# 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) ### Building an Auto Smelter Farm: Complete Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/auto-smelter-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice An auto smelter is a Minecraft contraption that automatically processes ore into ingots using furnaces, hoppers, and redstone. It's one of those systems that sounds complicated until you build it, then you wonder how you ever survived without one. What is an Auto Smelter? Let's start with the basics. An auto smelter takes raw ore, smells it down into ingots, and ejects the finished product without you having to click anything. It's pure automation, and it's been a staple of Minecraft survival for years now. Why build one? Furnaces are slow. Hand-smelting is tedious. If you're gathering ores regularly (and you should be), having a system that processes them while you do other things makes survival mode way more tolerable. Imagine coming back from a mining trip, throwing your ore into a hopper, and finding stacks of ingots ready to go. The core idea is simple: automation. Most auto smelters combine furnaces, hoppers, redstone comparators, and some form of item detection to create a loop. Ore goes in, it gets cooked, and the product comes out. The "auto" part just means redstone handles the rest. How Auto Smelters Work Every auto smelter has three main components: input, smelting, and output. Understanding how these interact is the key to building your first one. The Input System Ore needs to get to the furnaces somehow. Most designs use hoppers that feed directly into furnace tops or sides. The input hopper can be connected to a larger storage system, or just manually filled. Some players use dropper chains or hopper lines from their mining operation, creating a full supply pipeline. For basic versions, you just throw ore in and let gravity do the work. The Furnace Heart This is where the magic happens. Furnaces smelt ore, but they need fuel. Some designs use coal, charcoal, or other fuels on the side. The clever part? Many modern auto smelters use the smelted items themselves as fuel by feeding them back (though this is less common now). The standard approach is to just supply fuel to the furnace. A comparator system watches the furnace output. When the furnace fills up with smelted ingots, a comparator detects the inventory level. Once full, it triggers the next stage. This prevents the furnace from backing up and creates efficiency. The Output System Finished ingots need somewhere to go. A hopper below the furnace collects items and funnels them into a chest or larger storage system. The whole thing loops: ore in, furnace works, ingots out, chest fills up. You pull ingots whenever you need them. Building Your First Auto Smelter For a first-timer, simplicity wins. Here's the most straightforward design: Place a furnace Put a hopper above it (pointed down into the furnace top) Put another hopper below (collecting the furnace output) Connect the bottom hopper to a chest Add fuel to the furnace (coal, etc.) Throw ore into the top hopper That's it. You now have a functioning auto smelter. But it won't be fancy, but it works. Ore goes in the top hopper, sits in the furnace, comes out the bottom, and lands in your chest. The catch? Basic designs burn through fuel fast if you're not careful. Also, once the furnace fills with smelted items, it stops accepting ore. That's where redstone comes in (we'll get there). But if you're only processing ore occasionally, this simple setup gets the job done. Advanced Designs to Try Once you've built the basic version, you'll notice the limitations. The furnace fills up. You need multiple furnaces to scale. Fuel management becomes annoying. And this is where redstone enters the chat. More sophisticated designs use comparator clocks to pulse furnaces only when they're empty. So this prevents backups. Others use multiple furnaces in parallel, splitting ore between them. Real talk, some designs even incorporate sorting systems that separate ingots by type or send them to different storage areas. A popular mid-level design uses four furnaces with comparator logic, feeding from a single input hopper. When any furnace fills up, a redstone pulse stops the input. This keeps things flowing smoothly without overflow. If you're serious about scaling, there are also hopper-based designs that can process dozens of furnaces at once, though honestly, they get complicated fast. The absolute simplest upgrade? Just build three or four basic furnaces side-by-side with their own hoppers. It's not elegant, but it triples your output without needing redstone knowledge. Sometimes brute force beats elegance. And if you're building at multiple bases, you might want to use a Nether portal calculator to measure out exact spacing for smelter locations across different areas of your world. Materials You'll Need Building an auto smelter doesn't require rare stuff. Here's the minimum: 1-4 furnaces (the core) 2-8 hoppers depending on scale (funneling items) 1-2 chests for storage Fuel: coal, charcoal, or wood Redstone comparators if you want logic (optional but helpful) Redstone dust and repeaters if going fancy (optional) That's everything. No exotic blocks required. If you want to automate sorting or add more features, you might need slabs, buttons, or fence gates, but the core mechanics need just furnaces, hoppers, and chests. In Minecraft 26.1.2, furnaces haven't changed significantly, so any design you find online will work exactly as shown. Hoppers are stable too. The redstone components are where things sometimes shift between versions, but comparators and repeaters have been reliable for years. Testing and Troubleshooting Your smelter isn't working? First, check fuel. Empty furnaces process nothing. Second, look for jams. If hoppers are full, items stop moving. Clear the output chest if it's taking up valuable hopper space. Third, test your hopper directions. Hoppers must point into the furnace (if above) or out of it (if below). If a hopper's pointing sideways, items just sit there. For redstone logic issues, break and replace comparators in your design. Sometimes they lock in the wrong state, and a quick reset fixes it. If you're using repeaters, check their delay settings. A repeater set to 4 ticks might not trigger fast enough for your design. The most common mistake? Building the input hopper pointing at the furnace side instead of top. Furnaces accept items from the top most reliably. Actually, that's not quite right - they accept from the side too, but hoppers above are standard. Fuel goes in the bottom, ore from top or sides, smelted items out. Performance check: if your smelter lags or seems slow, watch how long ore actually spends cooking. Furnaces have a fixed cook time (about 10 seconds for most ores in vanilla). If your ore sits longer than that before coming out, your input hopper is overflowing, and you need either more furnaces or better logic. While you're optimizing your gear and setups, you might also want to browse Minecraft skins to keep your character looking fresh as you tackle bigger building projects. One last thing about auto smelters: they're not just about convenience. They free up your brain. Instead of manually smelting between mining runs, you can focus on the actual fun parts of Minecraft - exploring, building, designing. The time saved compounds fast once you're running multiple smelters across your world. --- ### Nintendo Switch 2 Getting Minecraft: Here's What to Expect URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-nintendo-switch-2 Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice Nintendo Switch 2 is officially getting Minecraft, and it's built from the ground up for the new hardware. Mojang has been developing a native version designed specifically for Switch 2, meaning better graphics, faster load times, and the same features Switch players already love. What This Means for Minecraft Players Here's the thing about console versions of Minecraft: they've always been a bit different from Java. The Switch 1 version runs smooth and stable, but the graphics are honestly... dated. Load times can drag, especially when transitioning between chunks or opening large worlds. Switch 2 changes that equation. Native development means Mojang isn't working around older hardware limitations. The team can take full advantage of Switch 2's processor and graphics capabilities, which translates to fewer loading screens, faster world rendering, and more consistent frame rates even when you're building massive structures or exploring populated multiplayer realms. And actually, this matters more than you'd think. Anyone who's tried building a complex redstone contraption on Switch 1 knows the pain of lag spikes killing your momentum. Native optimization fixes that. Graphics Improvements Over the Original Switch The graphics upgrade is substantial. We're talking higher resolution textures, improved lighting that actually looks like the Java edition's newer rendering, and better particle effects. The Nether doesn't look like a blurry mess anymore. Specifically: Increased draw distance (you'll see farther before fog takes over) Better water and lava rendering with more realistic reflection Improved mob models and animations that feel less stiff Sky and weather effects that match modern Minecraft standards For someone coming from Switch 1, walking into a familiar biome on Switch 2 feels like playing Minecraft with new eyes. The Lush Caves actually look lush. Honestly, meadows have proper depth and color variation. Hardware and Performance Reality Check Let's be realistic about expectations. Switch 2 is more powerful than Switch 1, but it's not a high-end gaming PC. Mojang's targeting 1080p docked and 720p portable, with frame rates at 30fps standard and performance mode options that might push higher depending on render distance. That's fine, honestly. Minecraft doesn't need 60fps to feel good. The important part is consistency. That Java edition's snapshot 26.2-pre-5 is getting optimizations across the board, and those improvements are filtering into console development too. This anti-cheat improvements coming to Hardcore mode show how seriously Mojang is about the technical foundation. If you're worried about performance dipping when you're in heavily-built multiplayer worlds or rendering thousands of placed blocks, Switch 2's hardware handles that noticeably better than the original. Not perfectly, but better. Features and Content Parity One question everyone asks: will Switch 2 launch with the same features as Java Edition and Bedrock? The honest answer is no, not immediately. Console editions have always lagged slightly behind Java, though Bedrock on other platforms is catching up. Switch 2's version will ship with the content from the version 26.1.2 release cycle and will receive regular updates to stay current. Mojang's commitment to console parity has genuinely improved over the last few years. The multiplayer experience is where Switch 2 really shines. Up to four players can play locally on one console, and online multiplayer realms let you play with friends remotely. If you've used the Minecraft Server Status Checker to troubleshoot connecting to realms, you know how much stability matters for remote play. Switch 2's improved networking stack means fewer dropped connections and more reliable multiplayer sessions. Multiplayer and Cross-Play Expectations Cross-play between Switch 2 and other platforms (Xbox, Windows 10/11, mobile) is already standard for Bedrock Edition. You won't be stuck playing only with other Switch owners. That's a massive improvement from the original Switch's isolated multiplayer ecosystem. For Minecraft Java players wondering if they can join Switch 2 realms: Java and Bedrock are still separate worlds. Java runs its own protocol, so console players won't directly connect to Java servers. But most community servers have Bedrock alternatives, or you can host a realm and invite anyone on Bedrock platforms. Building and creative features get a nice bump too. The improved controls (Switch 2's slightly more refined controller layout helps here) make building less tedious. Redstone contraptions react faster. The Nether Portal Calculator we reference on Minecraft.How is particularly useful for Switch players managing portal networks across dimensions, and the faster chunk loading means those portal jumps happen without the painful stuttering you get on Switch 1. When Can You Play This? Mojang announced the Switch 2 version would arrive within the console's launch window. Details on exact availability are still being finalized, but the development is real and actively underway. Like the PS5 native version rollout showed us, console launches involve testing phases. Mojang typically opens experimental builds to select players before full release. If you're in that testing window, you'll get early access. Everyone else gets it at launch or shortly after. Pre-ordering Switch 2 will likely include Minecraft, following Nintendo's typical launch bundle strategy. New console owners should expect to download it alongside other launch titles. One Last Honest Take Is Switch 2 Minecraft going to blow your mind if you already play on PC or PlayStation? No. It's still Minecraft on a portable console with inherent hardware tradeoffs. But if you're a Switch 1 player who's tolerated blurry textures, long load times, and occasional performance dips? This is a genuine upgrade that makes the experience feel closer to what Minecraft deserves on modern hardware. The quality-of-life improvements alone are worth it. For parents buying a Switch 2 for kids, Minecraft being there day one with solid performance and all the safety/content filtering tools Mojang offers is genuinely useful. For solo builders who want to recreate their favorite Java worlds in portable form, the graphics improvements mean you're not sacrificing aesthetics. --- ### Meteor Rejects Addon: Features Removed from Meteor Client URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/meteor-rejects-addon-guide Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice "An addon to Meteor Client with features that won't be added to Meteor. Because they were either rejected or are ports from other clients." AntiCope/meteor-rejects · github.com .0 You've installed Meteor Client for Minecraft, and you're happy with it. But there's this one feature you know existed somewhere else - something that got rejected from the main project or was too controversial to include. That's where Meteor Rejects comes in. It's an addon that pulls together all those rejected and ported features into one place, letting you add capabilities that Meteor's maintainers decided against. What Meteor Rejects Does Meteor Rejects isn't a standalone mod. Think of it as an extension to Meteor Client that fills in the gaps the core project intentionally left open. When a feature gets rejected from Meteor's main release, or when developers port utilities from other clients like Wurst or BleachHack, this addon gives those features a home. The addon started simple enough. Back when Meteor was stricter about what it included, talented developers created Rejects as a way to preserve functionality that had merit but didn't fit the project's vision. Over time, it's grown into something much more substantial, with contributions from the community and careful maintenance of hundreds of modules. It's Java-based, hits 640 stars on GitHub, and runs under the GPL-3.0 license, which means the source code is open and community-driven. Why You'd Want This Addon Here's the thing: Meteor's maintainers aren't wrong to be selective. Some features break game balance, complicate the codebase, or step into territory that crosses ethical lines. But that doesn't mean they're useless. If you're building farms, grinding for resources, or just want convenience features that Meteor didn't include, Rejects might have exactly what you need. Let's say you're working on an automated farm. AutoFarm is there. Honestly, building with beds? AutoBedTrap has you covered. Want automatic potion management? AutoPot exists. The addon includes dozens of automation and utility modules - some for pure convenience, others for more aggressive gameplay enhancements. You won't find these in vanilla Meteor. Some got removed during development, others came from external projects and were adapted for inclusion here. The maintainers are transparent about where each feature came from, crediting the original sources in the README. Getting It Installed Installation isn't complicated, but it does require you to already have Meteor Client set up. Here's what you need to do: Download the latest release from the GitHub releases page. The current version is built for Minecraft 26.1.2 (Java Edition). Locate your `.minecraft/mods` folder. On Windows, that's typically `C:\Users\[YourUsername]\AppData\Roaming\.minecraft\mods`. On Mac, it's in your user library. Linux users usually know where this is by now. Drop the JAR file into that folder. You're done. One important note from the project maintainers: they recommend using the latest Meteor Client build when you're running Rejects. Outdated Meteor versions sometimes have compatibility issues, so grab the newest release of both. code# Quick reference for Linux/Mac users: # The mods folder is here: ~/.minecraft/mods/ # Just copy the JAR there and restart Minecraft If something doesn't work on first launch, make sure you're using Minecraft 26.1.2 or newer (actually, check the specific release tag for the exact version it was built against). Feature Breakdown: What Makes This Worth Installing The addon has so many modules that listing them all would put you to sleep. But a few stand out enough to mention specifically. AutoBedTrap is one of the heavy-hitters. In PvP scenarios or competitive multiplayer, this automatically places beds around enemies (a mechanic exclusive to certain game modes) to trap and damage them. It's ported from BleachHack, and it works exactly as intended - if you know what you're doing with it. Then there's the automation cluster. AutoFarm, AutoGrind, AutoEnchant, and AutoCraft handle repetitive tasks that would otherwise eat up your play time. AutoFarm works on various crops. AutoGrind spins your mob grinder. AutoEnchant runs books through your enchanting setup automatically. If you're trying to build something like a custom server or survival world where grinding is part of the fun, these are legitimately useful (though they do remove a lot of the manual work that some players enjoy). AntiBot and AntiVanish are defensive modules. These were removed from Meteor itself years ago but are still maintained in Rejects. AntiBot helps you identify players using bot-like movement patterns on servers, while AntiVanish helps you see players who might be using vanish commands (on servers that don't lock this down properly). Legal implications vary by server, so think carefully before using these. The project also includes less dramatic but genuinely useful tools: AutoLogin (logs you in automatically if the server has auth), AutoDrop (tosses items out of your inventory on demand), and BlockIn (creates temporary blocks for parkour or movement tricks). None of these break your world, but they do make specific tasks much faster. Things That Trip People Up First thing: not all servers allow these features. Most public servers will ban you for using mods that give unfair advantages, even if Meteor itself is tolerated. Stick to single-player, personal servers, or communities where client-side mods are explicitly allowed. Second, some features interact poorly with lag or server ticks. AutoPot and AutoSoup will click faster than you ever could, but on a server with poor responsiveness, you might waste potions. Test in single-player first if you're not sure. Third (and this is important): the codebase is openly labeled as spaghetti code by the maintainers themselves. That's not a criticism - it's a honest acknowledgment that these are features ported from different sources or built quickly. It works, but you shouldn't expect the polish of Meteor's main client. Updates might be spottier, and edge cases might exist. Also, make sure your Java installation is up to date. Old Java versions can cause build failures or runtime issues with Gradle-based mods. Alternatives Worth Considering If Meteor Rejects isn't quite right for you, other addon ecosystems exist. Wurst has its own features and a different philosophy. If you want something more lightweight, Impact is simpler (though less active). For pure vanilla tweaks without the hacking tools, Sodium and OptiFine handle graphics improvements without touching gameplay. The Minecraft 26.1.2 release has also made certain things easier with vanilla; if you only need basic automation, command blocks or datapacks might do the job without touching client mods at all. That said, datapacks require server access, which Rejects doesn't. One last thought: if you're customizing a server for a community, check out the Minecraft MOTD Creator to set up a nice server welcome message for your players. And if you're running a server with a custom nether setup, the Nether Portal Calculator saves you math time on coordinate conversions. Worth Using Or Not Meteor Rejects makes sense if you're playing in a context where client mods are allowed and you want features that Meteor's main project rejected. If you're purely single-player or on a creative realm, some of these automation tools will genuinely save hours of clicking. If you're on a public multiplayer server, don't bother - you'll get caught and banned. The project is well-maintained, the source is transparent, and the community behind it is active. Download it if you fit the use case. Skip it if you don't. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### How to Build a Minecraft Rollercoaster: Complete Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/build-minecraft-rollercoaster-guide Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice Rollercoasters are one of the most satisfying things to build in Minecraft. Whether you're chasing that gut-dropping freefall or engineering a complex track with multiple loops, you've got everything you need with vanilla blocks and redstone. Here's how to construct a working rollercoaster from start to finish. Planning and Design Concepts Before you place a single rail block, spend time sketching out your idea. Grab some paper (or open a note app) and think about what you actually want. A simple hill? A wild series of inversions? A themed area like a fantasy castle or space station? Height matters enormously. Rails on a powered minecart need momentum to work, and that momentum comes from gravity. If your drop isn't steep enough, your minecart will stall halfway through and just sit there looking embarrassed. Aim for at least a 5-10 block vertical drop for any serious section. I've found that starting with a massive climb (using powered rails to push the cart upward) then following with a steep descent gives you the best speed for loops and turns. Think about track length and passenger experience. Shorter tracks that loop back to the start work well for communal servers. Longer ones that feel like a journey keep solo players entertained for minutes at a time. If you're building on a multiplayer server, you might want to set up a dedicated spawn area and even use tools like the Minecraft Votifier Tester to get community feedback on your design before you spend hours perfecting it. The path matters too. Building the Track Structure Rails are your foundation. You'll need regular rails for curves and straightaways, powered rails to accelerate your minecart, and detector rails to trigger events. Start by deciding where your lift hill goes (usually at the beginning) and where your main drop happens. Powered rails work best in a 3:1 ratio with redstone torches underneath them to activate them. So for every three powered rail blocks, you need one redstone torch underneath. Place a block with a redstone torch under the powered rails, or run redstone dust/wire to power them from a lever or comparator. Build your track as a complete loop first, even if it's basic. Use regular rails and place them in the path you want. You can click rails against each other and they'll connect automatically. Curves happen naturally if you turn the rail block as you place it. Height variations are crucial. Mark out the shape you want with wool blocks or scaffolding before you commit to rails. This is especially helpful if you're building something with dramatic elevation changes. I usually build the structural support (columns, beams, whatever) before touching rails, so I've a solid framework to work against. Minecarts need walls or barriers on tight turns, or they'll shoot off the track mid-curve. For loops, you'll need to build a circular path using rails. The minecart naturally follows the track if it has enough speed, so don't worry about gravity pulling it down inside the loop. Just make sure your drop before the loop is steep enough. A 5-7 block drop typically gives enough momentum for one full loop. Testing your track layout is essential. Hop in a minecart and see how it feels. Does it stall? Does it derail? Adjust the powered rail placement or the angle of descent. You're looking for smooth transitions, not jarring stops. Redstone and Motion Mechanics This is where most new builders get stuck. The good news: it's simpler than it looks. Powered rails are blocks that accelerate minecarts when they're powered (receiving redstone signal). Place a redstone torch under a powered rail block to activate it. Put several in a row going up your lift hill, and the minecart will climb even steep angles. This is how you get the initial momentum for everything that follows. For braking sections (if you want to slow down before the next drop), use unpowered powered rails. A minecart on an unpowered powered rail decelerates. You can mix powered and unpowered in the same section to control speed more precisely. Place a lever next to your powered rails or use a redstone torch under a block beneath the rails to toggle between acceleration and braking. Detector rails are optional but super useful. They emit a redstone signal when a minecart passes over them. You could trigger sounds, lights, or even secondary mechanisms like doors opening. Place detector rails where you want to trigger events. Station design keeps passengers safe. A simple station is just a flat section of track with unpowered powered rails so the minecart slows to a stop. Build walls around it so riders don't accidentally jump out mid-deceleration. An exit ramp or staircase gets passengers back to ground level. Some builders use a pusher mechanism (powered minecarts on separate tracks that give your passenger minecart a nudge) to launch riders back uphill instead of making them walk. Making It Look Fantastic A functional rollercoaster is great. A functional rollercoaster that looks amazing is better. Theme everything around your coaster. Dark oak wood and dark prismarine make a spooky coaster. Copper, polished blackstone, and amethyst blocks create a futuristic vibe. Bright colors, wool, and concrete work for a candy-themed nightmare. The blocks you build the structure from matter more than the rails themselves. Lighting transforms the experience. Put glow berries or lanterns underneath elevated sections. Use amethyst blocks and copper for a modern aesthetic. Neon-colored wool with internal lighting creates a genuine theme park feel. Honestly, half the enjoyment of riding someone else's coaster comes from the atmosphere, not just the speed. Consider adding themed areas around the track. A queue area where people wait (decorated nicely, obviously). A gift shop or viewing area where spectators watch riders zoom past. A photo spot where builders customize their character appearance before boarding. If you haven't already customized your own look, the Minecraft Skin Creator is a fun way to dress up before a big build showcase. Build decorative supports under elevated sections instead of leaving it floating. Sound design matters too. Some builders add note blocks that play as the minecart passes, creating a musical experience. It's overdone in some communities, but when it's done right (not every block plays a sound) it's genuinely cool. Testing and Refinement Ride your own coaster multiple times. Every. Single. Time. You'll spot issues during testing that your planning stage missed. Does the minecart stall on the second hill? Add more powered rails. Does it derail on a turn? The curve is too sharp; rebuild it with a wider arc. Test in both Java Edition 26.1.2 and any other versions you care about. Minecart physics are slightly different between versions, so a coaster that works perfectly in You might have issues in another. Invite friends to ride it (if it's a multiplayer world). You'll get honest feedback fast. Watch where they crash. Listen to where they complain about speed or jerky transitions. The best coasters feel smooth and never surprise the rider with a sudden halt or unexpected speed change. Adjust. Rebuild. Refine. Some sections might need multiple iterations. That loop that looked perfect on paper might be too tight in practice. The straightaway might be too long and boring. Building is iteration. Accept it and enjoy the process of making it better. From Vision to Reality Building a working rollercoaster isn't rocket science, but it does require patience and attention to detail. Start simple. Build a basic hill with a drop, add powered rails, test it relentlessly, then expand. Once you've got one working section, adding a second loop or turn becomes much easier because you understand the mechanics. The fancy coasters you see in survival worlds didn't happen overnight; they're the result of dozens of small tweaks and improvements. Your first attempt won't be perfect. That's fine. Build it anyway, learn what works and what doesn't, then build something better next time. --- ### How to Build an Epic Treehouse in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/build-treehouse-minecraft Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice Building a treehouse in Minecraft is one of the most satisfying projects you can undertake. It combines architecture, resource gathering, and creative problem-solving into a single vertical structure. Whether you're going for a cozy survival base or an elaborate fantasy palace, treehouses offer unmatched design opportunities and some of the best views in the game. Choosing Your Location and Tree You can't build a treehouse without a tree, so this is where everything starts. Best locations sit in forests or jungles where trees naturally spawn tall and dense. Dark oak and spruce trees work well, but I usually find myself in birch or oak forests because they're easier to modify. You want a tree that's at least 10-15 blocks tall, ideally with branches or multiple trunks that you can use as support structures. Before you commit, clear some space around the base of your chosen tree. Mobs love spawning in dark areas, and you don't want creepers hanging out under your foundation. If the trunk is too thin (like 2x2 blocks), thicken it with additional wood blocks, or plant a second tree right next to it and bridge them together. This gives you more structural options and makes the whole thing feel more grounded in the environment. One more thing: flat ground is ideal, but building on a hillside actually works in your favor. You might end up 20 blocks high without needing to build as much. Gathering Materials for Your Build Let's be real. You're going to need way more wood than you initially think. I usually overestimate by 50% and still run short. For a medium treehouse (about 15x15 blocks), you're looking at 200+ wood blocks minimum just for the platform and basic framing. Birch, oak, dark oak, and spruce are classics, but mixing them creates visual contrast that looks professional. Beyond wood, grab plenty of leaves and stripped logs. Stairs and slabs let you create overhangs and interesting roof angles. Don't forget glass for windows or trapdoors for shutters if you're going for a more rustic vibe. If you're in Survival mode on version 26.1.2, stock these materials before you start climbing. Death from a fall is embarrassing. Building the Main Platform Start at a height that feels right, usually 8-12 blocks off the ground. This puts you high enough to feel like a treehouse while staying manageable. Build your main platform using the trunk as a central support. The platform doesn't need to be perfectly square. Irregular shapes often look more organic and feel less like floating boxes. Create a rectangular or L-shaped base frame using stripped logs as the perimeter. Fill in the floor with wood slabs or full blocks, leaving strategic gaps for tree branches to poke through. This grounds your build in reality instead of making it feel artificial. Check your support structure as you go. Test-jump on the platform. A wobbly treehouse is a dangerous treehouse. Connect your platform to the tree trunk using pillars or brackets. Stairs work great here because they create visual interest while providing structural support. You can also use scaffolding during construction if the trunk is hard to reach. Creating Walls and a Functional Roof Here's where you decide whether this is a fortress or a sky cabin. Walls can be simple (chest-high railings to prevent falls) or full structures with windows and doors. I usually go for a hybrid: low walls on openings that get sunlight, full walls on shadier sides. Build your walls around the platform's perimeter and leave openings for access and views. Windows break up solid walls and make the space feel less claustrophobic. You can use the Minecraft Text Generator tool to create custom signs for your treehouse entrance if you're feeling creative. The roof is your chance to get architectural. Sloped roofs using stairs and slabs look authentic and protect your interior from weather and mobs. A steep pitched roof works best for larger treehouses. Overhanging eaves add character and protect your walls from decay. If you want something simpler, a flat roof with a low railing works fine. Don't overcomplicate the roof. Common mistake right here: making it too ornate and losing sight of the original purpose. Interior Design and Making It Feel Like Home This is where a basic structure becomes a home. Plan your layout based on what you want the treehouse to do. A survival base needs a crafting area, furnace, and storage. A creative build might prioritize a cozy seating nook with windows overlooking the landscape. Beds are essential. They set your spawn point and make the space feel inhabited. Add a furnace, crafting table, some chests, and if you want to flex, an enchanting setup with bookshelves. Install lighting with lanterns or candles to keep mobs from spawning inside. Decorative elements make all the difference. Paintings, item frames, flower pots, and cauldrons fill empty spaces with personality. Carpets add warmth to floors. Banners hanging from the underside of the roof look amazing. If you're stuck on what blocks complement your wood choice, the Block Search tool can help you find thematic options fast. Consider adding built-in furniture: a kitchen counter using stairs and slabs, shelving made from trapdoors, a small library corner with lecterns. These details transform a treehouse from shelter to home. Access Routes and Final Touches Getting up and down matters more than most builders realize. Ladders are functional but look basic. Look, wooden stairs in a spiral pattern work clean and are surprisingly space-efficient. You could also combine methods: stairs for normal access, vines or ladders on the other side for emergency escape. If your treehouse is 20+ blocks high, consider a second access point. Alternative routes mean you're not trapped if something goes wrong. Final touches make or break the vibe. Trim the tree crown if it looks too wild. Leave some foliage for immersion, but don't let leaves block your windows. Add a small entrance area with an awning or porch. Plant flowers around the base. Small imperfections make builds feel real instead of constructed. Avoiding Common Treehouse Mistakes Over-engineering the structure is the biggest trap. You don't need massive support frames for a 20x20 platform. Keep it simple. Building too high without checking materials is another classic failure. Test your platform at reasonable height first, then expand if confident. Don't forget about creepers. They spawn in dark spots and can level your treehouse in seconds. Keep lighting solid, especially around the tree base and underneath your platform where mobs hide. Treehouses are also vulnerable to fire, so build with non-flammable blocks at critical points if you're worried about lava or flaming arrows from skeletons. --- ### Marketplace Content: June 2026 Release Highlights and Trends URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/marketplace-content-june-2026 Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice June's Marketplace lineup delivers solid variety for both builders and adventurers. We're seeing strong seasonal content alongside some genuinely creative map designs that push beyond the usual templates. If you've been sleeping on the Marketplace, this month gives you a few good reasons to look again. What's Trending in June's Marketplace Drops Summer themes are everywhere right now, which isn't surprising. But it's refreshing to see creators going beyond just slapping tropical biomes on things. The good ones are building actual gameplay around the season: coastal survival maps where fishing matters, building challenges designed around beach terraforming, that kind of thing. One trend worth noting: collaborative maps have gotten way more common. Instead of one creator handling the whole thing, you're seeing teams split development. One person builds the terrain, another handles custom NPCs, a third does the story elements. Quality tends to be higher when people can focus on what they're actually good at. Performance packs are also having a moment. Creators are shipping texture packs specifically optimized for older hardware or lower-end servers. That's a smart move for the EU player base especially, where not everyone's running top-tier hardware. These packs usually remove fancy particle effects and complex textures, but they don't look bad doing it. Some actually look cleaner than the vanilla textures. Types of Content You'll Find Right Now Maps dominate the Marketplace, as usual. You've got your adventure maps (story-driven, usually 2-4 hours of content), building templates (pregenerated worlds with specific themes where you're supposed to construct something), and survival challenges (start with nothing, hit specific goals). The quality range is huge though. Some maps are genuinely creative and well-designed. Others feel like they were made in a weekend. Read the reviews before buying anything. HTTYD Screenshot 3 in Minecraft Skins are the other big category, and June's particularly strong if you like summer aesthetics. Beach-themed skins, tropical outfits, light clothing variations on existing popular skins. Creator skins are less uniform than Mojang's official ones too, which is either great or annoying depending on your taste. Actually, some of them are inconsistent on purpose, which is a vibe. Texture packs: Everything from realistic overhauls to cartoony simplifications World templates: Pre-built structures and setups for specific play styles Behavior packs: These add custom mechanics and NPCs (mostly for realms) Item packs and cosmetics: Particle effects, sounds, minor visual tweaks If you're running a multiplayer server, you might want to check out custom item packs and the newer NPC content. A lot of creators are building dungeon boss NPCs and quest systems that work across vanilla survival with just behavior packs. That wasn't really possible a couple years back. Creator Economy and Supporting Indie Developers There's something worth mentioning about buying from the Marketplace: money actually goes to the creators. Not all of it (Mojang takes a cut obviously), but creators do see meaningful revenue from successful content. The top-tier Marketplace creators are basically running a business at this point. Minecraft Marketplace showing trending maps, seasonal skins, and texture packs from top creators That said, just because someone's popular doesn't mean their content is the best fit for you. I've downloaded plenty of big-name creator maps that just weren't my thing. Personal taste matters more than name recognition here. If you're thinking about supporting a specific creator, check whether they've a server or community. Some of them do Patreon stuff on the side, discord communities, YouTube series around their Marketplace content. The Marketplace sale might be your entry point, but their actual passion project could be elsewhere. Finding Quality Content (Without Wasting Minecoins) Sort by rating and read the actual reviews. Yeah, I know that's obvious, but people skip this step. Look for reviews that mention specific problems: "Map won't work in singleplayer" or "Texture pack makes nether look worse." Those are useful. Reviews that just say "AMAZING!!!" are less helpful. Minecraft Marketplace showing trending maps, seasonal skins, and texture packs from top creators Watch YouTube previews if they exist. Real talk, most bigger Marketplace creators have preview videos or demos on their channels. Seeing gameplay for five minutes saves you the regret of buying something that sounded cool but plays poorly. For maps specifically, check whether it's designed for a specific Minecraft version. Some older maps might not work properly on 26.1.2 or have weird terrain generation bugs. The listing usually mentions version compatibility, but skim the reviews to see if anyone complains about technical issues. Consider checking out our Minecraft MOTD Creator tool if you're planning to host a server and want to display your Marketplace content details in the server description. It makes it easy to promote your setup. Similarly, if you're running a survival server, the Minecraft Votifier Tester can help you verify your voting setup's working correctly, which is useful for any multiplayer infrastructure. Niche Content Worth Exploring Don't sleep on educational maps. There are actually really solid ones designed for teaching specific skills: farm design, redstone mechanics, building techniques. These are great if you're stuck on a particular problem and want to learn by example. Better than watching a two-hour YouTube tutorial sometimes. Minecraft Marketplace showing trending maps, seasonal skins, and texture packs from top creators Micro-adventure maps are another underrated category. These are small, tight experiences designed to take 15-30 minutes. Perfect for when you want something quick instead of committing to a four-hour narrative campaign. The nostalgia content is doing well too. Creators are rebuilding maps from older Minecraft versions, updating them for current features. If you played back in 2013-2015, you might find something that hits different now. The Reality Check Not every Marketplace item is worth your currency. Some texture packs are straight-up worse than free alternatives available from community sites. Some maps are bloated with unnecessary custom items and could be half their file size. This is just true. The Marketplace has fantastic content, but it also has mediocre stuff sitting next to excellent stuff with minimal difference in how they're presented. Minecraft Marketplace showing trending maps, seasonal skins, and texture packs from top creators That's why reading reviews matters. And why watching previews helps. You're not getting a guarantee of quality just because something's on the official Marketplace. You're getting a curated selection, sure, but the curation is pretty light. That said, when creators do nail it, it's genuinely impressive. The best maps this month show real craft. A best texture packs show real attention to detail. June's got enough solid content that you can probably find something you'll actually enjoy using. --- ### TerraFirmaCraft's Total Rewrite of Minecraft Survival URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/terrafirmacraft-survival-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project TerraFirmaCraft (TerraFirmaCraft/TerraFirmaCraft) Survival Mode as it Should've Been Star on GitHub ↗ .2 If vanilla Minecraft survival starts feeling too easy after a few hours, TerraFirmaCraft throws that mindset in the trash. But this total mod overhaul transforms survival into something genuinely challenging, forcing you to plan seasons, manage food rotation, hunt ores under realistic geology, and work through a technology progression that makes you think. What This Project Does TerraFirmaCraft (or TFC if you want to sound like a veteran) isn't just "harder vanilla" with buffed mobs. It's a complete reimagining of how Minecraft survival should work. The mod replaces world generation from the ground up, rebuilds the technology tree into something you actually have to research, adds weather systems that matter, introduces a calendar with seasons, and completely overhauls how you find food and manage your nutrition. The world feels alive in ways vanilla never quite manages. You'll stumble across wild crops, fruit trees, different fauna depending on the region, and an underground that actually looks like geology instead of random caves filled with ore scattered randomly everywhere. It's the difference between playing Minecraft and playing a survival game that happens to use Minecraft's engine. Why You'd Want This Start here: do you find vanilla survival boring? Not in a "I need harder mobs" way, but more "I want the survival part to actually feel like surviving"? TerraFirmaCraft is for people who've beaten vanilla survival so many times they could do it blindfolded, or who just want something that demands more strategic thinking. If you've ever wanted a Minecraft experience that feels less like a sandbox and more like an actual challenge, this is it. The mod respects your time without being artificially grindy. Progression feels earned. And there's something deeply satisfying about building your first charcoal pile or getting iron from a bloomery instead of just... finding iron in the ground. How to Install This Thing TerraFirmaCraft runs on NeoForge (the successor to Forge if you're rusty on Minecraft modding). The basic process is straightforward: Download the latest version from CurseForge (search "TerraFirmaCraft" there) Install NeoForge for Minecraft 1.21.1 or compatible versions Drop the TerraFirmaCraft jar file into your mods folder Launch the game and create a new world Set your difficulty to at least normal. Hard mode isn't just more damage - it's genuinely punishing here. If you're planning a multiplayer server, the same process applies on the server side, and all players need the mod installed locally. The mod scales well for group play. If you're eventually running a public server and want people to vote for you, you can use the Minecraft Votifier Tester to make sure your voting system works correctly for supporters. Here's something crucial: the mod includes an in-game Field Guide that's actually full and helpful. And it shows up immediately when you spawn. Honestly, use it. The Features That Change Everything Realistic World Generation and Geology Forget the random ore scatter. TerraFirmaCraft generates the world with actual geological structure. You'll find ore veins at specific depths, deposits that form in realistic clusters, and rock types that vary by region. This makes exploration strategic instead of just "dig down and hope." Mountain ranges, flowing rivers, and distinct biomes all follow climate logic. No more desert butting up against tundra next to jungle in the same 500 blocks. TerraFirmaCraft Splash Image The Technology Tree This is where casual and committed players split. You don't just find iron and craft a pickaxe. Folks who try this start with rocks and clay, work up to pottery and pit kilns, eventually produce charcoal, and then finally smelt iron using a bloomery. Steel comes much later. Every step has purpose beyond being a stepping stone. The progression doesn't feel grindy. It feels earned. Seasons, Weather, and a Real Calendar Spring, summer, fall, winter - they're not cosmetic. Some crops only grow certain seasons. Weather affects survival. You stockpile food before winter or you starve. Your calendar tracks days in-game, creating rhythm and pace that vanilla never achieves. Food Management That Demands Attention You can't eat steak and call it a day. Food expires. It has nutrition values. You need dietary variety. Thirst is a stat you actually manage. Water helps, but not all sources are reliable. It sounds tedious on paper, but in practice it makes resource gathering feel purposeful and strategic. Wildlife That Feels Natural Animals spawn based on climate and biome type. Tropical fish don't appear in tundras. Predators are genuinely dangerous, which means early-game survival demands planning, not just hiding in a hole until you're geared. This changes how you approach your first few days completely. What Trips People Up Your first run? You'll die. A lot. That's intentional. If you're used to vanilla's progression arc, the tech tree feels slow at first. It's not slow - it's structured differently. Accept the rhythm and you'll have fun. Fight it and you'll ragequit. Updates shuffle mechanics around. Before updating a world, check the changelog. One release might completely change how forges work or adjust food values. Not a deal-breaker usually, but worth knowing going in. Actually, this goes for any major mod update - always check what changed before diving back in. If you're planning multiplayer bases and need to calculate portal coordinates across dimensions, the Nether Portal Calculator handles the coordinate math, especially useful when teammates are in different time zones and you're coordinating base locations. Other Mods in the Same Space TerraFirmaCraft is pretty unique in how full it's, but if you want alternatives worth checking: Immersive Engineering and similar tech mods give you progression and real crafting systems without the world generation overhaul. Lighter commitment if you just want deeper mechanics on top of vanilla. Quark adds quality-of-life features and new blocks but doesn't reframe survival fundamentally. Modpacks like Gregtech often aim for that progression-heavy feel, though they're heavier on overall complexity. Real talk: TerraFirmaCraft is in its own lane. If this description appeals to you, you won't find the exact same thing elsewhere. Ready to try TerraFirmaCraft? 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 TerraFirmaCraft/TerraFirmaCraft on GitHub ↗ --- ### Building a Minecraft Library: Design Ideas and Tips URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/build-minecraft-library Published: 2026-06-10 Author: ice Building a library in Minecraft starts with picking a good location and deciding on its size and style. Use dark oak or spruce wood for a classic feel, layer bookshelves with decorative blocks, add warm lighting, and include functional furniture like desks and benches. The right details make your library feel lived-in and beautiful. Choosing Your Location and Size Most players skip this step and just build wherever, but location matters more than you'd think. A library tucked into a mountainside looks way different than one in the middle of your base. I went with an underground cavern for mine once, and the isolated feeling actually worked perfectly. Start by considering what theme fits your world. Are you going for a medieval village library? A modern academic building? Maybe something whimsical? Your location should support that vibe. Underground libraries feel mysterious and scholarly. Treehouses make cozy reading nooks. Grand manors can house expansive collections. Size is another critical choice. Small libraries (think 12x16 blocks) work great as functional storage rooms with some personality. Medium ones (20x30 or bigger) give you room for actual seating areas, multiple shelf rows, and decoration. Large libraries become destinations on your server. But honestly, even a small library done well beats a massive empty shell. Foundational Blocks and Framing Alright, so you've picked your spot. Now you need walls. Dark oak and spruce are the classics for libraries, but don't just slap down logs and call it done. Oak is lighter and airier. Birch feels bright and modern. Warped wood has that magical, alien aesthetic. Blackwood looks moody and mysterious. Pick one as your primary block and maybe use a secondary accent wood to add character. The frame matters too. Leave spaces for windows (regular glass or the newer tinted glass in Minecraft 26.1.2) to bring in light and views. Use stairs and slabs for architectural detail on rooflines. Add pillars or buttresses if you're going for that grand stone library feel. Stone bricks, deepslate, or regular stone pair beautifully with wood and give that institutional weightiness libraries need. I like mixing in some decorative stone. Cracked stone bricks feel aged and real. Weathered copper has that greenish patina that suggests history and permanence. These touches transform a basic wooden building into something that feels genuinely ancient. Shelving and Storage Systems This is where libraries actually become libraries. Bookshelves are the obvious choice, but they're just the starting point. Bookshelves alone look kinda flat. Stack them with other blocks. Use fence posts or pillars to break up long shelving runs. Layer in decorative blocks like wood slabs, stairs, or walls. Lecterns are functional (you can display written books) and they fill vertical space nicely. Dark oak trapdoors hung from above look like hanging storage compartments. You can also get creative with storage. Barrels look like wooden casks. Chiseled bookshelves let you display books with custom designs. Mix in some shulker boxes camouflaged as decorative crates or trunks. Cauldrons can serve as decorative containers for scrolls or potions. The key is depth. Stagger your shelving at different heights. Leave some gaps for visual breathing room. Put tall shelves on one wall and lower ones elsewhere. But this creates flow instead of just warehousing your books. Lighting and Atmosphere Bad lighting kills a library vibe faster than anything else. You want warm, ambient light that makes the space feel inviting, not clinical. Soul lanterns glow a soothing blue-green that works especially well in darker, underground libraries. Regular lanterns give off warm orange light. Candles are cozy and romantic. Amethyst geodes cast a cool purple glow that feels magical. String lights made with chain and lanterns create those paper-lantern vibes. Glow berries hanging from the ceiling add organic, gentle light from above. Avoid bright fluorescent setups everywhere. That turns your library into an office, and you're not building a DMV. Aim for moody instead. Dim corners are fine. Use shadows as design elements. Consider adding windows and letting in natural light during the day. At night, your artificial lighting should be softer. I've seen libraries with mixed lighting levels that look almost photorealistic. Furniture and Decorative Details A library with only bookshelves is incomplete. You need seating. Folks who try this need tables. Anyone need things that make it feel like an actual space where people gather. Chairs are essential. Use a combination: regular wooden chairs, some high stools by reading tables, maybe an ornate throne-like seat for the head librarian (okay, that's self-indulgent, but do it anyway). Stairs and slabs can become simple seating too. But this variety makes your space feel organic. Reading tables work great with oak trapdoors, lecterns, or wood slabs on top of wood fences. Add a few books sitting on tables using decorative item frames with book textures. Real talk, throw in some quills or ink bottles as props. A check-out desk works beautifully with a counter design using slabs and decorative blocks. Railings or fence gates function as barriers. Drop a bell somewhere near the entrance because what library doesn't have a bell? Adding Your Own Style This is where you stop following guides and start making it yours. Maybe your library has a second floor accessible by a grand staircase. Maybe it has a reading garden outside with benches and ambient plants. You could add a secret passage behind a bookshelf (use pistons if you want it to actually move). Install a cafe area with a brewing stand and cauldrons as "coffee makers." Create a rare book vault with an iron door and heavy decoration. If you're building this library on a multiplayer server and want to match the aesthetic perfectly, consider designing a custom librarian skin using the Minecraft Skin Creator for yourself and other players. So this adds immersion when your characters are running around this beautiful space you've built. And if your server has a voting system, the Minecraft Votifier Tester can help you ensure it's functioning properly so players can reward your efforts. Some players have built libraries with animated bookshelves that rotate, libraries built into mountainsides, even underwater libraries with special glass chambers. Get weird with it. The internet has countless Minecraft library inspiration albums if you need a spark. But the best libraries are the ones that reflect how you actually think libraries should feel. --- ### Pink Petals in Minecraft: A Complete Building Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/pink-petals-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Pink petals are basically Minecraft's answer to decorative detail work. Found exclusively in the Cherry Grove biome (added in version 1.20), they're flowers you can stack multiple times on a single block face. Pretty? Yes. Useful? That depends on what you're building. Where to Find Pink Petals Pink petals only spawn naturally in the Cherry Grove biome, one of the newer biomes that rolled out with the 1.20 update. If you haven't found a Cherry Grove yet on your world, you're either unlucky or not exploring far enough from spawn. They usually cover the ground in patches like a pink carpet, sometimes mixing with grass and other ground cover blocks. Cherry Groves aren't actually that rare if you're willing to travel. They show up in temperate regions of the Overworld, typically clustering around cherry blossom trees. You'll recognize them instantly by the distinctive pink and white trees and the overall spring aesthetic that makes the biome feel completely different from everything else. Beyond the petals themselves, these biomes contain cherry wood variants, azaleas, pink leaves, dripleaves, and moss. It's basically the garden biome Minecraft always should've had. If you're on a multiplayer server and spawn is nowhere near a Cherry Grove, you might need to head out pretty far. Use a seed finder if you want efficiency. Or just keep walking. Harvesting and Placing Pink Petals Breaking pink petals gives you one petal block per break. You don't need a special tool for it either - your fist works fine. The block is so fragile that harvest speed doesn't vary depending on what breaks it. They just pop off immediately. Here's where pink petals get genuinely interesting compared to other flowers. You can place up to four petal layers on a single block face. This means if you want a really dense flower carpet effect or intricate ground patterning, you can stack them deep on one spot. It's something most other flowers don't let you do, and it opens up some surprisingly detailed decoration possibilities. Crafting pink petals isn't possible, actually. You can't combine ingredients to make them. They're purely a found-in-nature resource, which limits supply but also makes them feel more valuable when you're planning builds around them. This is different from seeds-based flowers that can be grown infinitely with bone meal. Creative Decoration Techniques Pink petals shine in meadow-style builds, fairytale cottages, Japanese-inspired gardens, and anything else that needs soft organic ground cover. The color is a subtle pink, not garish or neon. It blends with dirt, grass, gravel, and various stone types without competing for visual attention. I tested layering them with forget-me-nots, also from the Cherry Grove biome, and the color combination is honestly gorgeous. The two shades of blue and pink create depth without clashing. You can create really natural-looking flower beds this way. One technique that works surprisingly well: instead of using traditional path blocks, create pathways through dense pink petals. Layer them heavily to cover the ground, and you get a softer visual texture than any vanilla path block. The effect is understated but effective. Movement through pink petals is completely frictionless. They have essentially zero collision, so walking through them feels like moving through nothing. This makes them perfect for layering without awkward movement penalties that some decorative blocks create. For server owners building a Cherry Grove-themed spawn area or lobby, first impressions matter a lot. Creating a visually cohesive space makes players feel welcomed immediately. Consider using our Minecraft MOTD Creator tool to craft a personalized server message that matches your Cherry Grove aesthetic. Then surround the spawn with pink petal gardens for complete immersion. The real magic happens when you combine petals with lighting. Mix lanterns at ground level with dense petal placement, and the warm light catching on the flowers creates an atmosphere you just don't get with flowers alone. Gathering and Farming Petals Here's the frustration: pink petals don't respawn or grow. Once you've harvested them from a Cherry Grove, you're done unless you find another biome to strip. There's no bone meal growth mechanic, no infinite farm setup. Just finite supply. The best approach is organizing one dedicated harvesting trip. Bring multiple stacks of empty inventory and dedicate 15-20 minutes to systematically clearing a section of the biome. A single stack goes further than you'd think since you can layer four petals per block face. Some committed players have actually built entire pink petal farms in their main bases by hand-placing harvested petals. It's incredibly tedious work. I attempted it once and severely underestimated the time commitment. Actually, I never finished it. But it's theoretically possible if you have the patience and determination. Transportation matters. Either make multiple trips, or organize items into shulker boxes for bulk hauling. Design Ideas and Combinations Pink petals work best with cherry wood in its various forms. Mixing petals with white or light gray concrete creates sophisticated garden designs that feel intentional. You can also pair them with azaleas, dripleaves, flowering plants, and other Cherry Grove exclusives. An unusual combination worth trying: pink petals at ground level mixed with lanterns creates subtle nighttime effects. The petals provide color, lanterns add warm ambient light. It feels cohesive in ways that just flowers alone can't achieve. Rather than covering entire areas completely with petals, try using them as borders. A thin border between two other block types creates an intentional visual transition. This approach reads as more refined and purposeful. If you're building near a Nether portal and creating beautiful transition zones, you'll need precise coordinate planning between dimensions. Our Nether Portal Calculator helps ensure your portals land exactly where intended. While mapping those mechanics, pink petals mark Overworld entrance areas beautifully with natural detail. I tested placing pink petals at cherry tree bases for visual grounding. Honestly, it looks way better than expected. The petals catch light in a specific way that polishes the entire scene. Version Compatibility Pink petals were introduced in Minecraft 1.20 and remain available in all versions since, including the current Java release 26.1.2. They're stable and established with no removal plans. Bedrock Edition has identical pink petal mechanics. Switching between Java and Bedrock won't surprise you here. Current snapshots (26.2-pre-5) haven't changed them at all. Mojang seems satisfied with their design. --- ### Minecraft Droppers Explained: Building and Using Redstone Automators URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/dropper-mechanics-builds-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Droppers are one of those redstone blocks that seem boring until you realize they're the foundation of like, 80% of Minecraft automation. They're just a container that spits out items when powered by redstone, but that simple concept lets you build item sorters, mob farms, automatic crafting systems, and countless contraptions that make survival mode feel less grindy. If you've ever wondered how people make their bases run like clockwork, droppers are usually part of the answer. What's a Dropper, Really? A dropper is a block that holds nine items and ejects them when it receives a redstone signal. That's it. Put items in it, give it power, items come out. But the simplicity is deceptive, because what you do with that output determines whether you've got a useless box or the backbone of your entire farm network. Think of it like a tiny automated warehouse shelf. You load the cargo, a redstone signal pulls the lever, and one random item falls out. Not the first item, not the one you put in first, just whatever the dropper feels like throwing at you. This randomness seems annoying until you figure out how to weaponize it. They hold nine stacks just like a furnace or hopper, which makes them perfect for feeding into sorting systems or distribution hubs. You can upgrade them with hoppers above and below to control the flow of items, link them with redstone for automation, and chain multiple droppers together to create complex pathways for your stuff. Droppers vs. Dispensers: The Confusion Nobody Escapes I'm going to address this right now because everyone gets it wrong the first time. Droppers and dispensers look almost identical, sit next to each other in the creative menu, and seem like they do the same thing. They do not. Here's the difference: droppers eject items as entities that fall or roll naturally. Dispensers shoot items out with force in a specific direction. You use dispensers when you need directional control, like for arrow launchers, water dispensers, or flinging items across a room. Droppers are for gentle transfers, sorting systems, and situations where you want items to behave like gravity is pulling them. In a sorting system, using a dispenser would be a disaster. Your carefully filtered items would get launched across your base like rockets instead of gently filtering into storage. I learned this the hard way on a server once (yeah, there was laughing involved). Always use the dropper for sorting. One more distinction: dispensers can shoot special items like fire charges, splash potions, and the occasional boat. Droppers just treat everything the same, dropping it as a regular item entity. For 90% of what you build, this won't matter, but it's good to know. How Redstone Powers Droppers Droppers activate on any redstone signal, whether it's a pulse or constant power. A lever gives you manual control. A button gives you one-time activation. Honestly, a repeater can create timed pulses. An observer watching for block updates can trigger a dropper when something changes nearby. The power level doesn't matter, by the way. A full-strength 15 signal works the same as a 1-strength signal. But the timing absolutely matters. A one-tick pulse gives different results than a five-tick pulse, especially when you're running multiple droppers in sequence. Most people use repeater chains as clocks to pulse droppers repeatedly. Set three repeaters to max delay (four ticks each) and you've got a dropper that outputs items roughly every 16 game ticks. Adjust the repeaters for faster or slower output. Once you get comfortable with this, you'll start recognizing dropper clocks in other people's builds everywhere. Building Your First Dropper System Start with the absolute basics. Place a dropper somewhere, fill it with some blocks (dirt works fine), hook up a lever to the side, and flip it. Watch items dribble out. Congratulations, you've just automated something. Next level: put a hopper above the dropper so you can feed items into it automatically. Put a hopper below it to catch what comes out. You've now created an inventory pipeline. Items move in one end, get queued up, and exit the other end at whatever rate your redstone clock determines. Stack multiple droppers in a line and you get a chute effect, except controlled and organized. Stack them in parallel and you create multiple output streams. Want items sorted into different storage rooms? That's what parallel dropper lines are for. The redstone signal determines which dropper activates, which determines where items go. Most complex dropper systems use comparators to detect item presence and route items accordingly. When the comparator sees that a certain item type is present, it powers a dropper gate to divert more items toward that storage location. It sounds complicated until you watch it work, then it clicks. Real-World Dropper Applications Item sorters are the classic use case, and honestly, if you understand item sorters, you understand droppers. Droppers act as the gates or filters. When a comparator detects the target item, the dropper opens and items pass through. Otherwise they're blocked and sent down a different path. Mob farms use droppers too. A dropper can slowly feed items into a furnace smelter for cooking your drops. You could distribute potions throughout a base with droppers. Some people use droppers to control exact drop rates in farms, preventing lag from too many items accumulating at once. Automatic cooking systems, XP collection channels, tree farm output lines, potion distribution networks. Once you start looking, you see droppers everywhere in well-built bases. The magic is that they're invisible to the player. You don't see them working, you just see items arriving where they should be, on schedule. The Random Output Quirk Remember how droppers eject random items from their inventory? That seems like a bug but it's actually a feature if you know how to use it. When a dropper outputs, it picks completely at random from what's inside, not first-in-first-out. This randomness lets you build decision-making systems. If a dropper with multiple item types ejects into a detection chamber with comparators, you can see what came out and respond accordingly. It's like a redstone lottery with practical applications. Or you can intentionally use multiple droppers feeding the same location, which randomizes the output stream further. Useful for the kind of automation where you actually want unpredictability. Timing and Fine-Tuning Pulse duration matters. A one-tick pulse from an observer creates a different output rate than a two-tick pulse. If you need exact timing, experiment with repeater chains until you hit the droprate you want. I once spent an embarrassing amount of time tweaking a dropper clock to output exactly 64 items per minute for absolutely no practical reason. The point is, droppers reward this kind of obsessive tinkering. You can dial in precision if you care enough. Redstone observers can replace repeaters for more compact designs. An observer watching a dropper's block update can transmit that signal elsewhere, creating really small clock circuits. Droppers are surprisingly space-efficient automation when you design around them. Troubleshooting Dropper Problems Items not coming out? Check that the dropper has power and that it's actually oriented correctly. The spout (the little nub) should face the direction you want items to go. Pointy end forward, or backward, depending on your setup. Items streaming out too fast and creating lag? Add more repeater delays to your clock to slow the pulse rate. Or accept the chaos and build bigger storage. Something not working in a complex system? Break it down. Test each dropper individually with a simple lever. If that works, the problem is your redstone logic, not the dropper itself. If you're stuck, try using the Minecraft Block Search to verify you're using the right blocks, or load up a tutorial and compare your build step-by-step. Advanced Dropper Engineering Once you've got the basics down, things get weird in the best way. You can build dropper-based trading stations that function like vending machines. Players make a redstone request, items drop out in exchange. Not efficient, but incredibly satisfying. Dropper-powered loading systems for mining operations let you eject ore into a transport stream automatically. Less flashy than a flying machine but infinitely more reliable. Your base can distribute resources automatically to different wings using dropper hubs as distribution points. And if you're truly bored, dropper art is a thing. Synchronized droppers pulsing in patterns create visual effects. Pointless? Absolutely. Cool? Also yes. The crazy part is that once you understand how droppers work, you'll realize you can use them for almost anything that involves moving items. They're not just automation, they're a blank canvas. When to Use Droppers vs. Other Methods Hoppers are slower but more predictable. Droppers are faster but random. Water streams are free but messy. Choose based on your needs. For a storage system, droppers give you control. For a farm output channel, hoppers might be overkill. If you're building something and you need items to move point A to point B with no fuss, consider whether a dropper clock would work. Often it's the simplest solution. You can check server performance and stability on your favorite server using the Minecraft Server Status Checker to see if your redstone builds are lagging due to server issues or your own contraption. Worth checking before you blame the dropper. --- ### Minecraft Sheep Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-sheep-farming-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Sheep are one of Minecraft's most useful mobs, and they're stupidly easy to farm. You get wool without effort, mutton for food, and honestly they're kind of relaxing to watch. Here's everything about spawning them, what they drop, and how to build a farm that actually works. Where Sheep Spawn in Minecraft Sheep spawn naturally in grass biomes during world generation. You'll find them in plains, forests, meadows, and similar grassy areas, pretty much anywhere that has grass blocks and decent light levels. They spawn most commonly on grass blocks at light level 7 or higher during the day, though technically they can spawn at any light level above 0 on grass blocks during world generation. The thing about sheep is they come in different colors naturally. White sheep are the most common (around 70% of natural spawns), then grey and black at roughly 5% each, with brown, pink, light blue, and cyan making up the rest. The colors matter because when you shear a colored sheep, you get that specific wool color. No dye job needed. If you want a specific color for your farm, you'll either breed colored sheep together or use dyes on white ones as a backup. One thing that surprises new players: sheep don't spawn in huge herds. You might see one or two in a field, not clusters of ten. So if you want a real farm, breeding is essential. A single natural spawn isn't going to cut it for sustained wool production. What Sheep Drop and Why It Matters When you kill a sheep, you get wool blocks. One wool block per sheep, always. The color matches the sheep's wool, so you get specific-colored wool directly without having to dye white wool afterwards. Kill a red sheep, get red wool. It's straightforward. They also drop mutton when killed by a player (1-2 raw mutton), or cooked mutton if the sheep dies from fire or lava damage. The mutton heals decent hunger in a pinch, but honestly you're farming sheep for wool, not food. Mutton's just a side product that stacks up over time. But here's the mechanic that makes sheep actually valuable: you can shear them with shears for unlimited wool without killing them. Shear a sheep and it drops 1-3 wool blocks depending on the sheep's wool amount, then the sheep loses its wool (turns white for a moment) and starts regrowing it. The sheep regenerates wool over time as long as it's eating grass blocks. This is what makes automated farming possible. The shearing system is why sheep are better than most other wool sources. You get the resource repeatedly from the same mob instead of needing a constant supply of new animals. Breeding Sheep to Build Your Farm To breed sheep, you need two sheep and wheat. Give each sheep wheat and they'll breed, producing a lamb that inherits wool color from one parent. The lamb grows up in about 20 minutes, then you can breed it again. Breeding creates exponential growth if you've enough wheat. Breeding is the foundation of any real sheep farm. You want enough sheep so that you can rotate between shearing them, letting them regrow wool, and shearing again. A farm with five sheep is barely worth it. A farm with fifty sheep is actually useful. The math works in your favor: more sheep means more wool without waiting as long for regrowth between harvests. And yes, you can maintain colored sheep farms. Get a few sheep of different colors (either breed them or find them naturally), breed each color separately, and keep them in separate pens. The wool sells or trades well if you're on a multiplayer server, and it looks cleaner than a chaotic multi-colored flock. One trick: if you want specific colors, breed sheep that already match the color you want. Two red sheep breed more red sheep. White sheep can breed any color, so they're unpredictable. Start with the colors you want already established and avoid mixing them until you've enough of each. Building an Efficient Sheep Farm You don't need anything fancy. A basic setup is a large pen with grass blocks so the sheep can eat (which regrows their wool), some fencing to keep them contained, and enough space so they don't all get stuck in one corner. Roof it if you want to prevent other mobs from spawning nearby, though honestly an open farm works fine if you keep the area lit. What actually matters is the grass supply. Sheep eat grass to regrow wool, so you need abundant grass blocks. If your farm is indoors and the grass gets trampled and dies, the sheep won't regrow their wool and shearing becomes useless. Use bone meal on grass blocks to create more grass if it gets depleted. Or just have a separate outdoor section where they can graze naturally. Some players build farms half-indoors, half-outdoors specifically so sheep can always access grass. A real farm scales by just having more sheep and more space. You could build a fancy multi-level farm with water flows or automatic shearing systems using observers and pistons. That's cool if you want to get technical about it, but the simplest approach is honestly just a big pen with 30-50 sheep and a stockpile of wheat for breeding. Shear them all, let them regrow for a few minutes while grazing, shear again. Rinse and repeat. Manual shearing works great and lets you see what colors you actually have. For light levels, keep the farm at 8 or higher so hostile mobs don't spawn nearby and distract your sheep. Honestly, a few torches or lanterns around the edges does the trick. Don't overthink it. Wool Production and Daily Farming Strategy You'll generate wool fast once you've a working farm with enough sheep. A sheep produces 1-3 wool per shearing, so 30 sheep sheared fully gives you 30-90 wool blocks at once. Do that every ten minutes and you've got an ungodly amount of wool stacking up in your inventory. Use it for wool blocks, make carpets, dye it for color variety, trade it to other players, or store it. The bottleneck is always the grass. Sheep don't produce wool constantly. They regrow wool after being sheared, but only if they have grass to eat and time to regrow it. So the farm's grass supply is what limits your output, not the sheep count. Use bone meal aggressively and keep the grass regenerating, and you'll have a steady wool supply that's basically unlimited. For serious farming, separate your sheep by color into different pens. That way you can focus on the colors you actually want and don't end up with too many white sheep that you don't need. Or embrace the chaos and just have one giant pen where you breed everything together. The color variety can look nice if you use different colored wool for decoration. Finding the Best Biome for Your Farm If you're setting up a farm from scratch, pick a biome with grass and good space. Meadows are great because they spawn multiple colors naturally and have tons of grass. Forests work too. Avoid deserts, badlands, or wastelands obviously because there's no grass to sustain sheep. Plains biomes are solid if you want simplicity, but meadows give you more color variety from natural spawns. The choice honestly depends on where you've already built your base. Just make sure there's grass and you're good to go. If you're trying to find specific biomes or plan out your farm layout and locations, tools like the Minecraft block search can help you locate specific blocks and biome transitions. You can also create a custom server MOTD if you're running a multiplayer farm and want to advertise it to your friends or guildmates. Check out the Minecraft Block Search tool for locating resources and biomes, and if you're into multiplayer, the Minecraft MOTD Creator is handy for setting up your server message. Maximizing Your Output Most players don't realize how much wool one well-maintained farm produces. After about an hour of setup, you'll have enough wool to never worry about it again for the rest of your world. It's one of the few resources that becomes truly infinite with minimal effort. The key is having enough sheep that regrowth happens faster than your shearing speed. If you've got 50 sheep and you shear 10 per minute, all 50 will have regrown their wool by the time you loop back to the first one. That's the rhythm of an efficient farm. --- ### Copper Grates in Minecraft: A Complete Building Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/copper-grates-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Copper grates are one of Minecraft's more underrated decorative blocks, perfect for adding detail to industrial builds and creating interesting ventilation effects. They're essentially grille-like blocks that come in multiple oxidation states, making them incredibly versatile for both aesthetic and functional design purposes. What Are Copper Grates and Why You Need Them Copper grates are transparent grating blocks made from copper. They let light pass through while still providing a visual barrier, which makes them ideal for creating kitchen vents, air filters, or industrial scaffolding. Unlike regular copper blocks, grates have a lattice structure that feels much more refined for detailed builds. Added in the 1.21 update, copper grates fit perfectly into the growing copper block family (which includes copper doors, trapdoors, and bulbs). They're also waxable, meaning you can preserve them at any oxidation stage. Here's the thing about copper grates - they're incredibly photogenic. Sunlight shining through them creates these clean shadow patterns that just work for modern architecture, steampunk builds, or anything with an industrial vibe. I've used them as window grilles on server builds, and players always ask what block I used. How to Craft and Find Copper Grates Crafting copper grates is straightforward. You'll need copper ingots arranged in a specific pattern on the crafting table. Place 6 copper ingots in a 3x3 crafting grid, arranged in two rows of 3 across the top and middle sections This yields 4 copper grates per craft You can also find them naturally in deep dark experimental structures on some servers Mining copper ore with a stone pickaxe or better will drop raw copper, which you then smelt in a furnace to get ingots. Alternatively, if you've got a decent mining operation going, you could find copper ore in caves and cliffs between Y-levels 0 and 96. Actually, that's not quite right - copper spawns higher than that in newer versions. It generates up to Y 112 now in the latest releases. If you're trying to get copper quickly, look for exposed ore on cliff faces. Real talk, it's that distinctive orange-and-tan looking ore, and it's pretty hard to miss once you know what you're looking for. Understanding Oxidation and Weathering This is where copper blocks get interesting. Copper naturally oxidizes over time, changing color through four distinct stages: fresh copper (shiny orange), exposed copper (slightly weathered), weathered copper (greenish), and oxidized copper (deep blue-green). Copper grates follow this same progression. You can speed up oxidation with water, or prevent it entirely by applying honeycomb wax to your grates. The weathering system feels realistic and adds visual depth to long-term builds. Your new copper kitchen vent might look industrial and copper-bright, but after a few in-game months, it'll develop that classic patina everyone associates with aged copper roofing. Some players love this effect. Others immediately wax everything to keep that shiny copper aesthetic. You can also use the different oxidation states creatively. I've mixed oxidized grates with fresh grates in the same build to create an intentional contrast - like showing the progression of time or creating a striped pattern. It's a subtle detail that definitely sets builds apart. Building and Decoration Ideas Copper grates work in surprisingly many contexts. Here are some practical applications: Kitchen ventilation - those range hood vents above stoves look absolutely convincing with copper grates Building frames and structural details on industrial structures Window grilles for a period-appropriate feel (especially medieval or steampunk) Laboratory equipment and scientific builds Decorative fencing where you want visibility but with detail Submarine or underwater bases, since the grates maintain their appearance when waterlogged The transparency is key. You can stack grates vertically to create depth, or use them as the "skin" of larger structures. They're also one of the few copper blocks that don't take up solid space, which matters if you're working in tight quarters or building on servers where block limits matter. If you're looking for more visual inspiration, check out how other players use grates on the Minecraft skins page - some of the more detailed skin designs feature grate-like elements that translate well into actual block builds. Advanced Building Techniques Want to get fancy with copper grates? Here are some techniques that go beyond basic placement: Layering different oxidation states creates visual richness. Use fresh copper grates on the outer edges, exposed in the middle, and weathered copper further back. And this creates a visual depth that reads well from a distance, especially on multiplayer servers where everyone's admiring builds. Combining grates with copper stairs, slabs, and full blocks lets you build complex lattice patterns. The grates work as infill, while the stairs and slabs create borders. It's time-consuming but creates professional-looking results. Pair them with another material - say, dark oak wood or blackstone - and suddenly you've got something that looks intentionally designed rather than just decorative. Waterlogging is underused here. Copper grates can be waterlogged, which means you can submerge them while keeping their visible structure. And this is perfect for underwater bases or creating flooded chambers where you still want visual barriers. Try mixing copper grates with copper doors and copper trapdoors in the same structure. The fact that they all oxidize together means your entire copper "system" feels cohesive as it ages. This works especially well if you're building a functional copper farm entrance - doors for access, trapdoors for ventilation, grates for the walls. Tips for Using Copper Grates Effectively Wax early if you care about the color. Once you've decided on your grate color, apply honeycomb immediately. Otherwise, just accept that your builds will change appearance over time - which honestly can be beautiful if you lean into it. Use grates with complementary materials. Copper works best when it's not competing with other flashy blocks. Pair it with wool, concrete, wood, stone, or blackstone. The grates add detail without overwhelming. Remember that grates are transparent to light. This is usually good for aesthetic reasons, but if you're building a dark room or a light-blocking structure, plan accordingly. You might need solid blocks instead. On multiplayer servers, copper grates are relatively cheap to make once you've got steady copper supply. They're not like diamonds where you're hunting endlessly. So don't be shy about using them liberally for detail work. For server owners and creative builders, you might want to set up an MOTD Creator that showcases your server's best copper grate builds to attract new players interested in architectural detail work. Are Copper Grates Worth Building With? Yeah, they're. They're not flashy enough to be everyone's go-to block, which actually works in your favor - using them shows architectural thoughtfulness. They add visual interest without screaming for attention. Whether you're building functional details like kitchen vents or creating industrial facades, copper grates earn their place in your creative arsenal. The oxidation system gives them character that most blocks lack. Your builds literally age in real time. And the fact that you can interrupt that aging with wax means you've got control over how your builds evolve (or don't). Start with small applications. A single copper grate window, a vent detail, a small fence section. Once you see how they look in your build style, you'll figure out where else they belong. --- ### Minecraft Deep Dark Biome Guide: Loot, Mobs and Builds URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/deep-dark-biome-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice The Deep Dark is basically Minecraft's endgame biome where real danger lives. It's packed with valuable loot, lethal mobs, and unique building opportunities if you've got the nerve to venture that far underground. What Exactly Is the Deep Dark Biome? The Deep Dark sits way down in Minecraft's underground, typically around Y level -64 and below. It's a massive cave system with a distinct dark blue-gray aesthetic that honestly looks pretty ominous when you first stumble into it. The entire biome is covered in Sculk blocks, Sculk Veins, and Sculk Catalysts, which are blocks that spread whenever mobs die nearby - though there's a caveat worth mentioning. Naturally-spawned Sculk is already there, but the blocks also propagate from mob deaths, creating this eerie feedback loop where the biome gets darker and more hostile the more activity happens in it. Sculk blocks glow with an otherworldly light that doesn't come from typical light sources. Ancient Cities generate inside Deep Dark biomes, and these structures contain some of the rarest loot in the entire game. The biome was added in version 1.19, though it's been expanded and tweaked significantly since then. You'll find these cities at irregular intervals, and reaching them requires patience and careful navigation. The Warden: The Mob You Need to Respect Let's talk about the elephant in the room - or rather, the massive, blind, rage-filled creature that'll absolutely destroy you. The Warden is the Deep Dark's main attraction, and it's not there to be your friend. This mob is literally blind - it hunts purely by vibrations and sound. You could be standing directly in front of it while invisible, and it wouldn't care. Make noise? You're done. The Warden has 500 health points, which is absolutely massive compared to the Ender Dragon's 200 HP. This thing deals 16 damage per hit on hard difficulty, meaning it can one-shot most players who haven't loaded up on diamond armor and healing supplies. Running isn't really an option either - it moves faster than you'd expect for something that size. Here's the thing though - there's actually no real reason to fight the Warden in most runs. Smart players just avoid it entirely. Sound travels through Sculk blocks in specific ways, and understanding how vibrations propagate becomes essential knowledge for survival. The Warden spawns when you trigger enough vibrations in the biome. Each Sculk Sensor detects vibrations and activates Sculk Shriekers. The Shrieker screams three times, and on the fourth scream, the Warden itself spawns from the ground. It's a system that actually makes sense - the deeper you dig, the angrier the biome gets. Honestly, if you're exploring an Ancient City and you hear that first Sculk Shrieker sound, your best move is to freeze completely. Don't move. Don't break blocks. Just sit there and wait for the danger level to reset. It's tense as heck, but it works. Loot Worth the Risk This is where the Deep Dark actually shines. Several blocks here don't generate anywhere else in vanilla Minecraft. Sculk blocks themselves are useful for redstone contraptions because they interact with vibrations in unique ways. Sculk Catalysts let you farm your own Sculk blocks by having mobs die nearby, which means if you can transport mobs down there (dangerous, but possible), you can create your own Sculk spreading zones. Player exploring Deep Dark biome with Warden mob and rare treasures But the real treasures hide inside Ancient Cities. We're talking enchanted diamond gear, enchanted golden apples, mace weapons, and other stuff that simply doesn't spawn in the Overworld. Some players argue this loot is almost too good - it does make endgame progression feel different when you can grab fully enchanted gear this early. Echo Shards generate exclusively in Deep Dark structures, and these are used to craft Recovery Compasses, which point to your death location. Pretty niche, but incredibly useful for hardcore survival runs. Silk Touch enchantment becomes genuinely important down here because you can harvest Sculk blocks directly. Here's the thing, otherwise they'll just drop experience, which honestly isn't great for the energy you spent getting down there. A Silk Touch pickaxe is practically mandatory for serious Deep Dark farming. Building in the Deep Dark Sculk blocks have interesting building properties that people don't always exploit. The texture is unique enough that it works for gothic or sci-fi style builds. If you're into dark, mysterious aesthetics, this biome gives you unlimited building material with that specific look. The problem is terrifying. You're constantly worried about making noise and spawning a Warden. Some builders disable the spawning conditions or play on Creative mode just to work down there in peace, which is honestly valid - the stress isn't always worth the build quality. Deepslate is abundant here and works incredibly well alongside Sculk for contrast. You can create genuinely impressive structures by combining the deep blue Sculk with gray Deepslate and darker stone variants. The Warden threat actually adds interesting build limitations. If you're trying to create something that involves moving mobs or redstone contraptions with lots of vibrations, you've got real problems to solve. That kind of constraint can lead to creative solutions though. I've seen some players build elaborate silent farms using trapdoors and careful mob routing to avoid triggering Shriekers. It's complex, but when it works, it's genuinely impressive. Practical Exploration Strategies Bring lots of food and healing potions. The Warden hits hard and heals itself over time once it takes enough damage. Diamond armor is the bare minimum - Netherite gives you way better protection and knockback resistance, which matters if you accidentally trigger combat. Player exploring Deep Dark biome with Warden mob and rare treasures Sculk Sensors detect all vibrations, so crouch-walking becomes essential. Crouching reduces vibration range significantly, which is why some players build wool pathways through the biome. But it sounds ridiculous, but it genuinely works. Place wool, walk on wool, remove wool behind you - basic tactics but effective for staying quiet. Wool blocks muffle vibrations entirely, making them your best friend for stealth navigation. Bring a water bucket and blocks for emergency cover. You can't outrun the Warden, but you can hide behind structures until it loses interest. Water will slow it down temporarily if you're desperate. The Ancient Cities themselves have decent loot but also tons of danger. Sculk Shriekers are everywhere, and breaking blocks carelessly will trigger them. Move deliberately. Don't smash through walls - dig carefully and methodically. Mining fatigue is a real threat in these structures too, which severely slows your mining speed. Finding Ancient Cities This might actually be the hardest part. Ancient Cities are rare, and biome finders online help significantly. Finding them underground involves pure luck unless you use commands. Using /locate structure ancient_city will give you coordinates if you're playing in a mode where commands are allowed. Purists might not like this, but it saves hours of wandering around in the dark. Once you have coordinates, the actual travel there is straightforward - head to those coordinates and dig down until you hit Y level -64. You might need to optimize your connection for faster server response times, especially on multiplayer servers, so if you're running a server setup, check out our Free Minecraft DNS tools to improve your connection stability during long exploration sessions. From above ground without commands, look for Y level -64 terrain that looks like it's part of a Deep Dark biome. The biome coloring is usually slightly darker than regular cave areas. Once you find one entrance, exploring horizontally usually leads to Ancient Cities if you're in the right region. This takes patience though - sometimes you'll explore for an hour and find nothing. Gearing Up and Looking Good When you're preparing your Deep Dark expedition, you want to look intimidating (or at least cool). Your character's appearance matters when you're about to face the most dangerous mob in the game. Check out our browse Minecraft skins page for thousands of options to customize your Deep Dark explorer's look. Whether you want to look like a hardened survivor or something more adventurous, there's a skin for every playstyle. Is It Worth Visiting? For most players? Eventually, yes. The loot progression is better than grinding for hours in Nether fortresses. That enchanted gear you find down there can cut weeks off your progression timeline. For speedrunners and serious survival players, the Deep Dark is basically mandatory because the gear gains are too significant to ignore. For casual players just chilling and building? Probably not worth the stress. The danger and effort aren't worth the reward if you're just enjoying the game at your own pace. This game's fun either way - some of the best bases I've seen are built in the Overworld with zero interest in Deep Dark exploration. You're not missing anything essential by skipping it entirely. The choice comes down to whether you want the challenge and loot, or whether you'd rather spend that time on building, exploring other biomes, or farming resources more safely. --- ### Redstone Lamps Explained: How They Work and What to Build URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/redstone-lamps-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Redstone lamps are blocks that light up when powered by redstone signals, giving you complete control over dynamic lighting in your Minecraft base. Unlike torches or lanterns that burn constantly, redstone lamps respond instantly to redstone power, making them perfect for automated lighting systems, secret passages, and decorative builds. You can create anything from a simple lever-controlled entrance to complex contraptions that adjust lighting based on game conditions. What Exactly is a Redstone Lamp? Redstone lamps are one of those blocks that seem simple on the surface but unlock tons of creative potential once you start experimenting. Here's the core mechanic: the block stays dark and non-emitting until you power it with a redstone signal, then it glows instantly at full brightness. Toggle the signal off? Darkness returns. But that simplicity is actually the whole point. The key difference between redstone lamps and regular light sources is control. A torch burns forever. You can't turn it off. Redstone lamps respond to redstone signals. This makes them the foundation for anything automation-related in your base. When powered, redstone lamps emit a light level of 15, which is maximum brightness in Minecraft. They're as bright as any other light source in the game, but with one massive advantage: you can turn them on and off instantly using redstone circuitry. The downside? They require redstone infrastructure to function, which means you need to understand at least basic redstone mechanics. But that complexity is where the real fun starts. Once you get it, you can build genuinely impressive systems. Think about what this enables. Entrance halls that illuminate when you approach. Secret rooms that reveal themselves with hidden buttons. Lighting that follows the day-night cycle automatically. All of this comes from understanding how a single redstone lamp block responds to power. Crafting and Basic Setup Creating a redstone lamp requires four redstone dust and one glowstone block. Arrange them in a crafting table with glowstone in the center and redstone dust in the four surrounding slots. Done. You now have a redstone lamp that you can place anywhere in your base. Glowstone comes from the Nether, which means your first redstone lamp project requires a Nether trip. If you haven't ventured there yet, prepare yourself. Bring fire resistance potions, wear full armor, and stay alert. Glowstone hangs from the ceiling in chunks, so harvest what you need and get back to the Overworld before anything catches fire. Once you've got lamps crafted, placement is identical to placing any other block. The real work comes in powering them. You've got several options depending on what you want to build. Lever: The simplest option. Place it next to your lamp, run redstone dust between them, and flip the lever to toggle the lamp on and off. Button: Gives you momentary power. Press it and the lamp stays on for a few ticks before shutting down automatically. Useful for pulsing effects. Redstone dust: Connect your lamp to dust lines that receive power from other sources like repeaters, comparators, or tripwire hooks. Daylight detector: Powers your lamp when daylight is present, opens up automated day-night lighting systems. Pressure plates: Lamps turn on when something walks over a plate, perfect for motion-activated lighting. For your absolute first redstone lamp setup, just place a lamp and a lever next to each other, connect them with redstone dust, and flip. Watch it light up. That's the core. Everything else is expanding on that foundation. Simple Builds You Can Make in Survival Let's talk practical. Not everyone wants to spend hours designing complex piston mechanisms. Some of us just want useful, attractive builds that don't require an engineering degree. The Entrance Lighting System - This is where I start with every new base. Place redstone lamps above or beside your front door, run some redstone dust to a lever near your spawn point, and you've got instant control. Flip the lever and your entrance lights up. During the day it's unnecessary, but at night that glow is inviting. Plus, it looks way cleaner than having torches scattered everywhere. Your guests will notice the attention to detail. Even better, hide the lever somewhere and add a button outside your door. Walk up, press it, and your entrance illuminates to welcome you home. Small detail, massive atmosphere improvement. Atmospheric Interior Lighting - Here's where redstone lamps move beyond functional into genuinely beautiful. Hide lamps behind slabs, stairs, or walls inside your base. When powered, light spills out from edges, creating ambient lighting that feels warm and inviting rather than industrial. Connect these lamps to a daylight detector and suddenly your base responds to the game world. Dawn arrives, your interior lamps fade. Dusk falls, they brighten automatically. You're looking at a comfortable interior that actually feels alive. And if you're showing off your creation to others, you'll want to look good while standing in that beautiful lighting. Create a custom Minecraft skin that matches your base's vibe before you start hosting tours. The Secret Room Reveal - Build a bookshelf wall as your secret door. Hide lamps behind it or inside the chamber it leads to. Wire them to a hidden button somewhere in your base. Press the button and before the door even opens, the room lights up. It's cinematic, it's impressive, and it requires barely any redstone knowledge. Just patience and good wiring organization. Outdoor Path Lighting - Use redstone lamps to light pathways between your base and other structures. Connect them to a daylight detector so they only activate at night. Suddenly you've got navigation without glitchy mobs spawning on your pathways. Add some decorative blocks around the lamps and your entire base grounds feel thought-out. Moving to Moderately Complex Circuits Once basic lever-switching feels boring, it's time to combine redstone lamps with actual redstone logic. AND gates power a lamp only when two specific conditions exist simultaneously. T-flip-flops create toggles where one button press turns a lamp on, the next press turns it off. OR gates let multiple switches control the same lamp. These aren't complicated to build once you see the pattern, but they feel genuinely clever when everything works. One surprisingly satisfying project is a "smart base lighting" system. Daylight detectors turn lamps on at dusk, off at dawn. Real talk, add a separate switch so you can override the automation when you want manual control. Suddenly your base is actually responding to the world around it. Security lighting is another practical application. Multiple buttons throughout your base that all trigger the same lamp circuit to flash. If you've got creepers prowling nearby, one emergency press lights up your entire operation. It's useful for navigation too, especially if you're deep underground. The real big deal happens when you combine lamps with pistons and doors. Automatic garage doors that illuminate as they open. Security gates that glow when you approach. Sliding walls that light up to reveal hidden chambers. These feel like real automation systems, not just flashy lighting. Clock circuits are where things get satisfying. Build a repeating redstone pulse generator and you've got lamps that flash in patterns. Set the timing right and you can create pulsing effects, scrolling light displays, or even synchronized arrays. YouTube tutorials on redstone clocks can teach you this in about an hour, and the payoff is significant. Making Your Builds Look Extraordinary Here's something most people overlook: redstone lamps aren't just functional infrastructure. They're genuinely gorgeous when used aesthetically, and a well-lit base gets noticed. If you're showing off your work to friends or on servers, lighting separates memorable bases from forgettable ones. Recessed lighting is your friend. Don't just slap lamps on walls. Hide them. Place lamps in the floor with glass or trapdoors in front of them so light spills outward without the block being obviously visible. Do the same with ceilings. This professional touch immediately elevates the entire space. Color coordination matters more than people realize. Redstone lamps give off bright white light. If your base uses warm tones like oak and terracotta, that harsh white can clash if you're not careful. Use lamps selectively or pair them with warm-colored blocks nearby. In darker bases with stone and blackstone, that brightness becomes a feature rather than a problem. Landscape lighting is completely underrated. Lamps hidden in trees illuminate the canopy from inside. Lamps beneath walkways glow softly. Lamps aimed at water features create reflection. These small details tell visitors that you actually thought about the space rather than just stuffing it with blocks. Pulsing effects create real atmosphere. Wire separate lamp circuits to timing delays so they brighten and dim in sequence. Not enough to be obnoxious, just enough to feel alive. A nightclub vibe, a breathing rhythm, whatever aesthetic you're chasing. If you want your builds to be truly striking, presentation matters. Browse Minecraft skins and pick one that complements your base's style. You'll spend hours in that space. Might as well look good while you're there. Worth the Investment Redstone lamps aren't for everyone, and that's fine. Plenty of players are happy with simple torches and call it done. But if you're interested in building systems that actually respond to your commands, in creating bases that feel intentional rather than accidental, lamps are where it starts. Begin simple with a switch. Build from there. That moment when your first automatic system works? Genuinely addictive. --- ### Minecraft Axolotl Spawning, Drops & Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/axolotl-spawning-drops-farming Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Axolotls spawn in lush caves and drop experience when killed. They're primarily useful for their utility in combat and decorative purposes. To farm them, you'll need water, breeding mechanics, and tropical fish buckets. Where Axolotls Spawn and How to Find Them So here's the thing about axolotls: they're not exactly everywhere. You'll only find them in lush caves, which means you actually have to explore a bit first. These underwater biomes have this vibrant, glowing aesthetic with glow berries hanging everywhere, and that's where axolotls hang out in the water. The biome itself is pretty distinctive. If you're wandering caves at Y-level 63 to 64 or so and suddenly spot massive water reservoirs with all these aquatic plants, you've probably found a lush cave. Axolotls spawn here naturally in the water blocks. They only spawn in water. Now, here's a practical tip: instead of wandering around underground hoping to stumble on a lush cave, you can use a cave finder. Check out the Minecraft Block Search tool to help locate lush cave biomes near your base. It saves time and honestly, a lot of frustration. You can set up your farm much closer to your actual builds this way. If you want to skip the exploration entirely, you could always join a server where others have already found these biomes. The Minecraft Server List has communities that maintain shared resources and farm locations, which takes the guesswork out of it. When you finally spot them in the water, axolotls come in different colors: pink (the default), brown, gold, cyan, and blue. They're relatively slow swimmers compared to other aquatic mobs, which makes them easier to catch or corral. What Do Axolotls Drop? Here's where it gets less exciting than you might hope. Axolotls don't drop much of practical value, to be honest. When you kill them, they drop experience orbs. That's it for the standard drops. 20w51a in Minecraft Experience from axolotls is fine if you're grinding levels, but there are better mob farms for that purpose. Not exactly new. The real value of axolotls isn't in their drops, though. It's in their behavior and how they interact with other mobs. They'll attack and kill some aquatic creatures automatically, they grant you regeneration effects in water during combat, and they play dead (turn upside down) when they take damage. That last mechanic is interesting from a gameplay perspective, even if it doesn't translate to loot. If you're building an axolotl farm specifically for drops alone, you'll be disappointed. But if you're farming them for other reasons (decoration, keeping tropical fish populations in check, or just because they're fun), then it makes more sense. Setting Up Your First Axolotl Farm Building an axolotl farm is simpler than you'd think, actually. You don't need anything super elaborate. Start with a basic water collection area. A 5x5 pool at least 2 blocks deep works fine for starters. Axololt Leg Concept Art in Minecraft Water placement matters here. Make sure the water is still and calm, not flowing. Axolotls prefer stationary water, and flowing water can mess with their behavior and breeding patterns. You'll want to block off any current. Lighting is optional indoors but matters outdoors. If you're building this in a cave or enclosed space underground, you don't need to worry much. If you're building at surface level, make sure there's no light source above the water, because you don't want other mobs spawning in your farm area. A roof or some coverage helps. Add some decorative elements like glow berries or amethyst blocks if you want, but they're not necessary for the farm to function. Axolotls will breed and survive in basic water just fine. What matters is having enough space and minimal obstacles. Gathering Your Breeding Stock You need to actually get axolotls into your farm first. Bucket them from lush caves, one at a time if needed. Axolotls fit in water buckets just like fish, so grab some buckets and head back underground. Two axolotls minimum to start breeding, but honestly, grab a few extras in case something happens. Breeding and Scaling Your Farm Here's where axolotl farming gets interesting. They breed just like fish do: using tropical fish buckets. Hold a tropical fish bucket near two axolotls in water, and boom, they'll enter breeding mode and create a baby axolotl. An axolotl with a pink star in Minecraft You'll need to farm tropical fish separately to keep your axolotl breeding going. Actually, that's not quite right for pure farming efficiency. You could just use buckets sparingly and let your axolotls breed naturally over time if you wait long enough between feedings. But if you want production, tropical fish buckets are your go-to. Baby axolotls take about 20 minutes to grow into adults in-game. They're tiny and adorable until then. To scale beyond a small breeding setup, you'll want multiple breeding pools or one larger area subdivided with glass panes. This prevents overcrowding and makes it easier to separate age groups or color variants if you care about that sort of thing. Avoiding Common Mistakes Don't leave your axolotls on land for more than a few minutes. They'll start taking damage. Keep them in water or damp places, and definitely don't try to transport them on dry land. Water buckets are your friend here. Adoptable larva in Minecraft Avoid putting them near aggressive mobs. Drowned, striders, or other water-spawning mobs can stress the axolotls or cause trouble. Here's the thing, keep your farm isolated if possible. Some players make the mistake of assuming axolotls are useful as a general defense mob. They're not terrible, but there are way better options for protecting your base or farm from hostile mobs. Think of them more as a utility mob than a guard. Don't overfill your tank thinking more water means more breeding. They need swimming space, and dense water with no room to move around will frustrate them. Quality over quantity with the pool size. Finally, remember that axolotls are fun but not meta. You're not going to change your survival world with an axolotl farm, but they're genuinely cool to have around if you like aquatic mobs and colorful builds. Sometimes that's reason enough. --- ### Mushroom Fields Biome Guide: Mobs, Loot and Building Ideas URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mushroom-fields-biome-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice The Mushroom Fields biome is one of Minecraft's rarest and most unique environments. You'll find massive mushrooms, mycelium-covered ground, mooshrooms instead of normal cows, and almost no hostile mobs. It's perfect for building and gathering unique resources you won't find anywhere else. What Makes Mushroom Fields Special Mushroom Fields are genuinely different from every other biome in Minecraft. The landscape is dominated by giant red and brown mushroom trees that can tower 40+ blocks high. Look, one ground is covered entirely in mycelium instead of grass, which is the real visual signature of the place. But here's what actually matters: hostile mobs don't spawn here at all. Ever. Creepers, skeletons, spiders, zombies... none of them show up naturally on the surface during the day or night. This makes it one of the safest places to build and farm in the entire game. You're getting a built-in safety net that's honestly unmatched. The mooshroom mobs are unique too. They're cows covered in red mushrooms. Milk them like regular cows or feed them flowers to get different mushroom types in return. Feed a red mooshroom a blue flower and it becomes brown, and vice versa. Strange mechanic, but it actually opens up some interesting resource farming possibilities. Finding Your Mushroom Fields This biome is genuinely rare. In Java Edition 26.1.2, finding mushroom fields typically requires either extreme luck or a seed that has them featured. Some players spend hundreds of blocks searching without finding one. Your best bet is using a biome finder tool before generating your world. If you're already playing on a server, ask around first. If you're running your own server and want to verify player locations, the Minecraft Server Status Checker can help you confirm your server's functioning smoothly before doing any large-scale exploration. Mushroom Fields are typically found in ocean areas rather than on land. They generate as islands or peninsula shapes surrounded by water. Look for them at relatively moderate coordinates if you're exploring vanilla generation patterns. Mobs and What Spawns Here This is the critical bit. No hostile mobs spawn naturally on the surface or underground in mushroom fields biomes. None. This is actually a defining mechanic of the biome in Java Edition. What you will find: Mooshrooms (red and brown varieties) Bats Passive mobs only if you're in adjacent biomes Slimes can spawn in the swamp portions if mushroom fields border a swamp biome, but that's technically in the swamp, not the pure mushroom fields area. The mycelium ground actively prevents hostile mobs from spawning, making it perfect for AFK farms and relaxed building sessions. Unique Resources and Loot Mushroom fields don't have special loot chests or exclusive drops like Nether fortresses do. That's not really the appeal here. What you can farm exclusively or more effectively: Mushrooms - Red and brown mushrooms grow naturally. You can harvest them and farm more. Mooshroom milk - Feed mooshrooms flowers to get specific mushroom types, then use shears to harvest the mushrooms directly from their backs. Mycelium - Harvest it as a building block or for terraforming projects elsewhere. Giant mushroom stems - The wood from giant mushroom trees is a decent building material. Honestly, the real value of mushroom fields is the safety and space for building, not the loot itself. You're not going to find diamonds or rare enchanted books here. You're getting peace and quiet instead, which in Minecraft is worth more than you'd think. Building Ideas for Your Mushroom Base The biome's aesthetic practically builds itself if you lean into it. Mushroom-themed builds are the obvious choice. Use mushroom stems and nether wart blocks to create a forest cottage that looks like it grew from the landscape. Red terracotta and brown concrete can complement the natural colors. A lot of players build whimsical, fairytale-style structures here because the giant mushrooms genuinely look magical. Farm structures work incredibly well. Since no mobs spawn, you can build your mob farms, crop farms, and animal enclosures with virtually zero concerns about mob interference. Mooshroom farming in particular is efficient here since you control the entire population without dealing with spawned hostiles. Consider building a central hub or base that uses the giant mushrooms as natural anchors. They provide vertical visual interest and natural scale without you needing to build huge towers. Some players build into the mushroom stems themselves, creating homes that feel genuinely integrated with the landscape. For dimensional travel, a Nether portal is worth setting up here. If you're planning portal logistics, the Nether Portal Calculator helps you align your portals correctly so you spawn in the right place in the Nether. Practical Tips for Thriving Bring bonemeal. Giant mushroom trees won't grow to full size on their own often enough. With bonemeal, you can cultivate the landscape exactly how you want it. Build walls or fences if you want to contain mooshrooms. They wander like normal cattle, and while they're not hostile, you might want to keep your farm population stable. The lack of hostile mobs means you can work at night without torches. If you're building and want the aesthetic of a darker environment, mushroom fields actually let you do that safely. The mycelium-covered ground and massive mushroom canopy create natural shadows that are genuinely atmospheric. If you're setting up a long-term base here, consider building a perimeter with fences or walls around your main build area. Not for mob defense, but to clearly mark your territory and keep animals from wandering too far. It also creates a defined neighborhood feel. Water management is straightforward since you don't need to worry about mob pathfinding around water channels. You can build irrigation systems and water features without the usual defensive considerations. Is It Worth Settling Here? Absolutely, if you value safety and aesthetic appeal over exclusive resources. You're not getting rare drops or unique ores. You're getting peace, visual character, and space to build freely. For players who want to relax, farm efficiently, or build grand structures without constant mob interruptions, mushroom fields is hard to beat. The rarity makes it feel special too. When you finally find one and settle down, there's a real sense of accomplishment. Just don't expect to stumble on this biome randomly. Plan your seed or coordinate with other players. Once you're there though, you'll understand why some players never leave. --- ### Minecraft 26.2 Pre-Release 5: Testing the Latest Update URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-pre-release-5 Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2 Pre-Release 5 is here, and it's time to test what's coming next. Pre-releases sit between snapshots and full versions, meaning they're closer to what players will actually get. If you've never tested a pre-release before, now's a good moment to start. What Exactly Is a Pre-Release? Pre-releases aren't the same as snapshots. Snapshots drop weekly and can be pretty unstable - they're where Mojang experiments with wild ideas that might not make the cut. Pre-releases, on the other hand, only appear when the dev team is confident enough that they're testing the final product before shipping it to everyone. Think of it as the last quality check before you buy the car. So 26.2 Pre-Release 5 tells you something important: version 26.2 is nearly ready. There will probably be a Pre-Release 6, maybe 7, and then the full release. That's the timeline. Why You Should Test It Look, most players skip pre-releases entirely. That's fair - you want the stable, finished version. But here's the thing: if you report bugs now, Mojang can fix them before they reach everyone else's worlds. That's genuinely useful. Testing is especially important if you run a server or use lots of mods and plugins. You'll want to know if any compatibility issues exist before version 26.2 lands officially. And if you're the type who loves having the latest features early, pre-releases let you customize your server's MOTD and test settings on the actual release build. Tools like the Minecraft MOTD Creator work with any version, so you can set up your messaging now and be ready to go live instantly. Security First: The Mod Malware Problem Before you go hunting for mods to test with this pre-release, we need to talk about something serious. Cybersecurity researchers have been tracking a nasty piece of malware called WeedHack that's spreading disguised as Minecraft mods and launchers. PCGamesN reported that thousands of PCs have been infected since early 2026 - we're talking 2,000 to 3,000 new infections every single day. The malware does everything from stealing passwords and session IDs to hijacking webcams and recording keystrokes. It sounds like something from a spy thriller, but it's real and active right now. The scariest part? Hackers are using well-made YouTube videos to trick people into downloading this stuff. They target keywords related to Minecraft mods and then drop links in the descriptions. Young players, in particular, fall victim because they're excited to grab cool mods fast. Only download mods from trusted sources (CurseForge, Modrinth, official mod pages) Never grab mods from YouTube download links or sketchy Discord servers Check if other players are using the mod safely before you install it Keep your Java installation up to date If you're testing 26.2 Pre-Release 5 with mods, be extra careful. Stick with major modloaders like Fabric and Forge, and only grab mods from reputable sites. But this isn't paranoia - it's just smart. How to Install and Test Pre-Release 5 Installing a pre-release is dead simple. Open the Minecraft Launcher and look for the version selector. You'll see a dropdown where you can choose between releases, snapshots, and pre-releases. Just pick 26.2 Pre-Release 5 and launch. I'd recommend creating a separate installation folder for pre-releases so your main game stays untouched. Look, last thing you need is a pre-release bug eating your main world's data. Yeah, that's rare, but it happens. Back up your worlds. Seriously. Just copy the folder to another drive or cloud storage. Takes five minutes, saves you heartbreak. What to Look For While Testing When you're playing through Pre-Release 5, keep your eyes open for weird behavior. Mojang cares about specific things: Crashes and freezes are obvious - if the game locks up, that's a bug report waiting to happen. But also watch for subtle stuff: blocks not rendering correctly, mobs behaving oddly, performance tanking in certain areas, redstone contraptions misfiring, or resource packs breaking. If something feels off, it probably is. Take notes with F2 screenshots and note the exact steps to reproduce the issue. "The game crashed" is useless. "Placed a redstone repeater next to a lectern in a superflat world and it crashed" is actually helpful. Platform Updates Worth Knowing While we're waiting for version 26.2, console developers haven't been idle. Sony and Mojang have been working on a native PlayStation 5 version of Minecraft. It's been in testing for a while, and the performance bump is noticeable - we're talking proper 4K 60fps support, similar to what Xbox Series X|S already has. After four years of PS5 running the PS4 version, a native build feels overdue. That means future versions, including 26.2 eventually, will come to PS5 with better performance than they currently do. It's not a massive feature addition for Java players, but it shows Mojang's commitment to keeping all platforms competitive. Is Pre-Release 5 Stable Enough? Here's the honest take: pre-releases are significantly more stable than snapshots, but they're still not release candidates. You shouldn't use Pre-Release 5 as your main survival world unless you're cool with the possibility of losing progress. That said, testing it in creative mode or a copy of your world is totally fine. Most players will find it runs smoothly. The crashes and major bugs are usually found and squashed by the time Pre-Release 5 rolls around. By Pre-Release 7 or 8, it's almost identical to what the final release will be. If you're running a server, definitely test this version with your plugins and mods. Use Minecraft Votifier Tester to make sure voting systems stay functional during the transition. Server owners especially need to catch compatibility issues now, not after version 26.2 goes live. Testing pre-releases isn't mandatory. Most players will just wait for the final version and play normally. But if you want a chance to shape what's coming next, or you run a server and need early warning of problems, now's the time to grab 26.2 Pre-Release 5 and dig in. Just stay safe with mod downloads and you'll be fine. --- ### How wgpu-mc Brings Modern Graphics to Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/wgpu-mc-minecraft-rendering-engine Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project wgpu-mc (wgpu-mc/wgpu-mc) Rust-based replacement for the default Minecraft renderer Star on GitHub ↗ .0 If you've noticed Minecraft's renderer feels dated compared to modern games, wgpu-mc offers an alternative. This Rust-based rendering engine replaces the aging OpenGL backend, bringing support for modern graphics APIs and potentially better performance on current hardware. What This Project Does Wgpu-mc is a WebGPU-based rendering engine built entirely in Rust. Instead of relying on OpenGL (which has powered Minecraft's graphics since the beginning), it uses a modern GPU abstraction layer that can target multiple graphics APIs depending on your hardware. On Windows, that's typically DirectX 12. On Linux and macOS, it falls back to Vulkan or Metal. The project started as a passion project back in 2021 with a straightforward goal: give Minecraft a rendering pipeline designed for current-generation hardware instead of code written for systems from 2009. For actual Minecraft gameplay, you'd use wgpu-mc through Electrum, a Fabric mod that swaps out Minecraft's default Blaze3D renderer for the wgpu-mc engine. Both the engine and the mod are still in beta, which is worth noting upfront. Why You'd Want This Modern graphics cards are built around concepts that OpenGL handles poorly. If you're running a newer GPU, your hardware is essentially waiting around for OpenGL to catch up. Wgpu-mc cuts out that middle layer. The real benefits come down to three things: potential performance gains on modern systems, better support for newer GPU features, and future-proofing. If you've been frustrated with Minecraft's performance even on hardware that should handle it easily, this might help. That said, actual frame rate improvements vary wildly depending on your specific GPU and what mods you're running alongside it. This isn't for players who just want vanilla Minecraft to run faster (you're probably fine already). It's for people interested in seeing what a modernized Minecraft renderer could do and who don't mind running beta-stage software to experiment. How to Get It Running Installation assumes you're comfortable with Fabric modding. First, you'll need a Fabric installation for Minecraft Java 26.1.2 (the latest stable release as of 2026) or your preferred version. Electrum, the Fabric mod that integrates wgpu-mc, is still in development. You'll download it from GitHub or the project's official sources. Given that malware often disguises itself as Minecraft mods on third-party sites, always pull mods from official GitHub releases or trusted launchers like MultiMC or Modrinth whenever possible. The basic installation process looks something like this: code1. Install Fabric for your chosen Minecraft version 2. Download the latest Electrum JAR from the wgpu-mc GitHub releases 3. Drop it into your mods folder 4. Launch Minecraft through Fabric 5. Test in a single-player world first before importing a world you care about One thing that trips people up: even with Electrum installed, Minecraft might still render through OpenGL initially. You may need to enable the wgpu-mc renderer explicitly in Minecraft's video settings. Check the mod's documentation for your specific version. What Improves If you're expecting dramatic visual changes, you'll be disappointed. Real talk, wgpu-mc doesn't add ray tracing or overhaul Minecraft's art style. What it does is handle the graphics pipeline more efficiently, which can mean smoother frame rates, better support for high render distances, and potentially less GPU memory waste. Project screenshot You might notice improved frame times in large builds or complex scenes with lots of entities. Shader compatibility is more limited than with standard Minecraft (since you're using a different rendering backend), though development is ongoing. The Minecraft community has captured some screenshots showing the engine in action. A visuals look... like Minecraft. Because they're. The improvements are under the hood. If you use tools like the Minecraft Block Search to plan detailed builds, you might find that complex scenes render more smoothly when you actually place them in-world. Real Limitations and Gotchas Let's be direct: this is beta software. You might encounter crashes that don't happen in vanilla Minecraft. Mod compatibility is hit-or-miss. Some mods that modify rendering will break. Others work fine. Shader support is limited compared to OptiFine or Iris, though that's improving. If you're heavily invested in shader packs, wgpu-mc might not be ready for you yet. Actually, you should test it in a fresh world first regardless of what mods you're running. The project relies on community contributions, and development is slower than a commercial product. This is standard for open-source projects, but it matters if you find a bug or compatibility issue. You might have to wait for a fix. Older AMD GPUs and some integrated graphics have reported issues. If your hardware is more than 5-6 years old, you might want to test in a non-critical save first. Comparable Projects You've probably heard of OptiFine and Iris, which are performance mods for Minecraft's existing renderer rather than replacements. Both are more stable and have broader shader support, but they work within OpenGL's constraints. For newer hardware, wgpu-mc's approach could eventually outperform them, though it's not there yet. There's also Sodium (a Fabric mod focusing on optimizing the base renderer) and Lithium (optimizing server-side logic). Both can coexist with wgpu-mc if you want, though you'll sacrifice some stability for the combination. If you just want better Minecraft performance without experimenting, Sodium plus Lithium is the mainstream answer. If you want to help develop the next generation of Minecraft rendering, wgpu-mc is where that happens. Ready to try wgpu-mc? 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 wgpu-mc/wgpu-mc on GitHub ↗ --- ### JustEnoughItems: The Recipe Lookup Mod Every Modded Player Needs URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/justenoughitems-minecraft-recipe-mod Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice "Item and Recipe viewing mod for Minecraft" mezz/JustEnoughItems · github.com Ever gotten stuck in a heavily modded Minecraft world, staring at thousands of items with no clue how to craft them? JustEnoughItems solves that. It's a lightweight mod that turns your inventory chaos into organized, searchable recipe lookups directly in-game.What This Project DoesJustEnoughItems (JEI) is a recipe and item viewing mod built with one mission: show you how to craft anything without leaving the game. Open up any crafting interface, press a hotkey, and you're looking at a side panel displaying every recipe. Every variant. Every way to make that one tool you desperately need.It's available for both NeoForge and Fabric, supports recent versions of Minecraft, and the whole thing is written in Java under an MIT license. Nearly 1,000 GitHub stars speak to how useful the community finds it. Why You'd Use ItPicture this: you've installed a modpack with 200+ mods. You find some weird ore in the world. You've no idea what it's for. Without JEI, you're digging through wikis, watching YouTube videos, or asking in Discord. With JEI? Mouse over it and see every possible recipe instantly.Kitchen sink modpacks are where this really shines. When you've got Tech Reborn, Create, Thermal Foundation, and five other mod suites all competing for attention, JEI becomes your sanity checkpoint. First-time players in your world won't be hopelessly lost anymore.It saves you hours of guessing. Find an interesting item? Check JEI. See if it's worth keeping or if you can transform it into something better. That workflow speeds up progression dramatically, especially early game when you're juggling dozens of new items simultaneously. How to InstallInstallation depends on which mod loader you're using. Real talk, the good news is JEI is dead simple either way.For NeoForge:code# Download JEI 26.1.2 for NeoForge from CurseForge # Drop the JAR file into your.minecraft/mods folder # Launch Minecraft and it loads automaticallyFor Fabric:code# Download JEI 26.1.2 for Fabric from CurseForge # Ensure Fabric API is already installed in your mods folder # Drop the JEI JAR file into.minecraft/mods # Launch MinecraftThat's genuinely it. No config files to wrestle with, no dependencies beyond your mod loader, no coremods. Load the game and press J to open the recipe guide (you can rebind this in settings if you want something else). Key Features and How They WorkBidirectional Recipe LookupClick an item in JEI and it shows you how to make it. Click the same item again and it flips to show you what other recipes use that as an ingredient. Need iron ingots? See every single way to get them across all installed mods. But this dual-direction system is absurdly useful once you realize how much time it saves you.Real-Time Search Across All ItemsType a partial item name and JEI filters results instantly. Looking for any type of wood? Type \"wood\" and get them all. Can't remember if that modded ore starts with \"tin\" or \"copper\"? Just guess - JEI's smart enough to find it. When you're working with 500+ unique items across multiple mods, this feature alone justifies having the mod installed.Per-Mod Recipe FilteringSome mods you want to see recipes for. Others? Not so much. You can hide entire mods from the recipe view, which is great for challenge runs where you're limiting crafting methods to specific mod suites. Want to exclude Create's engineering recipes and use only vanilla and one tech mod? Done in two clicks.Bookmark System for Frequent RecipesFind a recipe you'll need repeatedly? Bookmark it. Your bookmarks display at the top of the list, saving you from repeated searches on recipes you use constantly. This is a small feature but surprisingly practical when you're actively building something.Integration with Item Organization ToolsJEI works best alongside other organizational systems. Check out minecraft.how's block search tool to identify materials you're working with, then flip back to JEI to find the crafting path. You can also use the text generator to label storage containers and plan your base layout while working through complex mod systems. Tips and Common GotchasHere's what actually trips people up when they start using JEI:Some modded crafting stations need configuration. If you're looking at a modded workbench or machine, make sure that mod is configured to send its recipes to JEI. Most do this automatically out of the box, but a few older mods need tweaking in their config files.JEI is view-only by default. It shows you the recipe but doesn't auto-craft items for you. You still need to move to an actual crafting table and manually create items. Some mod integrations allow dragging recipes directly to certain crafting grids, but that varies by mod. Don't expect instant crafting.Search works best with complete item names. The search is case-insensitive and quite forgiving, but being specific helps. Searching \"dye\" when you really want \"orange dye\" gives you everything. Usually fine, but knowing the full item name narrows results faster.One more practical tip: if JEI feels sluggish in massive modpacks, disable mods you don't care about recipes for. It noticeably improves responsiveness. Alternatives Worth Knowing AboutNot every player uses JEI, though most modded players do eventually.NEI (Not Enough Items) is the original and still exists. It does mostly the same job but isn't actively maintained. You'll find it on older modpacks, and it still works fine if you need it, but JEI has become the community standard for good reason.WAILA-based mods like \"What Am I Looking At\" show you information about blocks you're pointing at, but they're less focused on recipes and more on general block data. Different tool for a different purpose.For the vast majority of people playing modded Minecraft? JEI is the default choice. The community uses it, modpacks include it, and it just works. Ready to try JustEnoughItems? 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 mezz/JustEnoughItems on GitHub ↗ --- ### The Complete Guide to Prismarine in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/prismarine-minecraft-blocks-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Prismarine is an exclusive underwater block found in ocean monuments. It comes in three variants - standard, dark, and prismarine bricks - each with distinct appearances. Mining requires an iron pickaxe or better. It's best used for oceanic themed builds and aquatic designs. What Exactly is Prismarine? If you've never ventured into an ocean monument, you might be wondering what the fuss is about prismarine. It's basically the signature material of deep ocean structures - a teal-blue block that captures that underwater aesthetic perfectly. The color is what makes it work. It's not bright or neon-looking (thank goodness), but instead has this calming oceanic vibe that just resonates when you're building aquatic bases. Prismarine comes in three distinct variants, and each one plays a different role. Standard prismarine has this subtle gradient texture that gives it visual depth. Dark prismarine is the moodier option - darker, more dramatic, perfect for creating definition. And prismarine bricks? They've this structured, tiled appearance that feels architectural. Honestly, the best-looking structures mix all three rather than relying on just one. It's been around since version 1.8, which is over a decade now. For a block that old, it's aged incredibly well visually. Where to Find Prismarine in Minecraft Ocean monuments are the only place you'll find prismarine in vanilla survival. That's it. You can't obtain it anywhere else naturally - no deep caves, no special biomes, just ocean monuments. They spawn in deep ocean biomes, usually at least 60-80 blocks away from any coast (though this varies depending on world generation). You'll know you're getting close to one when sea lanterns start appearing underwater. These illuminate the monument's structure, making it shine even in the dark depths. The monuments themselves are massive three-story structures that absolutely dominate their area. Pro tip: bring water breathing potions. You can craft them using awkward potions and pufferfish, and they make monument exploration dramatically easier. Drowning mechanics are annoying enough without fighting them while you're mining. I've seen too many players make this trip without proper preparation and waste hours getting air. The monument's architecture is deliberately designed using all three prismarine variants. Standard prismarine forms the bulk walls. Dark prismarine creates the outlines and adds definition. Prismarine bricks fill interior patterns. It's actually really thoughtful level design that makes the whole structure feel cohesive and intentional. How to Mine Prismarine Like a Pro Here's the critical part: you absolutely need an iron pickaxe or better to break prismarine. Period. Use anything less - wood, stone, whatever - and the block won't drop. You'll break it, but it'll disappear into nothingness. I made that mistake once on a multiplayer server and learned this lesson the hard way. An iron pickaxe works fine. Diamond? Also works great. But honestly iron is completely sufficient for prismarine mining. If you're planning a big ocean monument raid, bring multiple pickaxes because durability adds up fast when you're breaking dozens of blocks. The underwater mining is honestly the tougher challenge than the tool requirement. You've got to manage oxygen, avoid drowned mobs, and deal with the fact that mining mechanics get awkward when you're holding your breath. That's why water breathing potions are so valuable. Brewing them takes effort, sure, but they make the whole experience vastly less stressful. An Efficiency V iron pickaxe will destroy prismarine blocks in roughly half a second per block. When you're collecting dozens for a project, that adds up significantly. Bring an Unbreaking III pickaxe too - you'll thank yourself later. The Three Prismarine Variants Explained Standard prismarine is the base variant. Its gradient texture makes it look almost luminescent underwater, with hints of light and depth. When you place it in above-water construction, it becomes this really beautiful blue-teal color that's hard to replicate with other blocks. Many builders consider it the most versatile of the three. Dark prismarine is your accent option. Use it as outlines, borders, frames around features you want to emphasize. The contrast between standard and dark is immediately eye-catching. I tend to use it more sparingly than the standard variant because it's easier to overdo - but when placed intentionally, it's gorgeous. Prismarine bricks have this structured, tiled appearance that feels almost architectural. They work great for roofing, walkways, and anywhere you want a clear pattern. However, they can feel busy if you overuse them in one space. The key is moderation and knowing when to let other variants breathe. Only prismarine bricks are craftable using recipes. Standard and dark prismarine can't be crafted - they're monument-exclusive. This makes the crafted bricks useful when you need extra of that specific type for your builds. Building with Prismarine This is where prismarine truly shines. Its color and texture make it perfect for underwater bases, aquatic-themed builds, and any structure that needs that oceanic feeling. Some builders create entire underwater cities primarily using prismarine as their main material. Sea lanterns are the natural pairing. They provide lighting, match the underwater theme, and pair beautifully with any prismarine variant. Blue concrete and light blue concrete can accent the prismarine without clashing. Even some dripstone or copper can work if you want warmth mixed with the cool tones. Lighting is crucial since prismarine doesn't emit light on its own. Without proper illumination your structure will feel dark and gloomy. Sometimes that's your intended vibe - moody underwater dungeon - but usually you'll want some brightness. Sea lanterns embedded in the structure, or glowstone behind transparent blocks, both handle this nicely. If you're building a themed server with custom player experiences, the minecraft.how whitelist creator helps manage access to your exclusive builds. And it takes the administrative headache out of permission management. Custom skins matching your build's aesthetic? The minecraft.how skin creator lets you design skins that coordinate with prismarine color schemes. For themed servers, that cohesion matters - everyone swimming in matching ocean aesthetics feels intentional rather than random. Why Prismarine Matters Despite Being Niche Prismarine isn't necessary for survival. You'll never need it to beat the game or accomplish essential tasks. But that's sort of the point. It exists purely for aesthetic and creative reasons. That means you get to decide how and where to use it. The fact that it's ocean monument-exclusive makes it valuable. You can't farm it in five minutes. Getting prismarine requires an actual expedition, which means builds featuring it feel more intentional and impressive. Rarity breeds appreciation. If you've built an ocean base or aquatic structure of any real ambition, prismarine is almost certainly part of the equation. It's the material that transforms an underwater build from 'functional' to 'actually stunning.' That transformation matters. --- ### Iron Golem Guide: Spawning, Farm Design and Drops URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/iron-golem-spawn-farming Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Iron golems spawn when you place iron blocks in a T-shape configuration and top it with a carved pumpkin. They're one of the best renewable resources in Minecraft, dropping iron ingots and poppies consistently. A well-designed farm can produce thousands of ingots per hour in version 26.1.2. How Iron Golems Spawn The spawning mechanic is surprisingly simple once you know what you're doing. You need four iron blocks arranged like this: three blocks horizontal on top, one block underneath the center. Then place a carved pumpkin on the center block. Here's the thing, boom. You've got an iron golem. But there's a catch (there's always a catch). The iron golem doesn't spawn instantly. A pumpkin has to be placed last, and the game checks for certain conditions: The golem needs at least a 3x3x3 space to spawn in There can't be a solid block above the pumpkin Lighting doesn't matter for spawning, unlike other mobs The blocks need to form in the right order, though the game is flexible about timing Most farms use this mechanic repeatedly, stacking multiple spawning platforms on top of each other. Villager presence actually encourages iron golems to spawn naturally, which is why village-based farms work so well. Village golems will stick around as long as they're close to enough villagers. Building Your First Iron Golem Farm Start small. Seriously. I've seen people jump into massive 20-layer farms and give up halfway through redstone troubleshooting. A simple single-layer farm with five or six spawning platforms teaches you the fundamentals without burning you out. The basic design works like this: each spawning platform has enough room for iron blocks and a pumpkin. Beneath that sits a killing mechanism (usually fall damage or suffocation). Below the killing zone, you need a collection area with hoppers feeding into storage. Fall damage is the easiest route for beginners. Drop golems about 30 blocks and they'll die from fall damage, leaving their drops intact. Water breaks the fall differently depending on depth, so test it before committing to a full build. Actually, let me clarify that: water damage reduces fall damage, so you need enough distance. Typically 40+ blocks works reliably. Multi-layer farms multiply production. Stack five layers and you've got five times the output of a single-layer farm. But each layer needs proper loading to prevent lag issues. If you're running a multiplayer server, consider using the Minecraft Server Status Checker to monitor performance while testing your farm under load. Water channels and hoppers handle collection. Route everything through a single funnel point leading to chests or barrels. Hopper minecarts work too if you want to route items across long distances, but they're slower than direct hopper chains. What Iron Golems Drop Each golem drops between 3-5 iron ingots. That might sound low until you realize a decent farm spawns golems constantly. They also drop 0-2 poppies per kill. These are mostly useless unless you're building a flower farm, but they stack up in storage. Sell them to wandering traders or compost them if you're into redstone contraptions. The iron is where the real value sits. A moderately efficient farm produces enough iron to fully equip yourself in diamond tools plus netherite, then have thousands left over. By late game, iron genuinely becomes the bottleneck resource, not diamonds. Most players aim for farms that produce 100+ ingots per hour, which is totally doable with a basic design. Optimizing Your Farm for Maximum Efficiency Several tweaks push production higher. First, make sure your spawning platforms have zero nearby dark areas where other mobs can spawn. So this sounds obvious, but strays and other creatures eating spawn attempts wastes enormous efficiency. Light everything around your farm. Second, golems care about villager proximity. Pack villagers into a small area within the farm. They don't need to move or work. Just exist. Their presence encourages golem spawning nearby. I'd recommend one villager per two or three layers, though honestly, even oversaturating with villagers doesn't hurt. Third, loading speed matters. Golems only spawn in loaded chunks. If you're not actively watching your farm, it's producing nothing. Most players use an AFK spot directly above or beside the farm to keep chunks loaded while they go make coffee. Entity cramming helps with collection. Pack golems close together before the killing mechanism, and the damage effects trigger faster. Don't go crazy though. Too many mobs in one spot causes lag spikes that actually slow production. For multiplayer setups where you want to manage farm access carefully, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator helps you control which players can access your server and potentially use the farm. Common Mistakes That Wreck Production Most farms underperform because of simple oversights. Not removing the pumpkin between spawns is honestly the worst. Some designs reuse the same pumpkin, which breaks the spawning checks. Place the pumpkin, let the golem spawn, retract the pumpkin, repeat. Designs using pistons to place and remove pumpkins work perfectly. Insufficient killing mechanisms rank second. Golems are tanky. Fall damage needs to be precise. Too shallow and they survive with barely any health (then despawn if you're not careful). Suffocation from pistons is more reliable if you get the timing right, but it's also more redstone-heavy. Overcomplicated collection systems. Hoppers work. Hoppers with minecarts work. Double-chests with hoppers feeding into them work. Don't overthink it. I've seen farms with item sorters that took three times longer to build than the spawning mechanism itself. Bad platform spacing causes mobs to spawn on wrong levels. Make sure platforms sit far enough apart that golems definitely spawn on the intended layer, not on some intermediate platform you forgot about. Chunk loading issues kill production silently. If you're only getting 10 ingots per hour from what should be a 100 ingots per hour farm, the chunks probably aren't loaded. Test by standing in front of a spawning platform for ten minutes and counting golems. If it's way below expected, something's wrong with your setup or loading. Farm Designs for Every Skill Level Beginners should build a single-layer platform with drop damage collection. Takes about 30 minutes and produces decent yields. Intermediate players can stack layers, add hopper systems, and incorporate a few villagers. This jumps production significantly with only modest complexity increase. Advanced builds integrate piston-based spawning control, automatic pumpkin placement and removal, and even automatic sorting systems. These produce more, but they're genuinely complex. Make sure you understand redstone before committing to a month-long build project. The 2x2 compact design works great for tight spaces. Limits throughput compared to sprawling farms, but saves space. The 10x10 open platform design maximizes output per layer. Neither is objectively better. Pick what fits your base. Whatever you build, test it at a small scale first. Build two layers, let it run for an hour, calculate the hourly rate. If it's significantly below what you expected, troubleshoot before expanding. --- ### Minecraft 26.2-pre-5 Snapshot: What's New Now URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-pre-5-snapshot-guide Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2-pre-5 is the latest snapshot, meaning it's a pre-release build that gives players a first look at what might make it into the next full release. Snapshots are where the experimental stuff lives, so features here aren't final and changes happen constantly. If you want to test the bleeding edge, you'll need to know what you're getting into and how to stay safe while doing it. What Exactly is a Snapshot? A snapshot isn't a finished product. Think of it as Mojang working out loud. They test new mechanics, balance changes, and features that might never make the cut. Players like us can jump in and break things intentionally, report bugs, and shape what the next version becomes. It's collaboration disguised as a game update. Running 26.2-pre-5 means you're one of the first to touch new features, but stability isn't guaranteed. Crashes happen. Worlds sometimes don't load. That's the deal. Backups are your friend here, not optional. The Current State of Minecraft Development We're currently sitting on 26.1.2 as the latest stable release. The snapshot 26.2-pre-5 is the experimental follow-up being tested right now. Mojang's development cycle moves quick these days, which is both exciting and occasionally chaotic. And here's something worth mentioning while we're talking about snapshots and testing: if you're downloading mods or tools claiming to improve your Minecraft experience, slow down. Security firm McAfee reported that malware called WeedHack has infected thousands of PCs by masquerading as Minecraft mods and launchers. The software uses well-edited YouTube videos targeting mod-related keywords to trick players into downloading it. Once installed, it steals session IDs, passwords, Steam credentials, and can even access your webcam. Between 2,000 and 3,000 people are getting infected daily. Only download mods from trusted sources like CurseForge, Modrinth, or Planet Minecraft. If you're testing snapshot features, stick to official Minecraft launchers only. How to Test 26.2-pre-5 Safely Want to jump in and test it yourself? Launching snapshots through the official Minecraft Launcher is straightforward. You'll find the snapshot versions in the installation menu. The key is keeping your worlds separate. Create a test world or copy an existing one before loading it into 26.2-pre-5. Don't test snapshots on your main survival world unless you really know what you're doing. The Minecraft community stays engaged with snapshot testing through the feedback site and Reddit. When something breaks or feels wrong, report it. Your testing actually matters. Mojang reads the feedback and fixes things based on what players discover. Snapshot Culture and Community Involvement Running a snapshot means being part of the experimental development cycle. You'll encounter unfinished features, placeholder textures, and bugs that range from silly to game-breaking. That's the whole point. Real talk, testers help polish what makes it to release. If you're worried about documenting changes or testing specific features, tools like the Minecraft Text Generator can help you organize your findings and share them with the community. And for testing specific server features, the Minecraft Votifier Tester is useful if your server uses voting systems. Related Minecraft News Worth Knowing Beyond snapshots, there's other movement in the Minecraft ecosystem. Mojang confirmed a native PlayStation 5 version is in testing and expected to release this year. Four years after PS5's launch, the console will finally get its own optimized version instead of running the PS4 build. It'll support 4K resolution and 60fps to match what Xbox Series consoles already offer. That's significant for PlayStation players who've been waiting. The broader point here's that Minecraft isn't sitting still. Between snapshot cycles pushing new features in Java Edition, console versions getting native ports, and the constant security considerations around modding, the ecosystem keeps evolving. Staying informed about what's coming in snapshots helps you understand where the game's headed before the official releases drop. Should You Install It? If you enjoy testing games and reporting bugs, snapshot 26.2-pre-5 is worth installing. Set aside a test world, expect occasional instability, and be thorough about backups. If you want a stable experience for casual play, stick with 26.1.2 and wait for the next full release. Both are valid choices. Snapshots aren't for everyone, but they're how the community shapes Minecraft's future, one test at a time. --- ### Mooshroom Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mooshroom-spawning-farming Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Mooshrooms are rare creatures that exclusively spawn in mushroom island biomes. They drop red mushrooms and bowls when killed, making them essential for starting a mushroom farm. Finding a mushroom island is the hard part, though most worlds will have at least one somewhere out there. What Are Mooshrooms? Red mooshrooms are cows with oversized red mushrooms growing directly from their backs. They're technically a variant of regular cows, except they can't be milked and they drop mushrooms instead of leather when killed. Look, there's also a brown variant that appears on mushroom islands, though it's far less common. The red type is what you'll encounter most often. When you hit a red mooshroom with a bowl (not a bucket), it transforms into a normal red cow and drops up to five red mushrooms. This mechanic makes mooshrooms incredibly valuable for mushroom farming, since you can convert them and get instant mushroom drops without needing to set up a full farm first. I tested this on a couple of servers and it's a genuinely useful shortcut early on. Where Mooshrooms Spawn Mooshrooms only spawn in mushroom island biomes, and they spawn exclusively on mycelium blocks (not regular grass or dirt). Mushroom islands are rare biomes, but they're usually not too hard to find if you're willing to travel. The easiest method is creating a new superflat world with the mushroom island preset to test mechanics, then apply what you learn to your actual world. In version 26.1.2, mushroom islands generate naturally in most world types, though they're more common in older seeds. If you're playing on a server with other players, you might want to set up a Minecraft Whitelist Creator to control access while you explore, especially if you find a mushroom island with good spawning potential. Protecting your biome from other players digging it up is honestly worth the organizational effort. Mooshrooms won't spawn anywhere else. Light level matters too. Mooshrooms spawn on mycelium at any light level, which is actually different from most mobs. So this means mushroom islands will be packed with mooshrooms at night, and they'll still spawn there during the day. The high spawn rate is why mushroom islands are so valuable for farming. What Mooshrooms Drop Red mooshrooms drop red mushrooms when killed. Brown mooshrooms drop brown mushrooms. You get 0-2 mushrooms per kill (sometimes more with looting enchantments), plus a 5% chance at a bowl if a player dealt the final damage. The bowl drop is actually what limits your farming potential initially, since you need bowls to convert mooshrooms to cows. Mushrooms are surprisingly useful in Minecraft. Red mushrooms breed nether wart crops, poison potions, and stew recipes. Brown mushrooms are less common but function identically. If you're looking to build a potion farm or need mushroom stew for early-game survival, mooshrooms are your answer. The real value isn't the mushrooms themselves, though. It's the breeding potential. Once you convert a mooshroom to a cow with a bowl, you can breed the cow normally and create a regular cow farm. But since mooshrooms are rare, most players keep them in their original form and farm mushrooms directly. You'll want at least 10-15 mooshrooms in an enclosed area to get decent mushroom output without needing to hunt for hours. Building a Mooshroom Farm The simplest mooshroom farm is a contained area on a mushroom island. Dig out a 10x10 square of mycelium, surround it with walls (fences work fine), and light it with torches or lanterns positioned to keep the light level below 12 in some spots. Wait a few minutes and mooshrooms will spawn in that enclosed area. You can speed this up by keeping the light level at 11 or lower in certain corners of your farm, leaving other areas well-lit. Mooshrooms don't have a minimum light requirement for spawning, so you can create a completely dark farm if you want, though you'll need night vision or torches to work in it. I personally prefer mixed lighting since it's easier to navigate. Once mooshrooms start accumulating, use a hopper system or manual collection to gather the mushrooms they drop when killed. You can also convert mooshrooms to regular cows using bowls, then breed the cows. This gives you both a steady mushroom supply and a renewable source of red mushrooms through mushroom stew crafting. Water channels work great for pushing mobs toward a collection point. If you're decorating your farm or want to add custom text for signs, the Minecraft Text Generator is useful for creating fancy signs or labels. Building a visually appealing farm makes it easier to find later when you need to update it. Mooshroom Island Exploration When you first reach a mushroom island, you'll notice there are almost no hostile mobs. This is because mooshrooms are the primary spawns, so creepers, skeletons, and zombies don't appear. It's one of the safest biomes to explore solo. The tricky part is actually getting there. Mushroom islands spawn randomly and can be far from your spawn point. Using a map website or seed analyzer can help you locate islands quickly rather than sailing blindly. Bring a boat and extra supplies since you might be out there for a while. Giant mushrooms (the tall brown and red ones) generate naturally on mushroom islands. They're good for navigation and harvesting mushroom blocks, but they won't help with mooshroom farming directly. Brown Mooshrooms and Breeding Brown mooshrooms are rarer than red ones, but they work identically in farms. You'll find both types on the same island. Brown mushrooms are mostly useful for potion crafting and decorative purposes since red mushrooms are more common. Converting mooshrooms to cows (via bowl) doesn't preserve the mushroom type. Any mooshroom becomes a regular red cow, no matter the original color. So this is honestly less intuitive than it should be, but it's the current mechanic. If you're building a huge farm, you'll eventually want to automate the process. Pushing mooshrooms over edges and letting them take fall damage, then collecting the mushrooms they drop, is more efficient than manual killing. Combine this with water channels and hoppers, and you've got a legitimate mushroom production system that keeps running as long as mooshrooms spawn in your farm area. --- ### LambDynamicLights: The Dynamic Lighting Mod Ruling 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/lambdynamiclights-dynamic-lighting-mod Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice LambDynamicLights transforms Minecraft's lighting system with dynamic shadows and realistic effects. It's among the most popular visual mods in 2026, making exploration feel alive and immersive. Here's what you need to know before installing.What's LambDynamicLights?LambDynamicLights is a Fabric mod that overhauls how light behaves in Minecraft. Instead of static light sources, it adds real-time dynamic lighting wherever you move torches, hold glowstone, or have light-emitting items. It sounds simple, but it changes everything about how the game feels.The mod works by making light sources follow you. Got a torch in your hand? It'll light up the area around you as you walk. That glowstone you're holding for decoration actually glows now. Creepers with explosives light up the darkness. It's deceptively elegant.Developed by LambdaHack, this mod has blown up in popularity since early 2026. The reason is straightforward: it makes Minecraft look and feel better without turning your world into a cyberpunk nightmare. You're not replacing vanilla aesthetics, you're enhancing them.Why It's Trending This YearVisual mods come and go, but LambDynamicLights hit different. Player engagement skyrocketed after several major Minecraft content creators showcased it on their servers. What caught everyone's attention wasn't flashy effects or over-the-top graphics. And it was the subtlety.Nighttime mining suddenly feels tense and atmospheric. Your torch actually creates shadows behind blocks, and you can see them move as you walk. Lava pits glow with a warm hue that actually influences nearby surfaces. Mobs holding items with light properties are easier to spot in caves. These aren't gimmicks, they're quality-of-life improvements that change how you experience the game.The second reason for its popularity is compatibility. It works with Minecraft 26.1.2 and pairs beautifully with other visual mods like Sodium and Iris for ray tracing. Performance-conscious players discovered they could run LambDynamicLights without tanking their FPS, which wasn't true for earlier dynamic lighting solutions.Key Features That MatterThe core feature is obvious: dynamic lighting. But here's what else it does well.Entity lighting - Mobs and players holding torches, lanterns, or glowing items emit light that moves with themBlock lighting - Light sources like end rods, soul lanterns, and enchantment tables glow realisticallyFluid effects - Water and lava surfaces reflect light sourcesShadow rendering - Light casts actual shadows on nearby blocks, creating depthConfiguration options - You can adjust light range, falloff, and which blocks emit lightOne thing I've tested on three different servers: the shadow rendering is the biggest visual big deal. Honestly, caves stop looking flat. The world has depth and dimension.Some players were worried it would look overcooked, but the default settings are restrained. It's not trying to turn Minecraft into Unreal Engine. It's respecting the vanilla aesthetic while making it more dynamic.How It Changes ExplorationExploring feels fundamentally different with dynamic lighting. When you descend into a deep cave system, your torch follows you. Unlike vanilla Minecraft, where you're basically viewing a pre-lit stage, you're now actively illuminating the darkness as you move through it. The cave ahead isn't just dark blocks waiting for light placement, it's actually dark, and you're pushing back the shadow with your light source.Traveling to the Nether becomes more atmospheric. Those fortress dungeons feel properly dangerous now. And if you're using a Nether portal calculator to plan coordinated travel between the Overworld and the Nether, you'll appreciate how much better the Nether looks with dynamic lighting. The obsidian corridors glow differently, and navigating lava lakes feels less sterile.Multiplayer servers see the biggest shift. Building at night without torches floating around everywhere feels cleaner. When you're running a server and want to set the mood with torches only in specific places, dynamic lighting respects that decision rather than flooding the area with uniform light.Installation & Download SafetyInstall it like any Fabric mod: download the JAR from CurseForge or Modrinth, drop it in your mods folder, and launch Minecraft.But here's something important. Download mods only from trusted sources. PCGamesN reported in 2026 that malware disguised as Minecraft mods and launchers has infected thousands of PCs. Attackers use high-quality YouTube videos to drive users toward infected downloads. Always verify you're on official platforms like CurseForge or Modrinth, and check the uploader's history.LambDynamicLights is developed by a legitimate creator with a solid track record of updates and support. You won't run into issues downloading from the official sources. So that said, stay vigilant about where your mods come from. One bad download can turn a fun gaming session into a nightmare.Setup is straightforward. You need Fabric Loader and the Fabric API installed first (both are easy one-click installs). Then LambDynamicLights itself. Restart the launcher, and it works immediately. No configuration required unless you want to fine-tune settings.Performance & Server SetupThis is where LambDynamicLights earned its reputation. Earlier dynamic lighting mods were FPS killers. This one isn't.On a mid-range PC with Minecraft 26.1.2, you're looking at a 5-15 FPS hit, depending on render distance and how many light sources are active. That's acceptable for a visual enhancement. With Sodium optimization, you might barely notice it.Servers benefit from cleaner visuals without performance concerns for the host. If you're running a multiplayer server and considering custom MOTD announcements about your server features, you could mention dynamic lighting in the message. A tool like the Minecraft MOTD Creator lets you format colorful server messages that advertise mods like this to joining players.Seriously though, the mod is well-optimized. Most complaints I've seen in server communities are from players with potato PCs trying to run max render distance, max graphics mods, and 47 other visual overhauls simultaneously. With reasonable settings, LambDynamicLights plays nice.My TakeIs it worth installing? Yes, genuinely.It's not a total overhaul that reinvents Minecraft. It doesn't add new content or mechanics. But it makes the existing game feel more alive and atmospheric. That matters more than people think. A small visual polish that works everywhere beats a flashy feature that only works in specific situations.I tested it on survival servers, creative builds, and caving expeditions. The improvement was consistent. Nighttime mining feels right. Building at night doesn't require a lighting hack. Exploration in caves is more immersive. None of these things are revolutionary, but together they create a better experience.The only real reason not to install it is if you're playing on a very old PC or laptop. Otherwise, it's a no-brainer.And honestly, if you're reading a Minecraft community site in 2026 and you haven't tried LambDynamicLights yet, you're sleeping on one of the best quality-of-life mods available right now. It's not trendy for no reason. --- ### Minecraft LIVE 2026: What Was Announced and What It Means URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-live-2026-recap Published: 2026-06-09 Author: ice Minecraft LIVE 2026 brought major announcements spanning platform expansion, critical security warnings, and roadmap reveals. The event highlighted console improvements, addressed emerging threats, and showcased upcoming features that'll reshape how players experience the game across devices. PlayStation Finally Gets Its Native Version One of the biggest applause lines came when Mojang confirmed the native PS5 version is officially rolling out this fall. Honestly, it's wild it took this long. The PS4 version has been running in backwards-compatible mode for four years while Xbox Series consoles already had native 4K 60fps support. PlayStation players have been patient, but the wait's finally ending. The new version will feature the same graphical and performance improvements already standard on Xbox Series X|S. We're talking full 4K resolution, consistent frame rates, and enhanced draw distances that make the blocky world feel genuinely vast on Sony's latest hardware. They've been testing it for months now with preview builds, ironing out stability issues and optimizing performance specifically for PS5's custom architecture. What's actually interesting here is Mojang's commitment to feature parity across platforms. Instead of PS5 getting some watered-down experience, it's getting the full modern treatment. That means if you're playing Creative Mode or exploring the same world as your friends on Xbox, you're seeing the same caves, the same mob spawning behavior, the same render distance. No compromises. That matters for crossplay and makes sure you're not losing features just because you play on a different console. The testing phase revealed some optimization work worth noting. Early testers noticed that despite PS5's additional processing power compared to PS4, Mojang didn't just blindly crank all settings to maximum. Instead, they balanced visuals with responsiveness. The game targets a locked 60fps in standard mode, which feels buttery smooth after years of variable frame rates on older hardware. For people who prefer visuals over performance, there's also a dynamic resolution mode that pushes 4K but accepts frame rate fluctuations within a narrow range. A Wake-Up Call About Security But Minecraft LIVE 2026 wasn't all celebration. McAfee cybersecurity experts dropped some genuinely terrifying research showing how malware disguised as Minecraft mods has infected over 116,000 PCs since January. Between 2,000 and 3,000 people get hit every single day. Let that number sink in. That's entire neighborhoods of infected computers. New Ghasts Pixel Art in Minecraft The malware's called WeedHack, and it's spread primarily through YouTube videos that look completely legitimate. These aren't low-effort scams either, the videos are well-edited, high-quality content targeting specific Minecraft mod keywords. Hackers basically created a convincing Minecraft mod ecosystem on YouTube to bait people in. They're not using AI-generated thumbnails or voice-overs. These are actual humans investing time in making convincing Minecraft content, just to slip malware into the download links. Here's where it gets nasty. The free version (available to anyone with a Discord account) can steal your Minecraft session ID, grab saved passwords, pull credentials from Steam and Discord, and access browser-based crypto wallets. Your gaming credentials, your digital currency, your saved payment methods, all exposed. But that's just the free tier. The premium version escalates to remote desktop access, webcam hijacking, keystroke logging, and full file system control. Your webcam. Every key you type. Every email you send. Every file you have access to. WeedHack in premium form is essentially a backdoor into your entire computer. McAfee's description reads like a nightmare scenario for anyone who downloads a "mod launcher" only to discover six months later they've been watched the whole time. Mojang took this seriously and spent a decent portion of LIVE addressing it directly. The message was crystal clear: only download mods and launchers from verified sources. This official launcher, CurseForge, and ModLoader are the safe bets. If you're hunting for texture packs or cosmetics, use trusted sites and double-check URLs. One typo in the URL could land you on a cloned malware site that looks identical to the real thing. And honestly, this is where tools like Minecraft Whitelist Creator become more valuable for server administrators. You can actually vet who's joining your multiplayer worlds and prevent random infected accounts from compromising the whole server. For private servers, whitelisting isn't optional anymore, it's mandatory security. If someone tries to join with a compromised account, you'll at least have control over who gets access to your storage containers and command blocks. The bigger picture Mojang emphasized: they can't control what happens outside the official launcher, but they can make the official tools more solid and encourage better security practices. The responsibility partly falls on the community to avoid sketchy sites and report phishing attempts. Version 26.1.2 and the Development Road Ahead The stable Java Edition 26.1.2 release that dropped earlier this year continues the steady evolution that's kept Minecraft feeling fresh. Performance improvements on mid-range hardware are actually noticeable, especially in cave-heavy worlds where chunk loading used to cause stutters. The changes to underground generation mean you're more likely to find interesting cave systems without those weird gen artifacts that plagued earlier snapshots. Vibrant happy ghasts in Minecraft Mob behavior tweaks add subtle depth to combat encounters. Creepers now pathfind more intelligently, making them genuinely threatening again instead of just stumbling toward you predictably. Drowned enemies behave differently in water versus on land, which sounds minor until you're suddenly dealing with a coordinated group underwater and realize they're actually dangerous. These aren't flashy changes that show up in trailers, but they're the kind of polish that matters when you're actually playing. Snapshot 26.2-pre-4 is already testing the next set of features, so the development pipeline stays aggressive. Mojang's committed to consistent updates that feel meaningful rather than incremental padding. Community Tools Getting the Spotlight Minecraft LIVE also highlighted how the community extends the game's functionality beyond what Mojang ships by default. Server administrators managing whitelists, creative players building with custom text, and modders expanding the universe all got recognition as essential parts of why Minecraft endures. Mounts of Mayhem unveiling header in Minecraft Speaking of which, if you're managing a custom server or a creative world, the Minecraft Text Generator tool has become essential for adding custom signs, banners, and command-block text displays. It saves hours of manual formatting that used to require knowing exact color codes and special character syntax. You paste in your text, configure colors and styles visually, and export the command. Done in seconds instead of trial-and-error debugging. The audience applauded when Mojang showed clips of community creations that relied on these helper tools. Massive redstone computers that wouldn't exist without command optimization. Pixel art that would've taken weeks to hand-code. Survival servers with custom rule systems that depend on rapid command prototyping. These tools aren't cheating, they're enabling the kind of complex creative work that pushes the game's boundaries. This ecosystem underscores why Minecraft remains a cultural phenomenon. The core game is solid, yeah, but the community-driven tools and solid modding infrastructure are what keep people invested years later. You can be a casual vanilla player, or you can descend into ridiculous redstone contraptions or massive creative projects. The game accommodates both. What This Means For You Depends on how you play, honestly. MCLive Summary MountainCover in Minecraft If you play on PlayStation, upgrade plans are solid and worth waiting for. The performance bump alone justifies the jump from PS4, and you're getting a genuinely modern version of the game. If you play across multiple platforms, feature parity means your experience is consistent. You won't discover that your favorite biome generates differently on PS5 versus Xbox, or that mobs behave differently. That consistency is worth celebrating. If you download mods, scrutinize every link and source because the security landscape just got more dangerous. Check the comments on download pages. Ask in Discord communities. Take five minutes to verify before clicking. It's the difference between playing safely and discovering six months later that your computer's been compromised. For server admins, the security discussions at LIVE should prompt a whitelist audit if you haven't done one recently. Ban any accounts that look suspicious. Enable logging. Keep your server software updated. It's tedious admin work, but it's also the difference between a safe community space and a potential liability. The bigger takeaway is Mojang's balancing act: expanding reach through new platforms while addressing real threats that come with that growth. They can't control what malware authors do, but they can educate players and make official tools more reliable and harder to impersonate. Where Minecraft Stands Right Now Console updates bring better performance. Security awareness saves computers. A growing modding community keeps the game fresh. Community tools enable creative visions that would be impossible with vanilla mechanics alone. Minecraft in 2026 isn't about one breakthrough feature, it's about steady evolution across every layer of the experience. The trajectory feels solid. Platform expansion means more people playing together instead of fragmented across different versions. Security warnings hopefully make people more cautious about what they install and from where. Stable releases keep the technical foundation solid so the game doesn't rot from underneath the creativity happening on top. LIVE showed a franchise that's not chasing trends or reinventing itself every year. It's executing consistently on what made it huge in the first place, protecting players while doing it, and giving the community space to push the game in directions Mojang never planned. --- ### Minecraft Ice Spikes Biome: Loot, Mobs, and Building Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/ice-spikes-biome-guide Published: 2026-06-08 Author: ice The Ice Spikes biome is one of Minecraft's most striking environments. You'll recognize it instantly: massive frozen spikes jutting into the sky, packed ice everywhere, and an almost otherworldly silence broken only by the occasional blizzard. It's beautiful, dangerous, and packed with unique resources you won't find elsewhere. If you're planning a visit (or a base), here's what you need to know. What Defines the Ice Spikes Biome? Think of Ice Spikes as nature's skyscraper project gone wrong. The entire biome is covered in varying heights of packed ice formations that sometimes reach up to 80 blocks tall. Look, a terrain is flat between these spikes, usually buried in snow layers and blue ice. Visibility can be rough during snowstorms, and dealing with landscape requires careful jumps and climbs if you want to reach the top of those formations. The biome generates in frozen regions of the world, typically adjacent to Deep Frozen Oceans, Snowy Taigas, or regular Snowy Biomes. Finding one isn't guaranteed early-game, but if you're actively exploring, you'll spot one eventually. Locating Ice Spikes in Your World Biome location depends on world seed. If you're on a specific server, check if someone's already mapped the landscape (most communities share this info on their community wiki or Discord). For single-player, you've got options. Your best bet is flying around in Creative mode first to scout coordinates, then switching back to Survival. Or use a biome finder tool if you're not worried about minor optimization. Some players argue finding biomes "the real way" is part of the fun. Honestly? I say use whatever keeps you playing. Wasting hours on a random walk isn't always worth it. The biome generates most commonly in the negative Z direction and scattered across other quadrants depending on your seed. Cold biomes cluster together, so if you find a Snowy Taiga or Frozen Ocean, keep exploring nearby. Which Mobs Spawn in Ice Spikes? Hostile mobs spawn here just like anywhere else, but the environment makes encounters different. Strays spawn frequently in Ice Spikes, and they're tougher than regular skeletons because their arrows apply Slowness. That slowness effect is brutal when you're trying to escape across packed ice. Build shelter immediately if you hear that distinctive click-clack sound. Polar bears also spawn here, and while they're not inherently hostile, they become dangerous if you're near cubs. Creepers, zombies, and regular skeletons show up too, especially at night or in dim caves. Endermen occasionally teleport in, which is... inconvenient when you're standing on a tall ice spike. Just don't look at them. One thing Ice Spikes doesn't have? Slimes. The biome doesn't meet the specific criteria for slime spawning, so you won't be farming them here. If you need slime, find a swamp or go cave diving elsewhere. The mobs aren't fundamentally different from other biomes, but the landscape makes every encounter more dangerous. Slipping on ice while fighting a Stray is legitimately perilous. Loot and Resources Worth Collecting Ice Spikes isn't known for massive treasure hauls, but there's absolutely stuff worth gathering. The obvious resource is ice itself. Packed ice and blue ice generate naturally, and blue ice is particularly useful for speed boost effects and sliding mechanics. If you're building a slime farm or a fast-travel system, ice is your answer. Snow layers blanket the ground, so if you need snowballs for potions (Awkward potions can be brewed into slow-falling with snowballs), grab them here. You can also break snow blocks and collect them for building. The real treasure comes from exploring Ice Spikes caves and ravines. Like any biome, underground structures generate here including mineshafts and dungeons. Loot chests in those structures offer standard Minecraft drops: iron, gold, diamonds (if you're deep enough), enchanted books, and saddles. Nothing exclusive to Ice Spikes specifically, but the difficulty of navigating icy caves means fewer players have systematically looted them. Server loot could be significantly untouched depending on your world age. If you're setting up a survival server and want to control resource distribution, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator tool helps manage who has access to your private server and can farm these biomes. Building Ideas That Work in Ice Spikes This is where Ice Spikes gets exciting. The dramatic landscape is perfect for certain builds. An ice palace is the obvious choice. These spikes naturally create vertical architecture. Place your build around and between the spikes, incorporating them into the structure. Use white concrete, pale oak wood, and packed ice as primary materials. The biome's existing spikes do half the work for you. I've seen incredible ice castles where builders carved interior spaces directly into the spike formations, leaving them hollow but intact. It's stunning. Another approach: a frost dragon's lair or winter-themed mob grinder. The biome's harsh aesthetic fits perfectly with ice-based builds. Smaller Builds and Outposts A cozy cabin surrounded by ice spikes makes for good aesthetics. Deep blue ice blocks mixed with spruce wood create a cold, isolated feeling that works narratively for hardcore modes or role-playing servers. If you're running a community server, the Minecraft Server List offers inspiration on how other servers organize base regions and build communities. The challenge with building here's resource gathering. You're far from typical material sources. Plan for long supply chains or establish outposts that feed materials to your main build site. Survival Tips for Ice Spikes Exploration Several practical warnings before you set up shop. Packed ice is slippery. Always. Without frost walker boots or specific positioning, you'll slide uncontrollably. This is dangerous near cliff edges and during combat. Bring boats - they help with navigation on ice and can technically hold you in place if you're in one (though that's more of a workaround than a real solution). Visibility during snowstorms drops dramatically. Mark your build with torches, lanterns, or glowing blocks so you can find your way back. Navigation beacons (tall pillars of opaque blocks) help too. Bring food. The biome offers nothing edible. You're relying entirely on your inventory, so plan accordingly for longer expeditions. Cold biomes don't have cows or pigs naturally, so hunting mob drops for meat or finding villages nearby might be necessary. Lighting is essential. Hostile mobs spawn freely on any dark surface, ice or not. Flood your build area with light sources to prevent spawn rates from overwhelming you. Be careful on tall spikes. The fall damage is real. Using elytra, water buckets, or slime blocks for safe descent is highly recommended if you're exploring the tops. Is Ice Spikes Worth the Effort? Yes, if you're collecting diverse biomes or want a visually striking build location. No, if you're looking for efficient resource gathering early-game. The biome is beautiful but resource-poor compared to forests, jungles, or plains. For a main base? Consider building near other biomes too. For a secondary build or exploration goal? Perfect. The Ice Spikes biome in Minecraft 26.1.2 offers a unique combination of challenges and aesthetic rewards. Whether you're setting up a frost fortress or just passing through, respect the landscape, watch for strays, and bring ice gear if you plan to stay awhile. --- ### Building the Perfect Animal Pen in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/how-build-animal-pens-minecraft Published: 2026-06-08 Author: ice An animal pen is an enclosed farm structure designed to contain and manage livestock in Minecraft. Building one is straightforward but offers tons of design flexibility. Here's what you need to know to create a pen that actually works. Why You Need an Animal Pen Ever tried managing a herd of cows without any containment? They scatter everywhere. This is why animal pens exist. A properly built pen keeps your livestock organized, lets you breed them more efficiently, and makes collecting drops way less chaotic. You're not just building walls here - you're creating a functional system. Plus, there's something satisfying about a well-organized farm. The basic idea is simple: animals need a confined space where they can't wander off into the wilderness and get lost. You get to decide how fancy you want to make it. Basic Pen Design Fundamentals Most animal pens follow the same basic structure. You need fencing to create a perimeter - and honestly, that's it. Mobs can't climb fences, so a simple fence-enclosed area does the job. But practical pens usually add a few more elements to avoid headaches later. A decent pen needs: Fencing all around (wood, dark oak, whatever matches your builds) A gate for access Enough space for animals to move around and breed A roof if you're worried about them jumping out unexpectedly Ideally, somewhere to store breeding items nearby The size depends on what you're raising. A cow pen can be smaller than you'd think, but cramped spaces look ugly and feel inefficient. Start with something like 10x10 blocks for a small operation. Building Your First Pen: Materials and Setup Start with a rectangular area. Dig out the perimeter or place fencing around it. Here's where material choice actually matters beyond just "does it work." Fences look decent and serve their purpose well, but you could also use walls, slabs, or even full blocks for a more integrated look into your base. Personally, I prefer fences because they let you see inside easily and take up less visual space. But it depends on your build aesthetic - some players prefer the solid look of a wall-based enclosure. Don't forget gates. You'll need at least one, probably more if your pen is large. Trapdoors or fence gates work fine - gates let you move animals in and out without them escaping during the process. Nothing's worse than accidentally releasing three cows while trying to add one more. The roof is optional but worth considering. If animals can path-find onto your roof and off the other side, you've got escapees. Most simple setups skip it, but it never hurts to add one, especially if you're dealing with goats or other creative jumpers. A simple dark oak or spruce wood roof matching your fence style looks clean. Different Animals, Different Setups Different livestock have slightly different needs in Minecraft, though honestly, most animals don't care about much beyond "is there space" and "are there breeding items nearby." Flatbedrock TunnelersDream in Minecraft Cows are the tank of livestock. They need two adults to breed, they're not picky about space, and they eat grass. A basic pen works fine. Pro tip: use hay bales inside as a visual indicator of a cow farm, even though they don't actually interact with them in vanilla Minecraft - it just looks the part. Sheep breed with wheat and are smaller overall. Some players make slightly smaller pens for sheep since they're less aggressive about pathfinding into weird corners. The main advantage of sheep is wool farming - you can dye them different colors and build them right next to each other since they're harmless to each other. Chickens breed with seeds, and any type of seed works. Jungles are great for mass chicken farms because you get tons of seeds from trees. Chickens lay eggs regularly, which is useful early game but less critical later. A roofed pen works better for chickens since they jump constantly and can be escape artists. Pigs breed with carrots or potatoes from the Overworld. They're similar to cows in behavior but breed slightly faster. Some players prefer pigs to cows for early-game protein since you don't need a duplicate to start breeding. And then there's the weird ones. Goats need specific conditions with powder snow and walls they can climb on. Axolotls need water blocks. Frogs need water too. These aren't traditional wall-enclosed pens, but the same principles apply - give them space and the right blocks. Making Your Pen Efficient Once your basic pen exists, you can add features that make it functional rather than just decorative. This is where farm design gets genuinely interesting. Breeding stations are the big one. If you want automatic breeding, which requires redstone, set up a system where animals can access breeding items. Manual breeding is simpler - you just toss the items on the ground and watch them breed. Most players start here and upgrade later. Hopper systems work nicely if you want to collect drops automatically. Animals drop items when they die, and hoppers can collect them into a chest. You'll need to set up a slaughter mechanism (usually fall damage or suffocation traps) to get the drops, but it scales incredibly well on larger farms. If you want to add custom labels and instructions to your pen, check out the Minecraft Text Generator tool. It's perfect for creating signage that keeps your farm organized visually and helps you remember breeding cooldowns or feeding schedules. Item sorting doesn't matter much for basic animal farms, but keeping your drops sorted from other farm products is nice. Stack your chests nearby and label them clearly so you don't mix food sources. Pro Design Tips and Considerations Aesthetics matter more than you'd think. A pen that looks good is one you'll actually want to visit and maintain regularly. Build the pen close to your base unless you've specific reasons not to. Traveling 500 blocks to breed cows gets old fast. Actually, wait - if you're doing fully automatic breeding with redstone, distance doesn't matter as much since it runs without you. But for manual breeding, proximity is everything. Use complementary building blocks to integrate the pen into your existing build. If your base is mostly dark wood, make the pen out of dark wood. If it's stone, use stone. Visual consistency makes everything feel more cohesive and planned. Leave room for expansion. A pen that's "big enough now" will feel cramped after a week of breeding animals. Plan space for growth or be prepared to rebuild later when you want to scale up. It's easier to plan ahead than relocate everything. Lighting is important but easy to forget. Animals spawn if it's dark, which is annoying in a pen and defeats the purpose. Throw some lanterns or glow berries around to keep hostile mobs from spawning. Plus, good lighting just looks nicer. If you're planning a mega-farm with multiple species, layout matters significantly. Group similar animals together - cows with cows, chickens with chickens - and leave clear pathways between pens so you can move around efficiently. You're going to be running back and forth constantly, so make navigation smooth. Consider your farm's location in relation to your base and other structures. If you're planning major construction, you might want to think about portal locations or pathways. Tools like the Nether Portal Calculator can help you plan efficient transportation networks across your world if you want to connect your farm to other areas. Making Your Farm Work Is a pen really worth the effort? Honestly, yes. Even a minimal pen beats running around trying to round up cows that scattered across three biomes. Plus they're weirdly fun to design once you get into it. Start simple with basic fencing and a gate. Add features as you go - breeding items, collection systems, better lighting. Don't stress about making it perfect immediately. Your first pen will probably look rough, and that's fine. Most farms evolve over time as you figure out what you actually need versus what's just nice to have. The best farm is one you'll actually use. --- ### Piston Doors Explained: How It Works and What to Build URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/piston-doors-redstone-guide Published: 2026-06-08 Author: ice Piston doors are one of Minecraft's best-kept secrets for adding moving entrances to your builds. Powered by redstone, they combine mechanics and creativity to create doors that slide, pivot, and open in ways regular doors can't. Here's what you need to know. How Piston Doors Work So what makes a piston door different from just using a standard wooden door? Everything, honestly. When you use a piston, you're manipulating solid blocks in real-time. The door isn't opening and closing with a predetermined animation - you're literally pushing blocks out of the way using physics. Pistons come in two varieties: regular pistons and sticky pistons. A regular piston pushes blocks one space away from it. A sticky piston does the same thing, but also pulls the block back when the piston retracts. This pull mechanism is what makes complex doors possible. Without sticky pistons, you'd be limited to very basic push-only designs that look pretty awkward. The magic happens through redstone power. When redstone current reaches a piston, it activates and extends. The timing of that power signal determines whether the door opens, closes, or gets stuck mid-animation (which is its own special headache). Understanding the flow of redstone from a button or lever to your piston is half the battle here. The other half is understanding that pistons have different behaviors depending on what they're pushing and how the signal is timed. Understanding Your Redstone Foundations Before you build anything, grasp this one core concept: redstone signal strength decreases with distance. Each block away from the power source, the signal gets one level weaker. At 15 blocks away, it's gone entirely. So this matters because piston doors often need the door mechanism to be several blocks away from your control button or lever. You'll need redstone dust, repeaters, or comparators to maintain signal strength over that distance. Repeaters aren't just for extending signal - they also add a delay, which is often exactly what you need for doors that have multiple moving parts interacting with each other. A 1-tick delay might be the difference between a working door and blocks clipping through each other. Redstone dust carries signal up to 15 blocks in a straight line Repeaters extend signal distance and add 1-4 tick delays (crucial for timing precision) Comparators measure or subtract signal strength for more complex logic gates Power sources include buttons, levers, day/night sensors, pressure plates, and tripwires One thing that trips people up: redstone signal travels horizontally and vertically without issue, but creating diagonal redstone paths requires creative thinking. Look, most builders stick to straight lines and right angles to keep things readable and avoid wasting materials. Building Your First Piston Door Let's start simple. Imagine a 2x2 hole in your wall you want to cover. Place four sticky pistons in a line facing inward, so they point directly at the hole. Put redstone dust in front of them, leading to a button or lever placed a few blocks away. When you activate the button, all four pistons push their blocks into the hole simultaneously, creating a solid wall. Press the button again, they retract, and the opening is clear. Done - you've a working piston door. This is the foundation every piston door builder learns, and it's deceptively educational: Multiple pistons activate together from a single redstone signal The direction the piston faces determines which direction it pushes blocks You can use any pushable block as your "door" - oak wood, stone brick, dark oak logs, whatever matches your aesthetic The space behind the piston needs room for the block to extend into This simple design is genuinely functional. You can stop here and use it as-is, or build something more sophisticated from this foundation. Upgrading Your Design: Three Builds to Try The Sliding Wall: Instead of pistons pushing blocks straight forward into a hole, arrange them to push blocks sideways. A 1x2 opening becomes a sliding wall that moves perpendicular to where you're entering. It looks far more sophisticated than the basic up-and-down design, and the effect is genuinely impressive. This works especially well for multiplayer server bases where you want to catch other players' attention. Running a server? Impressive entrances like this set the tone for your build quality. You could even showcase your piston door designs on your Minecraft MOTD Creator to give potential players a preview of what they'll encounter. Minecraft piston door mechanism with redstone activation and moving blocks The Flush Door: This is about pure aesthetics. Your piston door sits completely flush with the wall when closed - no exposed pistons, no visible redstone, no mechanical parts sticking out awkwardly. Achieving this requires careful block placement and sometimes uses the weird trick where blocks move into the same space (which Minecraft allows). When closed, a flush door looks like it's just another part of your wall. When open, blocks slide away or push up into ceiling space. It takes more planning than the basic design, but the payoff in visual polish is massive. The Double Door: Two separate piston mechanisms opening simultaneously to reveal a larger entrance. Set up your repeaters so both doors activate at the exact same moment with zero delay between them. The visual impact of symmetric doors opening together, like an actual grand entrance, is hard to match. And it requires more redstone setup, but the result feels genuinely impressive. When Your Door Stops Working Piston doors fail for three consistent reasons. First: powered blocks blocking the pistons. If your redstone dust or repeaters are placed incorrectly, you might accidentally power the blocks sitting in front of the pistons. So this prevents them from pushing through since a powered block in front of the piston just stays solid and immovable. Double-check that only the piston itself receives power, not the blocks adjacent to it. Look at your redstone path and make sure dust doesn't sit on top of blocks that are supposed to move. Second: timing issues with multi-piston systems. If you're pushing multiple blocks but they activate at different times due to mismatched redstone paths, they'll collide mid-animation or get stuck. Adding repeaters to delay certain pistons until others finish can fix this - but you'll need to experiment with the exact timing your specific build needs. It's not rocket science, just requires a few minutes of testing different delay combinations. Third: attempting to push immovable blocks. Obsidian, bedrock, chests, furnaces, and other tile entities can't be pushed by pistons. If your door design tries to push a chest or move through obsidian, nothing happens and your door just fails silently. Plan your design around what pistons can actually move - solid full blocks like stone, wood, and concrete work perfectly. Everything else is off the table. Quick troubleshooting tip: break your entire redstone signal and rebuild it piece by piece. Add the button first. Then add redstone dust. Then a repeater. Then the piston. Test at each stage. This takes ten minutes but saves you hours of frustration. Why Piston Doors Matter Piston doors are more than flashy redstone tricks. They let you build actual secret bases - a wall that slides open to reveal your hidden mining operation or your enchanting room. That's genuinely useful, not just cool-looking. It's a practical application of redstone that improves your base's functionality and makes everything feel planned and intentional. If you're running a multiplayer server, piston doors are the kind of detail that makes other players notice your attention to build quality. Set up one clean entrance and you've established a tone immediately. Pair that with a reliable setup using free Minecraft DNS for solid server connectivity, and you've created an environment where players actually want to spend time. Beyond the practical stuff, mastering pistons opens up understanding for everything else in Minecraft's redstone ecosystem. They're the bridge between "I can press a button and something happens" and "I can design complex automated systems." Once you truly get piston mechanics, the rest of redstone becomes less intimidating. --- ### Radiance: Breaking Free from Minecraft's OpenGL Limits URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/radiance-minecraft-ray-tracing Published: 2026-06-08 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Radiance (Minecraft-Radiance/Radiance) Radiance is rebuilt of Minecraft renderer on a Vulkan C++ backend, featuring native Hardware Ray Tracing on Windows & Linux. Break free from OpenGL limits for Minecraft. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 1,025 stars.0 Tired of waiting for Minecraft to modernize its graphics? Radiance is a community-built mod that completely replaces the vanilla renderer with Vulkan-powered rendering, adding hardware ray tracing on Windows and Linux systems. If you've wondered what Minecraft could look like with real-time lighting and reflection calculations, this project makes it possible. What Radiance Does Here's the technical reality: Minecraft has run on OpenGL since its inception, which made sense in 2009. But OpenGL has fundamental limits for advanced effects like ray tracing. Radiance sidesteps that entirely by using Vulkan, a modern graphics API that's purpose-built for high-performance rendering. Instead of the traditional method where light bounces around in a static, pre-calculated way, ray tracing simulates actual light physics. Rays travel through your world, bounce off surfaces, and create realistic shadows, reflections, and indirect lighting. Real talk, in Minecraft, this means caves feel genuinely dark, water reflects the sky accurately, and sunlight creates believable shadows across terrain. It's the kind of thing that looks immediately different when you load a world. The project has two main components: the Java mod you download and install, and the C++ Vulkan renderer backend that does the heavy lifting. You don't need to think about that technical split in practice, but it's worth knowing it exists. Why You'd Want This Okay, professional graphics in Minecraft sounds appealing in theory. But when would you genuinely use it? You'd want this if you've ever built something in survival or creative mode and thought, "this would look incredible with proper lighting." Massive builds especially benefit, particularly anything with glass, water, or intricate architecture. The showcase content shows building interiors that look genuinely striking when light pours through windows realistically. And if you're creating detailed structures, you might as well plan things out properly. Tools like the Minecraft Text Generator help you design signage and labels before building, so your creation looks polished from day one. You'd also want this if you like shader customization. Radiance supports custom shaderpacks, so you're not locked into one visual style. Two internal shaderpacks come included: one for vanilla-style path tracing and an advanced option with extra features like ReSTIR for improved light sampling and volumetric effects. But honestly? You'd want this just to see what modern rendering looks like. Even if you don't keep it installed long-term, it's striking enough to show friends or pull inspiration from. Installing the Thing Installation is straightforward but has a few wrinkles. On Windows and Linux, grab the mod jar from Modrinth or CurseForge (both platforms are supported). Drop it in your `.minecraft/mods` folder just like any other mod. codeCopy the Radiance jar to:.minecraft/mods/ Launch Minecraft through your usual launcher That's it. One thing worth knowing: Radiance is still in active development, and version 0.1.5-alpha is the latest release. It works solidly, but don't expect every minor Minecraft version to be supported immediately after release. Windows users should be aware of a known MSVC issue that can occasionally cause crashes with certain JDK versions. The project documentation mentions a fix involving JDK runtime library adjustments, but you might never encounter the problem at all. What Works Right Now Ray tracing is the main event, and it's genuinely solid. Reflections, shadows, and global illumination all work as expected. Performance is respectable on decent hardware, which is remarkable for ray-traced Minecraft. Support for PBR texture packs is built in, and custom shaderpacks load directly without preprocessing needed. Direct light sampling works across all modes, and the advanced shaderpack adds sophisticated techniques for sampling quality. Recent updates brought per-shader customization, multi-threaded chunk loading (faster world initialization), and dramatic improvements to texturepack reload speeds. RAM usage dropped significantly too, which matters for players running modpacks or working with limited memory. Motion blur, volumetric lighting, and cloud rendering are all part of the current feature set. If you're playing multiplayer and want to manage access properly, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator tool handles that quickly when you're ready to invite friends to your ray-traced world. The Performance Reality Check Ray tracing isn't free, and you need decent hardware to pull it off. You'll need a modern GPU capable of hardware ray tracing (Nvidia or AMD). Integrated graphics won't cut it. Performance varies wildly depending on your world complexity and settings, but the project team has invested serious effort into optimization recently. If you're running a 2-year-old or newer gaming GPU, you'll probably get playable framerates on medium settings. Older cards? You might need to dial back ray tracing intensity or use simpler shaderpacks. Expect to fiddle with settings. Customizing with Shaderpacks This is where Radiance stands out compared to other rendering projects. You're not locked into one visual style. Two shaderpacks ship with the mod: Vanilla PT for vanilla-feeling visuals, and Advanced for latest effects. But you can write or install custom shaderpacks to tweak exactly how lighting behaves, how realistic water looks, how volumetric light scatters. This is where players really personalize their world's appearance. Community documentation for building and sharing new shaderpacks is actively developing, so more options keep coming. Worth Installing or Not If you're a builder who cares about visual presentation, or if you're just curious about seeing Minecraft with modern graphics technology, install it. The project is stable enough for casual playing around. If you're running a heavily modded installation with dozens of other mods, maybe hold off for now. Radiance is a complete rendering replacement, so universal mod compatibility isn't there yet. If you want vanilla Minecraft with a few tweaks, this is honestly overkill. But if you're interested in pushing what Minecraft can look like visually, it's genuinely worth testing. Download it, spend an evening in a test world, and see if it grabs you. The community on their Discord is pretty active too, so you can ask questions if you hit friction. Quick Glance at Alternatives Other projects exist in the rendering space. Minecraft has traditional shader implementations, but most don't offer true hardware ray tracing support. Radiance's Vulkan approach gives it performance advantages. If you're on Mac or have older hardware, other solutions might fit better. But for modern Windows and Linux systems wanting ray tracing, Radiance is honestly your most direct option right now with 1,025 community stars on GitHub showing strong adoption.Minecraft-Radiance/Radiance - GPL-3.0, ★1025 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 --- ### Amethyst in Minecraft: Complete Guide to Finding and Using URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-amethyst-guide-finding-using Published: 2026-06-08 Author: ice Amethyst is a decorative purple mineral found exclusively in amethyst geodes deep underground. It's purely aesthetic with no crafting recipes or practical function in vanilla Minecraft, but it's become essential for builders wanting authentic purple coloring. You'll need a stone pickaxe or better to harvest it, and geodes spawn between Y-level 0 and 64 in cave systems throughout your world in Minecraft Java 26.1.2. What's Amethyst in Minecraft? Amethyst blocks come in four growth stages representing a crystal's development. You've got small buds that barely protrude from the cave wall, medium buds showing more definition, large buds that look almost ready, and finally full clusters that sparkle brilliantly. The pale purple coloring is unmistakable - it's distinct enough from other blocks that you'll spot it immediately once you know what to look for. Here's what makes amethyst unique: it's completely useless from a survival mechanics perspective. No crafting recipes. No enchanting materials. No combat applications. Honestly, and that's exactly why builders love it - it forces you to think about aesthetics instead of just grinding for power upgrades. The block was introduced in version 1.17 (Caves & Cliffs) back in 2021, and it fundamentally changed how people build with purple themes. Before amethyst, purple options were limited to purple concrete, purpur blocks, or purple wool. Amethyst offered something new: crystalline, translucent-ish blocks that catch light differently. Where Amethyst Geodes Generate Amethyst geodes are the only source of amethyst blocks in vanilla survival Minecraft. These structures appear randomly in cave systems between Y-level 0 and 64 in Java Edition 26.1.2. The geodes themselves are pretty large. Usually they take up a significant chunk of cave space, made of calcite (cream-colored stone) on the outside with amethyst crystals forming the interior. When you break through the calcite shell, you'll find yourself in a hollow geode chamber lined with amethyst at various growth stages. Geodes aren't particularly rare, but they're not everywhere either. Finding them is more about exploration than luck - you've got to actually go into caves and explore them thoroughly. If you're planning extended mining expeditions, verifying your server connection matters. Our Minecraft Server Status Checker ensures your connection stays stable during long cave diving sessions. Mining Amethyst the Right Way Your pickaxe choice matters here. Wooden pickaxes won't work - you need stone-level tools minimum. Stone pickaxe: Meets minimum requirements with adequate mining speed Iron pickaxe: Practical choice with noticeable speed improvement Diamond pickaxe: Mines faster still, though most players find iron sufficient Netherite pickaxe: Fastest option, honestly overkill for decorative blocks Here's the critical thing that trips up new players: small buds, medium buds, and large buds don't drop anything when mined. They just break. Only fully-developed clusters actually drop blocks when broken. So if you're trying to maximize amethyst collection, you need discipline - break only the full clusters and leave the younger buds alone to grow. Bone meal accelerates growth. If you're impatient, right-click a bud with bone meal and it instantly progresses to the next stage. This trick works for any crop-like block, including amethyst, which is useful if you want to set up a small farm near your base. Building With Amethyst Amethyst is essentially furniture for your builds. It doesn't do anything except look good, which is exactly what makes it valuable. Fantasy builds benefit enormously from amethyst accents - think purple-trimmed towers, geode-inspired chambers, enchanted libraries with purple crystal shelving. The pale purple coordinates perfectly with warped wood, purple concrete, and purpur blocks. Mixing these materials creates genuinely sophisticated builds rather than looking like you threw random colors together. The translucent quality of amethyst clusters becomes apparent when you place light sources nearby or behind them. Soul lanterns, candles, or even glowstone can turn amethyst into luminous decorative features. Building a wizard's tower practically demands amethyst clusters as magical-looking lighting fixtures. If you're customizing your character to match your builds, our Minecraft Skin Creator can help you design a skin that complements your amethyst color scheme. A matching purple outfit makes showcasing your builds feel complete. Farming Multiple Geodes Planning a major project that demands tons of amethyst? Single-geode mining won't cut it. Your best approach is systematic cave exploration with marking and mapping. Locate several geodes, then create efficient mining routes connecting them. Some hardcore builders even construct underground highways between geode locations, making harvest runs quick and efficient. Don't expect geodes to respawn. Once you've harvested a geode completely, it stays harvested. The good news is there are plenty of geodes out there, so finding new patches is usually just a matter of exploring deeper and checking more cave systems. Amethyst vs. Other Purple Blocks Minecraft actually has several purple options: purple concrete, purple wool, purpur blocks, warped wood with purple tones, and of course amethyst. Each serves different aesthetic purposes. Amethyst is unique because of its crystalline appearance and the way it interacts with light. Purpur blocks look more stone-like and industrial. Purple concrete is... well, it's concrete. Warped wood has organic qualities. They're tools for different aesthetics, and good builders use them strategically based on what they're trying to achieve. The geode look specifically demands amethyst though. You can't recreate that crystalline cave formation with alternative materials. And honestly, if you're building anything with even slight purple theming, amethyst adds sophistication that other blocks struggle to match. ---