creators designing custom characters (like the artists behind adderall_abuser, ironmouse, and testuser skins) to shader developers, texture pack artists, mod creators, and infrastructure builders like the Ferium maintainers. The game as you play it today is half vanilla and half community innovation. Ferium is part of a bigger ecosystem. The project's sister libraries (ferinth for Modrinth API calls, furse for CurseForge) are used by other tools. It's not an island. Tools like this are why Minecraft modding remains viable in 2026. When You Should Actually Use This If you've 5 mods, Ferium is overkill. Download them once and you're fine. If you have 20+ mods, Ferium saves hours over a year. Update every two weeks, spend 30 seconds each time instead of 15 minutes. If you're running a modpack or managing multiple instances, Ferium isn't optional. It's the difference between a project you maintain and one you abandon because updating became impossible. If you're on Linux or macOS and comfortable with CLI tools, you're Ferium's target user. Windows users might prefer GUI launchers like MultiMC or Prism, which have built-in mod management. Nothing wrong with that choice, just different workflows. How It Compares Curseforge's own launcher handles mod updates, but it's wrapped in the full launcher UI. Modrinth's launcher does similar. These work fine if you want a GUI, but they manage your entire Minecraft installation. Ferium is CLI-only. That means it's scriptable. If you want to automate updates as part of a deploy process or update mods on a server running modded Minecraft (many do), CLI is your only option. You can't GUI a headless machine. MultiMC and Prism let you manage instances, but they're not primarily mod updaters. Ferium is laser-focused on one job. That focus shows in speed and reliability. And yes, you can manually update. You'll save time until you have 50 mods. Then you'll realize you're doing the same task every two weeks and wish you'd automated it earlier. The GitHub project has 1,367 stars, active commits, and maintained releases. It's not abandoned. The MPL-2.0 license means you can use and modify it freely, though if you fork and ship modifications, you need to publish your source. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### UnifiedMetrics: Monitor Your Minecraft Server in Real-Time URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/unifiedmetrics-minecraft-monitoring Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project Cubxity/UnifiedMetrics Fully-featured metrics collection agent for Minecraft servers. Supports Prometheus and InfluxDB. Dashboard included out-of-box. ⭐ 534 stars💻 Kotlin📜 LGPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ So you've got a Minecraft server running and something's wrong - lag spikes, mysterious slowdowns, crashes you can't explain. The problem? You're flying blind. You notice performance drops, but you've no idea what's actually causing them. UnifiedMetrics fixes that by collecting real-time server metrics and feeding them into dashboards you can actually read. It's free, open-source, and practically invisible to your server performance. What UnifiedMetrics Actually Does UnifiedMetrics is a plugin that quietly monitors your Minecraft server and sends that data to Prometheus or InfluxDB. So it tracks memory usage, garbage collection pauses, CPU load, player counts, entity spawning, chunk loads, tick duration - basically everything that affects server health. The data flows into Grafana, where you get beautiful dashboards showing exactly what's happening right now. The plugin itself is lean. Built in Kotlin, it doesn't spawn a dozen threads or monopolize your CPU. It just sits there collecting metrics and shipping them off, using almost no resources. And you get a pre-built Grafana dashboard included, not some generic thing you've to customize from scratch. Why Server Monitoring Actually Matters Most server admins run completely blind. Lag happens, and you guess at the cause. Was it a plugin eating CPU? Too many mobs? A player's redstone contraption going haywire? You restart things hoping it fixes it. That's not strategy, that's superstition. Real-time metrics change everything. You see memory climbing in real time. Most players watch garbage collection cycles. Folks who try this count concurrent players and correlate player logins with CPU spikes. When something breaks, you don't debug for an hour - you look at the metrics and see exactly when and why performance tanked. And if you're running multiple servers? UnifiedMetrics works on Spigot, Fabric, BungeeCord, Velocity, and Minestom. Same metrics, same dashboard concept, different platforms. Your entire network gets the same visibility. Installation is Straightforward For Spigot servers, grab the JAR and drop it in your plugins folder: bash# Download the latest release wget