# 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 Map Making Community: Best New Tools in 2026
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-map-tools-community
Published: 2026-04-27
Author: ice
Minecraft map making in 2026 is backed by a powerful set of tools that didn't exist a few years ago. Structure blocks, world editors, text generators, and community collaboration platforms have made custom map creation faster and more accessible than ever. Whether you're building a small adventure map or a massive survival world, there's a tool for nearly every part of the process.The Community Has Never Been More ResourcefulThe shift happened gradually. Map makers started sharing techniques on Reddit, Discord servers popped up dedicated to specific building styles, and suddenly people realized they weren't alone in wanting better tools. This collaborative energy pushed developers, both independent and official, to fill gaps. Over on Reddit, there's this beautiful example of the community coming together when a father posted asking for help finding his daughter's lost animal sanctuary map. Hundreds of players showed up with suggestions, techniques, and encouragement. That kind of energy is what drives the tools we've today.What's wild is how much momentum has built since 2025.Structure Blocks Got Serious UpgradesIf you haven't messed with structure blocks much, Minecraft 26.1.2 actually made them worth your time. The interface got cleaned up. They're no longer this cryptic menu that feels like you're piloting a submarine. Now they handle larger areas more smoothly, and the save/load system is less janky overall. But here's the real big deal for map makers: the undo system actually works. Before, if you loaded a structure and it placed wrong, you'd manually dismantle blocks. Now you can just hit undo and try again. Sounds small, but it saves hours when you're iterating on a design.Combining structure blocks with something like the Minecraft Text Generator opens up possibilities that used to require command block wizardry. You can generate custom text, place it as a structure, and use it to label sections of your map, create signage, or build visual narratives. The tool generates the exact coordinates and commands you need, so you're not guessing in-game.World Editors Have Matured FastThird-party world editors have evolved from clunky, crash-prone programs into surprisingly stable tools. WorldEdit (if you're working on a server) and MCEdit-style tools now handle massive terraforming operations without melting your CPU. Some can batch-process terrain, copy entire biomes, and apply filters that would take weeks to sculpt manually. MCEdit variants still dominate for pure map creation. They let you load a world, edit sections, and export cleanly.WorldEdit plugins are essential if you're building on a multiplayer server. The command syntax is intimidating at first, but once you learn brush commands and selection tools, you're unstoppable.Terrain generation tools now use noise algorithms that feel almost as good as Minecraft's native generation. Some builders use these to pre-sculpt terrain, then load it into Minecraft for finishing touches.The real shift is that these tools no longer feel hacky. They're stable. They're documented. Developers actually maintain them.Custom Skins and Visual IdentityIf your map has NPCs or custom characters, you probably care about how they look. This is where the Minecraft Skin Creator comes in handy. You can build custom character designs without needing to be an artist. The tool gives you templates and intuitive controls so you're not wrestling with sprite sheets. For map makers, this means you can quickly create distinct-looking characters for quests, bosses, or story sequences. Consistency matters, and having a straightforward way to generate skins that fit your map's visual style keeps everything cohesive.Building diverse NPCs takes seconds instead of hours.Collaboration Platforms Flipped the ScriptMap making used to be solitary. You'd spend weeks building, then dump your world file hoping people played it. Now there are platforms where map makers share works-in-progress, get feedback, and collaborate on massive projects in real time. Servers dedicated to building communities let multiple creators work on the same world. Git-style version control for Minecraft worlds exists (yes, really), so you can revert mistakes, branch off ideas, and merge contributions. A few community platforms have popped up that handle the technical side, so you don't have to manually manage file swaps on Discord.The collaborative aspect has genuinely changed how maps get made. What used to be one person's solo vision now often becomes a team effort.What's Actually Worth Your Time Right NowIf you're just starting with map making, you don't need all of these. Start with structure blocks in vanilla Minecraft and the text generator to experiment with layouts. Learn how commands work. Build something small.If you're running a multiplayer server, WorldEdit is non-negotiable. It cuts build time by months. If you're making a narrative map with custom characters, the skin creator saves you from art tutorials and sprite editing.The best tool is the one you'll actually use. Pick something, dive in, and skip the analysis paralysis.
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### Build Realistic Flying Machines with Create Aeronautics
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/create-aeronautics-minecraft
Published: 2026-04-27
Author: ice
furukola/Create-Aeronautics-Minecraft-Mod-ALL-Versions Create Aeronautics is an advanced aviation expansion for the Create Mod. It introduces real-world physics and aerodynamics to Minecraft. Build functional airships and planes with realistic lift and mechanical integration. Experience the ultimate engineering challenge in the skies of 2026. Want to actually fly in Minecraft? Not with elytra or creative mode, but by engineering a proper aircraft with real physics underneath? Create Aeronautics lets you build functional airships and planes where lift, drag, and thrust actually matter. It's the mod you didn't know you needed if you've ever stared at the sky and thought, "I bet I could make that work." What Create Aeronautics Actually Does This mod adds a physics engine on top of the Create Mod that handles real-world aerodynamics. Your planes don't magically hover (or they do, but only if you engineer them right). You're building vessels with actual weight, balance points, and lift calculations. Wings generate lift based on airspeed and angle of attack. Propellers create thrust. The center of mass matters because it actually affects whether your creation crashes immediately or soars gracefully. It's not just flying though. You're still working within Create's mechanical systems. You need to power your aircraft, route mechanical energy to your propellers, balance thrust across multiple engines. Your first successful flight will feel earned because, honestly, it's. When You'd Actually Use This Mod Picture this: you've spent three months building a massive floating city. Now what? Teleport between platforms? Boring. With Create Aeronautics, you build an airship to navigate between districts. Real exploration. Real engineering problems to solve. Or maybe you want to create a functional airline system across your server. Different aircraft for cargo versus passengers. Designated flight lanes. Actual transportation instead of instant travel. One server I've seen built an airport with hangars, fuel stations, and a control tower (which... doesn't do anything mechanically, but looks incredible). You could also just go completely freeform and build things because they're cool. A biplane that actually flies. A massive cargo zeppelin. A fighter jet that turns faster than it should, technically, but who's checking? Installing Create Aeronautics First, you need the Create Mod itself. If you're running Minecraft 26.1.2 (the latest stable release), grab Create from CurseForge or Modrinth. You'll also need Architectury API and Flywheel - both are listed as dependencies. Download CreateAeronautics.zip from the releases page. Extract it into your mods folder. bash~/.minecraft/mods/CreateAeronautics.zip Launch the game and check your mods list to confirm it loaded. If your ship won't fly, the README's troubleshooting table points out the usual suspects: missing Create updates, center of mass issues, or insufficient thrust-to-weight ratio. That last one trips people up - your engines need to generate enough force to lift your design, which sounds obvious until you're standing on a 500-block airship with three tiny propellers wondering why nothing happens. One thing I'd add: if you see visual glitches with flying parts, check whether you've got conflicting shader packs. Iris and Oculus shaders work fine, but mixing certain mods can cause rendering issues. Key Features Worth Understanding Thrust and Propulsion - Create Aeronautics uses mechanical power to spin propellers. Your power source (rotational force from Create's systems) gets transmitted through bearings and shafts to propeller blocks. More speed equals more thrust, but there's diminishing returns. You're balancing fuel efficiency against climb rate. GitHub project card for furukola/Create-Aeronautics-Minecraft-Mod-ALL-Versions Aerodynamic Lift - Wings actually work. The faster your aircraft moves horizontally, the more upward force wings generate. This is why stubby, heavily-loaded aircraft need long runways, and sleek ones can climb steeply. It takes practice to internalize the relationship between wing size, speed, and how much weight you can carry. Control Systems - You steer using mechanical controls connected to control surfaces. Ailerons for roll, elevators for pitch, rudders for yaw. It's absolutely not intuitive if you've only flown with elytra (where you just... aim). You need to think like a pilot. Dive too steep and you can't pull up because you don't have enough speed for the wings to generate lift. Weight and Balance - Every single block has mass. Your cargo, your engines, your fuel tank - it all matters for whether this thing stays in the air. The center of mass needs to be roughly under your center of lift, or you'll spin uncontrollably. Yes, I learned this the hard way. Twice. Realistic Wind - If the mod has wind mechanics (some versions do, some don't depending on your installation), crosswinds will push your aircraft sideways. Fun if you're prepared for it. Disastrous if you're not. Common Gotchas and What Actually Fixes Them Your ship crashes immediately. Check two things: is the center of mass actually below the center of lift? Most common failure. Second, do you've enough thrust? A 50-ton airship with 200 newtons of propulsive force isn't going anywhere. The mod won't load at all. Dependency issue. You're missing Architectury API, or you've Create version 0.5.0 when you need 0.5.1+. Version compatibility is the boring answer to 90% of mod problems. Everything renders as purple and black. Shader conflict. Disable resource packs or shader packs until you find which one breaks it. Flight controls feel sluggish. This is usually because you need to bind flight-specific controls in the Keybinds menu. Default controls might not be comfortable for flying. Similar Projects Worth Considering If Create Aeronautics feels too demanding or you want something more arcade-like, Immersive Aircraft is simpler - no physics simulation, just straightforward plane building. It's fun but less rewarding once you understand real aerodynamics. Alternatively, if you want to focus purely on aesthetic flying contraptions without worrying about whether they're aerodynamically plausible, Create's basic contraptions work fine. You can use Create alone to build moving structures that fly by pure mechanical creativity. For servers, you might also want to pair this with a custom spawn system or a server properties customization tool. If you're setting up a public server with flight zones, you'll need clear rules about where people can and can't fly. Check out the Server Properties Generator to set spawn points and flight restrictions, or use the Minecraft MOTD Creator to announce your flight server's rules to joining players. Is It Worth Your Time? If you enjoy solving engineering problems and don't mind a learning curve, absolutely. If you want instant gratification and pure flying freedom, maybe not. This mod rewards patience and experimentation. Your twentieth aircraft will fly beautifully because you finally understand the balance between weight, wing surface area, and thrust. The community around Create Aeronautics is small but active. You'll find people sharing designs, troubleshooting weird physics bugs, and sometimes just showing off absurdly over-engineered aircraft. That's where the real fun starts. 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
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### Endstone: Paper Server Power Now for Bedrock
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/endstone-bedrock-server-setup
Published: 2026-04-27
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project endstone (EndstoneMC/endstone) High-performance Minecraft Bedrock server software with native C++ and Python plugin API Star on GitHub ↗ pache-2.0 Ever wanted to run a Bedrock server with the customization power of Java Edition's Paper? Endstone fills that gap, giving you plugin support and deep server control while keeping vanilla compatibility intact. What Endstone Actually Does Let's be honest: vanilla Bedrock servers are limited. You can't cancel events, control packets, or modify core gameplay the way you can with Paper or Spigot. Endstone changes that by sitting between you and Bedrock itself, intercept events, and offering a full plugin API. It's not an addon system or a script engine. It's a proper server wrapper with the architectural power Java players have had for years. The cool part? It's genuinely a drop-in replacement. Your world files, your configs, your existing Bedrock setup - they all work. You don't need to migrate anything. Just install Endstone, point it at your world, and start loading plugins. The underlying Bedrock server runs unchanged underneath, so vanilla features stay intact and reliable. Under the hood, this is C++ doing the heavy lifting. The project's got 623 GitHub stars and active development (latest version supports Bedrock 1.26.12). That plugin API itself leans on design patterns familiar to Bukkit developers - if you've written Paper plugins before, the mental model will click immediately. Why You'd Actually Use This The obvious case: you're running a Bedrock server and want to add custom commands, permissions systems, or gameplay mechanics without coding your own addon from scratch. Endstone handles the infrastructure - events, scoreboards, forms, inventory access, player data - so you can focus on logic. Concrete examples. Say you want a leveling system where players gain XP and unlock commands. In vanilla Bedrock, you're fighting against addon limitations. In Endstone, you write an event handler that listens for player damage, calculates XP, updates a scoreboard, and grants permissions dynamically. A few dozen lines of Python and you're done. You could implement a full economy system, custom combat mechanics, dungeon events, or ranked PvP matchmaking. Another angle: cross-server connectivity. You're running Bedrock but you want players to join from Java Edition servers via proxy tools. Endstone's packet control lets you intercept and modify join sequences, cosmetics, and other cross-version friction. It's not smooth out of the box, but it's possible in ways pure vanilla Bedrock isn't. Windows or Linux. Docker support exists. Python 3.10+ on Windows 10+ or Ubuntu 22.04+ / Debian 12+. That's flexible enough for most hosting setups. And if you need C++ performance for a critical plugin, the API supports that too. Getting Started Installation is three commands: bashpip install endstone endstone That's it. Python package manager pulls the release binary (Windows or Linux depending on your platform), and running `endstone` starts the server in your current directory. It'll generate a server config and a `plugins` folder. For your first plugin, create a Python file in that folder. Here's the bare minimum: pythonfrom endstone.plugin import Plugin from endstone.event import event_handler, PlayerJoinEvent class MyPlugin(Plugin): api_version = "0.10" def on_enable(self): self.logger.info("MyPlugin enabled!") self.register_events(self) @event_handler def on_player_join(self, event: PlayerJoinEvent): event.player.send_message(f"Welcome, {event.player.name}!") Drop it in `plugins/`, restart the server, and you'll see "MyPlugin enabled!" in the logs. Players joining get a welcome message. That's the entire feedback loop. The project provides templates for both Python and C++ if you want a scaffolded structure. But honestly, the bare plugin example above is small enough that you can copy it and start experimenting. What Makes It Powerful The API surface is substantial. We're talking 60+ events covering players joining, breaking blocks, taking damage, opening inventories, chatting, and more. Commands work with Bedrock's built-in command parsing (no custom string parsing required). You get scoreboards, forms (the interactive UI system), permissions, inventories, and access to player metadata and world data. Packet control is where Endstone breaks away from other solutions. You can listen to low-level network packets before the server processes them. That opens doors to anti-cheat, cross-version compatibility hacks, and fine-grained event cancellation. Modify a packet mid-flight and the change propagates through normally. Stay compatible with the latest Bedrock automatically? Design philosophy favors keeping up with Minecraft's monthly releases instead of playing catch-up. The v0.11.3 release added BlockType registry support and fixed several packet serialization bugs that were causing disconnects. That's the pace you're looking at - quick iterations keeping the API current. Things That Catch People Python plugins are convenient but slower than C++. If you're building something that runs on every tick for thousands of players, C++ is your answer. But for events that fire occasionally (player join, chat, custom commands), Python is fast enough. Worlds created in pure Bedrock will work, but if you have existing realm backups or world-specific data outside the level folder (like realm backup metadata), you may need to migrate manually. Endstone handles the world format natively - it's just the surrounding infrastructure that sometimes needs adjustment. Also, know that you're running a Bedrock server, not Java. That matters for plugin availability. Many popular Java plugins (Essentials, Vault, fancy chat formatting libraries) have no Bedrock equivalents. You'll write more from scratch. The community is smaller but growing, and the official template repos give you starting points. How It Stacks Against Alternatives PocketMine and Nukkit are older Bedrock server implementations. They don't run vanilla Bedrock underneath - they reimplement the server from scratch. That's more control but more maintenance, slower updates, and sometimes subtle differences in behavior. Endstone wraps real Bedrock, so vanilla features are guaranteed. Addon scripting is official and limited on purpose. It's great for cosmetics and simple logic, but can't hook into server-level events or permissions. Endstone is the play if you need control. If you're on Java Edition, Paper (or Spigot/Bukkit) is still the gold standard and always will be. Endstone is specifically for Bedrock communities that need plugin infrastructure. Real-World Setup Notes Run it in Docker for cleaner isolation and easier updates. Run it behind a reverse proxy if you're exposing it publicly (Bedrock uses UDP, so your firewall config matters). And before deploying anything to production, test your plugins locally. Endstone's development setup is straightforward enough that you can iterate on a laptop. For hosting a public server, consider using the Free DNS tools we offer at Minecraft.How's free DNS service to manage your server domain reliably and cheaply. And if you're maintaining a whitelist, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator streamlines generating and managing your player list. Check the Discord community (linked on the GitHub repo) before you get stuck. The maintainers respond quickly, and you'll find plugin examples and deployment advice from people running live servers. Support the project endstone 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.
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### OPanel: Minecraft Server Management in 2026
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/opanel-minecraft-server-management
Published: 2026-04-27
Author: ice
opanel-mc/opanel A Minecraft server management panel for Bukkit / Spigot / Paper / Folia / Leaves / Fabric / Forge / NeoForge servers .0 If you've ever tried managing a Minecraft server from the console alone, you know the pain. Commands get buried in chat spam, player actions take forever to process, and a quick backup becomes a 10-minute console hunt. OPanel fixes that. It's a web-based admin panel that turns server management into something you can actually do from a browser, with real-time dashboards, one-click player management, and terminal access all in one place. What This Project Does OPanel is a lightweight Java plugin that sits on your Minecraft server and exposes a clean web interface for everything an admin needs to do. Run it on Bukkit, Spigot, Paper, Folia, Leaves, Fabric, Forge, or NeoForge servers, and you get instant access to a control panel right from any browser. No config wizards or overwhelming dashboards - just straightforward tools that do what you'd expect them to do. The plugin handles the backend heavy lifting while the web UI (built with React, if you're curious) stays lean and responsive. You can manage worlds, players, plugins, and logs without touching the server console ever again. Why You'd Use It There are a few different reasons this matters depending on what kind of server you're running. If you're running a vanilla or modded survival server with friends, OPanel saves you from constant server restarts just to tweak a gamerule or kick someone AFK. The gamerules editor alone is worth it - toggle difficulty, PvP, mob spawning, whatever, without a single slash command. And the saves manager means you can upload new world downloads or manage backups without FTP access or command-line file editing. For server networks or public servers, the player management suite becomes crucial. Ban someone, whitelist new players, change permissions, send kick messages - all from the browser. The built-in terminal lets you execute commands without giving people direct console access, which is a genuine security win. You can also view inventory contents for suspected rule-breakers, which is genuinely useful for catching contraband or stolen items in survival. And if you run a server farm or want to show real-time status on a website, there's an Open API feature that broadcasts your server's current player count, online status, and other stats. Small detail, but it's the difference between a professional server presence and a static webpage that hasn't been updated in three years. How to Install Installing OPanel is straightforward if you know where to drop a plugin jar. Head to the releases page and download the build that matches your server version. Recent versions support anything from 1.16.1 up to 1.21.9, with separate builds for each major release. Drop the jar into your server's plugins folder: bashcp opanel-bukkit-1.21-build-1.2.1.jar /path/to/server/plugins/ Restart the server, and OPanel will generate its config files and set up a default user. The default port is usually 8080, so you'd access it at http://your-server-ip:8080. Change the port or enable HTTPS in the config if you're exposing this to the internet (you should be). If you're on an older version like 1.19.4 or 1.20, there's a separate build for that too. Just match the jar filename to your server's version number and you're done. Key Features and How They Work Dashboard and Real-Time MonitoringThe first thing you see is a dashboard that pulls together your server's vital signs: TPS, player count, RAM usage, chunk loading, all live. It's genuinely useful for spotting when something's tanking performance before players start complaining about lag. The layout is clean enough that you're not squinting at a wall of numbers. Player Management SuiteThis is where OPanel shines for multiplayer. You get a full player list with the ability to kick, ban, or change permissions without typing. There's also a separate banned players list and whitelist manager, so you can control access without needing external plugins. The NBT viewer for inventories is particularly handy - catch someone with enchanted netherite they shouldn't have, and you can see exactly what they're carrying. Plugin and Mod ManagementEnable or disable plugins and mods without restarting. Well, some mods don't reload cleanly, so YMMV on the mod side, but the plugin system is solid. You get detailed info about each plugin too - version, author, description - all pulled from the jar metadata. Beats clicking through your mods folder wondering what everything does. Server TerminalExecute commands directly from the web panel. There's a reason this matters: you can give people dashboard access without giving them console access. A trusted moderator can kick players or restart the server without being able to type random commands into the console. The command history is logged too, which helps with accountability. Saves and BackupsUpload, download, or delete world saves through the browser. Useful for rotating between seasonal worlds or making manual backups before major updates. You can also enable/disable individual saves without moving files around, which is a small thing that saves actual time. Practical Setup Tips A couple things to know before you go live with this. Secure your panel. If you're accessing it from the internet, use a reverse proxy with SSL (Nginx, Cloudflare, whatever). The default setup is fine for local networks, but leaving an admin panel exposed over HTTP is asking for trouble. Also, change the default password in the config immediately after first startup. Be aware that OPanel runs on the same JVM as your server, so it uses some of your server's RAM. Nothing dramatic, but if you're on a tight memory budget, check your server startup logs to see what the impact is. The plugin system for command execution is solid, but understand that you're still limited by what the server actually supports. Some admins expect to do things through the panel that only work with specific third-party plugins or mods. OPanel itself won't add those capabilities - it just makes them easier to access. If you're running a network with multiple servers, you'd need to install OPanel on each one separately right now. There's no built-in multi-server dashboard, so keep that in mind when planning your setup. Alternatives and How OPanel Compares There are other server management panels out there. Pterodactyl is popular for hosting providers and large networks, but it's overkill for a single server and requires a separate host running the panel daemon. Crafty Controller is lighter and self-hosted, which is closer to OPanel's philosophy, but OPanel installs as a plugin, meaning zero extra infrastructure. For vanilla-only servers, some admins just use Fabric server-side mods or Bukkit plugins that handle specific tasks. You'll spend less time on setup, but you'll also spend more time at the console. OPanel's value proposition is that it pulls everything together in one place. If you need to check your server settings and build a custom server.properties file, the Server Properties Generator pairs well with OPanel's gamerules editor - one tool for static properties, OPanel for runtime changes. Similarly, if you're managing a Nether farm or planning cross-dimensional builds, having the Nether Portal Calculator open in a separate tab beats trying to do the math in your head while the server's running. Worth Your Time? OPanel is genuinely solid for anyone running a small to medium Minecraft server. The 243 GitHub stars suggest a stable project with actual adoption, and the recent 1.2.1 release shows active maintenance. MPL-2.0 licensed, so it's open-source and you can audit the code if you want. It's not flashy, and it won't solve every admin headache, but it takes the most repetitive parts of server management and makes them genuinely frictionless. If you're tired of typing commands into console, it's worth 10 minutes to set up. 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
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### Making Mobs Matter: How LevelledMobs Transforms Your Minecraft Server
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/levelledmobs-minecraft-plugin-guide
Published: 2026-04-27
Author: ice
"Level-up mobs on your Spigot/Paper server, RPG-style!" ArcanePlugins/LevelledMobs · github.com .0 Want mobs that actually pose a real threat at any point in your server's lifecycle? LevelledMobs scales mob difficulty based on location, time played, or custom rules, so your server never feels too easy or impossibly hard. It's the plugin that makes progression matter. What This Plugin Actually Does LevelledMobs lets you scale mob difficulty across your Spigot or Paper server. Mobs gain levels, health, damage, and loot based on whatever rules you set. A zombie near a player with full diamond gear plays entirely different from one near a fresh spawn. The plugin isn't just slapping bigger numbers on mobs and calling it a day. It's genuinely configurable. You can tie mob levels to the player's progression, server playtime, world regions, custom tags, or even nearby structure types. Want skeletons harder in dungeons and easier on grasslands? Done. Need zombie difficulty to scale per-player based on their best armor? Also done. What makes LevelledMobs stand out is how much it respects server custom. Rather than forcing one difficulty curve, it lets you define the rules. Some servers want pure progression-based scaling. Others prefer location-based difficulty zones. A few want combination systems that blend multiple factors. Why Your Server Needs Mob Leveling Vanilla Minecraft has exactly one difficulty setting. It's global, binary, and doesn't care whether your player base is day-one fresh or built up with enchanted gear. This creates a weird progression arc. Early-game survival feels right - you're scared of creepers, caves are dangerous, night is genuinely threatening. But by week two, zombies are mosquitoes. By month two, you're speedrunning dungeons in full netherite with enchantments. Some servers just accept this and adjust via gameplay loops (farther out means harder terrain, more dangerous caves, custom mobs). Other servers crumble because new players can't survive and veteran players are bored. LevelledMobs fixes the fundamental problem: combat difficulty that matches your player base's actual power level. New players get reasonable early challenges. Veteran players get enemies worth their time. Everyone stays engaged longer. You'll notice players actually use armor and potions again instead of running at every mob with naked fists and no shield. Installation and Setup Setting up LevelledMobs is straightforward if you've worked with Spigot plugins before. Grab the latest JAR from the HangarMC repository or SpigotMC. Drop it into your plugins/ folder and restart your server. bash# Stop your server first./stop.sh # Copy the JAR to plugins folder cp LevelledMobs-4.5.2.b146.jar plugins/ # Start the server./start.sh On first launch, LevelledMobs generates its config folder at plugins/LevelledMobs/. The default settings are safe - mobs scale based on average player level, which works for most servers. If you want to customize (and you probably do), edit config.yml in that folder. YAML syntax matters, so indentation is critical. After making changes, reload without restarting: bash/lm reload The official wiki documentation is detailed. You'll want it handy for setting up custom rules beyond defaults. Key Features That Stand Out Per-Mob Customization Every mob type gets its own rules. Creepers can scale differently than endermen, which scale differently than custom variants. Define health scaling, damage multipliers, and loot tables per species. Location-Based Difficulty Zones Want a dangerous mining depth? Set harder scaling below Y-level 0. Custom dungeons? Tag chunks and apply different rules. Forest biome easier than a nether fortress? Absolutely. Custom Attribute Modifiers Version 4.5.2 and later add attribute modifiers beyond basic damage and health. Scale mob speed, knockback resistance, and attack cooldown. A boss-level creeper actually feels dangerous when scaled properly. Mob Groups for Complex Rules Group mobs by tag, biome, or custom criteria. Apply rules to "all flying mobs" or "all undead mobs" as a single set. Changes to the group apply instantly without restarting. Equipment and Loot Progression Scaled mobs wear progressively better gear as their level increases. A level-20 zombie shows up in iron armor with an iron sword. Loot scales too, so players get rewarded for fighting harder mobs. Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Scaling mob difficulty too aggressively kills new player retention. Jumping from level 1 to level 50 over two weeks feels unfair, not earned. Test with fresh players before going live on your public server. Some mobs need special treatment. A creeper's damage scaled 5x creates real problems - one explosion can destroy your storage room. Cap damage on certain mobs or use alternative scaling rules. Read the wiki recommendations before randomizing. Loot progression matters. A level-50 mob dropping level-1 items feels completely broken. Actually configure scaling loot tables so rewards match difficulty. Players notice immediately when this is wrong. Configuration conflicts happen when multiple rules trigger on the same mob in the same location. The last rule applied wins, creating confusing behavior. Document your rule order and test overlapping scenarios. Make backups before big config changes. One syntax error or typo can turn all mobs into level 1 (or level 999) on reload. Keep copies of working configs. Finding Your Server's Balance The Minecraft Server Status Checker helps you monitor how many players are online when testing difficulty spikes. You can also use the Minecraft MOTD Creator to advertise your progression-based difficulty in your server's MOTD. Your actual balance point depends on whether you're running PvP, survival, RPG, or creative-focused gameplay. Raid servers need harsher scaling. Casual survival benefits from gentler progression. Experiment and ask players for feedback - they'll tell you if mobs feel fair. Alternatives Worth Considering CustomBosses is simpler if you only need to customize specific mobs or boss encounters. It's less flexible but easier to learn for basic use cases. Mythic Mobs is more powerful overall with custom AI, animations, and skills. But it's overkill if you just want level scaling and heavier on server performance. MobStacker solves a different problem entirely (combining mobs into stacks for performance optimization), not really the same category - but worth knowing if you're optimizing mob spawning. Most servers using multiple systems combine LevelledMobs with one of those others, not one alone. LevelledMobs handles the difficulty scaling while the others handle specialized encounters or performance. Ready to try LevelledMobs? 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 ArcanePlugins/LevelledMobs on GitHub ↗
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### bStats: Understanding Minecraft Plugin Data
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/bstats-minecraft-plugin-analytics
Published: 2026-04-27
Author: ice
Bastian/bStats bStats collects data for plugin authors. It's free and easy to use! Ever wondered what Minecraft plugins are most popular? Or what Minecraft versions most servers actually run? bStats answers these questions automatically by collecting anonymized data from plugin installations across the entire Minecraft server ecosystem. It's free, open source, and already gathering statistics from millions of servers worldwide. What bStats Actually Does At its core, bStats is a data collection platform designed specifically for Minecraft plugin developers. When you integrate a simple library into your plugin, it automatically starts reporting statistics back to bStats servers. And that data gets aggregated, visualized, and made available on public dashboards where anyone can see trends in the plugin ecosystem. The bStats project itself is open source (MIT licensed) and maintained on GitHub as a parent repository containing several submodules: the backend infrastructure that receives and stores data, the web frontend where you view charts and statistics, a data processor that transforms raw data into metrics, and libraries for both Java-based plugins and PocketMine-MP. The entire stack runs in Docker, making self-hosting possible if you need complete infrastructure control. Most plugin authors don't need to self-host anything. You simply integrate the bStats metrics library into your plugin, and your statistics automatically flow to bstats.org, where dashboards are free to view for anyone interested in ecosystem trends. What makes this interesting is that all the data is completely public. No private dashboards, no paywalls, no account gates. Why Plugin Developers Actually Use This Plugin developers are flying blind without data. You release a plugin, people download it, and then what? Are servers actually installing it? Are they upgrading to new versions? What Minecraft versions do your actual users run? bStats answers these questions with hard numbers. You get metrics like total server count (how many servers have your plugin installed), player count (how many players interact with it), Minecraft version distribution, and server software breakdown. Over time, these metrics show growth patterns, adoption curves, and whether your user base is growing or declining. The version distribution data is particularly valuable. If you see that 85 percent of your user base runs Minecraft 1.20 or newer, you can confidently deprecate support for older versions. And that frees up development time for features your actual users care about. Custom metrics let you track data specific to your plugin's functionality. An economy plugin might track total currency in circulation. A dungeon plugin might track which dungeons are most visited. A minigames plugin might track which games are most popular. You control the metrics that matter to your plugin. And here's what many developers miss: bStats tracks plugin dependencies. You can see which libraries are genuinely critical to the Minecraft ecosystem and which are niche. This data informs decisions about which dependencies to take on. Privacy, Security, and Opting Out All data is aggregated and completely anonymous. You cannot identify individual servers. A plugin installed on just three servers shows aggregate trends, not raw server data. Server owners can disable bStats by setting a single config option in the plugin's configuration file. Collection stops immediately with no other impact on plugin functionality. Data transmission happens asynchronously in the background roughly once every 30 minutes using minimal bandwidth. Technically, bStats is open source with publicly visible source code on GitHub. You can inspect exactly what gets collected and how it's processed. No black boxes. Getting Started with bStats The experience depends entirely on what you're doing. If you're a server owner running plugins, you probably don't need to do anything. Modern plugins that support bStats handle integration automatically in the background. Zero configuration required. If you ever want to disable it, you can usually just add one line to a plugin's config file. You can browse public bStats dashboards right now without any account. Visit bstats.org, search for any popular plugin, and you'll see real-time statistics about adoption, Minecraft versions, and custom metrics. If you're a plugin developer, adding bStats is intentionally simple. For Java plugins, you add a Maven or Gradle dependency to your build configuration, then add a few lines of code to your plugin's startup method. bStats maintains separate libraries for different server platforms (Paper, Spigot, Bukkit, Bungeecord), so you pick the right one for your target. Here's what basic Java integration looks like: javapublic void onEnable() { //... other plugin initialization code... int pluginId = 12345; // Replace with your actual bStats ID new Metrics(this, pluginId); } Once deployed, bStats automatically starts collecting and reporting metrics. Advanced setups let you register custom charts, but the basic integration requires almost no code. PocketMine-MP developers have a separate PHP-based metrics library that works the same way. What Data Does bStats Actually Track? Server count is the most basic metric: how many active servers have your plugin. Paired over time, you see whether your plugin is growing or declining. Players count tracks how many players across all servers interact with your plugin. A popular plugin on a 1,000-player server counts as 1,000 players, while the same plugin on a 10-player server counts as 10. Together with server count, this tells the full adoption story. Minecraft version tracking shows exactly which versions your user base runs. Over a few weeks you see distribution patterns: maybe 60 percent run 1.20.4, 30 percent run 1.21, and 10 percent run older versions. And this directly informs compatibility decisions. Server software tracking shows adoption of different platforms. Is your ecosystem mostly Paper, Spigot, or a mix? bStats shows you exactly what your user base uses. Custom metrics are completely up to the plugin author. A PvP plugin might track player kills and deaths. A survival game might track games played and average duration. You only report metrics relevant to your plugin's functionality. All of this data is aggregated and displayed publicly. Anyone curious about Minecraft plugin trends can browse and explore. Common Questions and Gotchas Does this slow down my server? No. bStats operates asynchronously on a separate thread. Data transmission happens roughly every 30 minutes and is just a few kilobytes. Completely unnoticeable on modern connections. Can server owners disable it? Yes, through the plugin's config file. So it stops immediately with zero other impact. What if the bStats service goes down? Your plugin continues running normally. bStats is optional infrastructure, not critical to functionality. One important caveat: bStats data represents a sample of the ecosystem, not the entire picture. Not every plugin integrates bStats, so version distribution data shows servers running bStats-enabled plugins, which might not be identical to all Minecraft servers. That said, for popular plugins the sample is pretty representative. There's usually a few hours lag between when servers report data and when it appears on dashboards. Alternatives and Where bStats Fits bStats has no real competitor in the Minecraft plugin analytics space. Some plugins maintain proprietary telemetry, but that requires significant infrastructure work. Other Minecraft tools track different data entirely (block changes, player actions, economy transactions). If you're trying to understand your server's performance generally, tools like the Minecraft Server Status Checker and the Minecraft Server List help you benchmark against other servers. But for genuine insights into plugin adoption and ecosystem-wide trends, bStats is the only real option. Could you run your own analytics? Sure. bStats is open source and can be self-hosted. But self-hosting adds complexity, and most developers find the public service meets their needs perfectly. bStats exists in that perfect sweet spot of being genuinely useful, completely free, and low-friction. Plugin developers get actionable data without maintaining infrastructure. The entire plugin ecosystem moves smarter and faster because developers make data-driven decisions. Server owners benefit from better-maintained plugins. It's infrastructure that's so well-designed it becomes invisible. Support the project bStats 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.
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### Building Your Own Minecraft Adventure Map: A Complete Guide
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-adventure-map-complete-guide
Published: 2026-04-27
Author: ice
Adventure maps are custom Minecraft worlds designed to guide players through a curated experience, complete with quests, puzzles, and storytelling. Unlike survival mode where players make their own fun, adventure maps are your chance to craft a specific journey with challenges, rewards, and narrative structure. Making one requires planning, building skill, and understanding game mechanics - but the result is genuinely worth the effort. Understanding Adventure Map Basics An adventure map isn't just a pretty build. It's a complete experience you're designing for other players to enjoy. Think of it like directing a video game: you're setting up scenarios, managing pacing, and controlling what players encounter and when. The key difference between a good adventure map and a forgettable one? Intention. Every block placement, every redstone circuit, every item you place should serve the experience. Decorative buildings are fine, but they work best when they tell the story or hint at what comes next. Most adventure maps fall into these categories: parkour challenges, puzzle dungeons, quest narratives, survival challenges, or hybrid mixes of all four. Your first map doesn't need to be huge or overly complex. A small, well-executed puzzle dungeon beats a massive world with 50% empty space. What You'll Actually Need Surprisingly little. Minecraft 26.1.2 (the current Java Edition release) has everything built in. You don't need mods, plugins, or external tools unless you want advanced features like custom NPCs or complex economy systems. But that said, a few things make the process smoother: WorldEdit for copy-pasting structures and clearing large areas A schematic tool like MCEdit or Litematica for saving and importing pre-built sections NBTExplorer if you need to edit map item data or hidden values Your own patience and a working understanding of redstone basics Honestly? You can build a solid adventure map with just vanilla creative mode and knowledge of command blocks. The extra tools just speed things up. Planning Your Adventure Map This step separates the "wow, that's cool" maps from the "wait, what am I supposed to do here?" maps. Spend actual time planning before you place a single block. How to Make a Portal in Minecraft: A Comprehensive Guide Start by defining the core experience. Is this a 15-minute puzzle, or a two-hour story-driven quest? Who's the intended player? (Speedrunners optimizing for time, families playing together, experienced builders looking for a challenge?) The answers shape every decision you make. Write down the progression flow. Level 1 teaches mechanics. Level 2 builds on them. Level 3 combines everything into a climactic challenge. This sounds basic, but you'd be surprised how many maps jump between difficulty levels randomly. Sketching Your World Layout Grab paper or a simple digital mockup tool and sketch the layout. Where does the player spawn? Where's the first puzzle? The final boss room? Mark safe zones, dangerous sections, treasure rooms, and spawn points. This doesn't need to be artistic - it's just a map for you. Think about pacing and visuals. If someone travels through the same dark corridor for five minutes, they'll get bored. Mix environments: dark underground, bright outdoor areas, cramped spaces, open vistas. Contrast keeps players engaged. Consider using a central hub area where players can rest, access hints, or choose between different challenge paths. This gives players agency (which they love) and lets you control difficulty progression. Building the World and Structures Now the fun part: actual construction. This is where most of the time goes, but it's also where the magic happens. how to make a chickney farm in minecraft Start with terrain. Flat maps are boring. Use World Painter or terrain generation tools to create interesting landscapes, or manually sculpt terrain using commands like WorldEdit's brush tools. Varied elevation makes exploration feel less linear. Build landmark structures that guide players without obvious signs. A distant tower hints at the next area. A broken bridge suggests the player needs to find an alternate route. These environmental clues are better than floating text. Decoration That Tells a Story Every structure should feel intentional. A ruined castle implies danger or a past civilization. A cozy village suggests safety, at least initially. Scattered bones hint at previous adventurers who didn't make it. If you're not confident in building aesthetically, study builds on the Minecraft Block Search tool to understand which blocks work well together. Mixing texture types (smooth, rough, wood, stone) creates visual interest. Avoid using only one block type - that's the quickest way to make something look amateurish. You can also use custom textures and resource packs (which players can download separately) to completely change the visual feel of your map. A moody adventure plays differently with dark, muted colors than bright, vibrant ones. Designing Quests and Gameplay Mechanics This is where adventure maps stop being just pretty builds and become actual games. Command blocks are your tool here. They're honestly not as scary as they look. A simple setup: player enters an area, pressure plate triggers, command block runs `/say "You need a key to open this door"`. More complex setups can track inventory, teleport players, spawn mobs, or modify the world dynamically. If writing command syntax feels daunting, there are generators online that create the commands for you. You describe what you want in plain language, and the tool spits out the command block setup. Quest Types That Work Well Fetch quests ("bring me three diamonds") are simple but feel boring fast. Combat challenges ("defeat the mobs in this arena") are straightforward to design. Puzzle rooms ("arrange the colored blocks in the correct pattern") let players feel clever. The best adventure maps mix all three. A player solves a puzzle to unlock a treasure room, fights a mini-boss to earn a key, then uses that key to progress. Each challenge type breaks up the pacing. Item-based progression is powerful. If players need a wrench to open a door, and that wrench only appears after defeating the engineer mob, suddenly the map has a clear story. Use custom items (same block, renamed and modified) to create keys, weapons, or story props. Consider how you'll handle respawns and checkpoints. Should players restart from the beginning if they die, or respawn at the latest checkpoint? Casual players prefer checkpoints. Speedrunners love the extra challenge of a single-life run. Adding Polish and Testing The difference between an okay map and a great one is polish. This is where patience pays off. Test relentlessly. Play through your own map multiple times. Invite friends to test it (without spoiling the solutions). Watch how they interact with it. Do they miss obvious paths? Do puzzles take way longer than you expected? Do command blocks occasionally fail mysteriously? Fix the little things. If a jump is one block too wide, most players will rage quit. If a mob spawner isn't damaging players fast enough, the difficulty feels off. If text is hard to read, players will get frustrated. These details matter more than you think. Create a clear spawn point with instructions. Even veteran players benefit from knowing roughly what the map is about. A sign saying "Solve five puzzles to unlock the final chamber" sets expectations. An elaborate tutorial level teaches controls without feeling like a tutorial. Optimization and File Management Adventure maps get large. Optimize performance so the game doesn't lag. Use structure blocks to save complete buildings, making it easier to regenerate sections if you mess up. Keep backup copies - I've lost hours of work to accidental deletions. Before publishing, run Minecraft in single-player on a decent computer to make sure performance holds. Test on lower-end hardware if possible. A map that's unplayable due to lag is worse than a map that's less visually impressive. Export your map as a properly formatted file that other players can load. This usually means creating a resource pack and data pack (if you used custom commands), then bundling everything into a downloadable ZIP. If you want to track player progress or have multiple players on a server, check the Minecraft Server Status Checker to confirm your server environment is stable before hosting. Nothing kills an adventure map faster than servers crashing mid-experience. Community and Iteration Share your map on communities like Reddit's r/Minecraft or map-specific forums. Get feedback and iterate. The first version probably won't be perfect (honestly, mine weren't). Version 1.1 with bug fixes and balance tweaks is totally normal. Pay attention to what players say. If multiple people got stuck in the same spot, that's a design problem worth fixing. If everyone loved a specific puzzle, that's your design strength - lean into it for future maps. Common Mistakes to Avoid Scope creep is real. You start wanting a 30-minute adventure map and end up spending three months building a 400-block-wide castle. Set a finish line and stick to it. Don't rely on obscure redstone tricks that only experts understand. Your map should be beatable by players with average Minecraft knowledge. Complexity is fine; obtuse isn't. Avoid invisible command block spam that players can't see. If something magical happens, give players a visual or audio cue so they understand the game reacted to their actions. Test on multiplayer if you're designing for servers. Command blocks behave differently with multiple players, and lag becomes a real issue. Final Thoughts Building an adventure map is genuinely satisfying. You're creating something that other players will spend hours in, remember fondly, and potentially share with their friends. That's powerful. Start small. Build one good puzzle room instead of trying to create the next massive adventure. Share it, get feedback, then build on that success. Your second map will be significantly better than your first, and your tenth will be incredible. The best adventure maps come from creators who actually cared about the player experience, not from whoever had the biggest budget or most free time. Put thought into pacing, progression, and storytelling. Make something you'd actually want to play.
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### Valence: Building Minecraft Servers with Rust
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/valence-rust-minecraft-servers
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project valence (valence-rs/valence) A Rust framework for building Minecraft servers. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 3,206 stars If you've ever wondered what it'd be like to build a Minecraft server from the ground up instead of modifying existing software, Valence gives you that chance. It's a Rust framework that treats a Minecraft server like a blank canvas, letting you write custom game logic without carrying around a ton of legacy code. What This Project Actually Does Valence is a framework for creating Minecraft: Java Edition servers entirely in Rust. Instead of extending Bukkit, Spigot, or Fabric (the usual paths), you're working with a from-scratch implementation powered by Bevy ECS, an entity-component system game engine. Think of it like this: most Minecraft server software started by copying the original game and patching plugins on top. Valence starts with nothing and you add only what you need. The project handles the Minecraft protocol layer for you - networking, authentication, encryption, compression. It doesn't dictate gameplay. You could build a parkour minigame server, a creative-building sandbox, a role-playing world, or something that barely resembles vanilla Minecraft. The framework gets out of your way and lets you define the rules. Why You'd Actually Want This Most Minecraft server creators reach for Spigot or Paper because they're familiar and have ten thousand plugins. That makes sense if you want vanilla gameplay with some tweaks. But if you're building something custom - especially minigame servers or highly unusual game modes - you're fighting an uphill battle. You're disabling vanilla mechanics, fighting with plugin conflicts, and dealing with performance compromises from features you'll never use. GitHub project card for valence-rs/valence With Valence, you skip all that friction. Since you're writing Rust directly, you get: Explicit control over what runs on your server (no bloat) Strong type safety that catches bugs at compile time instead of runtime Access to Bevy's plugin ecosystem for extending functionality Potential for extremely efficient resource usage - Valence is designed to support thousands of players simultaneously on reasonable hardware This is also a smart choice if you're experimenting with novel server architectures or want to understand the Minecraft protocol deeply. You're not learning how to work around someone else's decisions; you're learning how the protocol actually works. Getting Started with Valence You'll need Rust installed. If you don't have it, grab it from rustup.rs. Valence Rust framework logo with Minecraft server interface in background bashcurl - proto '=https' - tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh Next, create a new Cargo project: bashcargo new my_minecraft_server cd my_minecraft_server Add Valence to your Cargo.toml: toml[dependencies] valence = "0.1" bevy = { version = "0.14", default-features = false } The Valence GitHub repository includes examples that show off basic server setup. One learning curve is real though - you're not clicking toggles in a GUI. You're reading Rust and understanding how entities, chunks, and players interact in the ECS model. Plan on spending time with the documentation and examples before your first working server. Features That Actually Matter Authentication and security are built in. Valence handles the Minecraft login sequence (including Mojang's session servers if you want online mode) and encryption automatically. You don't get to accidentally skip TLS or accept invalid logins. The framework makes it hard to do the wrong thing. Valence Rust framework logo with Minecraft server interface in background The protocol abstraction is full. Chunk rendering? Handled. Block states? Covered. Entity metadata, particles, inventories, dimensions, biomes - it's all there. The project includes a Fabric mod that extracts Minecraft's data (block properties, item types, etc.) and generates Rust code from it. You're not hardcoding Minecraft's rules; you're letting the framework generate them. There's built-in support for spatial queries. Want to find all entities within a 50-block radius? The framework uses a bounding volume hierarchy to do that efficiently, not a naive search. For servers with lots of entities this matters. Player skins render correctly. Whitelistings work. Multiple worlds and dimensions are supported. If you've ever run a server, you know these aren't small features - they're foundational pain points on every platform. What You Should Know Before Diving In Valence is early in development (version 0.1.0). Breaking changes happen. Features are incomplete. You might hit gaps where the framework doesn't quite do what you need yet, forcing you to work around something or contribute back. That's the tradeoff with fresh projects - less polish, but more flexibility to shape where it goes. Valence Rust framework logo with Minecraft server interface in background The Rust learning curve matters. If you've never written Rust, Valence is a steep entry point. The compiler is strict in ways that feel annoying until you realize it's catching entire classes of bugs. But the initial friction is real. Deployment is different from traditional Minecraft hosting. You're building a binary, not running a Java JAR on existing infrastructure. That actually simplifies things in some ways (no JVM tuning, lower memory overhead) but complicates things in others (you need to compile for your target architecture, manage Rust dependencies). Actually, here's something worth noting: if you're building a server for thousands of players, Valence's efficiency is a huge advantage. You won't necessarily need the same beefy hardware a Paper server would need. But if you're hosting 20 friends, this advantage doesn't matter. Pick the right tool for your scale. Integrating with Your Server Ecosystem If you're running a production Minecraft server, you probably use tools like server status checkers to monitor uptime and player counts. Valence can expose these metrics through standard monitoring APIs. There's also proxy support - you can sit Valence behind Velocity or Bungeecord, letting players connect through a proxy layer for smooth server-hopping. For administrative tasks like managing whitelists, you can integrate with standard tools. Many communities use whitelist creation utilities to streamline onboarding. Valence's modular design means you can build these admin features as plugins. How Valence Compares If you're debating between Valence and something like Paper, you're asking different questions. Paper is "how do I add features to vanilla Minecraft?" Valence is "what if I built a server from scratch?" They're not competitors; they're different choices for different goals. Against Velocity (a proxy), Valence isn't a replacement - it's a backend. Velocity handles routing players between servers; Valence handles individual servers. There are other Minecraft server frameworks in Rust (like Feather), but Valence's use of Bevy ECS and its focus on being a proper game engine framework (rather than just a protocol implementation) sets it apart. You're not just getting server code; you're getting a foundation for building complex game systems. Is This Worth Your Time? Valence makes sense if: You're building a custom minigame or novel game mode that fights vanilla server software You want to understand how Minecraft servers actually work You're comfortable with Rust and want to use its safety guarantees You need extreme efficiency for high player counts It doesn't make sense if you just want to run vanilla with a few plugin tweaks. Reach for Paper for that. The community around Valence is small but active. That maintainers are responsive. If you're considering this, join the Discord and see what others are building. Real projects are happening - people are shipping minigame servers on top of Valence and sharing what they learn.valence-rs/valence - MIT, ★3206 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
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### Testing Minecraft Plugins Gets Easy With run-task
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/run-task-minecraft-plugin-testing
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
jpenilla/run-task Gradle plugins adding tasks to run Minecraft server and proxy software pache-2.0 If you've built a Minecraft plugin and tested it locally, you know the dance: download the server jar, set up directories, place your plugin in plugins/, hit start, wait for initialization. Every single time. run-task eliminates that repetitive setup with a single Gradle command that handles everything automatically. What run-task Actually Does run-task is a suite of Gradle plugins that automate one of the most tedious parts of Minecraft plugin development: integration testing. Instead of manually downloading server software, configuring it, and placing your compiled plugin in the right folder, you define what version you want and run a command. The plugin handles the download, setup, and launch automatically. There are three main variants. run-paper handles Paper servers (the go-to choice for most devs), run-velocity covers Velocity proxy software, and run-waterfall covers Waterfall proxies. Each operates on the same principle: configure once in your build.gradle.kts, then use a simple task to spin up your testing environment. This might sound like a small convenience. When you're iterating on a plugin and testing dozens of times a day, the time savings compound fast. Why Plugin Developers Actually Need This Testing a Minecraft plugin is fundamentally different from testing a regular Java library. You can't just run unit tests and move on. Your code runs inside the Minecraft server, interacts with game state, manages player events, and relies on APIs that change between versions. That's integration testing territory, and there's no way around it. Without run-task? The workflow is painful. Download Paper 1.21.8, extract it, create plugins folder, build your jar, copy it over, run the server script, wait for startup, connect with a client, test your feature, shut down, change code, repeat. Do this fifty times while developing a feature and you've lost hours to pure boilerplate. Speed matters here. run-task removes that friction completely. Modify your code, run gradle runServer, and your plugin is already loaded within seconds. This is especially valuable when testing multiple Minecraft versions - switch versions in your config and re-run without manual setup. Getting Started with run-task Installation is straightforward. Add the plugin to your build.gradle.kts and specify the version you want to run: kotlinplugins { id("xyz.jpenilla.run-paper") version "3.0.2" } tasks { runServer { minecraftVersion("1.21.8") } } That's all you need. run-task automatically detects your plugin's compiled jar and includes it. If you're using shadowJar to bundle dependencies, it'll use that instead - no manual configuration. To launch: bashgradle runServer Your Paper server starts with your plugin already loaded and ready for testing. The first run takes longer while downloading everything, but subsequent runs are much faster with cached server files. For Velocity proxy testing, setup is almost identical: kotlinplugins { id("xyz.jpenilla.run-velocity") version "3.0.2" } tasks { runVelocity { velocityVersion("3.4.0") } } The plugin handles version compatibility automatically, so you can test against snapshot releases or stable versions without worrying about compatibility layers. What Makes run-task Worth Using The best feature is brutal simplicity. run-task doesn't try to be clever - it downloads the specified server software, detects your plugin jar, and runs it. Fewer moving parts means fewer things break. GitHub project card for jpenilla/run-task Automatic shadowJar detection is genuinely useful if you're bundling dependencies. Many plugins need to shade libraries for custom data formats or newer APIs. run-task respects that without extra configuration. Version switching is dead simple. Want to test on 1.20.4, 1.21.1, and the latest snapshot? Change one line and re-run. Regression testing becomes way less painful. And if you're building tools for server admins (like testing Votifier voting systems or experimenting with custom server MOTDs), having quick access to a running server is invaluable. One detail worth noting: run-task respects Gradle subproject structure. If you're organizing plugin code across multiple modules, it figures out the correct jar automatically. That's less trivial than it sounds. Common Gotchas and Things to Know First gotcha: run-task downloads server software to your.gradle cache - usually ~/.gradle on Linux/Mac, %USERPROFILE%\.gradle on Windows. If you're short on disk space or dealing with a slow connection, the first run takes a minute or two. It's worth it, but expect that initial wait. Java version matters. Paper and Waterfall generally need Java 21 or higher, while older Velocity versions might work with Java 17. If you're using a version manager like sdkman, make sure the correct version is active before running. There's also a learning curve with Gradle syntax if you're new to it. run-task uses Kotlin DSL (build.gradle.kts), which is more type-safe than Groovy but steeper for beginners. If you're still on build.gradle syntax, converting is usually straightforward. Actually, here's something that trips people up: run-task assumes you're testing a single plugin in isolation. If you're building something that requires multiple servers running simultaneously (like a proxy setup with multiple backends), you'll need to orchestrate that separately. It's not a limitation of the tool, just its design philosophy. When run-task Isn't the Right Choice run-task is excellent for plugin development. It's not a one-size-fits-all solution. If you're building a full server distribution with custom configs, startup scripts, and multiple plugins, you probably want Docker or a manual setup instead. run-task assumes you're testing a single plugin in isolation. For integration testing across multiple server software types simultaneously, you'd want more sophisticated orchestration - maybe Docker Compose or a custom test harness built into your CI/CD pipeline. Heavy testing of server administration workflows (monitoring, backups, cluster management) might be better served by a full server environment with proper persistence rather than run-task's temporary setups. Most plugin developers will find run-task covers 90% of their testing needs.jpenilla/run-task - Apache-2.0, ★341 Support the project run-task 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.
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### ChestShop-3: Build Minecraft Server Shops in Minutes
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/chestshop-3-server-shops-minecraft
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project ChestShop-3 (ChestShop-authors/ChestShop-3) ChestShop - the chest & sign shop plugin for Minecraft Servers running Bukkit/Spigot/Paper Star on GitHub ↗ .1 Sick of managing server economy by hand? ChestShop-3 lets players create shops from chests and signs, turning your server into a real marketplace. Install it once, configure Vault or Reserve, hook it to an economy plugin, and you've got a fully functional trading system that runs itself. What This Project Does At its core, ChestShop-3 is elegantly simple. A player places a chest, puts a sign above it with shop details (price, quantity, seller), and boom - instant transaction point. Other players click the sign and the trade happens automatically. The chest contents move to the buyer, the money goes to the seller. No NPCs, no command spam, no admin micromanagement. The plugin handles the boring stuff. It protects shops from theft, prevents lag explosions when shops get busy, enforces permissions, and logs transactions. It's been battle-tested across thousands of servers for years, so the architecture is genuinely solid. Version 3.12.2 (the latest release) runs on Minecraft 1.13 through recent versions, with development builds available for latest releases. The codebase is written in Java and maintained actively on GitHub by the ChestShop author community. Why You'd Actually Use This Player-run economies are what separate vanilla servers from real communities. When players trade with each other instead of relying on admin shops, they get invested. They build farm bases to supply crops, establish price wars over diamonds, form merchant guilds. So this plugin is the scaffolding that makes that social layer possible. Small survival servers especially benefit. You want players to interact without plugins becoming overhead. ChestShop does one thing and does it right. If you're running a creative or competitive server where economy matters, this is how you let players own the marketplace. And if you're setting up a new server, you might want to use our Minecraft Whitelist Creator while you're building out your server config and Minecraft MOTD Creator to make your server discoverable. Getting It Running Installation is genuinely straightforward. You'll need three things: ChestShop itself, Vault or Reserve (a permission bridge plugin), and an economy plugin that provides the currency system. Grab the.jar from the GitHub releases page: bashcd ~/minecraft-server/plugins wget https://github.com/ChestShop-authors/ChestShop-3/releases/download/3.12.2/ChestShop.jar Then install Vault from SpigotMC if you don't already have it (most servers do). Then pick an economy plugin - the project maintains a list of compatible options on their SpigotMC wiki. Restart the server. ChestShop generates its config file automatically on first load. You'll want to tweak a few settings - transaction tax rate, whether to allow shops in protected areas, which blocks count as valid shop signs - but the defaults work fine for most servers. And that's it. Players can start building shops immediately. No admin setup beyond that. Features Worth Knowing About Shop Protection. Players own their shops. Someone else can't waltz up and crack open a shop chest or modify the sign. The system respects who created the shop and prevents griefing. This matters because on public servers, trust is fragile. Partial Transaction Support. If a player wants to buy 32 diamonds but the shop only has 20, they can still complete the trade for 20 at the proportional price. Recent versions fixed some quirks with this - the 3.12.2 release patched edge cases where transactions would fail. Real quality-of-life stuff. Admin Shop Control. You can create server-run shops that never run out of stock, selling items at fixed prices. Use this to seed the economy with basic materials or create currency sinks. It's how most servers bootstrap their trading system. Translation Support. The project has crowdsourced translations in a dozen languages, including Ukrainian, Italian, German, Spanish. If your international community needs localization, it's there. Multi-Plugin Compatibility. It integrates with land claim plugins, region protection systems, and other popular server tools. It's not trying to reinvent the wheel on everything - it plays nice with existing ecosystems. What'll Probably Trip You Up First thing: you absolutely need Vault or Reserve configured properly. I've seen servers install ChestShop, forget the permission bridge, and wonder why shops don't work. No Vault, no economy connection, no transactions. Check that dependency before you blame the plugin. Second, make sure your economy plugin actually works before you introduce shops. If money is broken, shops cascade that brokenness. Test your economy in isolation first. Third, shop sign placement is specific. The sign has to be directly above a chest (or double chest). Some players try to place signs next to chests and get frustrated when nothing happens. You might want to document this when you onboard new players. Also, item names matter. Minecraft updates occasionally change internal item IDs and data values. When you update the server, ChestShop tries to auto-convert items to the new format, but going backwards (downgrading server or plugin versions) can cause issues. Always back up before major updates. What Else Is Out There ShopGUIs and similar projects exist if you want a more menu-driven experience instead of chest-and-sign shops. Some admins prefer the aesthetics and simplicity of click-to-open GUIs. QuickShop is another player-shop plugin that's actively maintained and popular on modern 1.18+ servers. It's lighter weight than ChestShop and has a different feature set. But if you want the classic chest-shop experience that just works, ChestShop-3 is still the standard. 296 stars on GitHub, thousands of servers running it, years of real-world testing behind it. That's not nothing.ChestShop-authors/ChestShop-3 - LGPL-2.1, ★296 Ready to try ChestShop-3? 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 ChestShop-authors/ChestShop-3 on GitHub ↗
---
### Mcman: Manage Your Minecraft Server Like Code in 2026
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mcman-minecraft-server-manager
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
" Powerful Minecraft Server Manager CLI. Easily install jars (server, plugins & mods) and write config files. Docker and git support included." deniz-blue/mcman · github.com .0 Tired of manually downloading plugins, hunting for the right server version, and crossing your fingers that your mod list doesn't break? Mcman treats your Minecraft server like a code repository - everything in one config file, automatic downloads, git-friendly, and surprisingly efficient. What This Project Actually Does Mcman is a command-line tool written in Rust that handles the tedious parts of running a Minecraft server. Instead of hunting links, copy-pasting JAR files, and manually editing config files, you describe what you want in a single server.toml file - your server version, plugins, mods, configurations - and mcman handles the rest. It downloads everything, verifies file integrity, and keeps things organized. The magic part? You can version control this entire setup with git. Add a plugin, update your TOML, commit it, push it. Your teammates can pull the changes and mcman will fetch everything they need. No more "wait, what version of X are we using?" confusion. (Actually, this works for managing whole networks too with a network.toml if you're running multiple servers.) Why You'd Actually Use This First, there's the obvious case: if you're running a custom server network, Mcman saves ridiculous amounts of time. I've seen server admins spend hours managing plugin versions across 5+ servers. Mcman cuts that down to a few commands. Update once, deploy everywhere. But there's a subtler reason. If you're testing different plugin combinations or experimenting with new modpack setups, Mcman lets you branch, experiment, and roll back cleanly - just like code development. Your main branch stays stable while you test features on a development branch before merging. You'll also appreciate this if you've ever wanted to share a server setup with a friend or colleague. Send them the repo, they run mcman run, and they've got your exact configuration. No more "wait, did you use CraftBukkit or Spigot?" arguments. Getting Started with Installation Getting mcman running is straightforward. On Linux and macOS, just grab the latest binary from releases: bashcurl -L https://github.com/deniz-blue/mcman/releases/download/0.4.5/mcman -o mcman chmod +x mcman./mcman - version Windows users can either grab the .exe from the releases page, or use Scoop if you've got it set up: powershellscoop bucket add minecraft https://github.com/The-Simples/scoop-minecraft scoop install mcman Linux users on Arch can install from AUR with yay -S mcman-bin or paru -S mcman-bin. Once installed, you initialize a new server: bashmcman init This walks you through creating your server.toml - pick your Minecraft version, server type (Paper, Spigot, Purpur, etc.), and you're rolling. Then mcman run starts your server, and mcman dev is the interesting one - it watches for changes and hot-reloads your server without full restarts. What Makes This Stand Out Actual config file support. Most server managers download the JAR and hope you figure out the rest. Mcman lets you manage server.properties, plugins' YAML files, and custom configs all in one place, with variable substitution. Change one setting across 10 files? You're not copy-pasting into each one. GitHub project card for deniz-blue/mcman Works with nearly every source. Modrinth, CurseForge, Hangar, Spigot, GitHub releases, Jenkins, Maven repositories - if a plugin or mod lives there, mcman can pull it. Need something custom? Just throw in a direct URL. Docker ready. Building a containerized Minecraft setup? Mcman plays nice with Docker containers. Generate a Dockerfile, use mcman inside it, ship it out. Git integration that actually works. This isn't just "oh you can version control your configs" - it's properly thought through. Worlds stay as zips in worlds/, plugins are locked to specific versions in the manifest, everything is reproducible. And if you need to fine-tune your server settings, our Server Properties Generator makes that process faster. The project sits at 304 stars on GitHub and is actively maintained. Rust performance means it's actually fast, which matters when you're managing multiple servers. Things to Watch Out For One thing that catches people: the rewrite happening on the v2 branch is substantial. If you're deploying something for a community, stick with the stable 0.4.5 release. Check the Discord (linked on the repo) for updates on v2 progress before committing to it. Config variables are powerful but require you to actually write them correctly. Typos won't always fail loudly - you'll just get weird behavior at runtime. Read the docs on variable syntax before you get frustrated. Also, if you're setting up shared servers, remember that Mcman's strength is in reproducibility - but that means everyone on the team needs to understand TOML syntax and git basics. It's not a GUI tool. One more caveat: I'd recommend using this for server management workflow, not as a complete hosting solution. Mcman handles the setup and deployment bits beautifully, but you still need your own server hardware, hosting, or custom Docker orchestration. For calculating how to properly organize your world coordinates (especially if you're working across dimensions), check our Nether Portal Calculator. Other Tools and Approaches There are other paths if Mcman doesn't fit your needs. Paper's plugin ecosystem handles some of these problems, but it's more limited in scope - no git workflow. Docker has its own learning curve but works well for container-first teams. Hosting platforms handle deployment for you, though you lose flexibility. Mcman sits in a nice middle ground: powerful enough for serious server operations, simple enough that one admin can handle it, and flexible enough to scale up. The Bottom Line Mcman isn't flashy. It's a command-line tool that makes running Minecraft servers boring in the best way possible - you spend your time building worlds and running your community, not wrestling with configuration files. If you're currently managing Minecraft servers and copying files around manually, this is worth thirty minutes of your time to evaluate. The project's on GitHub, the documentation is solid, and the Discord is active if you get stuck. 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
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### CobolCraft: Running a Minecraft Server in COBOL
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/cobolcraft-minecraft-cobol-server
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project CobolCraft (meyfa/CobolCraft) A Minecraft server written in COBOL Star on GitHub ↗ Ever wondered what it would take to build a Minecraft server from scratch in a 60-year-old programming language? CobolCraft does exactly that. It's a fully functional Minecraft server written in COBOL that supports Minecraft 1.21.4, and somehow, it actually works. What's CobolCraft Anyway? CobolCraft is what happens when someone decides to implement a Minecraft server not in Go, Rust, or Java, but in COBOL (Common Business Oriented Language). If that sounds absurd, it kind of is. But it's also genuinely impressive. This isn't a joke project either. CobolCraft implements real Minecraft server features: infinite terrain generation, multiplayer support with configurable player limits, persistent world and player data, crafting (both 2x2 and 3x3), item entities, chat, commands, fall damage, and respawning. You can connect with a standard Minecraft client and play legitimately. The project has 690 GitHub stars and is licensed under MIT, meaning you can fork it, study it, or contribute. The maintainer clearly put serious work into this, and the fact that it runs at all speaks to both their skill and COBOL's surprising capability for complex systems. Why Would Anyone Do This? This is the question everyone asks. The honest answer: because they could. But there's more to it. COBOL is often dismissed as a dinosaur language, but it's still running critical banking and government systems. It's verbose, yes, and its syntax feels alien to modern developers, but it's also incredibly stable and battle-tested. CobolCraft is a proof of concept that COBOL can handle non-trivial software challenges, even in 2026. It's a middle finger to the "COBOL is dead" crowd. For most players? This isn't a replacement for your go-to multiplayer server. It's a educational curiosity, a technical achievement, and a fascinating exploration of what's possible when you ignore conventional wisdom and just build something weird. Getting CobolCraft Running If you want to try it, you've got two paths: native Linux or Docker. Linux Setup CobolCraft targets Linux on x86_64 or arm64 architectures. You'll need: GnuCOBOL 3.1.2 or later (3.2+ is recommended for performance) make, gcc, g++, and zlib development headers curl (to download the official Minecraft server jar) Java 21 or later (to extract game data from the jar) On Debian or Ubuntu, most of this is straightforward: bashsudo apt-get install gnucobol make gcc g++ zlib1g-dev curl default-jre-headless Then clone the repository and build it: bashgit clone https://github.com/meyfa/CobolCraft.git cd CobolCraft make - jobs=$(nproc) make run The build process downloads the official Minecraft server jar, extracts block and recipe data, and compiles everything. First run creates a `server.properties` file with defaults. The server listens on localhost:25565 by default, which means you can only connect from your own machine. To make it accessible from outside (on your network, via VPN, or from a rented server), you'll need to edit the properties or adjust your network setup. Docker Route Prefer containers? Pull the pre-built image: bashdocker pull meyfa/cobolcraft:latest docker run - rm - interactive - tty \ - publish 25565:25565 \ - volume "$(pwd)/server.properties:/app/server.properties" \ - volume "$(pwd)/whitelist.json:/app/whitelist.json" \ - volume "$(pwd)/world:/app/world" \ meyfa/cobolcraft This is cleaner if you don't want to install GnuCOBOL and all its dependencies locally. The volumes let you persist configuration and world data between container runs. Configuration and Features That Work CobolCraft's `server.properties` file handles the basics. You can set the server port, world name, max players (up to 100), message of the day, and enable a whitelist if you want to restrict who joins. On the gameplay side, here's what's solid: terrain generation and chunk loading actually work. You can mine blocks, place blocks, break blocks, and they all use Minecraft's real loot tables. Crafting works in both the 2x2 inventory grid and the 3x3 crafting table. You can chat, run commands, pick up items, store them in your inventory, and interact with certain blocks like doors and trapdoors. Some blocks are fully implemented: torches, slabs, stairs, rotated logs and pillars, buttons, doors, trapdoors, beds, and signs. More complex blocks with multiple states or special interactions aren't there yet. Redstone? Nope. Pistons? Not really. Some orientation-dependent blocks partially work, but don't expect full parity with vanilla Minecraft. Physics is extremely basic. Falling damage and void damage work, and you'll respawn properly. But collision detection is simplistic, and you won't experience the kind of smooth movement mechanics you get from Java Edition. It's enough to play, but you'll notice the difference. If you want to build something interesting, you can. If you're expecting to run a survival server for 50 people mining Netherite, you'll be disappointed. But for a small group building with basic blocks and exploring a generated world? Absolutely feasible. Real Talk: The Limitations CobolCraft works, but it's not Spigot or Paper. Blocks with complex behavior require mountains of specialized COBOL code. Many interactive features are missing. Performance on massive builds hasn't been tested at scale. The project is clear about what it supports and what it doesn't, which is refreshing honesty. Also worth noting: this is built with GnuCOBOL, which compiles to C. That means it's dependent on GnuCOBOL's maturity and the underlying C compiler's performance. Version 3.2+ is recommended because earlier versions had performance issues. If you're running on an underpowered machine or planning to host 100 concurrent players, your mileage may vary. The whitelist is persistent (stored in JSON), which is nice. Configuration is straightforward. But if you find a bug in the server logic, you're reading COBOL to fix it. That's not ideal unless you actually know COBOL, which most modern developers don't. When You Might Actually Use This Genuinely? Probably not for serious gameplay. It's a novelty, but a well-executed one. Where it shines: education. If you're teaching systems programming, language design, or distributed systems, CobolCraft is a perfect case study. It shows what's possible with unusual tool choices and demonstrates that language age doesn't equal inability. It's also great for anyone learning COBOL who wants a real-world project to study. It's also just fun to say you've run a Minecraft server in COBOL. That's a conversation starter at any tech meetup. If you're building a Minecraft hub or creative world with a small group and want something unusual to host, it could work. Just manage expectations. Stick to basic building blocks, keep player counts low, and avoid trying to recreate complex redstone contraptions. And before you invest time, maybe read through the project's GitHub Issues to see what's currently broken or planned. For everything else, there's Paper, Spigot, or a cloud hosting provider running vanilla Java Edition. Getting More Out of Your Server Once you've got a CobolCraft server running and you're exploring your generated world, you might want to enhance your Minecraft experience elsewhere. The Minecraft Skin Creator on Minecraft.How lets you design custom player skins before you jump in. And if you're curious about specific blocks you're mining or placing, the Minecraft Block Search tool is a quick way to look up properties and crafting recipes. These aren't CobolCraft-specific, but they're useful tools for any Minecraft player. Bottom line: CobolCraft is a genuinely impressive technical achievement that proves COBOL isn't just a relic. It's not going to replace your favorite multiplayer server, but it's worth understanding as a proof of concept. And if you're bored with conventional Minecraft hosting options, it's a wild experiment to try. Ready to try CobolCraft? 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 meyfa/CobolCraft on GitHub ↗
---
### How to Use the Minecraft Smithing Table
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/smithing-table-netherite-upgrade
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
The smithing table is how you upgrade diamond gear to netherite, the game's most durable material. It's a simple but essential crafting station that transforms your best diamond tools into something even tougher. Here's exactly what you need to know. What Does the Smithing Table Actually Do? There are two types of smithing tables in Minecraft 26.1.2: the regular smithing table (for upgrades and tool repairs) and the netherite smithing table in the Nether. The regular one sits in your base and handles diamond-to-netherite conversions. It takes a diamond item and a netherite scrap, combines them, and spits out a netherite version with all the same enchantments you had. Why does this matter? Netherite doesn't burn in lava. It won't despawn when you die. It's also harder to break than diamond, which is the real reason you're here. The biggest detail people miss: enchantments transfer over. Your flame bow, your mending boots, your silk touch pickaxe - they all keep their magic when upgraded. How to Find or Craft Your Smithing Table You can't craft a smithing table from scratch in survival mode. Instead, you loot them from villages. Every village has a toolsmith's workplace, which contains a smithing table you can break and grab. It takes a pickaxe (any tier) and drops itself as an item. If you're playing on a server with limited villages nearby, that old crafting recipe doesn't work anymore. Actually, let me correct that: in modern versions, you find them in villages or use creative mode. The crafting recipe was removed years ago. Easiest move? Find a village. Break it from the toolsmith's area. Done. The Actual Upgrade Process: Diamond to Netherite Now for the core mechanic. Place your smithing table in your base (or keep one portable in the Nether). Open it. You'll see two input slots and one output slot. Put your diamond tool or armor in the left slot Put a netherite scrap in the right slot The upgraded netherite item appears on the right Take it and repeat That's literally it. One diamond item plus one netherite scrap equals one netherite item. The process is instant, no XP cost, no fuel needed. One caveat: the smithing table doesn't combine partial stacks or multiple items at once. You're upgrading one piece of gear at a time. If you've a full diamond set (helmet, chestplate, leggings, boots, sword, pickaxe, axe, shovel), that's eight separate upgrade operations. Where to Find Ancient Debris and Netherite Scrap This is the bottleneck. Netherite doesn't exist as an ore block. Instead, you hunt ancient debris in the Nether, smelt it into netherite scrap, then combine four scraps with four gold ingots in a crafting table to get one netherite ingot. Two ingots craft into netherite blocks, or you can use them directly in the smithing table. Ancient debris spawns between Y-level 8 and 119 in the Nether, but it's rarest around Y-level 15. The best strategy is branch mining at Y-level 15, clearing 2x1 tunnels in a grid pattern. You'll find clusters of 1-3 blocks scattered around. Expect to mine for 20-30 minutes to collect enough for a full diamond set upgrade (8 ingots needed, so 32 ancient debris blocks minimum). Take a Fortune III pickaxe if you've one - it doesn't increase ancient debris drops, but it helps with efficiency. Here's a tip: bring a water bucket and wear fire resistance gear. The Nether has lava everywhere, and ancient debris often sits next to it. Pro Tips for Efficient Upgrades Save your ancient debris runs for when you have a full diamond kit ready. Mining for single scraps is tedious. Gather enough for 8-10 ingots before heading back to your smithing table. You'll feel the progress better that way. Stock multiple smithing tables if you're in a multiplayer server. One table can only do so much, and upgrades are instantaneous, so there's no performance cost to having extras lying around. If you're hunting for ancient debris locations, use the Minecraft Block Search tool to track spawns if you're playing on a server with it available. For vanilla survival, just branch mine like normal. Netherite is permanent. Once you upgrade, you're not going back. So don't rush upgrades for PvP gear or stuff you're still testing. Prioritize your main tools: pickaxe, sword, and armor set first. Common Mistakes That Cost You Time Don't smelt ancient debris without a clear plan. If you're grinding for upgrades, stockpile the raw blocks first, then smelt in batches. Some players waste focus by smelting one at a time and forgetting what they're upgrading. Ancient debris smelting requires a furnace or blast furnace (blast furnace is faster). It yields one netherite scrap per block. You then combine four scraps with four gold ingots to make one netherite ingot. This two-step process trips people up. And here's the real one: don't lose your gear before upgrading it. A lot of players die in the Nether carrying ancient debris because they're impatient. Get home, process it, upgrade it safely, then take the netherite back out if you need it for mining more. Server Admin Quick Note If you're running a server and need to manage DNS records for your Minecraft server, check out the Free Minecraft DNS tool. It's handy for keeping your server accessible without paying extra hosting fees. Netherite upgrades are a late-game achievement. Getting a full set means you've already survived the Nether multiple times, gathered tons of ancient debris, and earned it. That's the point. There's no shortcut to netherite (except creative mode), and that's by design.
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### Epic Fight Mod: How to Add Soulslike Combat to Minecraft
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/epicfight-soulslike-minecraft-mod
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project epicfight (Antikythera-Studios/epicfight) Epic Fight - A soulslike minecraft mod, adding lots of game mechanics, features, and game changing things for you to discover in your adventures ! Star on GitHub ↗ .0 Tired of vanilla Minecraft combat feeling too simple? Epic Fight transforms every encounter into a skill-based duel with dodges, special attacks, and fluid animations that'll make you rethink how to play survival mode. What This Project Does Epic Fight is a Java mod that rewrites how Minecraft's combat system works. Instead of the vanilla click-and-wait pattern, you get dynamic fighting styles, timing-based attacks, and enemy mechanics that actually react to what you're doing. Enemies don't just stand there soaking damage anymore. They dodge. Most counter. The adapt. The mod draws inspiration from soulslike games - think Dark Souls dodge rolls and attack recovery windows - but keeps the core Minecraft experience intact. You can toggle Epic Fight's mechanics on or off if you want to fall back to vanilla combat for specific situations (mining, casual building). It's a major overhaul, but one that gives you control. Why You'd Use It If vanilla survival feels stale, this is the fix. Combat becomes the centerpiece of gameplay again instead of just an interrupt between mining sessions. Mobs become genuinely dangerous, which means resource gathering matters more, planning routes around hostile spawns becomes tactical, and defeating even basic skeletons requires actual attention. For servers, it creates natural difficulty progression without turning up a simple difficulty slider. New players get challenged, veterans get entertained. And if you're someone who loves Minecraft's combat balance but wanted just a little more depth, Epic Fight adds that without turning things into a rhythm game. Server owners often pair this with listing on a Minecraft server list to attract players looking for a more engaging experience. The added combat depth becomes a selling point. How to Install Epic Fight requires Forge (the mod loader) and works with recent Java editions. Here's the basic process: Step 1: Install ForgeHead to forgemc.net and download the Forge installer for your Minecraft version. Run it and select "Install client." This sets up the mod loading infrastructure. Step 2: Get the Mod FileDownload Epic Fight from CurseForge or Modrinth - both host the latest versions. Grab the version matching your Minecraft edition. Step 3: Place It in Your Mods FolderDrop the downloaded.jar file into your .minecraft/mods/ folder. On Windows, that's usually %appdata%\.minecraft\mods\. On Mac, ~/Library/Application Support/minecraft/mods/. On Linux, ~/.minecraft/mods/. Step 4: Launch and Check DependenciesStart the game through the Forge launcher profile. Epic Fight might ask for additional mods (dependencies) on first load. Follow the prompts and restart. This usually just means grabbing a library mod that Epic Fight needs to function. That's it. If you're not sure whether it's working, press R in-game (the default toggle key) and you'll see an indicator showing whether Epic Fight mode is active. Key Features in Action Dynamic Attack AnimationsThis is what makes Epic Fight feel different. Attacks aren't instant. When you swing, there's a wind-up, a strike, and recovery. You can't just spam-click your way to victory. Timing matters. Stamina matters. You'll notice mobs don't just ragdoll either - skeletons actually recoil from hits, creepers shuffle closer, and armored mobs block effectively. Dodging and MobilityHold Left Alt (configurable) and a direction to dodge out of harm's way. Unlike vanilla Minecraft, this actually consumes a resource (stamina) and has a cooldown, so you can't just spam invulnerability. Combat becomes about reading attack patterns and choosing when to dodge. Weapon-Based Fighting StylesDifferent weapons handle differently. Swords are fast and precise. Axes are slow but heavy-hitting. Spears have longer reach. This gives you reason to actually think about what to carry, not just grab whatever has the best damage number. Some weapons get special abilities too - charged attacks, ground pounds - depending on what you're holding. Enemy AI OverhaulVanilla mobs get new brains. Zombies don't just shuffle straight at you anymore; they dodge your attacks. Skeletons back away when you close in. Wither skeletons are legitimately threatening because they'll block and counter. This sounds simple, but it changes how you approach every fight. Health and Armor RebalancingThe mod adjusts health pools and armor effectiveness to match the new combat pacing. Fights take longer, but feel more dynamic. You're not one-shotting things anymore. That means every engagement needs strategy. Tips and Common Gotchas The biggest learning curve is just understanding the pacing. If you jump in expecting vanilla combat, you'll die to the first skeleton and think something's broken. It's not - you're just playing differently now. Take fights slow. Learn enemy patterns. Use your dodges. Stamina management trips people up. You've a stamina bar that depletes when attacking, dodging, or sprinting. If it empties mid-combat, you're slow and vulnerable for a moment. Don't go all-in every fight. Some players find the animations feel clunky at first. That's normal. Give it a dozen fights and it'll click. The animations exist because timing is now part of the system, not just visual fluff. If you're running on a lower-end machine, Epic Fight can impact performance because all those animations and AI improvements have overhead. You might need to adjust render distance or chunk loading distance if you notice frame drops. One common mistake: forgetting that Epic Fight mode can be toggled. If you want vanilla combat temporarily (maybe for mining or building), press R. Some players disable it entirely for creative mode or casual building sessions, then turn it back on for survival. Similar Mods Worth Knowing About Spartan Weaponry adds a ton of new weapon types with their own animation sets. Pairs well with Epic Fight - more weapons means more fighting variety. You can use them together or stick with vanilla weapons alongside Epic Fight's system. Mekanism doesn't change combat directly, but its tools and armor progression give you more targets to work toward, which makes the harder combat feel more purposeful. Axles and Create add mechanical depth to mining and building, which pairs nicely with a more challenging combat environment. If combat is harder, automation becomes more valuable. Some players combine Epic Fight with difficulty modifiers like Scaling Health (ramps mob stats as you progress) for a complete overhaul. Just be aware that stacking too many combat overhauls can make things brutally hard if you're not careful. For multiplayer servers, check your server's votifier settings if you're running mods - some server vote systems interact oddly with mod-heavy setups, so verify it's working after you install. Support the project epicfight 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.
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### JSPrismarine: The Modern Way to Host Minecraft Bedrock
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/jsprismarine-minecraft-bedrock
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project JSPrismarine (JSPrismarine/JSPrismarine) Dedicated Minecraft Bedrock Edition server written in TypeScript. Star on GitHub ↗ .0 Ever wanted to host your own Minecraft Bedrock server without renting from a third party? JSPrismarine gives you exactly that, and it's built with modern tools. No Java. No mods. Just TypeScript, plugins, and full control over your server. What JSPrismarine Actually Does JSPrismarine is an open-source server implementation for Minecraft Bedrock Edition, written in TypeScript. It's a complete Bedrock server you can run on your own hardware instead of paying for a hosted server somewhere. The project has 308 stars on GitHub and is actively maintained, which matters because Bedrock updates constantly and the protocol changes frequently. Here's the thing that makes it different from just renting a server: you own the whole thing. You decide what plugins run, what rules apply, who gets in, and how you want players to interact with your world. It's also built for extensibility, so if you know JavaScript or TypeScript (or something that compiles to it), you can build custom plugins instead of waiting for someone else to build what you need. The project is licensed under MPL-2.0, which is permissive. You can use it commercially, modify it, redistribute it. No weird restrictions. Why You'd Actually Want to Run Your Own Bedrock Server First, there's the cost angle. Paid Bedrock servers aren't cheap if you have a lot of players. You pay per month, and it adds up. If you've got decent hardware sitting around, running JSPrismarine yourself could actually be free after the initial setup. Then there's control. Want to run a private server for you and friends? Want to build a specific game mode that no one else offers? Want to restrict crossplay or lock down specific features? With JSPrismarine, you just do it. No waiting for feature requests or server provider approvals. Community hosting is another use case entirely. If you're running a Minecraft community or guild, having your own dedicated Bedrock server with custom plugins means you can create unique experiences that keep players coming back. You could build custom minigames, create progression systems, or implement economy plugins that work exactly how you want them. Plus, you control the backups and data. Getting JSPrismarine Running The installation isn't as simple as clicking a button, but it's straightforward if you're comfortable with a terminal. You need Node.js v21 or newer and pnpm installed (which comes with modern Node setups). Start here: bashgit clone - recursive-submodules https://github.com/JSPrismarine/JSPrismarine.git cd JSPrismarine corepack enable pnpm install pnpm run build pnpm run start The key thing: don't forget the ` - recursive-submodules` flag when cloning. This project has submodules, and without that flag you'll end up with incomplete code and a frustrating debugging session. Building takes a bit of time on first run since it's compiling TypeScript. Once it's running, your server will be accessible on localhost by default. To make it visible to other players, you'll want to configure networking and probably punch through your firewall, which gets into port forwarding territory. The documentation at jsprismarine.org/docs covers this, but fair warning: firewall configuration varies wildly depending on your setup. Development mode is also an option with `pnpm run dev` if you're planning to write plugins or contribute to the project itself. What Sets JSPrismarine Apart The plugin system is TypeScript-first, which is genuinely interesting. Most Minecraft servers are Java-based, so you write plugins in Java. JSPrismarine lets you write plugins in TypeScript directly, which means better tooling, clearer syntax, and the ability to use npm packages in your plugins. You can also write plugins in Kotlin, CoffeeScript, or anything that compiles to JavaScript. Actually, that last part only works if someone maintains bindings for it, so in practice you're looking at TypeScript or vanilla JavaScript. Performance is another angle. Since it's not running on the JVM, memory footprint is different, and you get JavaScript's event-driven architecture. For smaller communities, this can be noticeably snappier than Java servers. The project is under active development. Consider using the Minecraft Text Generator if you want to create formatted messages for your server's MOTD (message of the day) or broadcast system. Many JSPrismarine setups use custom formatted text to make server announcements stand out. Configuration and Customization JSPrismarine stores its configuration in YAML files, which is readable and editable without special tools. You can tweak difficulty, enable/disable features, configure spawn points, and set up basic rules. It's not as granular as some Java servers, but it covers the essentials. The real power comes from plugins. Since you're writing in TypeScript against documented APIs, you can build custom behavior. Someone running a creative server might write a plugin that limits building to certain zones. Someone running a survival server might build an economy plugin using a database backend. The possibilities depend on how much time you want to invest. If you're planning to list your server publicly, you'll probably want to integrate with server listing sites. Tools like the Minecraft Votifier Tester can help you verify that your server's voting integration is working properly if you decide to set that up. Common Pitfalls and Tips First gotcha: the protocol changes with each Minecraft Bedrock update, sometimes in breaking ways. JSPrismarine has to update to match. If you don't update JSPrismarine itself, your server will eventually fall out of sync with the latest Bedrock clients and players won't be able to join. This is different from Java servers, where a 1.20 client can often still join a 1.20.1 server. Bedrock is stricter. Second thing: this is pre-1.0 software. Version 0.13.1 is the latest release. That means the API could change between versions. If you write plugins, expect to maintain them as JSPrismarine evolves. It's not necessarily unstable, but it's not locked down yet. Crossplay complications matter too. Bedrock runs on Windows, Android, iOS, and console versions (with some workarounds). Making sure your server works smoothly across all those platforms requires testing on multiple devices, which takes time. Performance tuning isn't always obvious. If you're unfamiliar with Node.js ecosystems, the npm/pnpm dependency management can feel like a lot. JSPrismarine has quite a few dependencies, which is normal for TypeScript projects but worth being aware of for security updates and maintenance. How JSPrismarine Compares PocketMine-MP is the most popular alternative for Bedrock servers. It's PHP-based, been around longer, and has a larger plugin ecosystem. The downside? PHP is slower than JavaScript for game logic, and you're locked into PHP for plugin development. NukkitX is another option, written in Java. If you already know Java and the Java Minecraft ecosystem, it might feel more familiar. JSPrismarine's advantage is the TypeScript approach and the JavaScript ecosystem. If you already work in JavaScript, or you want something that's less established than PocketMine, JSPrismarine is worth looking at. But if you just want something that works with a large plugin library, PocketMine-MP is probably the safer choice. Support the project JSPrismarine 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.
---
### Beginner's Guide to Minecraft Survival Mode 2026
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-survival-beginners-guide
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
What You're Actually Getting Into Survival mode is Minecraft with the training wheels off. You spawn in a world with nothing but your fists and a whole lot of decisions to make within the next hour. Unlike Creative mode where blocks fall from the sky, here you gather, craft, mine, build, and fight mobs that spawn in darkness specifically to ruin your day. But here's the thing: survival mode is actually less intimidating once you know the first 10 hours matter infinitely more than the next 100. The First Five Minutes: The Wood Rush Punch trees. I know it sounds absurd, but this is it. Walk up to any tree, hold down left-click on a wooden log, and wait. Your fist is hilariously ineffective, taking about 10 seconds per log, but after you've collected 12-15 logs you'll open your inventory (E key) and convert them into planks. Each log becomes four planks. This is the most important moment in your survival experience, so don't skip it. With your planks, craft a crafting table. Place it on the ground in front of you. Now interact with it. Inside, craft wooden tools: a pickaxe first (three planks in a T-shape), then an axe, shovel, and sword. The pickaxe is everything. Without it, you cannot access stone ore. Without stone ore, you'll never reach iron. The progression is locked. Still holding nothing but stone age tools? Good. You're actually ahead of most beginners. Minutes 5 to 30: Build or Die Find flat ground, preferably near water. Using your wooden pickaxe, mine stone blocks (the gray speckled ones). Your goal is a minimum 4x4 room with a door, interior torches, and a roof. This isn't a masterpiece. It's a panic box. It's ugly. It's functional. That's all that matters when the sun is setting. While mining stone, look for coal ore (black speckles on stone). If you find any, grab it. If you don't find coal before dark, you have a backup: craft a furnace from stone, throw some wood planks in it as fuel, and burn a wooden pickaxe to get charcoal. Charcoal works identically to coal for crafting torches, though it sounds deeply wrong. Place your crafting table and furnace inside your box. Make torches from coal (or charcoal) plus sticks. Place torches everywhere inside - on walls, on the floor, above the door. Mobs spawn in darkness, not in lit areas. An interior bristling with torches is safe. Find or craft a bed. Wool comes from sheep (break it by hand), combine it with planks in a crafting table, and boom: bed. Place the bed somewhere inside. When it's night, right-click the bed and you'll skip the entire dark phase. You wake up to daylight and about 6 hours of safety. This single item removes approximately 90% of first-night panic. If you don't find sheep before nightfall, you're sleeping on the ground like an animal, listening to zombies and skeletons clack around outside. Not ideal, but survivable. Your First Night: When Everything Tries to Kill You Night lasts roughly 7 in-game minutes. Stay inside. Seriously. Creepers (green explosive things) are silent and will end you. Skeletons shoot arrows through walls sometimes. Zombies are weak but come in groups. Spiders are fast and terrifying the first time you see one. None of this matters if you've four walls, a door, and torches inside. The worst part about night isn't the danger - it's the boredom. You're trapped inside listening to ambient cave sounds and mob groans. This is when most beginners either panic-mine straight down (fatal mistake), build weird holes in their walls, or make desperate runs outside. Don't. You're safe. The mobs vanish at sunrise. Just wait. Day Two: Mining Starts Here You now have stone tools. Stone pickaxes can mine iron ore. Here's the target: get 12-15 iron ore, smelt it, craft iron tools. Iron tools open the mid-game. Mining strategy: dig down in a staircase pattern at a 45-degree angle. Every 10 blocks you descend, place a torch on your right-hand side. This creates a light-breadcrumb trail back to the surface. When you need to escape fast (lava, unexpected creeper), just look for torches on your right and follow them up. Ignore ore below you. Ever. Straight-down mining leads to lava pools underneath that fall on your head. Angle-mining (digging ahead and below) lets you see the danger before it kills you. Once you've smelted iron ore (charcoal in furnace, ore on top, wait ~10 seconds), craft an iron pickaxe. Now you can mine diamonds. Diamond Mining: The Right Way Diamonds are the gateway to serious endgame progression. PCGamesN's ore research confirms that in Minecraft 26.1.2, diamonds spawn increasingly commonly the deeper you go below Y-level 16, with the sweet spot around Y-level -53. But this keeps you away from the worst lava pools that form specifically at Y-level -54. To check your Y-level in-game, open your debug screen (F3 on Java, or check your coordinates in the top-left). Dig down to Y-level around -30 to -50, then mine horizontally, checking stone for blue diamond ore. Bring supplies: wood (to craft emergency items), a crafting table, a furnace, charcoal, and food. Do not bring everything - your inventory will fill instantly. Mine, collect diamonds, and return to the surface. Smelting and crafting happen later in your base, not underground in a panic. A single diamond pickaxe opens gates to obsidian, the Nether, and everything beyond. Most new players view diamonds as the "win" point. They're not. They're just the beginning. Food Before You Starve Hunger depletes as you move, sprint, and take damage. Three visual options exist early-game: Kill animals. Cows and pigs drop raw meat. Cook the meat in a furnace (charcoal as fuel) and eat it. Each cooked meat restores 4 hunger points. Break tall grass in grassland biomes. Grass drops seeds. Plant seeds on farmland (dirt block with a hoe, next to water) and wait. Mature wheat crops drop seeds and wheat. Seeds fill hunger minimally, but wheat is renewable. Find chickens and breed them. Two chickens fed seeds will produce baby chickens. Adults drop raw chicken and feathers. Cooked chicken restores 6 hunger points. Farming sounds tedious, but renewable food means never starving again. Set up a small farm near your base with a water channel running through planted rows. It's not glamorous, but it works. Building Beyond the Panic Box Once you've got food, water, a bed, and basic tools, you've breathing room. Your panic box served its purpose. Now rebuild something you actually want to log into. Think cottage. Central room for crafting/smelting, side rooms for storage and sleeping, a loft for additional storage. Use varied blocks: stone, wood, dirt, gravel. Add windows. A roof that's not flat. Something with a tiny bit of personality. New players often skip this because they're worried about the next threat, but your base becomes your anchor - the place you're excited to return to after mining. After you've got a solid base, the path splits completely. Some players hunt multiplayer survival servers to experience community gameplay. Others go deep into mining for Netherite (the true endgame ore, found in the Nether dimension). Some focus on building massive projects - castles, farms, entire cities. Survival mode doesn't have a goal; it has directions. First 10 Hours: Quick Checklist Hours 0-0.5: Collect 12-15 logs, craft table, wooden tools, find coal. Hours 0.5-1: Build basic shelter, craft torches, secure interior, locate sheep for bed. Hour 1-2: Sleep through first night, wake to daylight, begin stone mining. Hours 2-4: Gather stone, craft stone tools, begin mining down for iron ore, establish basic farm. Hours 4-6: Smelt iron, craft iron tools and armor, begin safer deeper mining. Hours 6-10: Locate diamonds at proper Y-levels, gather resources for mid-game progression. Common Early Mistakes (Don't Do These) Mining straight down: Lava pools lurk beneath. Angle-mine instead. Ignoring darkness: Mobs spawn in unlit areas. Torches are free sanity. Playing on Hard mode: You're new. Play Normal. Hard mode is for people who want to experience despair. Hoarding useless items: Your inventory fills fast. Keep tools, food, torches. Drop dirt and gravel later. Building near water at night: Mobs swim. Build on elevated ground or surround with walls. Exploring caves unprepared: Caves are dark, confusing, and full of mobs. Wait until you've iron armor and a clear head. Next Steps: Server Experimentation Once you're comfortable with solo survival, multiplayer completely changes the game. Playing on a server with other people brings cooperation, competition, trading, and usually someone doing something hilarious that becomes server legend within hours. Check out the Minecraft Server List to find communities ranging from vanilla purist servers (no mods, pure Minecraft) to heavily modded survival experiences. If you're curious about eventually hosting your own server, the Server Properties Generator makes configuration painless. Survival mode sounds overwhelming in abstract, but broken into the first 10 hours, it's a series of simple tasks: get wood, build shelter, get food, get tools, mine carefully, repeat. Your first base will be hideous. Your second will be better. By your tenth, you'll wonder why you spent 50 hours building dirt paths to nowhere. That's survival mode. Get started.
---
### InvUI: Building Custom Minecraft Server GUIs Like a Pro
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/invui-custom-minecraft-guis
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
NichtStudioCode/InvUI A paper library for creating custom inventory-based GUIs. If you're running a Paper server and want your plugins to feel polished instead of janky, custom inventory-based GUIs are non-negotiable. InvUI is a Java library that lets you build them without drowning in boilerplate or wrestling with Minecraft's raw inventory API. You get clean, reusable components, event handling that actually makes sense, and support for animations and complex layouts. What This Project Does InvUI is a Paper server library designed to handle one specific problem: inventory-based GUIs for plugins. Instead of registering raw inventory listeners and doing half your logic inside click handlers, InvUI gives you a structure. You define a GUI window, add items and buttons with callbacks, and the library handles the repetitive stuff underneath. It supports a wide range of inventory types beyond the basic chest. You're looking at chests, anvils, brewers, cartography tables, crafters, furnaces, grindstones, merchants, smithing tables, and stonecutters. Different games need different tools, and InvUI lets you pick the right container for what you're building. What sets this apart from writing GUIs manually is the abstraction layer. Instead of thinking about slot numbers and click events, you think about components: buttons, inventories with special behavior, multi-page layouts. The library handles mapping that to Minecraft's constraints. Why Server Developers Actually Use This Building a GUI the hard way means manually tracking item positions, writing click listeners, managing your own state, and dealing with all the edge cases Minecraft throws at you. You end up with spaghetti code that's hard to extend. InvUI trades that mess for a declarative approach. The event system is where things get genuinely useful. You can define what happens on item clicks, set constraints on which items can go into specific slots (only allow certain item types), customize stack sizes per slot, and handle pre-update events. But this unlocks GUIs that feel responsive and intuitive instead of fighting the player. Animation support is another win. You can create visual polish without writing frame-by-frame update logic. For anything from a simple loading spinner to animated menu transitions, InvUI handles the timing. Plus, the library supports paged layouts for long lists, tabbed interfaces for organizing content, and scrollable areas. If you've tried building any of these manually in Minecraft plugins, you know it's tedious. Here it's built in. Getting InvUI Into Your Project Setup assumes you've got a Maven-based plugin project. First, add the XenonDevs repository to your `pom.xml`: xml xenondevs https://repo.xenondevs.xyz/releases Then add the dependency. Version 2.0.x supports Paper 26.1.2, and that's what you'll want if you're starting fresh. If you're stuck on older Minecraft versions (back to 1.14), version 1.49 has you covered. xml xyz.xenondevs.invui invui 2.0.0 If you're using Gradle instead (fair choice), the equivalent is obvious. Once you've got the dependency building, you're ready to start defining windows and items. Core Features That Matter GUI Types. InvUI ships with several layout patterns built in. A normal GUI is just a fixed grid. Paged GUIs let you chunk content across multiple screens with navigation buttons handled automatically. Scroll GUIs work like a vertical scrollbar for large lists. Tab GUIs organize content into separate views. Pick the one that matches what you're trying to build instead of reinventing pagination logic every time. MiniMessage Support. Color codes in Minecraft plugins are a pain. InvUI has first-class support for MiniMessage, which means you can use clean syntax like `Hello` instead of Minecraft's legacy ampersand codes. Your item names and lore stay readable in code. ItemBuilder for Localization. If your server runs in multiple languages (or you're planning to eventually), InvUI's ItemBuilder handles language swaps cleanly. Instead of hardcoding item names, you define them once and let the library handle translations. Thinking ahead on this stuff saves refactoring pain later. Powerful Event System. You can attach click handlers to specific items, validate input before it lands in a slot, customize stack size limits per slot, and respond to pre-update events. This means your GUI can actually enforce rules instead of just looking pretty and letting players break everything. Embeddable Inventories. This is one of those features that sounds boring until you actually need it. You can embed an inventory inside a GUI window and use it like a normal container. Want a crafting bench inside a larger menu? A player storage area? Now it works naturally. Common Gotchas and How to Dodge Them Version 2.0 is a breaking change from 1.49. It's a complete rewrite optimized for modern Paper, which means your old code won't compile. If you've got an existing plugin on 1.49, upgrading isn't trivial. But if you're starting fresh, just use 2.0. The biggest surprise people run into: slot indexing. InvUI abstracts most of this, but you still need to understand how Minecraft maps inventory slots to a 9-column grid. The documentation covers it, but getting this wrong means buttons and items end up in weird places. Event ordering matters. Item pre-update events fire before clicks are processed, and that distinction changes how you validate input. Read the docs carefully before you assume your event handler will always see the final state. Animation performance can get weird if you're animating too many items at once or running update logic that's expensive. Keep animation callbacks lightweight and test on lower-end machines (or at least simulate it mentally). Alternatives Worth Knowing About There are other options out there. Some developers hand-roll GUIs using Minecraft's raw inventory listeners and skip the library entirely. That works if you want minimal dependencies, but you'll write a lot more code. Conversely, there are other GUI libraries for Paper, though InvUI's documentation and active maintenance make it a solid pick for new projects. If you're building something super simple (a single chest menu with 5 buttons), the overhead of InvUI might feel overkill. For anything more complex, it pays for itself. One note: if you're building GUIs for a network of servers with a custom protocol, you might want to look elsewhere. InvUI is firmly focused on single-server Paper plugins. It doesn't handle cross-server communication or proxy integration. Beyond Basic Menus Once you've got simple menus working, InvUI lets you build surprisingly sophisticated interfaces. Combine paged layouts with animations. Use tab GUIs to organize different sections of your plugin's configuration. Leverage the event system to build interactive tools (search menus, crafting benches, equipment managers). The Minecraft Text Generator can help you craft fancy item names and lore formatting to use inside your GUIs. If you're serving multiple regions or languages, combine it with InvUI's ItemBuilder to localize everything consistently. And if you're running a public server with multiple sites and game modes, you might also be managing DNS. The Free Minecraft DNS tool handles that side of things, so your players can connect to your server with a custom domain instead of an IP address. The library is genuinely well-documented. That team maintains a full guide at xenondevs.xyz with examples, and the GitHub discussions channel is active. If you get stuck, you're not staring at skeleton code - you've got reference material. Ready to try InvUI? 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 NichtStudioCode/InvUI on GitHub ↗
---
### Vane: Immersive Minecraft Without Abandoning Vanilla
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/vane-vanilla-enhancement
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project vane (oddlama/vane) Immersive and lore friendly enhancements for vanilla Minecraft Star on GitHub ↗ If you're running a PaperMC server and want to enrich vanilla without replacing it, Vane is worth your attention. It's a modular plugin suite that layers lore-friendly additions on top of the game you already know, from quality-of-life improvements to custom items and grief protection. What Vane Actually Does Vane is a plugin suite for PaperMC servers that adds thoughtful enhancements designed to feel like they belong in vanilla Minecraft. The philosophy here's important: instead of introducing radical new mechanics or replacing core systems, Vane augments what's already there. You're getting custom items, new enchantments, better portals, and grief protection - but players shouldn't feel like they're running a modded server. The project has 380 stars on GitHub and is built in Java. This distinction matters. Most server plugins either go vanilla-lite (barely adding anything) or swing hard into total conversion territory. Vane sits in the middle, which is the sweet spot for communities that want something more without losing that vanilla magic. Each feature is configurable, so you're not forced to enable anything that doesn't fit your server's vibe. Why You'd Actually Want This Let's say you're managing a survival server for friends. Players want longer-distance travel options beyond just walking or boats. They want some basic grief protection without running a massive region system. They're interested in custom tools that don't feel like they're from a totally different game. This is Vane's lane - filling practical gaps in vanilla. The portal system is the most impressive feature here. Actually, I'll come back to that. Beyond portals, you get a region system for grief protection (it's simple, not overcomplicated), custom items carefully designed to fit vanilla aesthetics, enchantments for tools you actually use, and integration with map mods like BlueMap and Dynmap. Each of these solves a real problem server owners face without making the world feel foreign to new players. Quality-of-life improvements that don't break vanilla balance Custom items and enchantments that fit the Minecraft art style Long-distance travel via Vane's portal system (expensive to create, expensive to use) Grief protection without the learning curve of complex systems Full configurability to disable anything you don't want Getting Vane Running Installation is straightforward if you're already familiar with PaperMC. The latest version (1.21.1) removed the ProtocolLib dependency, which simplified setup significantly. Grab the JAR files and drop them into your plugins folder. Here's the basic process: bash# Download the latest release from GitHub # https://github.com/oddlama/vane/releases # Extract the plugin JARs into your plugins directory cd your-server-directory/plugins wget https://github.com/oddlama/vane/releases/download/v1.21.1/vane-core-1.21.1.jar wget https://github.com/oddlama/vane/releases/download/v1.21.1/vane-admin-1.21.1.jar # Restart your server # The plugins will generate config files on first run Vane is modular, so you can download individual feature JAR files instead of grabbing everything. If you only want custom items and not portals, you don't have to install the portal module. So this keeps your plugin folder clean and only loads what you're actually using. One thing to note: Vane requires PaperMC. It won't work on vanilla servers or most other server software. After restarting, check your logs for any warnings. Config files appear in the plugins/Vane folder. You'll want to read through these to understand which features are enabled and how they're tuned. The defaults are reasonable, but every server's different. The Standout Features Portals for Real Travel Vane's portal system is actually impressive. Creating a portal is expensive (requires significant resources), using it's expensive (consumes items per trip), and they're beautiful. These aren't cheap teleportation gimmicks. They feel like something you'd genuinely invest in on a long-term server, and they support all entities including minecarts. I wasn't expecting the minecart support - that's the kind of detail that shows someone thought about how the feature actually works in survival gameplay. GitHub project card for oddlama/vane Custom Enchantments Beyond the vanilla enchantments, Vane adds new ones for tools you actually use regularly. These are properly balanced and don't trivialize the game. You're not getting god-tier enchantments that make everything instant; you're getting tweaks that make specific tasks less tedious in ways that fit the vanilla progression. The Region System Grief protection gets complicated fast. Most systems require players to memorize commands and understand complex claim hierarchies. Vane's approach is simpler. You define regions and set who can build in them. It's powerful enough for survival multiplayer without making someone spend an hour reading docs. Custom Items Done Right Several carefully designed custom items fit Minecraft's visual language. These aren't neon weapons or anime swords; they're things like a golden sickle for harvesting crops faster. They look like they belong. Map Integration If you're running BlueMap, Dynmap, or Pl3xMap, Vane integrates with them. Your map viewer stays updated with the latest changes, and features like regions can display on the map. It's a nice quality-of-life touch if you're already maintaining a map for your players. What You Should Know Before Starting Vane is fully configurable, which is great - but it also means you need to actually read the config files. Don't just drop the plugin and assume the defaults are perfect for your server. Also, this is a plugin. That means it runs on PaperMC servers. If you want the features on a vanilla client, that's not happening. Your players connect to your server and experience the features there - but they don't need to install anything on their client. If you're running other plugins, check for conflicts. Most survival plugins play nice with each other, but it's worth testing. The Discord community can help if something breaks. Actually, one more thing - custom items and enchantments require players to interact with them through normal Minecraft progression. If you're playing pure survival, you'll actually have to find and craft them. That's intentional and good, but I wanted to mention it in case you expected instant access. Where to Find Vane Skins and Server Status If you're running a Vane server, you might want to check out the Browse Minecraft Skins page to find custom skins that match your server's theme. And if you're testing your server's stability, the Minecraft Server Status Checker is helpful for monitoring uptime. Similar Projects Worth Knowing About If Vane doesn't quite fit your needs, there are alternatives. Fabric server mods offer similar vanilla-plus experiences but require client-side installation. For pure plugin solutions, some communities use combinations of smaller plugins (like WorldGuard for grief protection) stacked together. The difference is that Vane is cohesive - everything works together by design rather than being bolted on. Some servers run both Vane and other plugins. It's modular enough that you can mix and match if needed, though most people find the suite does what they want out of the box. Support the project vane 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.
---
### Lazymc: How to Auto-Wake Your Minecraft Server
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/lazymc-minecraft-server-idle
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
timvisee/lazymc 💤 Put your Minecraft server to rest when idle. .0 If you run a Minecraft server that sits empty most of the day, lazymc might be the solution you didn't know you needed. It automatically puts your server to sleep when no one's playing and wakes it the moment a player shows up - all without them noticing a thing. What Lazymc Does (and Who It's For) Lazymc is a proxy that sits between your players and your actual Minecraft server. Think of it as a bouncer at the door. When the real server is running, lazymc just gets out of the way and lets traffic through. But when you tell it to, lazymc can respond to connection attempts on its own, holding or kicking players with a custom message while it spins up the actual server in the background. The genius part? Once the real server is ready, lazymc transparently relays everything. Players don't know they were talking to a proxy the whole time. This is built in Rust and weighs about 3KB of RAM. For a self-hosted server running on limited hardware - a Raspberry Pi, an old laptop, a VPS with tight resource limits - this changes the economics completely. You're looking at lazymc if you run a modded server (which devour resources), a semi-public server where friends drop in unpredictably, or anything where "always on" costs more than you'd like to pay. Why Your Server Needs This Most Minecraft servers, especially modded ones, burn resources even when empty. A heavily modded setup can sit at 2-4GB of RAM usage just waiting. If you're paying per hour or month on a host, that's wasted money. If you're running it at home, that's your electricity bill and hardware wear. Lazymc solves this by actually stopping the server process when it's idle. Not suspending it - actually stopping it. Your RAM drops to nearly nothing. Your CPU load vanishes. Then the second someone tries to join, lazymc wakes the server back up and gets out of the way. The catch? There's a startup delay. If your server takes 30 seconds to boot, players will wait 30 seconds before they can join. Lazymc can tell them what's happening (with a custom MOTD showing "Server is starting..."), or it can kick them with a friendly message. For casual servers or friend groups, that's fine. Getting Started: Installation and Setup On Linux or macOS, grab the binary from the latest release. Download the right build for your system - aarch64 for ARM, x64 for standard Intel/AMD. On Windows, there's a pre-built.exe. bash# Download for Linux x64 wget https://github.com/timvisee/lazymc/releases/download/v0.2.11/lazymc-v0.2.11-linux-x64 # Make it executable chmod a+x lazymc-v0.2.11-linux-x64 # Rename for convenience (optional) mv lazymc-v0.2.11-linux-x64 lazymc Put the binary in your server directory. Test it works: bash./lazymc - help Now generate the config file: bash./lazymc config generate This creates a `lazymc.toml` file. You'll need to edit it - mainly pointing lazymc at your actual server's address and telling it how to start the server. If your server starts with `java -jar server.jar nogui`, you'll put that in the config. Then start lazymc: bash./lazymc start Update your server's DNS or your launcher's server IP to point to the lazymc proxy instead of the real server. From now on, lazymc is the front door. How the Join Methods Work Lazymc gives you choices for how to handle players joining while the server starts. Each has trade-offs. GitHub project card for timvisee/lazymc Hold is transparent but requires patience. Players connect to lazymc, and lazymc holds them in a queue. Once the real server boots, lazymc relays them in without them losing connection. They don't see a disconnect. Best for players who don't mind a delay. Kick is simpler but less elegant. When a player tries to join and the server's booting, lazymc kicks them with a custom message like "Server is starting, try again in 30 seconds!" Players have to manually rejoin. Works fine for small groups. Forward is clever if you run a lobby. It redirects players to a different IP (like a lobby server) while the main server boots. They play mini-games or hang out until it's ready, then you teleport them over. Lobby mode (still experimental) creates an emulated Minecraft server world while the real one starts. Players can move around in a small sandbox. When the real server's ready, they teleport over automatically. Features That Actually Matter Beyond the core sleep-and-wake idea, lazymc handles the admin stuff you'd do manually. It automatically manages your `server.properties` file - keeping the right host and port settings, configuring RCON if you need it. You don't have to fiddle with those by hand. If your server crashes, lazymc can restart it automatically. And it respects ban lists from your server, blocking banned IPs before they even reach the server process. One useful feature: you can send a `SIGTERM` to lazymc or hit it with RCON to gracefully shut down the server. Useful for updates or maintenance without yanking the power cord. There's also a proxy header option if you want the real server to know the actual player IP instead of seeing lazymc's IP as the client. That's essential if you use IP-based authentication or logging. Tips, Gotchas, and What to Watch For First: lazymc requires you to have direct system access. If you're on a shared hosting provider with a control panel dashboard, you probably can't run it. You need SSH or shell access to start the binary. Second: startup times matter. If your server takes two minutes to boot (looking at you, heavily modded setups with 200+ mods), players will wait. Plan accordingly and make sure your MOTD is clear. Nobody likes silent loading screens. Version support goes back to Java Edition 1.6, which is ancient. Recent versions like 26.1.2 work fine. But it's worth double-checking the GitHub if you're running something truly latest. One surprising thing: lazymc config can be finicky if you're on Windows because of how RCON works. The project has separate Windows docs covering this. Read them. If you're running a voting system (maybe you want people testing your server on sites like that), just make sure your lazymc MOTD is accurate. If you've used the Minecraft Votifier Tester to verify voting, be aware that lazymc's proxy response might differ from your live server's. When Lazymc Isn't the Right Fit Lazymc works great for modded servers or low-traffic setups. But if you're running a bustling community server that's online 12 hours a day, the boot delays become annoying. And if you need real-time uptime guarantees, the sleep/wake cycle isn't reliable enough - someone will join, wait for startup, and get frustrated. Also: plugins that hook into server lifecycle events (startup, shutdown) might behave oddly if you're constantly cycling the server on and off. Test thoroughly before running this on a production server with delicate plugin chains. If you're just trying to reduce your server cost a little and don't want to manage a proxy, consider asking your host if they offer auto-shutdown features. Some do. But most hosts don't, and that's where lazymc shines. Support the project lazymc 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.
---
### How to Build a Cohesive Minecraft Network with ValioBungee
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/valiobungee-minecraft-proxy-sync
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project ValioBungee (ProxioDev/ValioBungee) Synchronize players data between BungeeCord / Velocity proxies Star on GitHub ↗ .0 Running a Minecraft network across multiple servers sounds great until you realize players expect to carry their data everywhere. If your friend joins with 50 emeralds and switches to a different proxy server, they shouldn't lose them. That's what ValioBungee solves - it keeps player data synchronized across all your BungeeCord and Velocity instances using Redis. What's ValioBungee? ValioBungee is a fork of the long-abandoned RedisBungee project, updated and maintained by ProxioDev. It's a Java plugin that syncs player information (inventory, location, experience, and custom data) across multiple proxy servers through a central Redis database. If you're running a distributed Minecraft network, this plugin bridges the gap between independent proxy instances so players experience a smooth network no matter which server they connect to. The original RedisBungee hasn't been updated in years, and the creator moved on. Rather than let server admins scramble with outdated code, ProxioDev revived the project as ValioBungee (the name change was necessary due to trademark restrictions, though the internals remain largely the same). It's a genuinely useful example of community maintenance - someone saw a problem and fixed it. Why You'd Actually Need This Most single-server Minecraft setups don't need this. It's when you start building a proper network that things get complicated. Say you're running a hub server and three game servers (survival, creative, pvp). Players should be able to jump between them without losing progress. BungeeCord and Velocity already handle getting players from the proxy to individual servers, but they don't share data about who's online, what items they're holding, or custom data your plugins have stored. ValioBungee fills that gap. But it uses Redis as a shared data layer, so all your proxies can ask "is player Bob online?" and get the same answer regardless of which proxy answers. Common use cases include: Networks with multiple hub/lobby servers where players should see who's online across the whole network Hub-and-spoke architectures where players join a hub first, then pick which game server to play on Custom cosmetics or ranks that should follow players between servers Shared leaderboards or statistics Preventing duplicate logins if a player connects to multiple proxies simultaneously You don't need this if you're running a single server or a small proxy network. If you're operating at scale or want your network to feel like one cohesive system instead of separate servers, it becomes valuable. Getting Started with ValioBungee First, you'll need a running Redis server. If you don't have one, that's your actual first step (not part of ValioBungee itself). Then, grab the plugin. Download the latest release from GitHub: bashwget https://github.com/ProxioDev/ValioBungee/releases/download/0.12.6/RedisBungee-Proxy-Bungee-0.12.6-all.jar Move it to your BungeeCord plugins folder: bashmv RedisBungee-Proxy-Bungee-0.12.6-all.jar /path/to/bungeecord/plugins/ Restart BungeeCord. It'll generate a configuration file with defaults. Edit config.yml (usually in the plugins/RedisBungee folder) to point to your Redis server: yamlredis: host: localhost port: 6379 Restart again, and the plugin starts syncing player data. Simple in theory, but there's a recent gotcha worth knowing about (see the troubleshooting section below). How It Actually Works ValioBungee uses a Java Redis client called Jedis to connect to Redis and store player information. When a player joins, the proxy publishes their data to Redis. Other proxies subscribe to these updates, so they know who's connected across the entire network. You can query this data through the RedisBungeeAPI. If you're developing a plugin that needs to know "is player X online right now across the entire network?" instead of just on this server, that's what the API is for. Behind the scenes, it's storing player names, UUIDs, and connection state. Custom plugins can store their own data too, which is why it's useful for things like shared cosmetics or network-wide achievements. Known Issues and Quirks Here's where ValioBungee gets interesting (and slightly frustrating). The Adventure API relocation issue: Version 0.12.6 was released as a hotfix specifically because BungeeCord and ValioBungee were using different versions of the Adventure text library, causing conflicts. If you're using Adventure API in your plugins that also use RedisBungeeAPI, you'll need to recompile them after updating. This is annoying, but it's a real problem with Java dependency management and not unique to this project. Older plugins expecting the old API: The maintainer notes that version 0.13.0 (coming soon) will include a compatibility layer for plugins written for the original RedisBungee. If you're sitting on old plugins, you might hit this, but it's being addressed. Redis connectivity: If Redis goes down, your proxies can't sync. But this isn't ValioBungee's fault, but it's worth knowing. You should monitor your Redis instance separately. Configuration varies by use case: There's a wiki with setup instructions, but buried in the details are context-specific decisions about what data to sync and how to handle conflicts. It's not a one-size-fits-all plugin. Comparing to Alternatives ValioBungee isn't the only way to sync player data across proxies. Custom solutions exist, but they require development work and ongoing maintenance. Built-in proxy features in Velocity and BungeeCord have some player tracking, but it's limited to immediate network awareness without persistent data sync. Other Redis-based solutions are out there, but ValioBungee is actively maintained and has real community weight behind it. For most networks, it's the practical choice without requiring you to build infrastructure from scratch. Making Your Network Feel Cohesive Once ValioBungee is running, your network starts to feel like a single system. Players see their friends online, rankings follow them between servers, and custom items don't get lost when they switch servers. That cohesion matters more than you'd think. If you've ever played on a poorly-connected network where you lose items when changing servers or your rank resets, you know how jarring it's. ValioBungee removes that friction. As you build out your network, you might want to browse Minecraft skins to find cosmetics to offer your players, or check out the free DNS tool if you're setting up custom domains for your network.ProxioDev/ValioBungee - EPL-1.0, ★247 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
---
### Running Multiple Minecraft Servers on One IP with mc-router
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mc-router-multiple-servers-one-ip
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
"Routes Minecraft client connections to backend servers based upon the requested server address" itzg/mc-router · github.com Want to run multiple Minecraft servers on one public IP and port? mc-router lets you host several servers behind a single address, automatically directing players to the right backend based on the hostname they use to connect. No expensive hosting plans or additional IPs required. The Port 25565 Problem Here's the reality of home server setups: port 25565 is the standard Minecraft port, and most internet providers give you one public IP address. Want to run a survival world, a creative realm, and a competitive PvP server simultaneously? You're usually stuck buying multiple public IPs (expensive and often unavailable) or paying hosting companies for separate server subscriptions (which adds up fast). mc-router solves this by sitting in front of all your backends and acting as an intelligent traffic router. A player connects to `survival.example.com` and gets routed to Server A. Another connects to `creative.example.com` and hits Server B. Same IP, same port, completely different backends. Why This Matters More Than It Sounds Home server enthusiasts finally get multiple worlds without enterprise pricing. Community servers can consolidate infrastructure. And because it's written in Go, mc-router runs on minimal resources - less CPU and memory than a single idle Minecraft server. It'll happily run on older hardware or a Raspberry Pi. Honest take though: you don't need this unless you're already comfortable with Docker or Linux networking. Running one casual server for friends? Skip it. Building something more complex? This saves enormous amounts of money and headache. Security is another underrated benefit. mc-router blocks Minecraft port scanners that don't specify a valid hostname. Random internet traffic can't easily discover and crash into your setup. It's a free security layer that comes built in. Getting It Running Most people use Docker. Pull the image: bashdocker pull itzg/mc-router:latest Then run it with routes defined: bashdocker run -d \ - name mc-router \ -p 25565:25565 \ -e ROUTES=survival=backend-survival:25565,creative=backend-creative:25565 \ itzg/mc-router:latest Breaking this down: `-p 25565:25565` exposes the Minecraft port to the outside world. The `ROUTES` variable tells mc-router to send connections asking for "survival" to a Docker container named `backend-survival`, and "creative" connections to `backend-creative`. That's the entire concept. In a real setup, you'd use Docker Compose so your backends and router start together. Everything stays readable and shuts down cleanly. Running Kubernetes? mc-router auto-discovers backend servers from service labels. You don't manually list routes. For larger operations, this is genuinely the killer feature. Features That Actually Help Auto-scaling is the one that sounds made-up until you use it. Backend servers can automatically shut down when idle and wake up when someone connects. Idle servers drain resources and cost money. Players just see a loading message while their server boots. (This only works with Kubernetes StatefulSets or Docker containers, not VMs on cloud hosts.) GitHub project card for itzg/mc-router Metrics and monitoring mean you get Prometheus/InfluxDB integration out of the box. Track player connections, which servers get traffic, latency between router and backends. If you're already monitoring infrastructure, you get instant visibility. IP filtering and rate limiting block basic DDoS attacks and let you allowlist/denylist IP ranges. Not a substitute for real DDoS protection, but it keeps casual attackers away. Webhook integration notifies other systems when players connect and disconnect. Graceful fallback is small but valuable. When a backend goes down, show a custom MOTD instead of timing out. Auto-scaled servers booting up can show "Server starting..." instead of making players wait confused. Gotchas and How to Avoid Them DNS is non-negotiable. mc-router routes based on hostname, so players must connect to `survival.example.com`, not just the raw IP. If you don't have DNS sorted, our Free Minecraft DNS tool can help you get started. Once you've got that working, you might also bookmark our Nether Portal Calculator for other infrastructure work. Backend servers see all connections coming from mc-router itself, not original players. Your server logs lose real player IPs unless you configure proxy protocol support. It's possible, but easy to miss on first setup. mc-router adds almost no latency, but it becomes a single point of failure. If the router crashes, nobody reaches any backend. Proper monitoring and restart procedures matter. Configuration formatting is picky. Spaces around equals signs in environment variables silently break routing. Typos in container names fail quietly. Always validate configuration before wondering why traffic isn't flowing. Similar Tools Worth Knowing About Bungeecord and Velocity are Java-based Minecraft proxies designed specifically for routing players across servers. They handle cross-server data synchronization, but consume more resources and require managing a separate Java application. Use these if shared player data across worlds matters to you. Waterfall is a Bungeecord fork with slightly different management philosophy. Commercial hosting like AWS and DigitalOcean handles multiple servers without juggling ports. You're paying for convenience instead of building infrastructure yourself. mc-router wins when you want lightweight, hands-on control with minimal overhead. It's doing one thing really well rather than trying to be everything. Current State The project stays actively maintained with regular releases improving the Routes API and logging controls. With 840 GitHub stars and an active Discord community, this isn't experimental. It's a real tool people depend on. 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
---
### AuraSkills: The RPG Skills Plugin Minecraft Servers Have Been Waiting For
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/auraskills-minecraft-rpg-plugin-guide
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
Archy-X/AuraSkills The ultra-versatile RPG skills plugin .0 If you've ever played a Minecraft server and thought "wouldn't it be cool if my pickaxe got better the more I mined?" or "I want actual skill progression like an RPG," then AuraSkills is what you've been looking for. This plugin turns vanilla Minecraft into a progression system where nearly everything you do feeds into character development, stat boosts, and special abilities. What AuraSkills Actually Does At its core, AuraSkills is a framework for turning Minecraft activities into an RPG progression system. You mine? Folks who try this gain Mining XP. Folks who try this fish? Fishing XP. Farm crops, slay mobs, brew potions, enchant items - each action feeds into a corresponding skill. The plugin tracks all of this and levels you up in those skills, which then unlock stat bonuses, passive abilities, and active abilities you can trigger in combat or out. What makes this different from other progression plugins is the flexibility. AuraSkills isn't locked into one specific vision of what an RPG should look like. It's a platform. You can turn it into a hardcore PvP server where stats directly affect combat, a survival server where skills unlock convenience features, or a creative realm where abilities add new mechanics entirely. The plugin ships with sensible defaults, but almost every number, name, and reward is configurable. According to the project's stats, it's pulled in 338 stars on GitHub and is actively maintained. The latest release supports Paper 26.1.1, which means it's keeping up with current Minecraft server software. The RPG Features That Set It Apart Skills are the foundation. AuraSkills ships with a default set - things like Mining, Farming, Fishing, Combat, Magic, Alchemy - but you can add custom ones. Each skill tracks XP, levels, and can be configured to reward items, run commands, or apply stat modifiers when you level up. Stats are where the RPG mechanics actually hit players. Leveling up in Strength gives health and damage boosts. Charisma increases loot drops. Intelligence boosts potion potency and spell damage. Unlike mods that hard-code these, AuraSkills lets you decide which stats exist, what they do, and how much each skill contributes to them. You could make Constitution the only stat that matters, or create a 20-stat system with esoteric bonuses. It's entirely up to you. Abilities are the flashy part. Each skill can have passive abilities (always active) and active abilities (triggered with a command or item). Imagine passive lifesteal from Combat, or active abilities that let you Phase through blocks if you've leveled Magic high enough. These aren't built-in - you configure what abilities exist and what they do. Some servers use them as quality-of-life bonuses. Others build entire gameplay loops around them. There's also a mana system and custom loot tables for fishing, blocks, and mob drops. You can create entirely new item drops tied to your skills. A high-level farmer gets better crop yields. A high-level fisherman catches rare items. These little touches are what turn AuraSkills from a stat sheet into actual gameplay. Getting It Running On Your Server Installation is straightforward if you're comfortable with Bukkit-style plugins. Grab the latest JAR from the official releases page and drop it into your server's plugins folder. AuraSkills requires a compatible Paper server running recent versions of Minecraft - check the wiki for specifics, but anything from late 1.20+ should work. bash# On your server directory cd plugins wget https://github.com/Archy-X/AuraSkills/releases/download/2.3.12/AuraSkills-2.3.12.jar cd.. java -Xmx1024M -Xms1024M -jar server.jar nogui On first launch, AuraSkills generates config files. Don't panic at the wall of YAML. Start with the defaults and test the plugin as-is. Players will immediately start gaining XP for normal activities. Once you understand how it works, you can customize everything: skill names, XP rates, abilities, stat formulas, rewards, menu appearance. If you want to verify your server is healthy before adding plugins, you can check your setup with Minecraft.How's server status checker to ensure everything's responding correctly. Configuration and Customization (the Real Power) The config files are where AuraSkills goes from "neat plugin" to "this is exactly what my server needs." Want players to gain Farming XP from bone meal? You can tune that. Don't want the default Magic skill? Delete it. Think Acrobatics should give movement speed instead of fall damage reduction? Change it. Where most servers get stuck is the learning curve on the config structure. It's not difficult, just thorough. You're defining skills, stats, abilities, and how they all interact. A single ability might reference stats, trigger commands, apply potion effects, and modify loot tables. You need to understand the relationships between these systems to build something cohesive. The wiki is solid here. So it walks through the config structure with examples. And if you get stuck, the Discord community is active. But honestly, I'd recommend starting with a minimal config change - maybe just renaming a skill or adjusting XP rates - before attempting a full redesign of the stat system. Abilities, Menus, and Developer Integration Players access their skill trees, abilities, and stats through configurable in-game menus. These are fully themeable GUIs that show progress, available abilities, and stat breakdowns. It's not as flashy as a mod client, but it's functional and customizable. GitHub project card for Archy-X/AuraSkills If you're a plugin developer, AuraSkills exposes an API for integrating with your own plugins. You can listen for skill level-up events, modify XP gains, or query player stats from custom plugins. Release versions are published to Maven Central, making it easy to add as a dependency if you're building something on top of it. There's also a solid loot system. Instead of every miner getting the same drops, you can weight drops based on skill level or add rare items that only high-level players can find. This creates an incentive for skill progression beyond just stats. When AuraSkills Isn't The Right Fit AuraSkills is incredibly flexible, but flexibility means complexity. If you want to drop a plugin in and have an RPG system work immediately with zero configuration, you'll be disappointed. The defaults are solid, but most servers tweak them heavily. If that sounds exhausting, you might prefer something more locked-in like a premade skyblock plugin with built-in progression. Also, AuraSkills doesn't handle character classes, quests, or narrative progression. It's a skill and stat system. If your server concept revolves around story-driven content, you'll need other plugins to fill those gaps. Many servers pair AuraSkills with quest plugins or custom quest systems, but that's additional work. Performance-wise, AuraSkills is reasonable, but any plugin that tracks XP gains, applies stat multipliers, and modifies loot has overhead. On a small server with 10 players, you won't notice. On a 100-player server running 20 plugins, you might need to profile and optimize. The plugin itself isn't bloated, but it's not zero-cost either. Tips, Gotchas, and What Actually Works Start with stock settings and play test for a week. You'll immediately see what needs adjustment. Don't optimize the config before you understand what's broken. XP rates are your first tuning knob. Make them too high and progression becomes trivial. Too low and players get bored. I'd start at 1x and watch how fast the first few players level up. Most servers end up in the 0.5x to 2x range depending on their playstyle. Abilities are cool but easy to over-design. A skill with ten passive abilities becomes a wall of text in-game. Keep abilities meaningful. Every ability should do something that changes how the player approaches a task - either making them better at it or letting them do something new entirely. One thing I didn't expect: stat formulas get weird fast. If you're adding health per Constitution point, you need to decide if that scales linearly or exponentially. A hundred Constitution adding 100 extra health is very different from 200. Test edge cases. High-level players can break your difficulty curve if stats aren't balanced. Also, if you're running this on a server with NBT limits or item count limits, you might run into issues with loot table modifications. Not a deal-breaker, just something to be aware of if your server configuration is custom. Ecosystem and Alternatives If AuraSkills feels too extensive, there are lighter alternatives. McMMO is more combat-focused and has been around for years - it's simpler but less flexible. Levelledmobs adds mob scaling based on player skill, but it's a different use case. ASkyBlock has built-in skill progression but only works on skyblock-style maps. Actually, AuraSkills and McMMO can coexist on the same server if you want both systems. Some communities layer them together, using McMMO for combat skills and AuraSkills for everything else. It depends on what you're building. The real competitor is custom development. If you've a Java developer on staff, you could build a bespoke skill system. But you'd need months. AuraSkills gives you months of work in a downloadable plugin. For most server admins, that's the winning play. If you're setting up a server and want to verify everything's running smoothly once you add plugins, the Nether Portal Calculator won't directly help with AuraSkills, but it's a good sanity check that your server's math and physics are correct before you start balancing RPG formulas. 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
---
### RenderDragon Shaders: Your Safe Shader Guide for Bedrock 2026
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/render-dragon-shader-list-bedrock-guide
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project Render-dragon-shader-list (DominoKorean/Render-dragon-shader-list) List of shaders and related information, files, etc. that are compatible with RenderDragon. Star on GitHub ↗ .0 Minecraft Bedrock Edition feels limited for visual customization. Unlike Java Edition, where Optifine and mods give you endless tweaking options, Bedrock's official features are pretty bare-bones. RenderDragon shaders bridge that gap, but finding legitimate packs is weirdly difficult. The internet is full of stolen shaders, malware-laden downloads, and fake "optimized" versions. A RenderDragon Shader List exists to cut through that noise and point you toward the real thing. Why Bedrock Shaders Are Harder to Find (and Riskier) Here's the situation: Mojang discontinued official shader support for Bedrock years ago. That created a vacuum. Java Edition has a thriving mod ecosystem where you can trust major platforms, but Bedrock players are left scrambling. Sites like 9Minecraft have become notorious for distributing shaders without creator permission and bundling malware alongside them. New players don't always know this, which makes them easy targets. The problem is real. You can't easily tell which shaders are legitimate, which are stolen redistributions, and which are actively dangerous. Search "Bedrock shaders" and you'll hit scam sites before you find anything official. Even experienced players sometimes slip up and download from the wrong place. This is where trust matters. When there's no official marketplace, the community has to create one. What the RenderDragon Shader List Does DominoKorean's repository on GitHub is basically a trusted directory. It's a curated list of safe, community-verified RenderDragon shaders with installation guides, creator links, and Discord communities backing them up. Instead of hunting through sketchy websites, you check the list first. If it's there, it's legitimate. And that peace of mind is genuinely valuable. The project has 309 stars on GitHub, which tells you the community considers this a resource worth returning to. But it's not just a list. The repository includes installation walkthroughs, links to official creator Discord servers (especially the Bedrock Graphics community), and utilities that make shader management far less technical than it used to be. It also includes a warning section about problematic sites, which is refreshingly honest. The maintainers aren't shy about calling out places that distribute fake shaders. They're protecting their community, not trying to be neutral about safety. Understanding RenderDragon and What Shaders Actually Do RenderDragon is Bedrock's modern rendering engine, introduced years ago to replace the aging OpenGL/DirectX setup. When people say "RenderDragon shaders," they mean custom visual enhancements created by modding RenderDragon's files directly. But this is different from Java Edition shaders, which are created using a shader language that game engines understand natively. GitHub project card for DominoKorean/Render-dragon-shader-list What do RenderDragon shaders actually do? They enhance lighting, improve water reflections, add shadow depth, adjust ambient colors, and generally make your world look more cinematic. Some are subtle. Others are dramatic. None of them change gameplay - they're purely visual. The repository includes utilities that make using these shaders easier. MB Loader, for example, streamlines how you load and manage shader packs without manually digging through game files. If you've ever spent 20 minutes hunting through AppData folders trying to find where Bedrock stores textures, you'll appreciate a tool that handles it for you. BetterRenderDragon improves shader compatibility and stability. BetterResourcePackManager handles resource packs alongside shaders, since they often work together. Setting Up Your First Shader (Step-by-Step) The basic process is straightforward, though it depends on which shader and which method you choose. Start by visiting the repository and picking a shader that interests you. Read the description and check what device requirements or Bedrock versions it supports. Some shaders run great on older hardware; others need recent devices to stay playable. If you want the easiest route, use a shader loader utility. Download MB Loader from the repository, follow the installation guide, and select your shader from the list. The tool handles file management, which removes most of the complexity. For manual installation, you'll need to extract shader files to the correct Bedrock folder. On Windows, that's typically: bashAppData\Local\Packages\Microsoft.MinecraftUWP_8wekyb3d8bbwe\LocalState\games\com.mojang It's not complicated, just easy to mess up if you're not careful about folder structure. The repository's documentation walks you through this explicitly. Once installed, launch Bedrock, go to Settings, navigate to Graphics, and you should see your shader listed. Enable it, tweak any settings the shader offers, and you're done. Testing on a world you don't mind restarting is smart - some shaders cause unexpected visual glitches or performance dips in specific situations. Popular Shaders and What They're Good For The list includes dozens of options. A few have become community standards for good reason. 2 endcities generated close to each other in Minecraft YSS RD is a solid all-around choice. So it improves lighting and water without destroying frame rates on mid-range devices. Newb X Legacy is popular with players who want clear visual improvement without going extreme - good if you're not sure how intense you want to go. Eternity Shader is for players who want cinematic lighting, detailed water reflections, and don't mind the performance cost on powerful hardware. Each has different strengths. Some prioritize performance. Others push visual quality as far as they can. The repository notes these differences, so you can pick something realistic for your device. Unlike generic "best shaders" lists that just rank by popularity, this one acknowledges that the best shader for you depends on your hardware and preferences. If you're also interested in curating other visual aspects of your world, exploring custom Minecraft skins is the natural next step. Shaders change how your world looks; skins change how your character appears. Together, they create a fully customized experience. Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them A few things to know before diving in: Shader packs sometimes conflict with heavy custom resource packs. If you've got extensive texture modifications installed, some shaders might not play nicely. The solution is usually just disabling one temporarily to test compatibility. Performance varies wildly between devices. A shader that runs smoothly on newer hardware might tank frame rates on older devices. This isn't the repository's fault - it's just how Bedrock rendering works. Start conservative and upgrade your shader if your device handles it. Version incompatibilities happen. Bedrock updates frequently, and older shaders sometimes break until creators patch them. The repository notes known issues, but checking the shader creator's Discord is always smart if something doesn't work. Most importantly: don't install shaders from random websites, even if they claim to be "optimized" or "improved" versions. Stick to the repository's links and official creator sources. This is where the security advantage of the list really kicks in. Building Your Complete Bedrock Visual Setup Shaders are one piece of a larger customization puzzle. The Bedrock Graphics Discord community backing the project is worth joining. They're active, helpful, and constantly discussing new shaders, resource packs, and updates. Once you've got a shader running, you might want to pair it with custom textures, custom maps, or test it on a multiplayer server. If you're planning to play on community servers, it's worth checking server stability beforehand - you can use a Minecraft server status checker to verify uptime and latency before committing time to a server. The visual transformation shaders create is genuinely dramatic. So that difference between stock Bedrock and a good shader pack is night and day. Enhanced lighting, better water, improved shadows, all running on the same hardware you already have. For Bedrock fans, this is one of the most important community resources available. If you're mostly a Java player who loads up Bedrock occasionally, shaders might feel like overkill. But for Bedrock enthusiasts, this repository solves a problem that's plagued the community for years: how to customize your world safely. That's worth taking seriously. 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
---
### Best Minecraft Storage Mods: Organize Like a Pro
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/best-minecraft-storage-mods
Published: 2026-04-26
Author: ice
Storage is the real endgame of Minecraft, honestly. You can beat the dragon, find diamonds, build a mansion, but none of it matters if you're drowning in chests. That's where mods come in. Vanilla Minecraft gives you exactly one choice for item storage: a wooden box that holds 27 stacks. Double it and you get 54 stacks. Great. But once you're running a base with multiple projects, automatic farms, mob grinders, and contraption workshops, you need something better. Storage mods transform this nightmare into something manageable, and some turn inventory management into a whole separate game. Applied Energistics 2: The ME Network If you want to feel like you're running a sci-fi space station, Applied Energistics 2 (AE2) is the way to go. Instead of chests everywhere, you build a "ME Network" where every item in your system lives in a single searchable interface accessible from anywhere. It's overkill for small survival bases. But once you experience it, vanilla chests feel like stone tools. The core concept is simple: craft some cables, connect them together, attach storage drives, and suddenly your scattered iron, diamonds, and building blocks all live in one place. You pull items from the terminal and they appear in your inventory. No hunting through 40 chests to find the redstone. AE2 does have a learning curve. The power system, the drive types, P2P tunnels - it takes a tutorial or two. And it's designed for tech-heavy modpacks. If you're on a casual vanilla-plus server, it might feel like bringing industrial machinery to early survival. Why You'll Love It Searchable storage for hundreds of thousands of items Accessible from a terminal or portable crafting terminal Auto-crafting system that builds items on demand Looks futuristic and feels genuinely powerful Sophisticated Storage: The Practical Middle Ground For a less intense experience, try Sophisticated Storage. It adds upgradeable wooden and iron chests that hold way more than vanilla and let you sort items with filters. Think "chest++ without the sci-fi complexity." You craft a basic chest, then add upgrade modules to increase storage, add sorting functionality, even add auto-smelting or composting. It plays nicely with vanilla Minecraft aesthetics, so your base doesn't look like a tech factory. My pick here's Sophisticated Storage if you want big storage numbers without the modpack commitment. The sorting system is intuitive. Drop items in and they auto-organize based on rules you set. No more digging through piles of dirt blocks to find your slime balls. And here's what makes it special compared to AE2: the visual feedback. You see items flowing into the right chest. It feels more like Minecraft than a computer interface. Storage Capacity Breakdown Basic chests hold more with upgrades. A fully upgraded Sophisticated chest can store significantly more than double a vanilla double chest. The upgrades stack, so you're not locked into one configuration. Iron Chests: No Frills, Just Storage Iron Chests does one thing and does it extremely well: it adds bigger chests in metal tiers. Copper, iron, gold, diamond, obsidian. Each tier holds more stuff and looks slightly fancier. No power requirements. No autocrafting. No networks. Just progressively more storage space with a nice visual upgrade path. It pairs well with other mods because it demands nothing. Throw it in modpacks as quality-of-life padding or use it solo as a simple improvement. The obsidian chest, in particular, is a flex-worthy storage piece for a finished base that actually fits the aesthetic. Building a Storage Room That Actually Works Organization systems split into two philosophies: sorting and searching. Barrel header in Minecraft Sorting systems physically organize items into different blocks. You set up hoppers and filters so iron goes into one chest, diamonds into another, dirt into a third. It feels hands-on and vanilla-adjacent. You see the system working. Redstone purists love this approach. Searching systems store everything together. Applied Energistics2 and Refined Storage work this way. All items live in one network, you query for what you need, and it appears. Zero physical organization required. So this feels futuristic and ultra-convenient. Neither is objectively better. Pick based on your vibe and how much tinkering you enjoy. Some mods add barrel variants (Refined Storage, Create, Thermal Dynamics) that let you dedicate an entire block to a single item type. One barrel for wood stacks, one for iron ingots, one for diamonds. Your storage room becomes a wall of labeled barrels instead of a sea of identical chests. It's organized, aesthetic, and searchable from a terminal if the mod supports it. Multiplayer Considerations On multiplayer servers, storage becomes a social problem. Multiple players, shared storage, theft prevention. Some mods handle this better than others. Applied Energistics 2 has built-in permission systems. Sophisticated Storage lets you lock chests with keys. Both are multiplayer-aware. If you're running a whitelisted server with trusted players, this matters less. But for public or semi-public communities, account for security in your storage plan. Also consider performance. ME Networks and large Refined Storage systems can consume server resources, especially with auto-crafting features running constantly. Simple wooden chests don't. If your server's struggling with TPS (ticks per second), storage mods can be a hidden culprit. Test them on a dev build first. If you're looking for a community to test storage setups on, check out the Minecraft server list for active Java Edition communities. What Actually Matters When Choosing Pick a storage mod based on three questions: Search or sort? If you want to query for items, go Applied Energistics 2 or Refined Storage. If you want physical organization through filtering and routing, go Sophisticated Storage or barrels. How big is your modpack? AE2 expects a full tech tree and power system. For vanilla-plus survival, something lighter makes more sense. How much organizing do you want to do? Some folks love designing sorting systems. Others want to press a button and forget about it. Here's the truth: running multiple storage solutions together works perfectly fine. Use Sophisticated chests for everyday materials, keep a small AE2 network for specialty tech items, throw some barrels around for specific material types. Storage isn't supposed to be stressful or require choosing one perfect system. If you're setting up a server to test mods with friends, use the whitelist creator to manage who can access your test world. Making the Final Decision Applied Energistics 2 wins if you want maximum automation and futuristic vibes. Sophisticated Storage wins if you want practical upgrades without complexity. Iron Chests wins if you want the simplest possible expansion. And honestly, you don't need to choose just one. Install what interests you, test it in creative mode, see how it feels. Storage mods exist to make your life easier, not more complicated. The best mod is the one you'll actually use.
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### Mc-datapack-map: Visualize Your Custom Minecraft Worlds
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mc-datapack-map-minecraft-biomes
Published: 2026-04-25
Author: ice
jacobsjo/mc-datapack-map A Minecraft biome map capable of handling worldgen datapacks. If you're experimenting with custom worldgen datapacks, you're probably tired of loading full Minecraft worlds just to see whether the biome distribution looks right. This tool lets you preview exactly what those datapacks generate before you commit hours to a new world. It's fast, it works with complex mods, and the online version is completely free. What This Actually Does Mc-datapack-map is a map viewer built for Minecraft's worldgen system. You feed it a datapack (or upload a vanilla version), and it generates a visual representation of how biomes and structures will appear in your world. Think of it like an X-ray view of your terrain without needing to spawn in survival mode. The project uses Leaflet, the same library that powers Google Maps. You get the familiar pan-and-zoom interface you'd expect from any web map, except instead of roads and borders, you're looking at Minecraft terrain generation. Biomes appear as color-coded regions. Structures like villages, temples, and fortresses show up as markers or highlighted areas depending on what data the datapack provides. The clever part? It actually understands worldgen datapacks. Many biome viewers just show vanilla Minecraft. This one ingests the rules your custom pack defines and generates the map based on those rules. If your datapack tweaks mountain generation or adds new biome types, the map reflects that. Why You'd Actually Use This Let's say you're building a large survival server and found a modpack with custom worldgen. Before you allocate a permanent world file and point players at it, you want proof that the terrain won't be boring or broken. Run it through this tool first. Or you're a datapack creator. You wrote your own worldgen pack and need to verify it doesn't create weird biome borders or fail to generate structures in key areas. Spending an hour here saves you the embarrassment of shipping broken terrain. Even for vanilla, this is useful. Curious what the latest Minecraft update changed about biome distributions? Load it in and compare side-by-side with the previous version. The speedrun community uses tools like this to scout seeds before investing time. Server admins use them to preview terrain before committing to a world. Builders planning massive projects (cities, terrain reshaping, monument placement) sometimes check the base generation first to understand what they're working with. How to Get Started There are two paths: the easy online version, or running it locally. Online (simplest option): Head to https://map.jacobsjo.eu. It's already set up with vanilla Minecraft worldgen baked in. You can view the default map and explore how different Minecraft versions generate terrain. If you just want to play around with vanilla biome distributions, you're done. For custom datapacks, that online version has an upload feature. Zip up your datapack, select the target Minecraft version, and upload it. The tool processes it and shows you the result. No installation required. Local setup (more control): If you want to run this yourself or integrate it into a build pipeline, the project includes dev instructions. bashpip install -r requirements.txt npm i npm run createZips npm run dev The first two lines install dependencies (Python and Node). That third generates the vanilla datapack files. This fourth starts a dev server on http://localhost:5173. But this requires a browser that supports ES modules in web workers - most modern browsers handle this fine (Firefox 89+, Chrome/Edge 89+, Safari 15.2+). When you're ready to deploy a built version, run npm run build and then npm run preview to test the production build locally. What Sets It Apart Generic biome viewers exist, sure. Most of them either show only vanilla terrain or they handle custom datapacks in a limited way. This project actually parses datapack worldgen configurations and respects them. GitHub project card for jacobsjo/mc-datapack-map The color scheme is readable. Biomes are distinguishable at a glance, and you can hover over regions to see their names and properties. Structure markers are clear without being visually overwhelming. Navigation is smooth, even when zoomed way in or viewing huge maps. It's written in TypeScript. The codebase is clean and modular enough that if you need to fork it or extend it, you won't be wrestling with spaghetti code. Also, it's open-source under the MIT license with 100 GitHub stars, and the maintainer is actively responsive. The project accepts contributions (though you should ask before major changes), and there's a translation effort underway for multiple languages. Things That Might Trip You Up The dev environment requirement is worth noting: you can't just open an HTML file and run this locally without some setup. The build pipeline exists for good reason (module bundling, datapack processing), but if you're the type who usually avoids Node.js, be prepared to install it first. Custom datapack uploads process on the client side (in your browser), not on the server. And this is privacy-friendly and keeps the host's computational load down. But it also means very large packs might take a moment to process, and if your browser crashes mid-load, you'll start over. Actually, that's overstating it - processing is usually fast enough that it's not really an issue for typical-size datapacks. Vanilla datapack versions lag slightly behind new Minecraft snapshots. The maintainer usually catches up within a few days of release, but if you're testing bleeding-edge snapshot features, you might need to wait or build from source. One more gotcha: it only handles worldgen datapacks, not modpacks. If you're trying to visualize a modpack with custom content mods (like custom ore distribution or structure mods), this tool won't help. It's specifically for vanilla datapack-based generation changes. Practical Example: Testing Before Committing Imagine you're evaluating a custom worldgen datapack for your server. You download it, zip it up, and upload it to the map tool for Minecraft 26.1.2 (the current release). In seconds, you see a full preview. The biome distribution looks reasonable. Villages appear to spawn in the right places. Mountains generate at a height that makes sense for building. Now you're confident enough to allocate a world file and point your server at it. That's worth the two-minute preview. If you're also curious about biome specifics, minecraft.how has a block search tool where you can look up which blocks belong to which biomes. Use that to cross-reference what the map shows. And while you're here, if you're planning any custom texture work for your world, our skin creator might be useful for testing custom player skins before you use them in-game. Alternatives Other biome visualization tools exist, but most are either abandoned or limited to vanilla terrain. Chunkbase and similar seed database sites show vanilla biome maps, and they're great for finding specific seeds. But they don't support custom datapacks. Some servers use Dynmap or BlueMap for live world visualization, but those require the world to already exist and render continuously. That's overkill if you just want a quick preview before creating a world. If you're doing serious datapack development, you might write custom tooling specific to your use case. But for a general-purpose, no-setup-required visualization of how a datapack generates terrain, this tool does the job right. Ready to try mc-datapack-map? 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 jacobsjo/mc-datapack-map on GitHub ↗
---
### ViaBedrock: Bridge Java and Bedrock Minecraft Editions
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/viabedrock-java-bedrock-bridge
Published: 2026-04-25
Author: ice
"ViaVersion addon to add support for Minecraft: Bedrock Edition servers" RaphiMC/ViaBedrock · github.com .0 Ever wanted to play with friends across Java and Bedrock editions? ViaBedrock is a ViaVersion addon that promises exactly that: a bridge between the two versions. But here's the catch - it's still in very early development, and the project itself warns you not to use it for anything important yet. What ViaBedrock Actually Does ViaBedrock is a plugin built on top of ViaVersion, the most popular protocol translation framework in the Minecraft community. If you're not familiar with ViaVersion, it lets older clients connect to newer servers (and vice versa) by translating packets between versions. ViaBedrock takes that same concept and applies it to the entire Java/Bedrock divide. Imagine you're running a Java server but a bunch of your players have Bedrock clients. Or you want to test your world on both versions. ViaBedrock theoretically lets you do this by intercepting and translating the Bedrock protocol into something Java clients understand. It's genuinely ambitious work. The project is built in Java and hosted on GitHub with 365 stars, which for something this experimental is actually solid. This license is GPL-3.0, so it's fully open source. Here's the thing though: you'll be using what's essentially an alpha version. This isn't production software. Why You Might Want to Try It Cross-edition play is the main draw. Console players (PS5, Switch, Xbox) and mobile players run Bedrock Edition, while PC Java Edition is still the big modding hub. If your server community is split across both, having a bridge could be huge. It's also useful for experimentation and testing. Want to see how a world looks on Bedrock? Curious about the protocol differences? Want to contribute to protocol documentation yourself? ViaBedrock is a working example of exactly how complex the Bedrock protocol is. Server admins testing multi-edition setups will find this helpful. If you're planning a community server, you'll eventually want to test features across both editions - and if you're running server features like voting plugins, our Votifier Tester can help validate those work correctly across client types. Streamers might find it useful too. But I'd caution you: only do this on a test server, not something your community relies on. Getting It Set Up ViaBedrock comes in different flavors depending on your setup. For server admins, there's a standalone proxy version. For client-side testing, there's a Fabric mod. Let me walk through the basics. For the proxy approach, you'll grab the latest ViaProxy dev build (a separate project that bundles ViaBedrock): bash#!/bin/bash # Download the latest ViaProxy JAR wget https://build.lenni0451.net/job/ViaProxy/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/build/libs/ViaProxy-*.jar # Run it (replace with your actual filename) java -jar ViaProxy-x.x.x.jar The first time you run it, you'll get a config file. From there, you configure which Bedrock server you're connecting to and which port the Java proxy listens on. Java clients then connect to your local proxy as if it were a normal Minecraft server. If you're going the Fabric mod route, grab the latest ViaFabricPlus dev build from the CI system and drop it in your mods folder. Same concept, but client-side instead of server-side. Fair warning: both setups require you to be comfortable with Java, dev builds (which change frequently), and troubleshooting when things break. Which they'll. What Actually Works Right Now The feature list in the README is surprisingly long. Basic connectivity is solid - you can ping Bedrock servers, join them as a Java client, and authenticate with Xbox Live. Chat and commands work. Chunks load, blocks render, entities spawn. You can move around, respawn, switch dimensions. All of this is basically functional. GitHub project card for RaphiMC/ViaBedrock Form GUIs work too (those popup menus Bedrock uses), plus scoreboards, titles, and bossbars display correctly. If you want to test basic world compatibility, you'll probably have a workable experience. Custom skins are partially supported, and if you're testing world design with consistent player models, our Skin Creator tool can help generate test players quickly. But - and this is important - inventory is barely there. Block breaking and block placing are incomplete or experimental. Entity metadata isn't implemented yet. Item use is experimental. If your test involves any serious gameplay like mining, crafting, or PvP, you're going to hit walls pretty fast. The resource pack conversion is basic but functional. You'll see most textures, though custom content might not translate perfectly. Reading through the feature list, I counted roughly 18 features marked as done or mostly done, and maybe 9-10 that are incomplete or experimental. The math is hopeful, but incomplete inventory alone is a huge limitation. Common Gotchas and Reality Check Let me be straight: this project's own README says "Don't report any bugs yet. There are still a lot of things which are not implemented yet." If you're thinking of using ViaBedrock on a public server, step back. The dev builds update frequently, sometimes breaking things between versions. You'll need to check the Discord (linked on the maintainer's site) for status updates rather than relying on stable releases. This isn't something you set up once and forget about. Xbox Live authentication is implemented, which is cool, but it adds complexity. Make sure you understand the auth flow before deploying anything. Chunk caching works, which helps performance, but you should still expect lag compared to native Bedrock or Java servers since translation happens in real time. If you're running this on a public server, expect performance overhead. ViaVersion proxies already use extra resources compared to direct connections. ViaBedrock adds another layer of complexity on top. And honestly, most players won't tolerate the bugs and missing features. Other Projects in the Same Space ViaVersion itself handles Java version differences and is mature and stable. That's a better starting point if your problem is just connecting old clients to new servers. It's been battle-tested for years. If you specifically need Bedrock support but want something more polished, there's no true alternative yet - ViaBedrock is the only public project doing this work. GeyserMC is sometimes mentioned in the same conversation, but that's a different angle. It's a full Bedrock to Java proxy that doesn't require translation at the protocol level. Less experimental, but different trade-offs entirely. The fact that ViaBedrock exists suggests others are working on similar problems. Check back in 12 months - the landscape might look different.RaphiMC/ViaBedrock - GPL-3.0, ★365 Support the project ViaBedrock 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.
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### Phantom: Play on Custom Minecraft Servers From Your Console
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/phantom-minecraft-console-servers
Published: 2026-04-25
Author: ice
jhead/phantom Use your own Minecraft server with your Xbox or PS4/5 and play with friends! Ever wanted to play on a custom Minecraft Bedrock server from your Xbox or PS4 without paying for Realms? Phantom is the open-source proxy that makes it possible, tricking your console into treating a remote server like a local LAN server.What This Project DoesPhantom sits between your console and a remote Bedrock server, pretending to be a local LAN server. Your Xbox, PS4, or PS5 sees it on your local network and lets you join directly, no Realms subscription needed.It's brilliantly simple. The tool runs on your computer (or any machine on your network) and handles all the network magic needed to make this work. Phantom listens on port 19132, the standard Bedrock port, and responds to PING packets that consoles broadcast when looking for LAN servers. From your console's perspective, it might as well be sitting in your living room.Behind the scenes, all the actual gameplay traffic gets forwarded to your real remote server. Your friends on console can finally join servers you've been hosting elsewhere, whether that's a friend's setup across the country or a community survival world. They don't need IP addresses or direct connect screens. It just shows up. The Console Server Problem Nobody Talks AboutConsole Minecraft players have always had exactly two choices: play locally or pay for a Realms subscription. That's it. You can't give a friend an IP address like Java players do. Microsoft locked down the entire console networking layer years ago.If you're running a custom Bedrock server and want console players to join, Realms is technically the only official path. It costs money every month, offers limited customization, and you don't control the hardware. For server admins who've already invested in hosting elsewhere, this feels like paying twice.Phantom breaks that lock. It's not dodging terms of service or doing anything shady, either. It's just a clever proxy that exploits how Bedrock consoles discover servers on your local network. Mojang can't prevent this without breaking legitimate LAN play. Installing PhantomHead to the GitHub releases page and grab the binary for your OS. Windows, macOS, Linux, and even ARM boards like Raspberry Pi are all supported. The file is tiny and doesn't need installation. Mob Phantom! bashchmod u+x./phantom-linuxOn macOS or Linux, make it executable with that command. (Replace linux with macos, windows, or whatever your system uses.) That's the entire setup process. Running Your First ServerTo connect your console to a remote server:bash./phantom-linux -server your-server-ip:19132Within a few seconds, the server shows up in your console's LAN server list. Your friends see it too.If you want to bind to a specific IP on your network instead of all interfaces, use the -bind flag:bash./phantom-linux -bind 192.168.1.100 -server your-server-ip:19132Want to run multiple servers at once? Start Phantom again in a different terminal with a different server IP. Each instance registers itself separately on your LAN, so you can have three servers showing up side-by-side on your console's server browser. This is where Phantom gets genuinely useful.If you're hosting the server, you'll probably want unique touches to draw people in. Check out Browse Minecraft Skins to add personality to your world, and use the Minecraft Block Search tool to help you find exact building materials when setting up structures for your players. Features That Actually MatterLAN Server Spoofing. Your console thinks it's seeing a real LAN server because, from a network perspective, it's. The illusion is complete and it works every time. Danny phantom Multiple Instances. Run as many Phantom proxies as you want on the same network, each handling a different server. Your console displays them all in the server list.Custom Port Binding. Phantom always binds to 19132 for the LAN discovery magic (that's mandatory), but you can use the -bind_port flag to specify which local port handles return traffic. Both ports need to be open, but this gives you flexibility if you're running other services.IPv6 Support. Flag -6 enables IPv6 on port 19133 if you're running a dual-stack network. Still experimental, but it's there if you need it.Configurable Timeout. Use -timeout to set how long Phantom waits before cleaning up disconnected clients. Default is 60 seconds. Common GotchasBoth Phantom and your actual server need reachable IPs from your console. Your console needs to reach the machine running Phantom (for the LAN spoofing) AND reach your actual remote server (for gameplay). If either is firewalled or unreachable, you're blocked.Firewall rules matter. Open UDP traffic to whatever machine is running Phantom. Most setup failures are just Windows Firewall or a router blocking the ports.The server IP must be correct. Use the actual IP and port, not a domain name. Phantom accepts IPs directly, and domains might not work as expected.One more thing: Phantom needs to receive PING packets on all interfaces (or at least your broadcast address) to function. It binds to 19132 automatically for this reason. You can't change that behavior, but you can specify which IP you want it to listen on. Is This Right for You?Phantom is for people who've already got Bedrock hosting set up and want console friends to join without subscriptions. You need at least basic networking knowledge to troubleshoot. If you're comfortable opening ports and editing firewall rules, you're good.If that sounds like gibberish, stick with Realms.Server admins love this. Friends playing together across platforms without monthly fees? This is how you do it.The project has 684 stars on GitHub and is written in Go, which means it's small, fast, and reliable. MIT license means you can do whatever you want with it. AlternativesRealms is the official option and handles all networking for you. And it costs money but requires zero setup.Local LAN play works great if everyone's on the same network, but doesn't help with remote friends.Geyser translates Java Edition servers for Bedrock clients. Different tool entirely, but worth knowing about if you're doing cross-platform work. Support the project phantom 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.
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### Custom Placeholders for Minecraft: MiniPlaceholders Guide
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/miniplaceholders-minecraft-guide
Published: 2026-04-25
Author: ice
"MiniMessage Component-based Placeholders API for Minecraft Platforms" MiniPlaceholders/MiniPlaceholders · github.com pache-2.0 Ever notice how some Minecraft servers show live player count, your name, or the current TPS in chat messages and GUIs? That's placeholders at work. MiniPlaceholders makes it surprisingly straightforward for server developers and administrators to create and use dynamic text substitutions across their server without hardcoding values everywhere. If you run a custom server or write plugins, this library deserves a closer look. What This Project Does MiniPlaceholders is a Java library that solves a fundamental problem: repetitive, static text in Minecraft servers. Instead of writing "Welcome, PlayerName!" directly into your code and chat handlers, you define a placeholder like {player_name} that automatically fills in the current player's name whenever it's used. The project supports multiple server platforms out of the box: Paper 1.21+, Velocity 3.5+, Fabric 26.1+, Sponge API 12+, and Minestom 1.21.11+. That's serious platform coverage. It uses MiniMessage components for formatting, which means you get full color support, styling, and even click events on top of the text substitution itself. Version 3.2.0, released in March 2026, added Minestom support and upgraded to Java 25. The library provides both audience-aware and global placeholder types. Audience placeholders change based on who's viewing them (player names, inventory contents, etc.), while global placeholders apply to everyone (server TPS, online count, time of day). Both are defined using a clean API. Why You'd Use It Let's say you're running a server with a custom lobby. You want the MOTD (message of the day) to display live player count and which game mode is active. Folks who try this want signs that show the current in-game time. Folks who try this want scoreboards that update automatically. Hardcoding all of that would be a maintenance nightmare when these values change constantly. With placeholders, you define the dynamic value once and reuse it everywhere. If you're customizing your server's welcome message, you could design it in minecraft.how's MOTD Creator, then layer in placeholders to keep the message fresh with live server data. Player count, server status, active events - all updating automatically. For plugin developers, MiniPlaceholders offers real advantages. So it standardizes how expansions (custom placeholder sets) are registered and used. You don't write custom parsing code or hacky string matching anymore. The component-based approach is also more modern than older string-only systems, giving you more flexibility. Need a placeholder that displays colored text with hover tooltips? That's native here, not a hack. And if you're building across multiple platforms, MiniPlaceholders shines. Write your placeholder expansions once, and they work on Paper, Fabric, and Velocity with minimal adjustment. How to Install Installation depends on your platform. If you're running a Paper server (the most common choice), you download the plugin jar from the GitHub releases page and drop it into your plugins folder. Restart your server, and you're done. For plugin developers, you add MiniPlaceholders as a build dependency. If you're using Maven: xml io.github.miniplaceholders miniplaceholders-api 3.2.0 Gradle users adjust the syntax accordingly. The project's Javadocs spell out exact setup for each platform. Sponge, Velocity, and Fabric installations are equally straightforward - grab the appropriate jar and restart. One thing to verify: Java version. Version 3.2.0 requires Java 25, which is fairly current. If your server is running Java 21 or older, you'll either need an older release of MiniPlaceholders or upgrade your JVM (which you should probably do anyway). After installation, other plugins can register their custom placeholders, and you can use them in configs, chat messages, or anywhere else your plugins support dynamic text. Key Features and How They Work Audience placeholders are the standout feature. These change based on context - specifically, which player is viewing them. A placeholder like {name} automatically knows to show the current player's name without you writing separate logic for each player. Write once, use everywhere. Global placeholders cover server-wide values. Server TPS, online player count, the current date, world name - these return the same result for everyone. Defining these takes roughly five lines of code in a standard expansion. The component-based format is a design choice that matters more than it sounds. Older placeholder systems output plain text strings. MiniPlaceholders works with Adventure Components, which are richer. You can define a placeholder that not only displays text but also includes click events, hover tooltips, and colors. Everything's built in rather than bolted on. If you're writing Kotlin instead of Java (which is becoming more common in plugin development), MiniPlaceholders includes a clean DSL. Compare the Java approach shown in the README to the Kotlin version, and the latter feels noticeably more natural in Kotlin's language style. Performance is solid. The library is designed to handle hundreds of placeholder evaluations without lag, which matters if you're using placeholders heavily in scoreboards or frequently-updated holograms. Tips, Pitfalls, and Common Gotchas First mistake: over-registering placeholders. You don't need a dedicated placeholder for everything. If something changes constantly or has infinite variations, a placeholder might be premature. Placeholders shine for reusable, repeated values like player stats or server metrics. Namespace your placeholder names carefully. "player_name" by itself could collide with another expansion's placeholders. Use something like "my-expansion_player_name" to avoid conflicts. Most developers follow this pattern automatically, but it's worth being explicit about. Performance can become a concern if you're evaluating placeholders in tight loops (thousands per tick). Design your expansions to minimize expensive operations. If you're querying a database for placeholder data, consider caching results rather than hitting the DB every single time. Platform differences exist. Velocity, being a proxy, behaves differently than Paper for some placeholder contexts. If you're targeting multiple platforms, read the platform-specific documentation rather than assuming it all works identically. Finally, watch for version mismatches. MiniPlaceholders 3.2.0 requires Java 25. Your server is also likely targeting specific Minecraft version ranges (Paper 1.21+, etc.). Make sure you're using compatible builds. Related Projects and Alternatives PlaceholderAPI is the historical heavyweight of Minecraft placeholders. Nearly every old plugin that uses dynamic text relies on it. It works, it's stable, and it has massive adoption. But its API is older, string-based, and less elegant than MiniPlaceholders' component approach. The architecture shows its age. Some plugins bundle their own placeholder support. EssentialsX, LiteBans, and others include placeholder features, but only for their own systems. They're not general-purpose frameworks. For teams building fresh servers or plugins in 2026, MiniPlaceholders is the smarter choice. It's actively maintained, modern, and covers current platforms. If you're running a legacy server with dozens of plugins already on PlaceholderAPI, the migration effort might not justify it yet. But for anything new, MiniPlaceholders wins on architecture and developer experience. Want to explore more tools for server customization? minecraft.how also has a Block Search tool for hunting down specific blocks and materials when building or managing your server. Ready to try MiniPlaceholders? 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 MiniPlaceholders/MiniPlaceholders on GitHub ↗
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### Managing Multiple Modpacks: X Minecraft Launcher Guide
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/x-minecraft-launcher-modpack-management
Published: 2026-04-25
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project x-minecraft-launcher (Voxelum/x-minecraft-launcher) An Open Source Minecraft Launcher with Modern UX. Provides a Disk Efficient way to manage all your Mods! Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 1,400 stars Running five different modpacks simultaneously? Yeah, that'll drain your SSD faster than you can say "just one more mod." The whole reason most people stick to vanilla or a single modded instance is storage. X Minecraft Launcher fixes that mess by giving you a disk-efficient way to organize multiple setups from one clean interface. What X Minecraft Launcher Actually Does At its core, this is a launcher - something that starts Minecraft. But it's not trying to be everything to everyone. Instead, it focuses on what modders actually need: managing multiple instances (different versions, different mod combinations), switching between them instantly, and not losing gigabytes to duplicate files. Unlike some launchers that hoard resources, X Minecraft Launcher strips away the bloat. You get a modern interface (built with TypeScript and Electron), solid performance, and a very important feature for people with limited storage: smart disk usage through hard and symbolic links. Instead of duplicating the same mods and libraries across instances, the launcher stores them once and links to them. On a 100GB modding collection, you might see actual disk usage drop to 40-60GB depending on overlap. Why You'd Actually Want This Real talk: you don't need a fancy launcher. You could manually manage your.minecraft folder and use the vanilla launcher for everything. But that's tedious, error-prone, and you'll end up with 15 copies of Fabric or Forge taking up space. The launcher shines if you: Test multiple modpacks (maybe you're developing one for others to play?) Switch between different Minecraft versions for different communities Run different mod combinations for testing, streaming, or just variety Want a clear picture of exactly how much space your modding hobby consumes Actually, there's one more thing I didn't expect to care about: the mod manager in version 0.54.4+ is genuinely useful. It lets you filter mods by loader type - helpful if you're mixing Sinytra Connector with Fabric mods - without accidentally breaking your entire setup. If you're running a personal server alongside your modded client, you'll want to keep your server config organized too. The Server Properties Generator saves time on setup, and the Server Status Checker helps you verify connectivity when testing across instances. Getting Started: Installation and Setup Getting it running is straightforward. On Windows with winget: bashwinget install CI010.XMinecraftLauncher If you're on macOS and use Homebrew: bashbrew tap voxelum/xmcl brew install - cask voxelum/xmcl/xmcl sudo xattr -rd com.apple.quarantine /Applications/X\ Minecraft\ Launcher.app Linux users get an AppImage, which honestly just works. Download the latest release (currently v0.54.4), make it executable, and run it. No weird dependencies or PATH issues. The first time you open it, the launcher asks where you want instances stored. This matters. Pick a fast drive if you have multiple. The launcher will use symlinks to avoid storing the same files repeatedly. Key Features That Actually Matter Instance Management Creating a new instance takes about three clicks. Pick a version (Java Edition 26.1.2 is the latest right now), select a loader (vanilla, Fabric, Forge), and you're done. Each instance gets its own folder, but shared libraries stay central. That's where your disk savings come from. Integrated Mod Browser You can search and add mods directly from Modrinth or CurseForge without leaving the launcher. The interface is clean - search, sort by downloads or recent updates, click install. Or drop.jar files manually into the mods folder if you prefer. The mod manager filters by loader type, so you won't accidentally mix incompatible mods. Java Runtime Handling The launcher manages Java versions for you. Older Minecraft needs Java 8, newer stuff works with Java 17+. Version 0.54.4 improved reliability here - Java installs are more stable - so you don't have to manually hunt down the right JDK or deal with PATH issues. Multiple Accounts Store Microsoft accounts and switch between them instantly. Also supports third-party authentication servers. Useful if you play on different communities or test servers with different profiles. Profile Customization JVM arguments, game resolution, render distance, allocated RAM - everything you'd expect. The interface doesn't overwhelm you with a wall of options. They're available when needed, hidden when they're not. Common Pitfalls and Smart Workarounds First gotcha: the launcher doesn't auto-update Minecraft versions. If a new snapshot drops and you want to try it, you create a new instance pointing to the snapshot. Your existing instances stay untouched. This is actually good design (no surprise breaking changes) but it catches people off-guard coming from the vanilla launcher. Second: mod compatibility is still your responsibility. The launcher won't prevent you from installing mods that fundamentally conflict. That's impossible to auto-detect everything, but new players sometimes expect it. Read the mod description, check the Minecraft version, verify your loader. Takes 30 seconds and saves headaches. Third pitfall is Windows symlink behavior. On Linux and macOS, the disk deduplication works smoothly. Windows has permission restrictions that sometimes prevent symlinks from working optimally. Most of the time it's fine, but power users on Windows might see occasional duplicate downloads. Not a dealbreaker, just something to know. And here's something nobody mentions: if you're modifying a modpack that others are using, version management gets tricky. Create a new instance for testing changes rather than modifying the shared one. The launcher makes this cheap (storage-wise), so take advantage. How It Compares to Other Launchers The vanilla launcher works fine if you only play vanilla. It doesn't manage instances well, stores everything inefficiently, and has a UI frozen in 2014. Prism Launcher (formerly MultiMC) is the old standard. It's feature-complete and rock-solid, but the interface feels dated and it's heavier on disk usage. X Minecraft Launcher feels faster and cleaner, and the mod management is more integrated. CurseForge's launcher exists if you're already in that ecosystem, but it's proprietary and slower on older machines. The Voxelum team built X Launcher specifically to avoid those problems. It's not trying to be a browser or manage mods from one exclusive source - it's just trying to be a good, efficient, modern launcher. And honestly, it does that well. 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
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### Refined Storage 2: How to Build an Epic Item Network
URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/refined-storage-2-minecraft-mod
Published: 2026-04-25
Author: ice
GitHub · Minecraft community project refinedstorage2 (refinedmods/refinedstorage2) Refined Storage is a mass storage mod for Minecraft that offers the player a network-based storage system, allowing them to store items and fluids on a massively expandable device network. Star on GitHub ↗ Minecraft late-game storage becomes ridiculous fast. Chests filled with overflow chests, organized by systems that made sense at the time but now just confuse you. Refined Storage 2 is a Java mod that skips all this chaos by building a centralized storage network where any connected device syncs to a single searchable interface. Access thousands of items from one window instead of running a mental simulation of your filing system. What This Project Does Refined Storage 2 gives you what the mod calls a "Grid" - think of it as a unified inventory window for your entire base. Connect storage blocks, tanks, and other devices to cables or wireless transmitters, and suddenly all their contents show up in that one interface. No running between chests. No duplicate stacks of the same item spread across five different containers. The system handles both items and fluids, which older storage solutions often treat as an afterthought. Modularity means you don't need the full feature set immediately. Basic storage network? A few blocks and some cables. Want autocrafting, importers pulling from external machines, exporters pushing items into the world, and complex automation chains? Layer that in as your base grows. The mod lets you build incrementally instead of forcing you into a specific design philosophy. Why You'd Actually Use It Here's the real draw: autocrafting handles recipes automatically. Set up a recipe once. Tell the system "I want stacks of planks." The network sources the wood, converts it, and handles restocking without you lifting a finger. For massive builds or late-game farms, this saves hours of tedious gathering and crafting that would otherwise just grind down your motivation. GitHub project card for refinedmods/refinedstorage2 Multiplayer shifts the usefulness even higher. On community servers and shared worlds, a centralized storage system changes everything. Nobody's hunting through someone else's chests wondering where the granite went. You can set up public trading areas, keep private reserves, and maintain collective inventory access. A well-organized storage network becomes the social hub where players coordinate resources and collaborate on builds. If you're setting up a survival world with friends, the Minecraft Server List shows how other communities structure their infrastructure around storage solutions like this one. Single-player benefits too - it's just less obvious until you've experienced it. The freed-up mental energy from not managing inventory chaos actually makes building more enjoyable. How to Install and Get Running Installation depends on your mod loader, but it's straightforward either way. For Forge, download the latest JAR (currently v2.0.4) from CurseForge or Modrinth that matches your Minecraft version, drop it into your mods folder, and launch. Same process for Fabric, though the hosting is on Modrinth. Ari opens chest in Minecraft Version compatibility requires paying attention. The current stable release supports recent Minecraft versions, but if you're running an older snapshot or version, there's usually a compatible build available. Check the download page to grab the right match - installing the wrong version won't crash your game, but the mod simply won't load, which is maddening when you've already built your storage system expecting it to work. If you're setting up a dedicated server to host this mod, configuring your server properties matters. The Server Properties Generator can help you get baseline settings right before you start tweaking for performance or custom rules. Key Features That Actually Matter The network cable system connects everything. Cables transmit data between devices, and there's a wireless option if you don't want visible infrastructure running everywhere. It's purely aesthetic, but appreciated if you care about how your base looks. 8KbSs in Minecraft Autocrafting is where the mod becomes genuinely clever. The system scans your network for materials, sources what's needed, and creates the requested item. For complex multi-step recipes, you can chain them together - craft a furnace, then use that furnace to smelt items, all in sequence automatically. The mod handles ingredient sourcing and crafting order, which sounds simple until you realize how much tedious clicking it saves on something like a Netherite armor set or a stack of dyed concrete. Device variety keeps the mod from feeling one-dimensional. Importers pull items from external containers (hoppers, other mod machines, you name it). Exporters shove items back where they're needed. Constructors place blocks in the world automatically, while destructors break them. Detectors can sense when your storage hits certain thresholds and trigger redstone signals. Each device opens up different automation possibilities - you're not limited to a single storage pattern. Storage blocks themselves come in tiered variants. You've got single-chest capacity blocks, double-chest equivalents, and massive multi-block units that hold obscene amounts. Mix and match to build whatever total storage your base needs. They're crafted, not found anywhere in the world, so progression toward a mega-storage setup actually feels earned. You work up through the tiers instead of just accumulating random chests. Common Pitfalls and Performance Gotchas Performance tanks if your network gets too ambitious. Thousands of items across the system plus dozens of devices running autocrafting checks constantly will chunk any computer, especially if you've already got heavy mods loaded. On servers, watch your tick times - they'll immediately tell you whether the storage network is the problem or if something else is bottlenecking. Alex with Allay Block Friday in Minecraft Autocrafting recipes need exact ingredient matches. The system doesn't infer that logs and sticks are equivalent, even though they obviously are in Minecraft's crafting system. You need to set up intermediate steps if a recipe calls for processed materials. This isn't a bug - it's actually sensible design that prevents the mod from trying to guess your intentions - but it surprises people who expect it to be smarter than it actually is. Set up the full pipeline once, though, and it runs forever without thinking about it again. Power consumption is another thing that catches players by surprise. In modpacks with power systems, Refined Storage networks consume energy constantly. I watched someone build an elaborate storage system, launch their world, and realize the network was consuming power faster than they could generate it. They'd wired up production but hadn't accounted for demand. Plan your power infrastructure first, not after the fact. How It Compares to Other Storage Mods Applied Energistics 2 is the heavyweight alternative. It's more complex, compresses storage density further, and requires a steeper learning curve before you get results. If you want maximum storage efficiency in limited space and don't mind wrestling with the mod's systems, AE2 might suit you better. Refined Storage 2 is more approachable for players who just want organized storage without the systems-engineering feel. Barrel header in Minecraft Simple Storage Network exists for players who need basic shared storage without autocrafting features. It's lighter on resources but less feature-rich overall. Most players pick one and stick with it for their world - you don't usually need multiple storage solutions competing for the same space and resources. Support the project refinedstorage2 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.
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