https://github.com/Cubxity/UnifiedMetrics/releases/download/v0.3.8/unifiedmetrics-platform-bukkit-0.3.8.jar # Move to plugins mv unifiedmetrics-platform-bukkit-0.3.8.jar /path/to/server/plugins/ # Restart and the config generates automatically On startup, UnifiedMetrics creates a config file. You point it at your Prometheus or InfluxDB instance, set how often it scrapes (default is reasonable), and you're done. The plugin doesn't write to disk or need a database - it just pushes data to your metrics backend. That keeps things fast and simple. Fabric, BungeeCord, and Velocity have their own builds. Minestom too, if you're into that. All the installation patterns are basically the same: download, drop in the right folder, configure once, forget about it. What You Actually Get to Monitor The metrics are thoughtfully selected. System level: memory (used, max, committed), garbage collection time and freed bytes, CPU load, thread count, process uptime. Server level: plugin count, player logins, quits, chat messages, ping events. World level (on Bukkit and Minestom): entity counts, loaded chunks, players per world, tick duration histograms. Think about what that means in practice. If a player like adderall_abuser builds a massive mob farm, you can see entity count climbing and chunk load spikes in your dashboard. If adding a plugin tanks garbage collection, you see it immediately. Memory leaks show up before they crash your server at 3 AM. The dashboard is built specifically for Minecraft. Pie charts of players across worlds, histograms of tick duration over time, gauges showing memory pressure. It's not generic monitoring software pretending to understand Minecraft - it actually does. Gotchas and Things to Know Before Starting First thing: Prometheus and InfluxDB aren't one-click installs. If you've never run metrics infrastructure, there's a setup curve. You need to understand scrape intervals, retention, time-series concepts. The documentation walks you through it, but it's not trivial. Budget an hour to get the whole stack running if you're new. Second: performance impact scales with your scrape interval. Default settings (one data point every 30 seconds) are basically invisible. Crank it to every second and you'll notice overhead. Don't do that unless you specifically need per-second granularity. YAML config syntax will bite you. Indentation matters. If your config is wrong, the plugin silently fails to connect. Triple-check it before assuming the whole thing is broken. And here's something worth knowing: on extremely high-population servers (400+ concurrent players), metric collection itself adds a measurable tick cost during collection cycles. It's still tiny - we're talking single-digit milliseconds - but if you're already maxed out on performance, it's worth considering. One server running with players like ironmouse reported it was negligible, but experimentation matters. Compatibility Across Versions and Platforms Spigot 1.8+, Fabric 1.16+, BungeeCord any version, Velocity, and Minestom. If you're running anything standard, you're covered. The project updates regularly - the latest release (0.3.8) has dependency updates and bug fixes, showing active maintenance. Backend support is either Prometheus or InfluxDB. Prometheus is simpler if you're new to metrics. InfluxDB gives you fancier time-series features. Either way, UnifiedMetrics speaks both fluently. A quick note on licensing: it's LGPL-3.0. That means the code is free, you can audit it, and if you modify it you need to share your changes back. For any server operator, that just means it's free and you control the code. How It Compares to Other Approaches Some servers just use simple TPS monitoring plugins that log tick rates to a file. Works, but it's not queryable or real-time. Others write custom monitoring using Paper's API, but that requires coding knowledge. ELK stack (Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana) is another option for log analysis, but that's overkill if all you want is metrics dashboards. More complex to set up, more infrastructure to maintain. Monitoring solutions like players testuser have used in other communities exist, but many cost money or are proprietary. UnifiedMetrics is free, open-source (534 stars on GitHub means it's actually battle-tested), and actively developed. You get real-time visibility without vendor lock-in. Some large networks use paid monitoring services, but you lose code visibility and pay per server. If you're comfortable running your own Prometheus instance, UnifiedMetrics is better. Real-World Example Setup Here's roughly how you'd wire this up for a medium-sized server network. Install UnifiedMetrics on your main server and any backend servers. Point them all at a central Prometheus instance running on a separate machine. Set Prometheus to scrape every 30 seconds. Drop the Grafana dashboard JSON (included in the project docs) into your Grafana instance. Now you've got a single pane of glass showing all your servers. One player, joakim2tusen, mentioned in a server setup guide that once they had metrics running, they started noticing patterns they'd never seen before - like how player login surges correlated with specific mod malfunctions. Having data changes how you debug. The coolest part is that once you've got the infrastructure in place, adding a new server is trivial. Drop the plugin in, update the config, done. The whole network is visible in one dashboard. When You Might Not Need This If you're running a tiny vanilla server with five friends, metrics are overkill. You'll notice lag immediately and restarting fixes most things. If you're not comfortable managing Prometheus and InfluxDB infrastructure, this adds operational burden. You need to keep those services running, backed up, updated. It's not fire-and-forget. And if your server is already maxed out CPU-wise, adding metrics collection (even if it's lightweight) might not be a good idea. Performance tuning should come first. But for any medium-to-large server, any network, or any operator who wants to actually understand what's happening under the hood, UnifiedMetrics is genuinely impressive. Players like housecz_zero running established communities have found that visibility changes everything about how they manage their servers. Ready to try UnifiedMetrics? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit Cubxity/UnifiedMetrics on GitHub ↗ --- ### mcaselector: How to Manage Minecraft Chunks in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mcaselector-minecraft-chunk-guide Published: 2026-04-14 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project Querz/mcaselector A tool to select chunks from Minecraft worlds for deletion or export. ⭐ 4,404 stars💻 Java📜 MIT View on GitHub ↗ Need to reset chunks in your Minecraft world without nuking the entire thing? mcaselector lets you surgically remove or export specific chunks and regions - handy when you've got corruption, lag sources, or just want a fresh terrain regeneration in one area. It's the kind of tool that stops you from rage-deleting hours of work. What This Project Does mcaselector is a desktop application that loads a Minecraft Java Edition world and lets you see exactly where chunks and regions are stored. You can then select specific chunks, delete them (forcing Minecraft to regenerate the terrain), export them to a separate world, or filter them by criteria like structure type, biome, or modification date. The tool reads the actual world file format (.mca files), so it's making real modifications to your save data, not simulating or predicting changes. Built in Java, it runs standalone on Windows, macOS, and Linux. Current version supports everything from Minecraft 1.2.1 through 1.21.5+, though the maintainer regularly updates it as new snapshots and full releases drop. With over 4400 GitHub stars, it's become the de facto standard for this kind of work in the community. Why You'd Actually Use It Chunk corruption happens. You're mining peacefully, a server crashes, and suddenly half your base is floating or missing textures. Or you've got a sprawling world where one region got accidentally covered in bad terrain generation and you can't just recreate it by hand. Instead of starting a new world or tediously cutting out that section manually, you run mcaselector, select the corrupted chunks, and delete them. But it's not just damage control. Content creators use it to prepare worlds for showcase videos, deleting uninteresting areas while keeping the important builds. Admins use it to reset the Nether or End on long-running servers without touching the Overworld. Players exploring real-world maps (yeah, some folks rebuild Earth in Minecraft) use it to export specific chunks and stitch them into other worlds. Actually, that brings me to something worth noting - you need backups before you touch this tool. mcaselector modifies your actual world file directly. One wrong click, and you're not hitting undo in the UI; you're restoring from backup or accepting the loss. That's not a flaw in the tool, just the reality of working with world data. How to Install Download the latest release from GitHub. There's a Windows installer if you prefer clicking through a setup wizard, or a universal JAR file that runs on any system with Java installed. bashjava -jar mcaselector-2.7.jar That's it. The JAR is portable - no installation required, just run it. On Windows, the installer bundles Java for you if you don't already have it, which is nice if you're not typically a Java developer. Launch the application, and you'll see a file browser. Point it at your Minecraft world folder (usually.minecraft/saves on Windows or Linux, or ~/Library/Application Support/minecraft/saves on macOS). Wait for it to load - large worlds take a few seconds to render all the chunk data. Once loaded, you're looking at a grid where each square represents a chunk (16x16 blocks). Regions (32x32 chunks) are outlined with thick lines. Key Features That Actually Matter The selection tools are the heart of the tool. You can select chunks manually by clicking and dragging, but the real power is the filter system. Want to delete all chunks modified before a certain date? Select by timestamp. All chunks containing a specific biome? Filter by that. All chunks with a certain structure (village, mansion, stronghold)? Checkbox it. Then import selections from CSV files if you want to work with external data. GitHub project card for Querz/mcaselector One standout addition in the latest version is subtraction mode. Select a group of chunks with one filter, then subtract another filter's results from that selection. Say you want to reset your Nether except where you've built a farm - you'd select the whole Nether region, then subtract chunks containing your specific structure. Precise work that used to require multiple manual passes. The export functionality is underrated. You don't have to delete chunks - you can copy them to a new world file instead. Grab those beautiful mountains from your 1.20 world, export them, and import them into a creative-mode building project. Or archive chunks before you reset them, keeping the original data safe. Batch editing is there too. Found a chunk you want to tweak? Change it directly without reloading the whole world. The interface shows you what you're about to modify before you commit to it, which is genuinely useful given the irreversibility of the tool. Gotchas and Things to Know First: always make a full backup of your world folder before opening it in mcaselector. Seriously. I know I mentioned this earlier, but it bears repeating. There's no recovery inside the app. Second, the tool updates regularly to support new Minecraft versions, but those updates don't happen instantly. If you're playing on the bleeding edge of snapshot versions, mcaselector might not recognize your world format yet. The maintainer is active and usually catches these within a few releases, but there can be a lag - actually, version 2.7 just added support for Minecraft's new world folder structure (dimensions/minecraft/) from 1.21+, so that's worth knowing if you're on a recent build. Third point: chunk deletion in Minecraft isn't instant from a gameplay perspective. When you delete a chunk, you're telling Minecraft "regenerate this terrain next time it loads." If that chunk had player-placed blocks or mobs, they vanish without warning. The chunks surrounding the deleted ones remain untouched, so you might get some weird seams or terrain cliffs at the boundaries. Most of the time it blends naturally, but not always. Also worth mentioning: if you're using a modded world, mcaselector might not understand all the custom NBT data in your chunks. It handles vanilla Minecraft fine, but heavily modded installations can be risky. The tool will load them, but there's potential for data loss if you're not careful. Who's Using This Server admins rely on it. YouTube creators use it. Players like adderall_abuser, ironmouse, and joakim2tusen have used similar tools to manage large-scale Minecraft projects. If you're running a long-term world or collaborative server, you'll run mcaselector eventually. And if you're not, you probably will the moment chunk corruption hits. Some players also use it for creative world setup. You want a blank canvas with just one specific biome? Select those chunks, export them, start a new world, and import them. Or grab specific terrain features from different worlds and stitch them together. The possibilities are there if you're willing to think outside the typical "load world, play survival" flow. Alternatives (Not Many) Honestly, there's not much competition here. WorldEdit mods exist, but those require Fabric or Forge, modify your game, and work from inside Minecraft - mcaselector works standalone and doesn't touch your game installation. For pure chunk-level manipulation of vanilla worlds, mcaselector is pretty much it. Some players use NBT editors for ultra-precise work, but that's a completely different (and much more fragile) workflow. If you're running a server, plugins like VoxelSniper exist for in-game world editing, but again, those require server mods. mcaselector is unique in being a standalone tool that understands the raw world format without any server component. There are also cloud-based world editors that let you upload your world and edit it in a browser, but those come with privacy questions and aren't always free. mcaselector does everything locally on your machine, no upload required. 🔗 GitHub: Querz/mcaselector - MIT, ★4404 Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog ---