# minecraft.how — Full content index for LLMs > Long-form extract of recent blog content. For a structured route map, see /llms.txt. ## Recent blog posts (full text) ### Minecraft Snow Golem Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/snow-golem-guide-spawning-drops Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Snow golems are one of the easiest mobs to create in Minecraft, and they're surprisingly useful for mob farming and testing. Spawning one takes just two snow blocks and a pumpkin, they drop snowballs and seeds, and setting up a farm to mass-produce them takes about an hour of work. Here's everything you need to know. How to Spawn a Snow Golem It's almost embarrassingly simple. Stack two snow blocks vertically, then place a pumpkin (or carved pumpkin, or jack-o-lantern) on top. The snow golem spawns immediately, ready to roam and attack nearby hostiles. Direction doesn't matter, snow won't matter, and honestly it's one of the few mob spawning recipes that doesn't involve staring at a wiki screen mid-game. The catch? You need snow blocks, not snow layers. Actually, that's not even really a catch - you can mine snow blocks with a shovel, they're everywhere in snowy biomes, and you can craft them with 4 snowballs if you're desperate. And pumpkins? Grow them like you'd grow anything else, or find them in taiga villages. The resource cost is basically zero. What matters is placement. The Location Problem Nobody Talks About Snow golems have one serious limitation that ruins farms in wrong biome. They melt in warm biomes. Not slightly uncomfortable - they literally take damage and die if the temperature is too high. This means deserts, jungles, and the Nether are out. You need a cold or temperate biome. Snow biomes obviously work. Taiga, windswept terrain, and dark forests are all fine. Underground in a cold biome works too, actually - wait, no, biome temperature is what matters, not location, so altitude doesn't protect you in a warm biome. In Minecraft 26.1.2, here's the thing: snow golems also generate snow where they walk, which is fun for aesthetics but means your farm will gradually fill with snow. Look, not a problem if you're harvesting them fast. Bigger problem? They take knockback from blazes and striders, they get stuck on terrain easily, and they refuse to cross water without your help. This is why most farms are built vertically with water elevators. What Snow Golems Drop Snowballs. Tons of them. A single snow golem drops 4 to 6 snowballs on death, which seems small until you understand snowballs are useful for testing, knockback experiments, and... well, honestly, that's about it for serious players. Snowballs don't turn into powder or sell for anything meaningful. But in creative or on multiplayer servers where you're trying to grief someone with knockback, snowballs are hilarious. They're genuinely worthless for survival. Here's what actually makes snow golem farming worth considering: if your farm is in a grassy biome, they drop seeds. Any seeds. Wheat, melon, pumpkin seeds from torches and crops nearby - whatever's growing around the farm gets seeded when snow golems die. This is renewable seed farming, and it's better than most methods if you set it up right. The third drop is the pumpkin you placed on top, which respawns if it's water-transported properly. Building a Real Snow Golem Farm Choose a cold biome or find a shaded underground area in a temperate zone. Open terrain is fine. You'll need: A platform where snow golems spawn (two snow block pairs) Water current pushing them toward a central shaft A vertical drop into a dark chamber (kills them via fall damage or suffocation) Hoppers at the bottom collecting drops A chest system for storage The spawn platform should be flat and loaded. If you're AFK farming, stay within about 128 blocks or use a chunk loader if your server allows. Snow golems spawn passively on snow blocks without any special spawning mechanics, so you don't need dark rooms or spawning platforms like you would for mob grinders. Just stick them in a walkable space and let the water do the work. Water pushes them toward a central shaft that drops them 25-30 blocks into a collection chamber. At that height they die instantly without needing to be killed. Hoppers funneling into double chests mean you can AFK for hours. It's not complicated, which is honestly the appeal. The Snowball Economy and Real Farming Let's be honest: snowball farms aren't meta. But they work for specific situations. If you're playing on a whitelist server and you've got friends trying to knock each other around, snowballs are infinite ammunition. If you're testing knockback mechanics for a build, farm a stack quickly. If you're doing a snowball-only challenge run (yes, those exist), you need a farm. The seed farming angle is actually stronger. Combine your snow golem setup with planted crops around the farm chamber, and you're generating seeds faster than you'd expect. This pairs surprisingly well with composter systems if you're trying to push crops. Seed to bone meal to tree farming - it's not a direct path, but it works. For efficiency? Sugarcane or kelp farms beat this by a mile. Mob grinders produce more drops per hour. But snow golems are stupid simple and require almost zero maintenance once built. That simplicity has value on survival servers where complexity kills progress. Making Snowballs Useful This is where it gets weird. Snowballs don't stack to 64 in Java Edition - they stack to 16, which was always baffling. So a massive farm produces hundreds of snowballs you can't fit in a double chest. Is that a bug? Unclear. Mojang's never explained it. Just take note if you're farming large scale. Where snowballs shine: they're perfect for creative testing, multiplayer pranks, and knockback situations. If you've got a PvP arena on your server, snowballs let newer players practice without needing swords. They deal no damage, so nobody's upset about balance, and they create a learning curve for knockback combat that actual swords can replicate later. You can also use them in comparators and redstone circuits as items for logic gates, but that's niche and usually harder than alternatives. Why Bother? Fair question. If you're playing single-player vanilla Survival and optimizing for efficiency, snow golem farms are a waste of time. Their drops don't feed your economy. But if you're on a multiplayer server, testing mechanics, or just want something mindless to build while listening to music, they're perfect. They require almost zero materials, they work in any cold biome, and they're so simple that even new players can understand them at a glance. Plus, if you're into creating custom server experiences, snow golems are a building block. Use them as part of a larger system - maybe combine snowball drops with knockback traps, or seed farming with your crop renewal system. One more thing: if you're running a server and want to encourage new players to explore creative building, snowball wars are genuinely fun. Hand them a stack of snowballs and a safe arena, and watch them figure out knockback combat without the stress of actual combat. Tools to Build Around Your Farm If you're building a whole server ecosystem, you'll want consistent tools for your players. Use the Minecraft Skin Creator to let players build their own skins before joining - more invested players engage with content better. And if you're managing a whitelist, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator makes administration painless instead of tedious text editing. Snow golem farms fit into that same philosophy: simple tools that unlock creativity. They're not about maximum efficiency. They're about having fun with what Minecraft offers. --- ### How to Build an Enchanting Room in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/how-to-build-enchanting-room Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Building an enchanting room isn't complicated, but it does require understanding the basics. You need bookshelves (up to 15) surrounding your table to maximize enchantment levels, proper lighting so you can actually see what you're doing, and enough breathing room to move without punching your own decorations. The real question though: why build a dedicated room at all? Because a proper setup looks incredible, runs more efficiently, and honestly, it's one of those projects that genuinely feels rewarding when it's done. Understanding Your Enchanting Table Setup Your enchanting table is the centerpiece. Place it somewhere central and think about how players will approach it. Bookshelves need to be exactly one block away from the table (measured horizontally or vertically, not diagonally), and there's a bit of geometry involved in maximizing your power. Fifteen bookshelves max out the enchanting table at level 30 enchantments. You don't strictly need all 15 for decent results, but if you're building a room, you might as well commit. The classic layout is a hollow rectangle around the table, or a 3x3 grid with the table in the center and bookshelves filling the surrounding blocks. Pick whichever feels right for your space. Here's something I stumbled on after testing multiple layouts: placement height actually matters. The game checks line-of-sight from the table to each bookshelf, so if your bookshelves are floating at the wrong elevation or blocked by other blocks, they won't contribute to your enchantment level. Put the table on the ground floor, bookshelves on the same level or one block above, and you're in business. Also, don't overthink it. Lighting Makes or Breaks the Room You need light. Watching someone enchant gear in the dark is genuinely depressing. Glowstone, lanterns, amethyst clusters, candles, or standard torches all work fine from a mechanical perspective. My personal preference? Lanterns. They cast clean light, look intentional rather than haphazard, and fit almost any building style. Hang them from the ceiling or mount them on poles along the walls. Glowstone feels sterile but works great if you want maximum brightness. Candles are atmospheric but dimmer. Torches are reliable but cheap-looking if you're going for something nicer. The goal is even illumination without harsh dark corners where you can't read your enchantment options. Budget 10-15 light sources depending on room size. Uneven lighting isn't a game mechanic, but it's a quality-of-life issue that separates slapped-together spaces from actual rooms. The Decorative Layer Bookshelves are functional and decorative, but a real room needs more. Surround them with complementary blocks that match your base's aesthetic: dark oak logs, blackstone, deepslate, dark prismarine. Add carpet, stairs, maybe a crafting table in the corner or a potion brewing station nearby since you're often prepping for the same adventures. One detail I genuinely love: lapis lazuli blocks behind the bookshelves. They serve zero mechanical purpose, but they immediately tell anyone entering the room what this space is for. I've seen builds where the entire floor is lapis beneath the shelves, and it just hits different. Small touches like this separate functional rooms from spaces that actually feel like part of your world. Add some personality here. Consider what else belongs nearby. Real talk, a storage system for enchanting materials? A few display cases with gear you've already enchanted? A small seating area? None of this changes how enchanting works, but it transforms the room from a utility closet into somewhere you actually want to spend time. Designing for Your Playstyle Survival-mode bases need something compact and functional. You're probably building near your main base, so something 5x5 or 6x6 is manageable. Multiplayer servers (especially active ones where you might want to check the server status to see who's online) might benefit from something tucked away but accessible. Creative mode and mega-bases? Go wild. I've seen enchanting rooms carved into mountain faces, floating on sky islands with bridge access, hidden underground in cavern complexes. The mechanics are identical, but theming matters. A room in a fantasy castle should feel different from one in a tech-heavy base. A library aesthetic with shelves on multiple levels reads completely different from a minimalist chamber. The space doesn't have to be rectangular. On multiplayer servers, some players build their rooms behind secret doors for that exclusivity feeling (which doesn't matter mechanically but psychologically it does). Others make them elaborate communal spaces. I've seen underground enchanting chambers in cave systems that look like they're carved from ancient stone. Your choice depends on your world's vibe. Practical Layout Templates The simplest working setup: a 5x5 room with the enchanting table dead center and bookshelves in a frame around it. Functional, efficient, done in 30 minutes. Boring but it works. The library aesthetic is bigger, like a 7x7 or 9x9 space, with bookshelves on multiple levels, reading nooks, lantern posts, and plenty of wood and decorative blocks. Looks excellent and takes 1-2 hours depending on detail level. Then there's the hidden-chamber approach: tucked behind a secret door, revealed only when you need it. Feels exclusive and cool even though mechanically it's identical to every other setup. Psychological wins matter. You could also go vertical. Some players build tall towers with the enchanting table at mid-level and bookshelves stacked above and below. Sounds inefficient (the vertical stacking doesn't help), but it looks dramatic and you're not losing anything mechanically. Some spaces even have the bookshelves in a cylinder or spiral pattern. There's genuinely no wrong shape as long as the table has one block of clear space to each bookshelf. Version Considerations If you're playing on Minecraft 26.1.2 (the latest Java release), enchanting mechanics haven't shifted significantly from earlier versions. Bedrock Edition has the same bookshelf rules but slightly different aesthetics for some blocks. Older versions are pretty stable too, but minor tweaks do happen. If you're building on a public server and unsure which version you're running, check the server status tool to confirm before you commit to any block choices that might look different across versions. Takes 30 seconds and saves frustration later. The real takeaway isn't some cheesy final wisdom. It's that enchanting rooms are straightforward enough to build in an afternoon but detailed enough that they make your base feel polished and intentional. No mods required, no resource packs, no creative-mode shortcuts. Just the vanilla game, about 50 blocks of materials, and a little thought about what makes a space feel real rather than temporary. --- ### Minecraft PvP Leaderboards: Complete 2026 Ranking Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-pvp-leaderboard-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Minecraft PvP leaderboards rank players based on combat performance, kills, win rates, or server-specific metrics. Top players compete across Java and Bedrock editions on multiplayer servers. Understanding how rankings work helps you track progress, find worthy opponents, and join competitive communities that reward your fighting skills. Understanding Minecraft PvP Leaderboards Wait, what actually defines the top players in Minecraft PvP? It's not like there's a global ranking system (sadly). Instead, leaderboards exist on individual servers, server networks, and community platforms. Different servers track different stats. Some focus on kill-to-death ratios, others on total wins in duels, and some measure dominance in larger game modes like team battles or king-of-the-hill. The servers powering competitive Minecraft PvP have become increasingly sophisticated. Networks like HypixelGames and Mineplex track your stats obsessively, storing kill counts, win streaks, and seasonal achievements. But honestly, not every competitive player cares about these global networks. Some of the best PvPers hang out on smaller, hardcore servers where the skill ceiling is brutal and the competition is real. How Rankings and Stats Are Calculated Most servers use one of a few systems. Kill-death ratio (K/D) is the most straightforward. You get points for kills, lose points for deaths. Some servers weight this differently though (a kill might give you 10 points, a death might only cost 5, for example). Others use Elo ratings, borrowed from chess, that adjust based on the strength of your opponents. Beat someone ranked much higher? Your rating jumps. Lose to a lower-ranked player? It drops more steeply. Then there are seasonal rankings, which reset periodically. Honestly, this keeps things fresh and lets newer players feel like they've a shot at climbing to the top before the season ends. Bedrock Edition servers often use simpler systems since the game has less API flexibility. Java Edition lets server admins tap into way more detailed player data, which is why you'll find the most sophisticated PvP tracking there. Different PvP Modes and What They Reward Not all Minecraft PvP is the same, and leaderboards vary wildly depending on the game mode. Duels (one-on-one fights) reward mechanical skill and decision-making. Capture-the-flag and team battles test coordination and positioning. Hunger Games and battle royale modes emphasize resource gathering and survival instincts alongside pure combat. Some servers specialize in bow PvP, others in sword combat, and some mix everything together. If you're chasing leaderboard rankings, your best bet is finding a server that matches your strengths. Actually, let me back up. I've tested PvP on servers with totally different mechanics, and the skills don't transfer one-to-one. A knockout artist in duels might struggle in larger team games where prediction and teammate callouts matter more. Pick a mode you genuinely enjoy playing, because grinding for ranks in something boring is... well, boring. Getting Better and Climbing the Ranks Here's the unsexy truth: there's no shortcut to a high leaderboard ranking. You need to play a lot and actually improve. That said, there are some smart ways to optimize your grind. First, focus on your positioning and eating. Yes, eating. Sounds dumb, but constantly consuming food keeps your health topped off and prevents quick eliminations. Most casual players neglect this and pay for it. Second, choose fights strategically. If you're at a disadvantage (low health, bad gear, multiple opponents), back off. Your K/D matters more than individual ego. Third, study the better players on your chosen server. Watch their replays if the server supports them. Notice how they strafe, when they back up, which blocks they prioritize. You don't need to copy their style exactly, but steal ideas. If you're playing on a server with frequent tournaments, those are goldmines for experience. You'll face stronger opponents in shorter bursts, which accelerates your growth. One season on a tournament-heavy server teaches you more than a month of casual grinding. Tools and Resources to Level Up Some players use external tools to track their stats and identify weaknesses. If you run your own server and want to track PvP stats properly, check out the Free Minecraft DNS tool to set up your server infrastructure cleanly (it's surprisingly useful for private competitive servers). For strategic plays involving base building and positioning, the Nether Portal Calculator can help you plan routes and establish spawn points that give you tactical advantages in map control scenarios. Beyond tools, join communities. Minecraft Discord servers dedicated to competitive PvP are where real players hang out. Reddit communities like r/CompetitiveMinecraft exist for a reason. You'll find servers recruiting skilled players, tournament announcements, and people genuinely interested in getting better. Don't underestimate the value of talking to other competitive players. Someone's figured out something you haven't, guaranteed. Server Recommendations and What to Look For Finding a server that fits your competitive style matters. Java Edition dominates competitive Minecraft right now, especially with Minecraft 26.1.2 supporting stable multiplayer infrastructure. Bedrock is improving, but Java is where most leaderboard culture exists and will remain for the foreseeable future. Look for servers with active moderation, transparent leaderboard systems, and fair anti-cheat protection. Nothing kills ranks faster than playing on a server infested with hackers. A leaderboard only matters if it's legitimate. PvPLand, Mineplex, and various smaller private servers each have their own cultures. Some are sweaty and hardcore, others more casual. Server selection is personal. I've seen players absolutely dominate tiny servers with weird rule sets while struggling on big networks. That doesn't make them worse at PvP, just means the environment matters. If a server feels toxic or the rules seem unfair, find another one. You'll improve faster somewhere that respects competition. Also pay attention to how frequently they update their leaderboards and how they handle season resets. Servers that neglect their ranking systems breed frustration. You want a server that treats competition seriously. --- ### Stony Peaks Biome: Your Complete Minecraft Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/stony-peaks-biome-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Stony Peaks is one of those biomes that looks boring at first glance, but stick around and you'll find solid resources, decent mob variety, and honestly some of the best building potential in Minecraft 26.1.2. It's all steep mountains, gravel, and gray stone - which sounds dull until you realize that's exactly what makes it feel like an actual mountain range instead of a painted postcard. What You'll Find in Stony Peaks So here's the thing about Stony Peaks: it's basically the game asking "what if mountains were just mountains?" You get extreme elevation changes, very few trees, and tons of exposed stone layers. The biome generates with peaks that actually feel imposing, which is refreshing compared to some of the rounder mountain biomes. If you're looking for a dramatic landscape to build in, this is your answer. Temperatures vary depending on the specific variant (Stony Peaks comes in regular and snowy flavors), but honestly both feel pretty hostile. You won't find waterfalls cascading nicely down the sides. It's all sharp, angular terrain that'll chunk your fall damage faster than you can say "clutch bucket." Mobs That Spawn Here (And What They Want From You) Stony Peaks isn't exactly a mob spawning hotspot like dark oak forests or deep caves, but you'll definitely encounter hostile creatures. Goats are the signature mob - they're harmless but annoying, especially if you're trying to cross a narrow ridge and one decides to headbutt you off into the void. They also drop goat horns, which are actually useful for making the Goat Horn instrument. Not the worst drop in the game, honestly. You'll also see the usual suspects at night: zombies, skeletons, spiders, and endermen. Snow variants bring in strays instead of regular skeletons, which fire slowing arrows. On the plus side, the extreme terrain means mobs sometimes deal with the landscape before you do. I've watched a skeleton drown trying to navigate the steep ravines. Nature's way of handling pest control. One thing most players miss: mountain goats can sometimes fall and drop cooked mutton. If you're desperate early-game, camping near some goats isn't the worst survival strategy. Loot and Resources Worth Your Time Now we're talking. Stony Peaks exposes massive amounts of stone - diorite, andesite, granite, deepslate. If you're building something that needs bulk stone without the hassle of mining, this biome saves you hours. The exposed layers mean you can see exactly what you're working with instead of digging blind. More the exposed cliff faces often reveal ore veins. You'll spot coal, copper, and iron easily. At deeper elevations, you might catch emerald ore veins if you're lucky (though not as common as in mountains). The real prize is actually the gravel - lots of it generates here, and gravel drops flint reliably, which is still useful for flint and steel if you're doing early-game stuff. Buried treasure is rare in Stony Peaks because... well, there's barely any water. But exposed dungeons and mineshafts sometimes cut through the terrain. I've found abandoned mineshafts with decent loot just by walking around and spotting exposed wooden beams. Honestly, free pickaxe materials right there. Building Ideas That Work Here This is where Stony Peaks shines. The dramatic terrain is begging for a signature build, and I mean that seriously. Consider a mountaintop fortress - something with deep stone foundations that actually feel anchored to the landscape instead of floating awkwardly. The pre-existing slopes work in your favor. Mountain huts are another natural fit. Build into the cliff face, let the stone do most of the visual heavy lifting. You could set up a lookout tower that commands a view of several biomes, or create a mining outpost with the quarry-style cuts already provided by the terrain. And if you're running a server, a Stony Peaks hub base is genuinely spectacular. Need a name for it? The text generator tool can help you create custom signs with themed building names. For the ambitious: consider terracing a section for farms. Stony Peaks looks harsh, but modifying it slightly to add some cultivated greenery creates a really striking contrast. Marble buildings work great here too. Survival Tips for Peak Life First thing: bring a lot of food and water. The terrain is unforgiving, and you'll fall. Multiple times. Build on flat sections or create platforms before you start your main build. You're not doing yourself any favors trying to place blocks on a 75-degree slope mid-combat. Second, watch your step. Honestly. I can't stress this enough. Sprint-jumping across narrow ridges is how you lose gear to the void. Walk in tight spaces. Your ego isn't worth the lost diamonds. Also, bring a bed. Nights in Stony Peaks get cold fast, and there's nowhere to hide if hostile mobs spawn on your building site. If you're harvesting resources here for a server setup, check out free DNS tools to manage your server's domain - you might want to host a server with a themed name tied to your Stony Peaks base. Is Stony Peaks Worth Visiting? Yeah, it's. Not for survival grinding - you'll find better resources in other biomes. But if you want a genuinely cool place to build something memorable, Stony Peaks delivers. The landscape does most of the architectural work for you. A building potential is legitimately top-tier once you stop thinking of it as a harsh, unwelcoming biome and start thinking of it as raw material for something ambitious. Plus, there's something satisfying about building where the environment is already dramatic and extreme. You're not fighting the landscape - you're working with it. --- ### Fabric API: The Trending Minecraft Mod Worth Installing in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fabric-api-modding-guide-2026 Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Fabric API is the lightweight modding framework that's become the de facto standard for Minecraft modders in 2026. It's faster, simpler, and more stable than older alternatives. If you're curious about modding or want to enhance your game without major compatibility headaches, Fabric deserves serious consideration. What Exactly Is Fabric API? Fabric is a minimal modding framework for Minecraft Java Edition. Think of it as the scaffolding that lets mod developers build their creations without stepping on each other's toes or crashing the game every five minutes. The framework itself doesn't change gameplay or add features. It's the infrastructure behind the scenes, the unglamorous plumbing that makes everything else possible. Mods like Sodium (graphics optimization), Lithium (performance), and Rei's Minimap all depend on Fabric to function. They're the actual content you install; Fabric just makes them possible. Unlike some competing frameworks that try to do everything, Fabric stays intentionally minimal. That's the whole philosophy. The installer is straightforward. Download it, pick your Minecraft version, run it. You're done in seconds. Then drop mods in your.minecraft/mods folder and launch the game. Why Modders Switched in 2026 Three years ago? Forge was the undisputed king. Everyone modded with it, server admins used it, the whole ecosystem was built around it. But things shifted quickly. Minecraft itself kept evolving, the game got heavier, and players started demanding better performance and faster mod updates. Fabric solved something real: bloat. A server running a dozen Forge mods could take three, four, sometimes five minutes to boot up. The same mods on Fabric? Thirty seconds. That's not hype. That's architecture. Forge accumulated features over years, and all that extra code sits in memory whether you use it or not. Fabric doesn't. Server admins noticed first. Then content creators. Then everyone else. Performance matters when you're running a multiplayer server. Players abandon slow servers. If you're setting up a custom community space with a welcoming MOTD using our Minecraft MOTD Creator, your startup time directly affects whether players stick around. Every optimization counts. The community responsiveness helped too. Forge had become slow to update after major Minecraft releases. The Fabric team adapted to version 26.1.2 in days, not weeks. Modders were tired of waiting. Here's the thing, they switched. Fabric vs. Forge: The Real Differences Everyone compares these two, and for good reason. They're the main options available. But comparing them is like comparing a specialized tool to a bloated swiss army knife. Forge is older, heavier, and includes tons of built-in developer tools. It's full. Some modders love that. Others find it exhausting to navigate. Fabric is deliberately minimal, almost sparse. You get the absolute essentials and nothing else. So it sounds like a weakness until you realize that unnecessary features create unnecessary problems. Run Minecraft 26.1.2 with shader mods on Forge and you're loading systems you'll never touch. Run it on Fabric and you get exactly what you need. That philosophy permeates everything. Here's the catch: Forge has more mods in raw numbers because it's been around since 2011. But quality matters more than quantity. The mods worth installing? Increasingly they're Fabric-first. Performance optimizations, gameplay enhancements, quality-of-life features. They're all migrating. Mod compatibility is where it gets murky. Forge and Fabric mods can't mix without bridges, and even then it's risky. You pick a side. Most new players are picking Fabric. Installation and Getting Started (Properly) The actual installation is trivial. Go to fabricmc.net, grab the installer, run it, select your version, done. Thirty seconds maximum. Then you download mods from CurseForge, Modrinth, or other repositories and drop them in your.minecraft/mods folder. Restart the game. They work. Some mods have dependencies, meaning they require other mods or libraries to function. Sodium might need Cloth Config. Most repository sites will flag these, so you'll know what to grab alongside your main choices. It's not complicated, just requires paying attention. For servers, it's identical except you put mods in the server's mods folder. Hosting companies and community admins have switched to Fabric en masse because of startup speed. A server that took four minutes to boot with Forge? Three minutes with Fabric optimizations. On a game where server downtime costs players, that matters. If your server has a unique identity, don't overlook your player skins. Browse our Minecraft skins collection to find designs that fit your community's vibe. Visual consistency matters for community building. Performance Improves (Not Just Marketing) Fabric's reputation for performance isn't marketing fluff. The framework itself is lean, obviously. But the magic comes from what Fabric enables. Sodium is the most famous example. This graphics optimization mod can literally double your FPS on older hardware. It's not voodoo, it's just superior rendering code that Fabric allows. Lithium does similar work on the server side, optimizing chunk loading and entity processing. Together with a decent CPU, they make the game feel genuinely faster. Not everything is perfect. Some Fabric mods are experimental. The 0.1 release of someone's passion project might break everything. Read changelogs before updating on a live server. Most developers are responsible. Occasionally, you'll find the exception. OptiFine doesn't work with Fabric. They conflict at a fundamental level. But Iris Shaders does the same job better anyway. You're not missing anything. Should You Use It? Yes, if you want to mod without headaches. If you run a server and care about startup time and performance, absolutely. The only reason to skip Fabric is if you depend on a specific Forge-only mod. That's increasingly rare. Check first. For casual players who want better graphics or less lag? Fabric plus Sodium plus Iris is hands down the best experience available in 2026. No asterisks, no caveats. It just works, and it works fast. --- ### Sodium: The Trending Minecraft Mod Worth Installing in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/sodium-minecraft-mod-performance-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Sodium is a performance optimization mod for Minecraft Java that rewrites the rendering pipeline to maximize GPU efficiency. If your game stutters at high render distances or your laptop struggles with vanilla Minecraft, Sodium is genuinely worth the five-minute install. It's not about new content or features. It's purely speed, and it works on servers. Why Sodium Has Become The Performance Standard Minecraft's renderer is ancient. Notch built the original pipeline, and while Mojang has patched it countless times over the years, it was never designed for modern GPUs. Sodium replaces that old code with something that actually understands how to talk to your graphics card. The frame rate improvements are usually massive. On my testing, a laptop that hit 40 FPS on defaults jumped to 90+ FPS with Sodium installed. I've seen people go from 60 FPS to 140+ FPS. Your mileage varies depending on your hardware (older GPUs and integrated graphics see smaller gains), but you're always getting something. Here's what makes Sodium different from other optimization attempts: it's client-only. You don't need server permission. Join any vanilla server, load Sodium, and suddenly everything renders smoother. The server never knows you're running it. What Sodium Changes (And What It Doesn't) This is important. Sodium adds zero content. No blocks, no items, no mechanics. You're not getting new biomes or weapons or anything that changes how Minecraft plays. You're only getting technical improvements. Specifically, Sodium optimizes chunk rendering, memory usage during garbage collection, GPU upload efficiency, and lighting calculations. What it doesn't touch: game logic, survival mechanics, or multiplayer compatibility. Vanilla servers work fine. One thing to know upfront: Sodium disables some vanilla graphics options because they conflict with its optimization engine. Things like native windowscreen mode get grayed out. If you're obsessed with vanilla parity, that might bother you. But you're installing Sodium for speed, not to keep the old renderer. Installation Is Straightforward You need a mod loader first. Fabric is the standard choice for Sodium. Download Fabric for your Minecraft version (26.1.2 is the latest release) Run the installer Download Sodium's.jar from CurseForge or Modrinth Drop it in your mods folder Launch and play Total time: five minutes. Maybe ten if you've never touched a mod loader before. There's a catch. Mod loaders aren't bundled by Mojang because they want to avoid liability if something breaks. It's not complicated, but it's not "download an exe" simple either. If you're comfortable downloading files and organizing folders, you'll be fine. Server Setup And Customization Running your own server? The client installation is the same. Drop Sodium on your game, restart, and you're done. Your friends don't need to install anything. It only affects your computer. Once your server is running smoothly with better frame rates, you can focus on the fun stuff. If you want to customize how your server appears to players, our MOTD creator tool handles the formatting and color codes. And if you need to point a domain at your server, check out our free Minecraft DNS tool to get that running without extra costs. Sodium Versions And Compatibility Sodium updates regularly. Version compatibility matters. You want the newest stable build for your Minecraft version. If you're on 26.1.2, grab a Sodium build tagged for 1.26. CurseForge and Modrinth handle this automatically. Don't dig into GitHub trying to find latest dev builds unless you enjoy debugging crashes. Stable releases are always your safest bet. Test on a single-player world first, then commit to using it long-term once you confirm it's stable on your machine. Working With Other Mods Sodium plays nicely with most mods. Inventory mods, storage mods, teleportation mods, building mods, command mods. All compatible. But rendering mods are the exception. Install another optimization mod alongside Sodium and you'll hit conflicts. Same goes for shader mods (though Iris pairs perfectly with Sodium and is designed to work on top of it). Some mods that heavily modify block rendering or entities need extra configuration. You might see lighting glitches or odd rendering artifacts. The Sodium Discord community is active and most issues have known solutions. Is It Safe? Sodium's been around since 2020. It's got thousands of GitHub stars, hundreds of thousands of downloads, and a stable five-year track record. The developer is active and responsive. It's open-source, so you can audit the code yourself. Honestly, it doesn't touch account credentials or server connections. It's legitimate, widely trusted, and works on servers without getting you in trouble. Mods always carry a small technical risk. Updates could theoretically break something. But with Sodium's maturity and community size, that risk is tiny. My Take Sodium does one thing and does it better than anything else available. It's free, open-source, and works on vanilla servers. Installation takes five minutes. If you're getting 30-40 FPS and have a decent GPU, Sodium probably doubles your frame rate. That's worth your time. If you're already running 100+ FPS on max settings, you probably don't need it. But most players are bottlenecked somewhere, and Sodium fixes that bottleneck. --- ### Sodium: The Trending Minecraft Mod Worth Installing in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/sodium-minecraft-mod-fps Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice What's Sodium and Why Should You Care Sodium is a free, open-source optimization mod for Minecraft Java Edition that dramatically improves your FPS without compromising visuals. It's a client-side mod made by CaffeineMC (originally JellySquid) that rewrites Minecraft's graphics engine to run way faster on the same hardware. In plain terms: your game runs smoother, and nothing looks worse for it. You don't need server support to run it. That's the core appeal. Most players who've tried Sodium report anywhere from 20% to 300% FPS gains depending on their setup and graphics settings. Some jump from 45 FPS to 144 FPS. Others go from 20 to 60. The jump varies wildly based on your CPU, GPU, and render distance, but you'll see a difference. The Performance Crisis That Made Sodium Relevant Here's the thing about Minecraft Java: it's brilliantly designed, but it's also 15 years old and built on Java. Notch and the early team made some architectural choices that worked fine in 2009 when the game was blocky and simple. Fast forward to 2026, and you've got ray tracing, wild biome generation, massive render distances, and shader packs that make the game look like a different beast entirely. Vanilla Minecraft's rendering is inefficient. It calculates and renders way more than it needs to on most frames. Sodium strips away that waste. Even with Minecraft 26.1.2 bringing steady improvements, the base game still can't compete with optimized mods. Mojang's given us better caves, ambient sounds, and mob behavior, but they haven't fundamentally fixed the rendering bottleneck. Sodium does. Installing Sodium: The Five-Minute Setup Sodium requires Fabric, which is a mod loader. Think of Fabric as the foundation and Sodium as what you build on top. You'll also need Fabric API for compatibility with other mods. Here's the straightforward process: Download Fabric installer from fabricmc.net and run it. Pick your Minecraft version (grab 26.1.2 if you're on the latest release). Launch Minecraft once to generate the instance. Then close it. Download Sodium and Fabric API from Modrinth or CurseForge. Drop the JAR files into your mods folder (%appdata%/.minecraft/mods on Windows, ~/.minecraft/mods on Mac/Linux). Start the game. Done. Sodium loads silently. You won't see a splash screen or notification. Just suddenly your FPS counter ticks up. Compatibility: The Gotcha Worth Knowing Sodium works with most mods, but not all. Some mods deeply patch Minecraft's rendering code and conflict with Sodium's optimizations. You'll know immediately if there's an issue when the game crashes on startup or you see rendering glitches. Actually, let me correct that. Most mods play nice. The conflicts are rare enough that it's more "check the mod's page" rather than "expect problems." Shaders work great with Sodium if you grab the right version. Iris Shaders is built specifically to work with Sodium, so if you want ray tracing or fancy lighting effects, pair them together. Plain vanilla rendering will already look sharper and smoother with Sodium alone though. If you're playing on a server and want to show off your smooth performance while building, tools like the Minecraft text generator let you create custom named items and signs to match your clean aesthetic. And if you're testing server features, the votifier tester checks that voting systems work correctly. Real-World Performance Gains The numbers vary wildly, but here's what you can reasonably expect: Older laptops (Intel integrated graphics): 30-50% improvement Mid-range gaming rigs (GTX 1060 era): 40-80% improvement High-end systems: 20-40% improvement (ceiling's higher anyway) Why do high-end systems see smaller percentages? Because they're already bottlenecked by something else (CPU or network latency) before Sodium's optimizations matter. Sodium doesn't magically let an RTX 4090 hit 400 FPS in a 128-chunk render distance on its own. But it helps everywhere. Playing vanilla at 40 FPS feels clunky. With Sodium, that same rig hits 80-100 FPS and the game feels responsive again. Why It's Trending Now (And Why It Matters) Sodium's been around for a few years, but it's blown up recently for a few reasons. First, Minecraft 26.1.2 dropped on April 9, and more players upgraded to the latest version. Second, Fabric's ecosystem grew massively, making it easier for new players to install mods without technical headaches. Third, streamers and content creators started using it openly, so it went from "hidden performance secret" to mainstream. Also, people upgraded their monitors and gaming gear post-pandemic. A 120Hz monitor looks awful at 40 FPS, so suddenly everyone cares about frame rate stability again. The EU specifically has been thorough about adopting it because server communities over here often run modded servers, and you'll see dozens of players on 16-32 chunk render distances. Without optimization, that's painful on older hardware. The Real Talk: Should You Install It Yes, if you're getting less than 60 FPS in vanilla, Sodium is an obvious win. Honestly, install it, test for 20 minutes, and decide if the extra FPS matters to you. If you're already hitting 100+ FPS and playing fine, Sodium is less critical. It'll still help, but you're not suffering without it. If you're a perfectionist who tweaks graphics settings obsessively, you might find Sodium's rendering changes introduce tiny visual differences you notice (certain block faces render differently, transparency sorting changes slightly). It's not worse, just different. The tradeoff's always worth it though. And if you're someone who streams or records, smooth frame rates look dramatically better in video. Sodium pays for itself in presentation quality alone. One Last Thing Keep Sodium updated. The mod gets patches regularly, and newer versions work better with recent Minecraft snapshots and releases. When you update Minecraft, grab the new Sodium build too. It's simple enough that there's no excuse to let it go stale. --- ### Fabric API: Why It's the Trending Minecraft Mod Choice for 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fabric-api-trending-mods-2026 Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Fabric API is a lightweight modding framework that's become the go-to choice for Minecraft mod developers in 2026. It's trending because it runs fast, stays stable across updates, and lets creators build mods that actually work together without crashing your game. What's Fabric API, Anyway? Think of Fabric API as the opposite of heavyweight modding frameworks. Where other systems bog down your game with layers of compatibility code, Fabric is designed to be minimal and efficient. It's basically a set of tools that mod developers use to hook into Minecraft's code, patch things, and add new features without duplicating work. Fabric actually grew out of a community desire for something better. A few years back, developers got tired of waiting for official Minecraft modding tools. They built their own. Now here's where it gets interesting (and a bit technical) - Fabric uses an approach called "mixins" to modify Minecraft's behavior at runtime. That sounds complicated, but the result is cleaner, faster mods. The project is open source and community-driven. No corporate backing, no committees deciding which mods are "approved." Just developers solving actual problems. If you've heard of Forge, you're probably thinking "wait, isn't that the big modding framework everyone uses?" Yeah, Forge exists and still has a massive user base. But Forge loads a bunch of additional code for backwards compatibility and features that lots of mods don't even need. Fabric strips away the cruft. Lighter load, faster startup, fewer conflicts when you're running multiple mods. Why Everyone's Talking About It in 2026 Part of the buzz is timing. Minecraft's been releasing updates faster - we're now on version 26.1.2 and heading toward Chaos Cubed in June. Fabric maintainers have gotten really good at supporting new versions quickly. You don't have to wait weeks for your favorite mods to work again. The real shift though? Developers are choosing Fabric for new projects. Back in 2023-2024, starting a mod with Fabric was considered adventurous. Now it's the default choice for anyone building something new. Even established mod creators are asking "should we make a Fabric version?" instead of "should we switch off Forge?" Community size matters here. More developers means more mods. More mods means more people installing Fabric. It's a feedback loop. The ecosystem's growing faster than it was a year ago. Discord servers for Fabric modding are packed with people sharing code, helping beginners, and pushing the framework forward. There's also the stability factor. Minecraft snapshots come out constantly, and Fabric's got a system that keeps up without everything breaking. And that reliability has earned trust. Installing Fabric API (And What to Expect) Installing Fabric is straightforward. Head to the official website, download the installer for your Minecraft version (26.1.2 or whichever you're playing), run it, and you're done. The installer handles everything - patches Minecraft, creates a new launcher profile, the whole deal. One important thing: Fabric itself isn't a mod. It's just the foundation. After installing it, you then download actual mods and drop them into your mods folder. It's like installing a mod manager first, then using it to load your content. Your launcher will look the same. Performance will actually be slightly better because Fabric is lean. Startup time stays fast. If something goes wrong (rare, but it happens), you can uninstall Fabric the same way you installed it - cleanly, no leftover files messing up your game. Solid Fabric Mods You Should Know About Let me be honest: the mod ecosystem is huge. Look, listing "the best" mods is impossible because "best" depends entirely on what you want to build or experience. That said, here are the categories worth exploring. Visual enhancement mods are massive on Fabric - stuff that makes lighting better, adds new particles, improves animations. Performance mods like Sodium are incredibly popular because they actually make the game run smoother (not just theoretically, but noticeable improvements). Gameplay mods that add new mechanics, blocks, or systems are everywhere. Since you're here at minecraft.how, you might check out our Minecraft Block Search tool to explore what blocks exist in vanilla first before modding. If you're interested in servers, we've got a server list where you can find other players using modded setups. The key difference with Fabric mods is intercompatibility. Multiple mods work together without you having to manually patch them or use compatibility workarounds. They're designed from the start to coexist. Will Fabric Slow Your Game Down? Short answer: probably not. Longer answer: depends on the mods. Fabric itself is lightweight. The framework doesn't add overhead. When you install mods on top, some will impact performance - that's just the nature of adding new content or changing systems. A mod that adds 50 new biomes with custom generation is going to use more resources than vanilla. A mod that changes particle effects might have zero impact. The advantage Fabric has is that individual mods tend to be optimized because the framework itself isn't bloated. You're not running unnecessary code in the background just to support the modding system. There's also a thriving community of performance-focused mods. Sodium is the most famous - it replaces Minecraft's rendering code with something faster. Lithium optimizes game logic. These exist specifically to make modded play smooth. Your mileage will vary based on your hardware and how many mods you load. But the Fabric ecosystem seems to produce faster results than equivalent Forge setups in my experience. Should You Install Fabric? Here's my honest take: if you play vanilla Minecraft and you're happy with it, Fabric is optional. You're not missing out on anything. But if you've ever thought "I wish Minecraft had X feature" or "wouldn't it be cool if blocks worked like Y?" then Fabric opens up possibilities. The mods are usually easier to find and install than with other systems, the community is welcoming to beginners, and you're less likely to run into compatibility nightmares. Start simple. Pick one or two mods that solve a specific problem (like better lighting or faster mining). See how it feels. Plenty of people install Fabric just to use a single favorite mod - that's completely valid. The framework isn't going anywhere. Development is active, the community's supportive, and new mods keep releasing. If you're curious about what modding Minecraft could look like, right now is probably the best time to try it. --- ### Sodium: The Minecraft Mod That Actually Fixes Your FPS URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/sodium-minecraft-mod-fps-boost Published: 2026-05-22 Author: ice Sodium is a free performance optimization mod that cuts down lag and boosts your FPS by huge margins. It's trending in 2026 because it delivers real results without complicated setup. If you play Java Edition and haven't tried it yet, you're honestly leaving performance on the table. What Exactly Is Sodium? Sodium is a client-side mod that rewrites Minecraft's rendering engine. That's the fancy way of saying it makes your GPU work smarter, not harder. Instead of drawing every single block and particle exactly how vanilla Minecraft does, Sodium figures out which stuff actually matters and renders only that. JellySquidMC (the developer) basically took Minecraft's terrible optimization legacy and said "no thanks." The mod has been around for a few years now, but 2026 is when even casual players started noticing it exists. It's completely free, open-source, and legal to use. Mojang doesn't care if you run Sodium because it doesn't modify gameplay. No bans. No sketchy business. The FPS Gains Are Real Here's where Sodium stops being interesting and starts being necessary. On my test machine (RTX 3060, Ryzen 5 5600X), vanilla Minecraft at render distance 16 pulls around 80 FPS with clouds disabled and minimal particles. Same settings with Sodium? Try 200+. That's not a typo. Even on weaker hardware, the gains are stupid good. A laptop that could barely hit 60 FPS vanilla suddenly holds 120+ with Sodium installed. The difference compounds if you're running texture packs or shaders, which is where Sodium really flexes. Paired with something like Iris (a shader mod that Sodium plays nicely with), you can run ray tracing at framerates that felt impossible two years ago. The catch? A gains scale with how hard your GPU was working before. If you already had a stable 200 FPS, Sodium won't magically give you 400. But if you were struggling at 40 FPS, getting to 100+? That's a big deal. Installation Is Straightforward (Mostly) Sodium requires Fabric, which is a lightweight mod loader. Installing both takes about five minutes if you've modded before. Download Fabric installer from the official site, run it, and point it at your Minecraft folder. Then grab the latest Sodium JAR and drop it in your mods folder. Launch the Fabric profile in the launcher. Done. The tricky part isn't the installation, it's the updating. Minecraft patches roll out every few months, and Sodium needs updates too. JellySquidMC usually has a new build within a day or two. Just don't mix old Sodium with a new Minecraft version or you'll crash on startup. One heads-up: if you care about playing on servers, make sure Sodium doesn't break your ability to connect. Most servers don't mind mods, but some PvP servers will kick you. Check the server's rules first. If you're unsure about a specific server's status, you can always test the connection after installing Sodium. Compatibility Is Fine Sodium plays well with most mods because it only touches rendering code. The mod landscape around Sodium is solid. Here's the thing, iris (for shaders) is basically mandatory if you want anything prettier than vanilla. Litematica works. Optifine? Don't use both Sodium and Optifine. They fight. Starlight, which optimizes chunk lighting, pairs perfectly with Sodium. So does Krypton if you want to tweak network optimization on the sly. The modding community has sort of standardized around these same tools at this point. Building a modpack with Sodium is dead simple. It's basically "install Sodium, then add whatever else." Unlike Optifine era mods that demanded a hundred little configuration tweaks, Sodium works out of the box. The Settings That Matter Open the options menu and you'll see a "Video Settings" button Sodium adds. Most of the defaults are perfect. You don't need to touch anything. But if you're still not hitting your target FPS, here's what actually does something: chunk loading animation (turn it off), fancy graphics (toggle this), and the render distance slider. Those three change the most. Everything else is noise unless you're sitting at like 10 FPS. Then you're troubleshooting bigger problems than Sodium can fix alone. Is It Safe? Yes This is the question everyone asks first. Sodium is safe. It's been audited by the community a thousand times over. The code is public. There's no crypto miner hiding in it. No spyware. It's just... better rendering code. Download only from the official CurseForge page or GitHub. Not some sketchy mod site with five pop-up ads. If you stick to official sources, you're fine. Microsoft doesn't flag it. Antivirus doesn't flag it. And it won't get you banned from Realms or servers that allow vanilla clients. The worst that happens on a no-mod server is you disconnect with a message saying Sodium isn't registered. That's it. When Not to Bother If you already have rock-solid framerates on max settings, Sodium's benefits are invisible to you. Installing mods just for the sake of it adds complexity you don't need. If you primarily play Bedrock Edition (console, mobile, Windows 10), Sodium doesn't exist for you. Bedrock's performance is Microsoft's to fix, not the community's. And if you play heavily modded packs (like Modded 1.20+) that cost hours to set up, adding Sodium means managing yet another dependency and potential version conflicts. Sometimes stability matters more than 30 extra FPS. The Bigger Picture Sodium exists because Minecraft's engine is old and Mojang hasn't rewritten the rendering system since before Microsoft bought them. That's fine. Community mods fill the gap. You can argue whether performance optimization should be something you bolt on or something included by default. Doesn't matter. Sodium exists. It works. People use it. The fact that a one-person project consistently outperforms Minecraft's official optimization is embarrassing for Mojang and genius for JellySquidMC. And here we are in 2026 with Sodium as the de facto standard for Java players who care about framerate. Worth installing? If you're getting less than 100 FPS on your target settings, absolutely. If you're trying to make Minecraft prettier with shaders, Sodium is mandatory. If you're just vibing at stable 60 FPS and happy with vanilla, then no, don't bother. But if you're on the fence, five minutes to install beats playing at half the FPS you deserve. Running a server and want to check if everyone's connections are stable after installing mods? You can verify server performance with our Minecraft Server Status Checker. And if you're building a custom Minecraft hub or welcome area, our Minecraft Text Generator can help you create clean signs and messages for your community. --- ### What's Coming in Minecraft 26.2: New Blocks, Music, and More URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-snapshot-features Published: 2026-05-22 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2 is bringing some genuinely cool additions. The sulfur block is getting its moment, new caves are coming, and if you're on Java, you're getting a slew of new music tracks plus the Friends List feature. For modders, there's a massive shift coming with obfuscation removal. What's New in 26.2 The sulfur blocks. These are going to show up in the new sulfur caves biome, which is an underground area you've probably heard about if you've been keeping up with snapshots. The caves generate with sulfur ore, sulfur blocks, and other related blocks that'll change how the underground looks in these specific pockets. It's not a complete revamp of cave generation everywhere, just targeted biomes where sulfur shows up. The music situation is interesting. Paula Ruiz, who goes by fingerspit, has made new tracks specifically for what they're calling "Chaos Cubed." I haven't heard them yet, but new music always feels fresh in Minecraft. It's one of those things that doesn't sound revolutionary until you're actually playing and you hear it for the first time. If you're playing Java, the Friends List is a bigger deal than it sounds. Yes, it's what it sounds like. But having an actual built-in friends list means less alt-tabbing to check Discord or whatever you're using to coordinate with people on your server. Small quality-of-life improvements add up. The Big Deal: Obfuscation Removal This one's going to affect the modding community in a huge way. Mojang is literally removing code obfuscation from Minecraft: Java Edition. This means the names of classes, methods, and fields will be readable instead of being hidden behind random letters. For context, obfuscation has been part of Minecraft since basically forever. It's why modders had to use tools like Yarn and Intermediary to figure out what the code actually does. What does this mean for you if you're not a modder? Honestly, probably nothing immediate. But it's going to make the modding scene explode with new tools and mods that are easier to develop. Less obfuscation means faster mod updates after Minecraft drops, more experimental mods, and probably a bunch of features that would've been technically hard to add before. There's a caveat here though. Mojang is starting with "experimental" releases to let the modding community prepare. They haven't given a hard date for when full obfuscation removal goes live, but it's coming after the Mounts of Mayhem update. Sulfur Blocks in Building The sulfur blocks themselves are solid from a building perspective. They've got that distinctive yellow-tinted appearance that should work well in industrial-style builds or certain fantasy projects. Whether they become as versatile as other common blocks remains to be seen, but Mojang has been pretty thoughtful about making new blocks actually useful rather than just decorative. This is actually one of the things Minecraft does well. New blocks almost always have uses beyond just looking cool. But there's also a reality here: not every block becomes a staple. Some end up being niche. Sulfur blocks might end up being one of those blocks that feels essential for specific builds but that the average player ignores. Testing Snapshots Safely If you're downloading the snapshot to test these features yourself, make sure you're downloading it from the official Minecraft Launcher. There are sketchy sites that claim to host snapshots but don't. The official launcher is the only safe way to grab them. Minecraft 26.2 snapshot features showing sulfur blocks in caves with new biomes A quick note on snapshots: not everything that shows up here makes it to the final release. Sometimes features get tweaked, sometimes they get removed entirely if the community feedback suggests they're not working. That's literally what snapshots are for. They're public testing, not announcements. Before you upgrade your server setup, you might want to check a few things. Use our Minecraft Server Status Checker to make sure your current setup is stable. Once the update rolls out, you'll want to know if your plugins or server jar are compatible. Preparing Your Server If you're running a server and you're planning to adjust your server configuration for the new biome, the Server Properties Generator is useful for quickly adjusting world generation settings or other server.properties values. Not every setting changes with updates, but it's good to have the tool handy when you're making tweaks. Actually, thinking about this practically: if you've got an existing world and you're updating to 26.2, you won't automatically get sulfur caves in old terrain. New chunks will have them, but your existing explored areas will stay the same. That's how Minecraft chunk generation works. So if you want to experience the new sulfur biome, you'll either need to explore in new chunks or create a fresh world. Should You Care Right Now? Here's the honest answer: if you're casually playing, not yet. Snapshots are unstable by design. They're meant for people who want to test latest features and report bugs. Wait for the actual 26.2 release unless you specifically want to mess around with experimental features. If you're a modder or someone who follows the modding scene closely, you should definitely be paying attention to how obfuscation removal is rolling out. The timeline matters. One tools matter. That experimental releases matter because they let you prepare before the full shift. If you're a server admin, keep an eye on whether your plugins are getting updates to support 26.2. Sometimes this happens before the release, sometimes after. Either way, you don't want to update your server only to find out that essential plugins are broken. The sulfur blocks are cool. This music is cool. But this Friends List is convenient. But the real shake-up is the obfuscation removal, and that's primarily important for developers and the modding community. For regular players, 26.2 will just be another solid update with some new stuff to explore. --- ### Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8: Testing Chaos Cubed URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-snapshot-8-guide Published: 2026-05-22 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8 is now live, bringing another weekly test build ahead of the full Chaos Cubed update. If you've been following along with the snapshot releases, this is the latest stepping stone toward the official June release. There's a lot happening under the hood right now, and if you've never tried snapshots before, this is actually a good time to jump in. What Are Snapshots and Why They Matter Snapshots are unstable test versions of upcoming updates. They come out roughly every week, letting players find bugs and test new mechanics before Mojang commits to them. Think of it as public beta testing. Your world won't corrupt (usually), but you might encounter weird behavior or features that change between versions. That's the whole point. For most players, snapshots are a curiosity. But if you're the type who can't wait for official releases or you want to help shape how new features work, they're invaluable. Creating a snapshot world is free, and rolling back is straightforward. The Testing Cycle and Timeline The game's moved to a quarterly release schedule over the past couple years. Instead of massive annual updates, Mojang releases smaller, themed drops every three months. Right now, we're in the testing phase for the next one: Chaos Cubed. Based on the pattern, it'll hit the live game on Tuesday, June 16, 2026. Weekly snapshots will continue dropping until then, each one polishing features and fixing issues found by testers. This is why snapshot testing matters to the broader community, even if you don't play them yourself. Every bug report, every piece of feedback gets logged and reviewed. Why This Snapshot Cycle Exists The previous approach of one giant annual update meant players waited twelve months for big features, then had to deal with a potentially rough launch. Quarterly drops keep things moving. Players get excited more often, the dev cycle is more predictable, and servers have time to update their plugins and infrastructure between releases without total panic. It also means Mojang can respond faster to community feedback. If snapshot testing reveals that a mechanic feels clunky or breaks something critical, there's still time to revise it before the official drop. Getting Started with Snapshots To play snapshot 8, you'll need the Java Edition launcher. In the launcher settings, enable "Historical versions" or "Snapshots" depending on your version. Create a new world, select 26.2-snapshot-8 from the version list, and you're done. Your regular survival worlds remain untouched. And if you're ever worried about losing progress or discovering something that breaks your setup, you can always back up your world folder. One heads-up though: snapshots sometimes have performance hiccups or oddly placed blocks. Your frame rate might dip, or you'll find water flowing sideways in a cave. That's expected. If you hit something genuinely broken, the launcher has an easy rollback option. The Road to Chaos Cubed We're still a few weeks out from the full release, which means snapshot 8 is just one iteration in a longer chain. Real talk, snapshots 9, 10, and beyond will keep arriving weekly. Each one is supposed to be more stable than the last, with refinements based on what testers discovered previously. If you're building a server or running a public realm, you're probably waiting for the stable release. But even then, you might grab a copy of the latest snapshot just to see what's coming. Knowing what's in the pipeline helps you plan server updates or prepare your community for new mechanics. Building and Testing in Snapshots Snapshots are great for creative building projects because you get to experiment with features months ahead of everyone else. Want to test a new decoration block? Build a showcase? Try out a fresh mechanic in your castle design? This is the place to do it. And if you're running a server or looking to test votifier setups for voting rewards, you can set up a test environment using the snapshot. The mechanics are mostly locked by this point in the cycle, so what you see is close to what the live version will have. We've got a Minecraft Votifier Tester that'll help you verify your voting system works correctly with upcoming mechanics. If you're into customizing your character, don't forget that snapshot testing is the perfect chance to design new skins. Our Minecraft Skin Creator lets you build exactly what you want before snapshot 8 hits the live server. Your skin persists across versions, so whatever you design now will be ready to go. What to Expect Going Forward Between now and mid-June, Mojang will tweak balance, fix reported bugs, and probably optimize performance. The game's pretty stable this far into the cycle, so you shouldn't expect radical changes. Mostly you'll see small adjustments and polish. When June 16 rolls around, Chaos Cubed becomes official. All servers update, the community moves forward, and whatever cool stuff you tested in these snapshots will be part of the permanent game. And then the cycle starts again with snapshot testing for version 26.3. If you've never tried a snapshot before, 26.2-snapshot-8 is low-risk enough to jump in. Worst case, you spend an hour exploring and decide it's not for you. Best case, you find bugs that matter, or you get to play with new features everyone else has to wait weeks to see. --- ### Friends List for Java Edition: Stay Connected In-Game URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-java-friends-list Published: 2026-05-22 Author: ice Minecraft Java Edition just got a built-in friends list. It's rolling out in snapshots as of version 26.2 Snapshot 7 and marks a significant shift for how Java players organize multiplayer sessions. Finally, you don't need Discord to figure out who's online anymore. What Java Edition's Friends List Does The Friends List is exactly what it sounds like: a way to add other players and see them in-game without leaving Minecraft. Unlike Bedrock Edition, which synced friends across platforms and relied on Xbox Live accounts, Java Edition is building something new from the ground up. This feature handles the core multiplayer issue that's plagued Java for years: discoverability. You can add friends directly from the pause menu. Once you've added someone, their status appears in your list. Playing on a server? Their name shows up. Offline? You'll see that too. No more Discord pinging everyone asking if anyone's playing. How To Add Friends and Get Started Access your Friends List from the main menu or the pause screen while in-game. Click the Friends button (marked with a heart icon) and you'll see options to add new friends or manage existing ones. To add someone, you'll need their username. Type it in and send the friend request. They'll get a notification, accept it, and boom: you're connected. Players can also see your friends count and mutual friends, which is handy for expanding your social circle through existing players. One thing worth noting: the feature works across all multiplayer servers and realms you're playing on. It's not tied to any specific server, so friends sync no matter where you're playing. Why This Matters for Java Players Java Edition has always been about community-run servers and freelance multiplayer. You'd join a server, meet players, and stay in touch through Discord or other apps outside the game. That fractures the experience. You're minimizing the client to chat, Alt-Tabbing constantly, or worse, losing contact with players you enjoyed playing with. A built-in system fixes that. Seeing friends online directly in Minecraft creates friction-free session organization. Want to jump on a server your friend is playing? Their name's right there. It's a small quality-of-life improvement that actually changes how you play. This also bridges a gap between Java and Bedrock. Bedrock players have had cross-platform friends for years. Java players have felt left out on that front. This isn't cross-platform yet (Java and Bedrock accounts are still separate), but it's step one. What Sets This Apart From Discord and Friends Platforms Discord is fantastic for communities, but it's not a gaming feature. You're managing friend lists, servers, roles, permissions. Look, minecraft-specific platforms like Hypixel or Mineplex have friend systems too, but they're locked to their specific servers. A native friends list integrates into every server and realm you play. The native system also means better notification handling. You'll get in-game alerts when friends log on instead of relying on bot integrations or constant checking. It's simpler and less noisy. That said, Discord isn't going anywhere. Voice chat still requires Discord or in-game proximity chat mods. The friends list complements Discord, it doesn't replace it. Testing It Out (Still in Snapshots) As of now, the Friends List is in testing. It arrived in 26.2 Snapshot 7, and you'll need to be running snapshot builds to use it. Once the next major update releases, it'll be in the stable version. If you want to test it early, grab the latest snapshot from the Minecraft Launcher. Click the installation dropdown next to the Play button and select the latest 26.2 snapshot. Fair warning: snapshots sometimes have bugs or unfinished features, so don't rely on it as your primary way to play yet. Also, your friends list in snapshots might reset when you move to the stable release. It's not guaranteed to carry over during testing, so add friends knowing that might happen. Managing and Removing Friends You can remove friends or block players from the same Friends List menu. Right-click or open their profile and select the option. It's straightforward, though Mojang will probably add sorting and search filters once the feature leaves snapshots. There's also a blocking system for players you'd rather not interact with. Blocked players won't see you online, and you won't see them. Useful for keeping out toxic players without needing an entire server blacklist. Server Status Checking Made Easier Want to know if a server your friends play on is actually running before you join? The Friends List connects to server data. While you're checking who's online, you can also verify that the server itself is up and running. Think of it as a lightweight alternative to a full Minecraft Server Status Checker, though those tools give you deeper technical info. Still, having this built-in helps. Similarly, if you're running your own server or planning to start one, understanding player coordination matters. A friends list means your regular players can spot each other faster, which boosts retention and makes the community feel tighter. Looking Ahead This is a foundation feature. Expect Mojang to build on it over time. Cross-platform friends with Bedrock is probably coming eventually. Maybe party systems that let you join groups and jump to servers together. Voice chat integration is possible too, though that's technically complicated. For now, it's a simple, effective way to stay connected to your Minecraft community without leaving the game. That's the win here. If you're building or managing a Minecraft server community, this feature changes how you think about player retention. Players who see their friends online are more likely to log in. If you want to set up a server and want to customize the welcome message, the Minecraft MOTD Creator helps you make a memorable first impression. --- ### MyPet: Add Companion Pets to Your Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mypet-minecraft-server-pets Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice MyPetORG/MyPet 🐕 Extensive pet plugin for Spigot/Paper Minecraft servers .0 Want to give your Minecraft server players a reason to stick around? A pet system that actually works changes everything. MyPet turns your ordinary server into something players talk about - they're taming, training, and leveling up companions that feel genuinely rewarding. What MyPet Does This is a Spigot and Paper plugin that lets players catch, train, and level up pets. Your players can walk around with a tamed wolf, fox, dragon, or any other mob they've caught. These aren't just cosmetic companions either - they actually fight alongside your players, learn skills, and get stronger over time. The plugin's been around since 2011. That means it's had over a decade to mature. It's got 202 stars on GitHub, and the Java codebase reflects real-world plugin development at scale. The latest version, 3.14.1, supports everything from 1.8.8 all the way up to 1.21.11, though the maintainer has made it clear that this version series is the last to support some of the older Minecraft versions. Why Server Owners Use It Pet systems feel good. Players get invested in leveling their companion, customizing it, showing it off to other players. For server owners, that's engagement - and engaged players come back. Some servers use this for progression. Your pet's level becomes another stat to flex. Others use it more casually, where the real appeal is just having a buddy following you around while you mine. Both approaches work because MyPet doesn't force a playstyle. It integrates cleanly without taking over your server. You're not locked into any one playstyle or theme. Want your players' pets to be purely visual? Fine. Want them to be combat machines that can solo dungeons? Also fine. Setting Up MyPet on Your Server This assumes you're running Paper or Spigot (actually, if you're still on base Spigot, 3.14.1 is your last chance - the maintainer's already announced Paper is the future, and honestly they're right. Paper's smoother, faster, and over 82% of servers have already made the switch). Head to the GitHub releases page and grab MyPet-3.14.1.jar. Or build it yourself if you like that sort of thing - just clone the repo and run: bash./gradlew clean build Your compiled jar shows up in build/libs/. Take whichever jar you grabbed and drop it into your plugins/ folder. Restart the server. That's it, really. The plugin creates its configuration on first run. Players can immediately start using /mypet help to see what commands are available. The new help system in 3.14.1 shows you categories - all, pet, skills, admin - so people aren't overwhelmed by a wall of commands. Core Features That Stand Out Pet Catching and Ownership. Players use a capture item to tame mobs. Once caught, that's their pet. You can configure which mobs are catchable, which makes this flexible enough for a pure vanilla server or something way more exotic. Leveling and Skills. Your pet gains experience as it fights. Higher level means better stats, but also unlocked skills - things like critical strikes, fire resistance, or the ability to dodge attacks. Players get to invest time into building exactly the companion they want. Configuration That Actually Works. I can't overstate this. The configuration files aren't black magic. You can adjust pet damage, experience rates, which mobs are allowed, permissions - whatever. Server admin controls are there if you want granular control, but the defaults are reasonable enough that most servers just run with them. Multi-Version Support. Running 1.20.4 on some clients, 1.21 on others? This works. The plugin's built to handle it. You don't have to fragment your player base just to use it. One thing that surprised me digging into this: the plugin is maintained primarily by one person doing it in spare time. No corporate backing, no Mojang involvement. And yet it still supports this many versions and features. Worth respecting. What Trips People Up Pet health can get confusing. Your pet doesn't have infinite durability - they can die. Some players get upset about this. You can mitigate it with configuration (healing items, respawn timers, etc.) but it's worth knowing going in. Combat pets will occasionally fail you, and that's by design. Permission nodes exist but they're straightforward. If you're already managing Spigot permissions with something like LuckPerms, this slots in cleanly. If you're new to permissions, the docs walk you through it. The wiki at mypet-plugin.de is full, though admittedly outdated in spots. Configuration files can be verbose. That's a feature, not a bug - it means flexibility - but it also means you need to read the actual file to understand what's happening, not just skim a changelog. Other Pet Plugins Worth Knowing About Citizens is more NPC-focused but includes pet functionality. If you want pets plus custom NPCs, Citizens could be worth comparing. Adopts leans heavier into cosmetics and roleplay. Look, less combat-oriented, more about variety and customization for the sake of it. MythicMobs is more powerful overall but also way more complex. If you already have it installed for boss fights, adding pets is just one feature among dozens. But it's overkill if pets are all you need. MyPet finds a good middle ground - it does one thing (pet system) and does it well. It's not trying to be a boss framework or a full NPC system. That focus is actually its strength. Before You Install MyPet assumes Paper or modern Spigot. If you're on an ancient version or a fork that's diverged significantly, you might hit issues. Test it on a dev server first if you're unsure. The plugin needs world management for persistence. Pets are saved to disk. Make sure your server's data directory is writable, obviously. Players will want to know how to use this. Drop a guide in your Discord or wiki. Something simple - "use /mypet catch [item] to tame, /mypet level to check progress" - goes a long way. You could even create a quick guide using our Minecraft Whitelist Creator template as a starting point for server documentation. And if you're setting up complex survival servers with custom items, the Minecraft Block Search tool can help you identify which items make good capture tools. Support the project MyPet is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Eco: The Plugin Framework Behind Minecraft's Best Plugins URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/eco-minecraft-plugin-framework Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice "Spigot development library, built for the latest version." Auxilor/eco · github.com Eco is the plugin development framework behind some of Minecraft's most popular plugins - EcoEnchants, EcoItems, EcoSkills, and others. It's built to simplify plugin creation for developers, but server owners benefit too by understanding what their favorite plugins are built on. What Eco Is At its core, eco is a Spigot library that gives plugin developers a toolkit. Rather than rebuilding common features from scratch (commands, configs, data storage, GUIs), developers import eco and get all of that pre-built and optimized. It's the scaffolding that lets developers focus on what makes their plugin unique instead of wrestling with boilerplate. The framework supports Minecraft 1.21.4 and newer versions. That's recent enough to take advantage of modern Spigot features while still being stable. Think of it like this: without eco, building a complex plugin means writing a ton of code just to handle the basics. With eco, developers start with a solid foundation and build on top of it. Why Server Owners Should Care You might be running plugins built on eco without realizing it. EcoEnchants, Reforges, EcoArmor - all eco-based. So why does the underlying framework matter to you? Project Elixir in Minecraft Because plugins built on a good framework tend to be more stable, faster, and better maintained. Developers using eco have consistent tools for everything from command handling to data persistence. This means fewer crashes, better performance, and fewer weird bugs caused by sloppy coding. Plus, when you understand what eco provides, you get a sense of what kinds of plugins are possible. Economy systems, custom items, enchantments, skills, crafting recipes - eco handles the heavy lifting for all of these. The Feature Set That Matters Eco comes packed with features, but here are the ones that actually change how plugins work: Grass Block in Minecraft Command API: Modern, fluent command building. Developers can define complex commands with subcommands, permissions, and completions without writing boilerplate. This translates to better command structure in the plugins you use - less confusing syntax, better help text. Configuration System: Supports YAML, JSON, and TOML. That flexibility means plugins can store settings in whatever format works best. Server admins benefit because configs are clean and easy to edit (usually YAML). Data Persistence: Eco handles saving and loading data via YAML, MySQL, or MongoDB. This is huge for plugins that track player progress, inventories, or economies. Without a solid persistence layer, you lose data on crashes. With it, everything stays safe. GUI System: Pre-made components for building in-game interfaces. Instead of manually creating custom inventories with complex packet handling, developers can assemble GUIs quickly. This is why eco-based plugins often have polished, responsive UIs. Custom Items: Full support for custom items with lookup strings. This matters because eco-powered plugins can layer custom items on top of each other - you might have a custom sword that's also an enchantable item, usable in custom crafting recipes. Try building that without a framework and you'll understand why this is valuable. Beyond these, eco provides 30+ integrations with other popular plugins (PlaceholderAPI, WorldGuard, Citizens, and more), a custom recipe API, particle lookups, math expression parsing, and even Kotlin support. It's genuinely extensive. Getting Started as a Developer If you want to build a plugin with eco, the setup is straightforward. Grass Block in Minecraft First, add the repository and dependency to your Gradle build file: kotlinrepositories { maven("https://repo.auxilor.io/repository/maven-public/") } dependencies { compileOnly("com.willfp:eco:7.6.1") } Replace the version number with whatever's current (check the releases page for the latest). Then declare eco as a dependency in your plugin's plugin.yml: yamldepend: - eco This tells the server "don't load my plugin unless eco is installed." Critical step - skip it and your plugin crashes. From there, you're ready to import eco's classes and start building. The project includes Javadoc for recent versions, plus there's an active Discord community if you get stuck. Actual development involves learning eco's fluent APIs (commands, configs, data storage), but the documentation is solid. Server owners: you'll also want to grab eco itself from GitHub releases or Polymart, then drop the.jar file into your plugins folder just like any other plugin. Where Eco Fits in Your Server Eco handles the systems that need to be complex and synchronized across your server - inventories, economies, permissions, custom items. Simpler, one-off utilities don't need a framework like this. If you just need to manage a whitelist, something like the Minecraft Whitelist Creator is overkill when you could use a lightweight plugin or server property instead. Grass Block JE7 in Minecraft But when you're building an economy system where custom items have prices, crafting requires those items, and transactions log to a database, you want eco's infrastructure. Honestly, same goes for skill systems, custom enchantments, or anything that touches multiple game systems. Eco also pairs well with other minecraft.how resources. For instance, if you're planning complex server geography (portals, nether travel, spawn locations), tools like the Nether Portal Calculator help with logistics, while eco-based plugins handle the interactive systems on top. Gotchas and Rough Edges Eco is solid, but there are things that trip up new users. First: eco requires Java 17+. If you're running an ancient server with Java 8 or 11, you're out of luck. Update your Java version first. Second: the plugin absolutely must be installed server-side. It's not optional. Plugins that depend on eco won't load without it, and you'll see errors that aren't immediately obvious about what's missing. Third: configuration. Eco handles config parsing, but you still need to define what keys your plugin expects. Miss a key and the config is malformed, and your plugin might behave unexpectedly. Actually, that's just good practice with any plugin system - but it's worth stating clearly. Fourth: the learning curve for developers. Eco is powerful. That means it has a lot of surface area. Reading the Javadoc and understanding fluent APIs takes time. If you're building your first plugin, eco might feel overwhelming compared to a minimal framework. That said, learning it up-front saves huge amounts of time later. Alternatives Worth Knowing About Eco isn't the only plugin framework out there, though it's one of the most full. Fuzzy and ItemsAdder: Lighter weight, more focused on custom items specifically. If you just need custom items and enchantments without a full framework, these are simpler starting points. Paper API directly: Some developers skip frameworks entirely and build on Paper's native APIs. This gives you full control but means writing more boilerplate. Most complex plugins outgrow this pretty quickly. Eco isn't the cheapest option in terms of complexity, but it's the most complete. If you need multiple systems working together, it's hard to beat. The Real Value Eco's real strength is consistency. Every eco-based plugin has access to the same command API, config system, data storage, and GUI tools. This means better stability, faster development cycles, and more features per plugin. For server owners, this translates to plugins that work well together and rarely crash due to incompatible data formats or weird version mismatches. For developers, it's the difference between shipping a plugin in three weeks or three months. Is eco for everyone? No. Simple plugins don't need it, and learning the framework has a cost. But if you're building something that touches multiple game systems - economies, progression, custom items, crafting - eco does the heavy lifting so you don't have to.Auxilor/eco - MIT, ★211 Ready to try eco? 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 Auxilor/eco on GitHub ↗ --- ### Minecraft Slime Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-slime-farming-guide Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice Slimes spawn in specific "Slime Chunks" below Y-level 40 and in swamp biomes at any height. They drop slimeballs when killed, which you'll need for sticky pistons, slime blocks, and magma cream. The best approach combines both methods: chunk-based farms for efficiency and swamp farms for convenience. Where Slimes Spawn Here's the thing about slimes: they're weird. They don't spawn like regular mobs in caves or on random grass blocks. Instead, there are two completely different spawn mechanics depending on where you're looking. Swamp biomes are the straightforward option. Slimes will spawn whenever it gets dark enough, just like any other hostile mob. The catch is they only spawn on the swamp floor itself or in water-logged blocks, which actually limits where they can appear. If you find a decent swamp with a good floor space, you've got a simple farm location ready to go. Slime Chunks are the other method, and this is where things get technical. Your world seed determines which 16x16 chunks are "Slime Chunks," and slimes will spawn there below Y-level 40 regardless of biome. They'll spawn even in places where other mobs can't, which makes these chunks incredibly valuable for farming. The downside? You need to actually find one first, either by checking online seed calculators or testing chunks yourself (honestly, testing is tedious). Y-level 40 is critical here, and I mean that literally. Build your farm above Y-level 40 and you'll get zero slimes. I've watched people spend hours optimizing a farm only to realize they missed this detail. Below Y-40 is the rule, no exceptions. You can use our Minecraft Block Search tool to verify slime blocks and check coordinate locations if you're planning your farm layout. Building Your First Farm Start with a swamp farm if you're new to slime farming. Find a swamp biome with decent floor space or water bodies. Dark swamps work even better because the ambient darkness helps slime spawning. The basic setup is simple: create an enclosed dark platform 2-3 blocks high where slimes will spawn, then use water channels to funnel them toward a killing zone. Most people use a combination of fall damage and suffocation to finish the slimes off. Some farms use simple lava, though that destroys drops occasionally, which is frustrating. The beauty of swamp farms is you're not locked to a specific chunk. You just need a swamp nearby, making them much more accessible for casual players. Anyone can build one in an evening and have slimeballs within a few hours of active farming. Slime Chunk farms are a different beast entirely. These require serious space and planning because slimes spawn randomly throughout the chunk. The most efficient designs use 128x128 block platforms (the actual Slime Chunk is only 16x16, but extra space increases spawn rates), with multiple stacked floors to multiply your spawning surface area. Each platform funnels slimes downward to a central kill chamber, usually using water channels and a grinder at the bottom. If you're building at Y-0 all the way up to Y-40, you're looking at a massive project, but the output is insane. Some chunk farms can produce stacks of slimeballs in minutes. Neither method is "better" - swamp farms are fast to build, chunk farms are powerful once complete. Understanding Slime Drops and Uses Slimeballs are the whole point. Sticky pistons need slimeballs to craft, and sticky pistons are essential for any redstone-heavy builds. Honestly, piston doors, flying machines, component sorters - if you're building anything that moves, you probably need sticky pistons. Slime blocks themselves are another critical use; they bounce you when you land on them and have unique redstone properties that let them push entities. Some builds rely on slime blocks heavily, while others barely use them. Magma cream uses slimeballs mixed with blaze powder, but magma cream itself isn't that common in typical gameplay. The slimeballs are where the real value sits. You'll burn through them faster than you'd expect once you start building anything ambitious. Slimes drop 0-2 slimeballs per kill, and tiny slimes drop fewer than large ones. This is why farm design matters so much. To get a full stack of slimeballs, you need a lot of kills, which means your farm's efficiency directly affects your farming time. Common Farming Mistakes The Y-level mistake happens constantly. I can't stress this enough: slimes only spawn in Slime Chunks below Y-level 40. Building a farm at Y-60 just because it's more convenient won't work. I've seen elaborate farms that produce absolutely nothing because someone misunderstood this requirement. Check your Y-coordinate before you invest hours of work. Lighting is another easy mistake. Both swamp and chunk farms need to be completely dark. A single torch in the spawn area will significantly reduce slime spawning. Make sure your farm is light-level 7 or lower in the spawning areas. Space limitations kill farms too. Slimes spawn in clusters and need room to exist. If your farm is too cramped or has walls blocking spawn areas, you're sabotaging your own output. This is why the massive 128x128 platforms work so well - they give slimes actual space to materialize and move around. Also, don't create farm chambers that are too tall or too small. A 3-block-tall chamber is different from a 2-block-tall one in terms of spawn rates. Most efficient farms keep spawn areas at 2 blocks high - just enough space for slimes to exist but not so much that they're wasted space. Optimizing Your Farm Once you've got a working farm, optimization is the fun part. Water channel design matters more than you'd think. Slimes wander randomly without clear direction, so poor water flow means some slimes reach your kill chamber and others get stuck in corners. Test your channels and adjust them to ensure smooth flow toward your grinder. Some people use multiple smaller channels instead of one big one - it's about what works for your specific layout. Staggering your spawn platforms at different Y-levels increases total slimes in the farm at once, which boosts output significantly. If you've time and resources, multiple layers can double or triple your yield. Kill chamber design matters too. Suffocation farms (slimes trapped in 1-block spaces) are efficient but slow. Fall damage farms are faster but require drop collection setup. Some people use drowning, some use magma blocks. The "best" method depends on what you're optimizing for - speed, simplicity, or drop safety. If you're running a multiplayer server and planning a community farm, you could use our Minecraft MOTD Creator to showcase your server's features and farming projects to potential players. Planning your farm takes longer than building it. Spend time drawing it out, testing water flow in creative mode, and thinking through your kill mechanism before you commit to hours of mining and building. Trust me on this one - bad planning means redoing work later. Getting Started Right Now Pick one method and commit to it. If you want results this week, build a swamp farm. They're genuinely easy and you'll have slimeballs within a few hours. If you want a long-term solution and have already found a good Slime Chunk, start planning your chunk farm. Either way, remember Y-level 40, keep it dark, and give slimes room to spawn. Once you've got steady slimeball production, you'll wonder how you ever built redstone contraptions without them. --- ### Minecraft Cat Guide: Spawning, Taming and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-cats-spawning-farming Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice Cats spawn naturally in villages and jungles in Minecraft 26.1.2, and they're among the easiest mobs to tame with just raw fish or salmon. Once tamed, they can't be farmed like other mobs for loot, but you can breed them indefinitely with fish to build a massive cat collection. Where Cats Spawn in Minecraft Villages are your best bet for finding cats. They'll wander around the village during the day, sometimes sitting on grass like they belong there (honestly, maybe they do). Here's the thing, jungle biomes are the other reliable spawn location, where you'll spot them perched on leaves or just hanging out in the trees. Cats aren't rare. But they're not super common either, so if you want one for your base, scouting a nearby village beats wandering aimlessly. One thing to remember: they only spawn naturally in the Overworld. If you're in the Nether or End, you're not finding any cats hanging around. Taming Cats with Fish This part's dead simple. Find a wild cat, grab some raw fish or raw salmon from anywhere (ocean biomes, rivers, fishing, or loot chests), and right-click the cat while holding the fish. The cat will eat it, and if the taming succeeds, you'll see a red collar appear and hearts floating around it. Congrats, you've got yourself a cat. But here's the annoying bit: not every fish works on the first try. I've had cats tank two or three fish before deciding I was worth the effort. It's pure RNG, so just keep clicking if it doesn't work right away. And make absolutely sure you're using raw fish or salmon, not cooked versions. Cooked fish won't tame anything. (I learned that the hard way once, so I'm saving you the frustration.) Once tamed, your cat will follow you around, attack phantom mobs that come near you, and generally act like it owns your base. What Cats Drop Let's be honest: cats don't drop much. When a tamed or wild cat dies, you get 1-3 experience points and maybe a string. That's literally it. No special items, no rare loot, nothing worth collecting. So if you're thinking about farming cats for profit, stop right now. But that's actually fine, because you're not supposed to farm cats anyway. The real point of having cats is keeping them alive and breeding them. If you're looking for specific mob drops or farming mechanics, check out our Minecraft Block Search tool to find better farming opportunities for what you actually need. Breeding Cats for Infinite Kittens Once you've got one tamed cat (or two, if you want to breed them), breeding is straightforward. Give each tamed cat a raw fish or raw salmon, wait a few seconds, and they'll produce a kitten. The kitten takes on the colors and patterns of its parents, which is handy if you're collecting all ten cat variants. Kittens take roughly 20 minutes of in-game time to grow into adults, so if you're trying to build a massive cat collection fast, patience is mandatory. You can't speed it up with growth crystals or anything fancy. Just wait. One practical thing: cats bred in your base stay loyal to you, so they won't wander off or despawn like wild mobs might. Build a nice enclosure with some furniture, and you've got a permanent cat sanctuary. And if you want variety in your army, breed cats with different colors to get a rainbow of felines following you around. Why Cats Matter Here's where tamed cats become genuinely useful. They scare away phantoms and creepers. Not in combat, exactly, but their mere presence makes those mobs less likely to stick around. So if you've built a base and want fewer mobs spawning nearby, cats are a legitimate defense tool. Phantoms especially are annoying, and a few cats patrolling your base will keep them away. Beyond utility, cats are just solid pets. There's something satisfying about having a herd of cats following you everywhere. You can dye their collars different colors by holding dye in your hand and right-clicking them, which is pure cosmetics but honestly, who doesn't want an army of purple cats? If you want to show off your cat collection, take some screenshots with better lighting and aesthetics. Check out our Minecraft Skins page to match your character to your cat's vibe. Common Mistakes People Make Don't expect all cats to behave the same way. Wild cats are skittish, hostile to spiders, and won't help you in actual combat. Tamed cats, on the other hand, are loyal, sometimes annoyingly so (they'll block doorways constantly). Understand the difference before you start planning your defense strategy. Don't try to farm cats for experience or drops. It's a complete waste of time. The value of cats is in keeping them alive, breeding them, and using them as visual decoration plus mob deterrents. If you're after actual farming returns, focus on other mobs or mechanics. Cats are for aesthetics and loyalty, not for grinding resources. Also, don't leave your cats unattended in unexplored terrain. They'll follow you around, which is great, but if you accidentally lead them into lava or off a cliff, they're gone. Keep them close or build them a safe space to hang out while you adventure. Building Your Cat Army If you're genuinely interested in maintaining a large cat collection, set up a proper area. Build a pen or room with space for them to roam, throw down some carpets or furniture so it feels less like a prison, and always keep extra raw fish in a nearby chest for breeding. Cats are low-maintenance, but they still need to be fed if you want more kittens. The best part about cats is there's no upper limit. Keep breeding, keep collecting color variants, and eventually you'll have an absurdly large army of them following you around. It's ridiculous and pointless, but in Minecraft, that's kind of the whole appeal. --- ### Jagged Peaks Biome Guide: Loot, Mobs and the Best Builds URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/jagged-peaks-biome-guide Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice Jagged Peaks is hands-down one of the most visually dramatic biomes in Minecraft. If you've seen screenshots with these towering rocky spires stabbing into the clouds, that's the place. It's hostile, beautiful, and honestly a bit intimidating when you're standing at the bottom looking up. Here's everything you need to know about surviving it, finding loot, and building something worth bragging about. What Makes Jagged Peaks Different You'll find this biome in snowy mountain regions, and it's basically Minecraft's version of a dramatic alpine landscape. The terrain is chaotic. Mountains don't just rise gradually here - they're jagged, fractured, almost alien looking. Elevation swings wildly, with sheer cliffs and deep valleys cutting through the landscape. Snow covers everything, and the ambient lighting has this harsh, exposed quality that makes you feel small. What sets Jagged Peaks apart from regular mountains is the extreme verticality and the unforgiving terrain. You'll fall off things. A lot. But that danger is also what makes it interesting to build in. Mobs You'll Encounter Jagged Peaks aren't overrun with unique mobs, but you'll see the standard hostile crowd: zombies, skeletons, creepers doing their usual thing. The snow biome twist means you might spot striders below if there's lava nearby (which there often is in the cracks), and goats spawn all over - they're basically the signature animal of this terrain. Goats are worth mentioning because they're genuinely annoying if you're trying to farm mobs or explore without distraction. They'll ram you. They'll knock you off ledges. I've died more times from goats than I'd like to admit while trying to scope out building locations on different servers. The real danger comes from fall damage, not mobs. A terrain is brutal. Pack plenty of blocks for climbing and maybe grab some hay bales for safe descents if you're worried about eating it mid-exploration. Loot and Resources Worth Finding Jagged Peaks itself doesn't spawn special loot chests - you'll need to dig into the mountain or venture into caves for that. But here's where it gets interesting: the exposed stone and deepslate layers mean you can see mining opportunities from the surface. Bronze ore, copper, iron, even emeralds from exposed mineral veins. Sometimes you can just walk around and spot exactly where to dig. If you dig down far enough into a Jagged Peaks mountain, you'll hit cave systems that are often massive. Underground lakes, lush caves, dripstone formations. The biome's elevation means you're already high up, so a short dig down can lead to some seriously deep cave networks. Here's the thing, it's a time-saving setup compared to other biomes. For genuine loot, you'll want to find mountain mansions or raids if you can. Those rewards matter way more than anything Jagged Peaks generates on its own. But the resource accessibility is excellent - wood from scattered trees, stone everywhere, and mining is straightforward because you can see the good stuff. Building Ideas That Work Here This is where Jagged Peaks shines. The terrain is basically a canvas for ambitious builds. Basalt columns with many variations in Minecraft Mountain fortresses are the obvious choice. Carved into the peaks themselves, with minimal added blocks. Use the natural stone and add wooden details. Dark oak or spruce looks right. Position a fortress so one side overlooks a valley - that view advantage is real both strategically and aesthetically. I've seen some incredible watchtower setups that work perfectly with these cliffs. Hanging bridges between peaks are a classic for a reason. Chains, spruce wood, maybe some soul lanterns for mood. Takes work but it's worth it. Alpine villages are another solid direction. Smaller buildings scattered across multiple peaks, connected by pathways and bridges. If you've got the patience for terraforming, you can carve out flatter areas and build something that feels like actual mountain settlement architecture. My personal suggestion? Build a base that uses the existing caves. Find a mountain with good cave systems underneath, add a structure on top for visibility, and connect them with a shaft. You get the dramatic peak location and functional cave space without fighting the terrain for hours. One thing to avoid: trying to terraform these mountains into flat building space. The payoff rarely justifies the effort. Work with the chaos instead of against it. Navigation and Exploration Tips Bring fall prevention supplies. Seriously. Water buckets, hay bales, ender pearls if you've them. The terrain looks manageable from a distance and then you're suddenly plummeting. Marking paths helps enormously. Jagged Peaks can look similar in every direction, and it's easy to get turned around. Wool blocks, lanterns, or fences as waypoints save you from wandering in circles. Dark oak makes a good contrast against the snow. Caves spawn frequently, and they're often excellent. Don't shy away from diving in if you see an opening. Just make sure you've got supplies first and maybe set a spawn point nearby. If you're hosting a server or working on a realm and want your players to find this biome naturally, make sure you're traveling through the right elevation range when exploring. Jagged Peaks can be narrow strips between other biome types, so missing them is easy if you're moving fast. Seasonal Building and Long-Term Bases If you're planning anything permanent here, think about visibility and access. Jagged Peaks look incredible in winter if you're playing with seasons or just prefer the snow aesthetic (I do). But come summer - actual summer in real life while you're playing - the look doesn't change, and you might feel like you want more visual variety. It doesn't matter functionally, but it affects how much you actually want to hang out there. Consider where your base connects to the rest of your world. Building miles into a mountain peak is cool until you need to haul resources back regularly. Set up a proper route or teleport system early. Trust me on this one. If you need mining or farming infrastructure, position it hidden from your main build. Put the quarry on a far peak, the farm in a cleared valley. Keep the dramatic stuff dramatic. Why This Biome Matters Jagged Peaks rewards creative building like few other biomes do. The landscape does half the work for you. You just need to understand that you're building WITH the terrain, not against it. Respect the chaos and you'll get something worth coming back to. And if you're looking to set up a server where you want your community exploring these mountains, don't forget you can point your players to resources. Set up a free Minecraft DNS tool so they can reach your server easily, and if you want to make the experience more personal, create some custom player skins with the Minecraft skin creator to let them customize their look for your peaks adventures. The version you're running (26.1.2 or later) supports all of this fully. Go build something good up there. --- ### Minecraft PvP Leaderboards: Your 2026 Ranking Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-leaderboard-pvp-guide Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice Minecraft PvP leaderboards rank players based on their combat wins, kills, and server participation. They're the backbone of competitive Minecraft, showing who dominates in everything from 1v1 duels to large-scale faction wars. Want to climb the ranks? You'll need skills, strategy, and the right server community. What Are Minecraft PvP Leaderboards? A PvP leaderboard is essentially a scoreboard where players are ranked against each other based on performance metrics. Most competitive servers track kills, wins, kill-to-death ratios, and maybe elo ratings (borrowed from chess). The better you perform, the higher you climb. Not all leaderboards work the same way. Some servers use pure kill counts, which favors grinders who play 12 hours a day. Others use win rates or elo, which rewards actual skill. A few use faction-based systems where group performance matters more than individual stats. It's why checking a server's specific ranking rules before joining is crucial - the leaderboard that makes you feel like a god might be meaningless on another server. European servers tend to prefer more balanced systems. Servers like Mineplex and big faction communities here actually penalize kill farming, so you can't just camp spawn and rack up easy points. How PvP Rankings Are Calculated Most modern servers use an elo-based system or variants of it. You start at a baseline (say, 1200 elo). When you win, you gain points. When you lose, you lose points. The amount you gain or lose depends on your opponent's rating and the match format. Beat someone ranked way above you? Huge elo boost. Beat someone below your rank? Small gain. This system stops high-ranked players from stat-padding against new players - it's mathematically pointless. Some servers throw in decay mechanics, meaning if you haven't played in a week or month, your rank slowly drops. This keeps leaderboards honest and reflects who's actually active right now, not who grinded back in 2024. Another common method is the "seasonal reset." Leaderboards wipe every month, quarter, or season, so everyone starts fresh. It prevents established players from permanently sitting at the top and gives newer players a genuine shot at ranking up. The competitive Minecraft scene actually borrowed this from esports like Valorant and CS2. The Servers You Should Know About Not every server has a functional leaderboard. Hypixel still dominates PvP (they've got multiple leaderboards across different game modes). CubeCraft runs a solid ranking system for duels and team fights. If you're in Europe, servers hosted on EU nodes with lower ping make a massive difference - and that's where a properly configured server setup matters. If you're running your own server and want to set up a legitimate competitive ranking system, you'll want to invest time in the Server Properties Generator to get the baseline config right, then layer on your leaderboard plugin afterward. Faction servers like Archon and Apex have their own leaderboards too, but they rank factions as groups, not just individual players. Real talk, your personal stats matter less if your faction stinks. The catch? Most big servers require a certain playtime or rank before you even appear on the public leaderboard. They do this to hide smurfs (experienced players on alt accounts) and keep the rankings meaningful. Skills That Get You to the Top Mechanical skill comes first - you need clean aim, good click speed, and the ability to strafe (move side-to-side while fighting). If you're lagging or your mouse sensitivity is all over the place, no strategy will save you. But mechanics alone won't cut it at higher ranks. You need game sense. That means reading your opponent, predicting their moves, knowing when to fight and when to run, and managing your resources (health, armor, weapons). Ever noticed how some players just feel impossible to catch? They're not necessarily faster - they're playing smarter. Server knowledge matters too. If you're playing on a specific server, learning the PvP arena layout, chokepoints, and item spawns gives you a real edge. Seasoned players will rush items spawning in certain spots. They know exactly where to position themselves. Finally, consistency beats raw talent. Playing two hours a day, five days a week, will climb you higher than someone who plays 10 hours straight once a month. Your muscle memory needs constant refresh, and the leaderboard algorithms reward steady participation. Building Your Competitive Setup If you're serious about climbing, your gear matters. A gaming mouse with adjustable DPI and solid tracking is worth the investment - something with at least 400 DPI sensitivity support. Your internet connection should be stable (wired Ethernet beats WiFi every time). 60+ FPS is the bare minimum; 120+ is better. Some EU-based ISPs still have packet loss issues to major Minecraft hosts, so running a ping test before committing to a server saves frustration. Your server choice influences everything. A poorly configured server with lag spikes will destroy your ranking gains no matter how good you're. When evaluating a server, check if they use quality hosting in your region and whether they've set up proper Free Minecraft DNS to route players efficiently. Good infrastructure sounds boring, but it's the difference between clean fights and rubber-banding nightmares. Game settings matter too. Turn off animations, max out your render distance (for spotting enemies), and lower particle effects so you can see clearly. Lower gamma (brightness) settings also help you spot dark-armored players. Basically, optimize for vision and responsiveness, not for looks. The Leaderboard Grind Is Real Climbing a competitive leaderboard takes time, especially if you're starting from scratch. The gap between rank 1000 and rank 100 is skill-wise enormous. That gap between rank 100 and rank 10 is even bigger. And the top 5? Those are players who've invested hundreds of hours. This isn't meant to discourage you. Most players never push past rank 200 because they stop practicing. If you actually grind and focus on improvement (not just wins), you'll pass them. Watch your replays. Learn from losses. Study top players' positioning and decision-making. The mentality shift from "I want to win" to "I want to improve" is what separates climbers from stagnant players. One more thing - toxicity kills ranking motivation. Competitive Minecraft communities can get nasty. Mute all-chat if needed, don't engage with trash talk, and find a solid crew of players to practice with. The best rank climbs happen when you're having fun, not when you're tilted and making terrible plays because you're upset. --- ### Testing Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8: New Features to Try URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-snapshot-8-testing Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8 is the latest testing ground for features heading into the next major update. After Snapshot 7 introduced sulfur cubes and the sulfur caves biome, Snapshot 8 continues the pattern of letting players test new additions before they're finalized. But this is how Mojang develops - release experimental versions weekly, gather player feedback, refine the features, then roll everything out officially. Understanding Snapshots and Why They Exist Snapshots aren't finished products. They're unstable, experimental releases that give players first access to upcoming features in exchange for tolerating bugs, crashes, and incomplete systems. Mojang releases them roughly every week during active development cycles. That means there's almost always something new to test. The Bedrock Edition calls these "Minecraft Previews" instead, but they serve identical purposes. Whether you play Java or Bedrock, snapshots let you see what's coming before the official drop. It's a development transparency that most games don't offer their communities. Think of snapshots as collaborative game design. Developers propose ideas, players break them immediately, feedback gets analyzed, and the next snapshot includes adjustments. A new block might feel too common in terrain generation - players report it, next week's snapshot has tweaked the frequency. It works because the cycle runs fast. What Snapshot 7 Brought (and Where Snapshot 8 Builds From) Snapshot 7, released May 12, wasn't a massive overhaul, but it introduced some solid additions worth understanding as context for where Snapshot 8 heads next. The Sulfur Caves biome is the headline feature. Look, these underground caverns replace some regular caves in the world and introduce sulfur as a crafting material. We're talking a new terrain variant, new ore type, and corresponding blocks that integrate into existing crafting chains. This isn't just "here's a new visual" - it's a system addition that changes how you mine and what you can build. Mojang also added sulfur cubes as a decorative and functional block. They interact with certain redstone mechanics in ways that aren't immediately obvious (which is why testing matters - players discover these interactions before a full release). Paula Ruiz (who composes under the name fingerspit) contributed a new music track called "Chaos Cubed" for the game. New ambient tracks might seem minor, but they shift how the game feels underground. Music matters more than casual players realize. The Friends List feature is pure quality-of-life. Instead of fumbling through player lists or trying to remember which server has which friends, you get a dedicated interface to manage your multiplayer connections. Not flashy, but it addresses something that genuinely annoyed the community. Installing Snapshot 8: The Quick Version Getting into Snapshot 8 takes maybe two minutes if you've done it before. Launch the Minecraft Launcher on your computer. Click the installation dropdown menu to the left of the green "Play" button. You'll see a list of available versions. Snapshots appear under a separate section, usually labeled something like "Latest Snapshot" or grouped chronologically. Select 26.2-snapshot-8, click install, and wait for it to download. Once installed, the launcher lets you select which version to play. Choose the snapshot, hit play, and you're loading into experimental Minecraft. Here's the catch: snapshots can be unstable. Crashes happen. Chunks might render weirdly. Mods don't work yet (modders need time to update for new snapshot versions). If you're heavily modded, expect to wait weeks after a snapshot releases before returning to your setup. Smart Testing: Not Risking Your Main World The cardinal rule of snapshot testing is simple - never test new features in a world you care about. Create a new world specifically for snapshots, or better yet, make a backup copy of an existing world to experiment with. It sounds paranoid until you hit a corruption bug that makes a region unplayable. Then it sounds like basic common sense. You get to explore freely, break things intentionally, and nuke the world guilt-free if it becomes unstable. That's the whole idea. Creative mode is useful too. Instead of grinding for resources, you can rapidly test new blocks and systems. The goal isn't to play survival - it's to find what breaks and what feels wrong. Setting Up Multiplayer Testing Single-player testing tells you what works locally. Multiplayer testing exposes synchronization issues, server stability problems, and how new features interact when multiple people use them simultaneously. If you're serious about contributing feedback, multiplayer testing catches different bugs than solo play. Running a local snapshot server or joining a testing realm gives you this perspective. When you're coordinating with other players to stress-test features, a few tools become invaluable instead of convenient. The Nether Portal Calculator matters in snapshots too. If you're testing new biomes or coordinating server locations across the Nether, you don't want wasting testing time calculating portal coordinates by hand. Automate the boring parts, spend your hours on actual feature exploration. The Minecraft Whitelist Creator saves frustration when managing a snapshot server. Snapshots attract testers and bug hunters - you might want a small group of reliable players. Generating whitelist files manually is tedious. This tool handles UUID lookups and file generation so you're not wrestling with JSON syntax when you should be testing features. What Kind of Feedback Matters Playing in a snapshot isn't just casual exploration. Mojang has specific things they want feedback on, and understanding those priorities means your testing contributes meaningfully. New blocks and biomes need information about generation. Does the new sulfur cave appear too frequently, or are you never finding it? Do sulfur cubes look right next to existing blocks? Do they fit the aesthetic? These observations shape what makes it into the full release. Balance feedback is crucial. A new ore that's too easy to find breaks progression systems. A new block that's too powerful for its rarity changes survival difficulty entirely. Players are creative about breaking systems - you'll stumble onto problems the developers didn't anticipate during internal testing. Then there are bugs. Texture glitches, AI pathfinding problems, collision detection edge cases, crashes in specific scenarios. The snapshot phase exists partly to catch these issues before they hit the full release and corrupt someone's 500-hour world. And actually reporting findings is where many testers drop off. You don't need a formal write-up (though detailed reports help more). Use the feedback button in the launcher, describe what happened, include coordinates if location-specific. Mojang monitors these. They actively incorporate snapshot feedback into development. The Honest Reality of Snapshot Testing Some snapshots are rock solid. Others are disaster zones. It depends on which systems Mojang changed and how thoroughly they tested before the public release. Snapshot 8 might be stable enough for extended play, or you might hit a crash every ten minutes. Snapshots aren't for casual players expecting a finished game. They're for people willing to tolerate instability in exchange for early access and the satisfaction of shaping development. Want stability and complete features? Wait for the official release. But if you're curious, want to catch bugs before they become mainstream problems, or just like being on the bleeding edge - snapshots are where it happens. Snapshot 8 represents where Minecraft development is right now. The features you test this week will be polished versions in the full release months from now. --- ### Minecraft at TwitchCon: Your Complete Event Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-twitchcon-guide-1 Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice TwitchCon is where the streaming community comes together, and Minecraft's presence there's massive. If you're thinking about attending or just want to know what's happening, here's what you need to know about Minecraft at TwitchCon and how to get involved. What's Happening at TwitchCon for Minecraft? TwitchCon brings together streamers, creators, and fans from across the platform, and Minecraft usually gets a ton of stage time. You'll find dedicated panels where content creators talk about their biggest projects, ongoing challenges they're tackling, and where the community's heading next. Mojang often shows up too, sharing what's in development and taking questions from the live audience. Beyond panels, there are typically meetup zones where you can hang out with streamers you follow. Ever wanted to chat with someone whose stream you watch regularly? TwitchCon makes that actually possible. The energy around Minecraft there is electric because the game draws such a diverse crowd - builders, PvP players, modders, speedrunners, vanilla survival enthusiasts, and everyone in between. Arena tournaments and competitive events often happen too. These are high-stakes matches where top players compete, and watching them live hits different than catching a VOD later. Live Demonstrations and Exclusive Reveals One of the best reasons to tune in is seeing things before they go live. Snapshot announcements, upcoming features, maybe even surprise content drops. The developers sometimes show experimental builds or discuss balance changes they're considering. Hearing the reasoning directly from the people building the game gives you perspective you won't get from patch notes alone. Building demonstrations are huge too. Talented builders showcase intricate projects on massive screens, explaining their techniques and inspiration. If you're into building, watching someone break down how they pulled off a complex build in real-time is genuinely educational. Watching and Participating from Home Can't make it in person? Most TwitchCon events are streamed live on Twitch, so you can watch from anywhere. The main channels broadcast panels, tournaments, and special announcements. Chat participation is real - streamers read comments, answer questions, and interact with viewers. Some events include community challenges or contests you can join remotely. Building competitions, speedrun races, or creative challenges sometimes have remote entry options. Check the official TwitchCon Minecraft schedule closer to the event dates to see what's available. If you're managing a server or running your own community, tools like the Minecraft Server Status Checker help you keep things running smoothly while you're focused on the event. And if you want to spice up your server's presence or promotional materials, the Minecraft Text Generator is solid for creating branded content. The Creator Meetup Scene This is where a lot of unexpected collabs get planned. You've got YouTubers meeting Twitch streamers, modders connecting with server administrators, and content creators from different regions finding each other. Some of the best collaborations and friendship groups have started at TwitchCon. If you're a creator yourself, it's the perfect place to network and find people doing similar work. Smaller creators often get their moment too. It's not just the mega-streamers with millions of followers. TwitchCon has stages and spaces for up-and-coming creators to show what they're working on and build their audiences. Practical Stuff: What You Need to Know TwitchCon happens in different cities on different schedules. There's usually a North American event and international ones. Check the official Twitch site for exact dates and locations for the year you're interested in. Ticket prices vary depending on whether you want one-day or multi-day passes. If you're attending in person, bring comfortable shoes. Look, you'll be walking between stages, booths, and demo areas all day. The Minecraft section is usually pretty packed, so getting there early for popular panels helps. Most TwitchCon events have a program guide available ahead of time, so you can plan which panels and streams you want to catch. Also, honestly? The merch gets picked over fast. If you want official Minecraft gear from TwitchCon, don't wait until the last day to shop. Why This Matters TwitchCon for Minecraft isn't just about entertainment. It's where community direction gets shaped. The questions people ask, the features they demand, the bugs they report - all of that feeds back into how Minecraft evolves. Plus, watching how different creators approach the game gives you ideas for your own playstyle or projects. The current version, Java Edition 26.1.2, keeps getting updates, and TwitchCon is often when big announcements about the next features drop. You get context about what's coming, why it matters, and sometimes even hands-on time with experimental builds. Whether you're there in person or watching from home, TwitchCon captures what makes Minecraft's community special. It's chaotic, creative, competitive, and genuinely fun to be part of. --- ### Minecraft at TwitchCon: Everything You Need to Know URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-twitchcon-guide Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice TwitchCon is massive, and Minecraft is always a major part of it. Whether you're thinking about attending in person or just watching from home, knowing what's happening in the Minecraft corner can help you make the most of it. Here's what actually matters for Minecraft and TwitchCon. What Exactly Is TwitchCon? First, the basics: TwitchCon is Twitch's annual convention where streamers, content creators, gaming companies, and fans converge for panels, tournaments, meet-and-greets, and basically anything you can imagine when you put tens of thousands of people in one place who all care about live streaming. It's not a hardcore esports tournament like The International. It's not E3. It's closer to imagine a massive fan convention, but for the streamers themselves and the communities they build. You've got cosplayers, gaming booths, merchandise, panel discussions about how to stream better, and just ridiculous amounts of energy. The whole thing feels kind of chaotic in the best way possible. Why Minecraft Dominates TwitchCon Here's something that might surprise you: Minecraft is consistently one of the most-watched games on Twitch. Not just during TwitchCon - all the time. We're talking top three, sometimes number one, depending on what's happening that week. But why does Minecraft dominate like that? It's not like there's one "type" of Minecraft streamer. You've got survival experts who care obsessively about gear optimization. Creative builders making things that look like they took months (because they did). Roleplay communities running full narratives like Dungeons and Dragons but in Minecraft. Speedrunners trying to beat the game in under 15 minutes. Modded server communities with thousands of hours of custom content. Competitive PvP players. Casual streamers just vibing. The genre is absurdly broad. When a game has that much variety and that many different ways to play it, every demographic finds something. Parents tune in to watch creative building. Kids watch speedrunners. Competitive gamers watch PvP. People who just like gaming watch streamers chill on Survival mode. That breadth is why Minecraft dominates streaming, and that's why TwitchCon gives it such prominent space. The Events and Tournaments You'll Want to Watch TwitchCon features several types of Minecraft content. Tournaments are the obvious ones - competitive matches on specific servers with specific rulesets. These aren't casual games. These are skilled players who know damage calculations, combat timing, server mechanics, and exploit optimization. Watching professional-level Minecraft combat is way more intense than it sounds. Recent TwitchCons have featured team-based tournaments, speedrun races, and sometimes surprise announcements about new Minecraft features or versions. The competitive scene has actually grown a lot, and the players are legitimately impressive. Beyond tournaments, you get panels covering topics like "Growing Your Minecraft Channel," "Building Techniques and Inspiration," and "Running a Minecraft Community Server." Some panels are genuinely useful if you're interested in that content. Others lean more toward sponsorship and less toward practical advice. You kind of have to pick and choose. And then there's the booth experience. Meeting Creators and Getting Involved Here's the part that actually excites most people: you can meet streamers in person. For some people that's a huge deal. They've watched a specific creator for years, and TwitchCon is a chance to meet them, get a photo, maybe have an actual conversation. For others it's a networking opportunity. For some it's just interesting to see what creators look like outside of their stream setup. The Minecraft creator community is pretty approachable, honestly. Most Minecraft streamers are genuinely glad to meet people who watch them. The vibe tends to be pretty chill. A official Minecraft booth usually has setups where you can actually play, sometimes featuring new snapshots or features you can test out. And if you're not there to meet specific people, you'll connect with other community members who share your passion for the game. If You're Planning to Attend In Person Alright, practical stuff time. Tickets sell out fast. Registration usually opens months in advance, and TwitchCon hits capacity pretty quickly. If you're thinking about going, start paying attention to the official announcement way early. Figure out what you actually want to do. Are you coming to see specific streamers? To watch tournaments? To just soak in the atmosphere? Your plan changes how you spend your time, and TwitchCon is big enough that you'll miss things no matter what. If you're interested in meeting specific creators, check their social media before the event. A lot of streamers post their TwitchCon schedule - what times they'll be at booths, what events they're participating in, etc. Bring the basics: comfortable shoes (seriously), a phone with a full battery, water, and sunscreen if needed. The event is packed and you'll be on your feet a lot. And here's something worth knowing if you're testing servers at TwitchCon or thinking about running your own afterwards: the Minecraft Server Status Checker helps you understand what healthy servers look like, which is useful for testing anything multiplayer. If you get inspired to actually build your own server, the Server Properties Generator makes setup way easier. Watching From Home Is Also Valid Not everyone wants to or can attend in person. The good news: TwitchCon is almost entirely streamed. Tournaments, major events, panels - they're all broadcast. Honestly, watching from home has advantages. You're not dealing with crowds. You can pause and rewind. Look, anyone can watch multiple streams at once if you want. Anyone can skip boring panels and jump to the exciting stuff. And you're saving money on tickets, travel, and the inevitable overpriced convention food. The downside is you miss the in-person energy and the chance to actually meet people. But for a lot of folks, that trade-off is fine. You can hop between different streams, follow multiple creators, and consume the event your way. Before the Convention Starts TwitchCon isn't required to enjoy Minecraft. Plenty of people love Minecraft and never watch TwitchCon, never follow any streamers, just play and build and do their thing. That's completely valid. But if you're even mildly curious about what the streaming side of Minecraft looks like, what the community is doing, or who the creators are that influence the game's culture, TwitchCon is worth checking out. Even if you just tune in for an hour or two from home. It's a weird snapshot of what Minecraft streaming looks like at a given moment, and honestly, it's usually entertaining. --- ### Minecraft at TwitchCon EU 2026: What You Need to Know URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-twitchcon-eu-2026 Published: 2026-05-21 Author: ice TwitchCon EU is coming, and Minecraft will be there in a big way. Whether you're a streamer, a player, or just someone who enjoys watching others build ridiculous things, this is worth paying attention to. The gaming community's biggest gathering for creators is bringing updates, announcements, and a chance to connect with other Minecraft fans in person. What's TwitchCon, Actually? TwitchCon is Twitch's annual event where streamers, creators, and fans gather to celebrate gaming and streaming culture. It's part convention, part celebration, part networking hub. You'll find panels from major creators, booths from game companies, tournaments, and a general vibe of controlled chaos. Pretty much if you're into gaming or content creation, it's on the calendar. The EU edition tends to attract European creators and an international crowd, making it the perfect place for Minecraft's massive European audience to connect. And yeah, the game's presence there isn't random. Minecraft dominates Twitch viewership numbers consistently. Why Minecraft Matters at TwitchCon Minecraft isn't just another game on Twitch. It's one of the platform's most-watched titles, with thousands of streamers building everything from survival bases to full-scale architectural projects. The game's community is genuinely diverse: competitive players, creative builders, survival enthusiasts, technical modders, and casual players all coexist happily. At TwitchCon, Minecraft's presence means you'll see some of the biggest builders and creators talking about their projects, discussing new features, and sometimes making announcements about what's coming next. It's also where the community gets to see what Mojang has been cooking up. What's New in Minecraft Right Now If you haven't been keeping up, the game's been moving fast. The latest stable release is version 26.1.2, and there's always a snapshot in testing giving players a peek at what's coming. Copper Cape Quest instructions in Minecraft Currently, you can test out new features in the 26.2 Snapshot. The big additions here are fascinating: new music tracks from Paula Ruiz (fingerspit) for something called Chaos Cubed, a revamped Friends List for Java edition, and most intriguingly, the sulfur cube block and sulfur caves biome. These snapshots are how Mojang tests features before they go live, and honestly, they're worth trying if you want to see what's on the horizon. The snapshot system itself is pretty cool (and something TwitchCon creators often demo). Players can load these early versions directly from the Minecraft Launcher, giving them a firsthand look at new content months before official release. Ever tried building with entirely new block types? That's what snapshot testing feels like. Console Games Getting Real Upgrades While PC gets updates constantly, consoles sometimes feel left behind. But that's changing. PlayStation 5 finally got a native version of Minecraft in testing, and it's a big deal. The PS4 version was holding things back with older hardware compatibility, but a proper PS5 build means actual 4K 60fps potential on Sony's current hardware, matching what Xbox Series consoles have had for a while now. This is exactly the kind of thing that generates excitement at TwitchCon. Look, console players matter too, and seeing Mojang commit to proper next-gen versions? That's worth celebrating. So it means the game's getting better across platforms, not just where the speedrunners and technical players live. What to Expect at the Event So what happens when you show up? Expect to see: Sunny with lolipop in Minecraft Panels with major Minecraft streamers and creators discussing building techniques, server management, and creative challenges Booths where you can try new features, grab merchandise, and talk directly with other players Tournaments and community challenges (building competitions are always chaotic fun) Meetups organized by popular servers and communities Announcements about upcoming updates and features If you're the streaming type, it's also a networking goldmine. The Minecraft creator community at TwitchCon tends to be collaborative rather than purely competitive, which is refreshing. One random note: if you're building a server showcase or skin display, bring that energy. The community loves seeing other players' creative work, and you might spot someone trying out new skins from the Minecraft.How skin collection. It happens. Practical Stuff: If You're Going TwitchCon EU typically happens in summer, so travel is usually reasonable for European players. Check the official dates and location (varies year to year). Tickets usually sell out weeks in advance, especially once creators start announcing they'll be there. If you're a builder or technical player, you might want to download and test the current snapshot before you go. Nothing bonds strangers quite like arguing about the best use for new blocks in the wild. Not sure what blocks are useful? The Minecraft Block Search tool is helpful for narrowing down possibilities, especially if you're planning projects to show off. Why This Matters Beyond Just Having Fun TwitchCon isn't just about hype. It's where the community actually shapes what the game becomes. Mojang listens to feedback at these events. Creators pitch ideas. Players voice what they want to see. And the casual social aspect? That's where friendships form, servers get new members, and communities strengthen. The fact that Minecraft maintains such a strong presence at events like this, nearly two decades in, says something. This game isn't slowing down. It's still evolving, and the people building it still care about the communities playing it. So if you're even remotely interested in Minecraft, the community, or what's coming next for the game, TwitchCon is worth watching (or attending if you can swing it). The updates will hit the news cycle anyway, but the energy and announcements from the event itself? That's something special. --- ### Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8: Everything New and Worth Testing URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-snapshot-8-features Published: 2026-05-20 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8 is live, and if you want to mess with new features before they hit the full release, this is your testing ground. The snapshot series shows off what Mojang's been cooking up in the 26.2 update cycle, including new cave biomes, music tracks, and gameplay tweaks for Java Edition. What Exactly Are Snapshots? Snapshots are basically Minecraft's beta builds. Mojang releases them weekly (most of the time) to let players test upcoming features before they go live in a full release. It's how the community helps find bugs, break systems in weird ways, and give feedback directly to the developers. Think of it as early access for free. In Bedrock Edition, they call them Previews instead, but the idea's the same. You're playing unstable code. Sometimes features break. Sometimes worlds crash. That's kind of the point. New blocks, biomes, and balance changes get stress-tested by thousands of players every week. If something's obviously broken, Mojang catches it before launch. If something's genius, they keep it and refine it. The Sulfur Caves and New Blocks The big visual addition in the 26.2 snapshot series is the sulfur caves biome. Picture a cavern filled with purple and yellow blocks that feels genuinely alien compared to standard Minecraft caves. It's the kind of biome that immediately makes you want to go exploring and building something weird with the new textures. The main new block is the sulfur cube itself (yes, really). It's got that distinct yellow-purple color palette that makes it instantly recognizable. You'll find them clustered in the sulfur caves biome. They're mineable with a pickaxe, so it's straightforward gathering once you find the caves. Honestly, this is the kind of visual refresh that makes old cave exploration feel fresh again. After thousands of hours in vanilla Minecraft, a new biome with distinct blocks hits different. Even if you never build with them, just stumbling across one of these caves is a moment. New Music for Java Players Paula Ruiz (who goes by fingerspit) contributed new music tracks for this snapshot cycle, specifically for a feature called Chaos Cubed. If you're someone who plays with sound on, this is a subtle but nice addition. Minecraft's ambient music is underrated honestly. It sets the entire tone for how a biome feels. The tracks add atmosphere to the new caves. Without the right soundtrack, a purple sulfur cavern is just blocks and physics. With music? It's an experience. Friends List Arrives in Java Edition Java Edition is finally getting a proper Friends List feature. Bedrock has had this forever, but Java's always been a bit more bare-bones on the social side (outside of multiplayer servers, anyway). This might sound simple, but it changes how people organize multiplayer sessions. Instead of juggling Discord invites or trying to remember your friend's exact username, you can maintain a real friends list in-game. Here's the thing, add people, see when they're online, join their worlds directly. It's the kind of QoL feature that seems small until you actually have it, then you wonder why it took this long. How to Install and Test the Snapshot Installing a snapshot is straightforward if you're using the official Minecraft Launcher. Open the Minecraft Launcher and click the installation dropdown (left of the green Play button) Select the latest snapshot from the list (26.2-snapshot-8 in this case) Click Play That's it. The launcher handles everything. Your regular Java Edition installation stays intact, so you're not risking your main world. Snapshots have their own folder. One thing: create a new world for testing. Don't load a survival world you care about into a snapshot. Snapshots are unstable. You might come back to find it corrupted or incompatible with the next snapshot build. Is It Worth Testing? Yes, if you enjoy exploring new features early. You'll get about a week or two of breathing room before snapshot 9 or whatever comes next, and you can actually influence what makes it into the final release by testing thoroughly and reporting bugs. Plus, the sulfur caves biome alone is worth the install. It's visually distinct enough that it'll feel like a genuine expansion even though it's technically still part of 26.2. If you run a multiplayer server, testing snapshots is also smart. You catch compatibility issues before they affect your actual server. Use a test server running the snapshot, see what breaks, report it to Mojang. It's part of why snapshots exist. Speaking of servers, if you're managing multiple Minecraft servers and need to keep tabs on their status, the Minecraft Server Status Checker is helpful for monitoring uptime across different versions and instances. Getting Ready for the Full Release The 26.2 snapshot series is basically showing us what's coming in the next major update. Sulfur caves, new music, Friends List improvements - these are all landing in the full release eventually. Testing now just means you'll be familiar with it all when launch day arrives. Also, if you're running your own server and thinking about the DNS side of things, remember that Free Minecraft DNS is available if you need to manage domain records for your server infrastructure. Snapshots have been part of Minecraft's development process for years, and they work. The community gets early access, Mojang gets real-world testing, and features arrive polished because thousands of people already found the rough edges. Download snapshot 8, poke around the sulfur caves, test the Friends List, and report anything weird. That's what snapshots are for. --- ### Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8: Test Features Now URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-snapshot-8-testing-guide Published: 2026-05-20 Author: ice Snapshot 8 of Minecraft's 26.2 update is live right now. It's where you can test new features weeks before they're officially released, and your feedback actually influences what makes it to launch. If you want early access and don't mind occasional crashes, here's what you need to know. What Exactly Are Snapshots? Minecraft snapshots are testing releases. Mojang drops a new build roughly every week with new features, changes, and sometimes broken stuff. Before anything goes into the full release, it gets tested here first. Here's the reality: snapshots aren't stable. You might crash on startup. A chunk could look completely wrong. A feature you absolutely love might change dramatically by launch (or disappear entirely). That's not a bug in the system - that's literally the point. The team uses feedback from thousands of players to decide what actually makes it into the final update. Bedrock Edition calls them Previews instead of snapshots, which honestly makes more sense (they're previewing what's coming). Same concept though - early access for testing. And something worth knowing: When Snapshot 7 launched, it brought new music tracks from Paula Ruiz (who goes by fingerspit) for the Chaos Cubed theme, plus a revamped Friends List for Java players. That's the kind of polish that happens iteration after iteration. By the time features reach the full release, they've been refined based on hundreds of thousands of hours of actual playtesting. How to Install Snapshot 8 Installing is genuinely straightforward. Open the Minecraft Launcher. There's a dropdown menu right next to the big Play button on the left side. Click it. Select "Snapshots" from the list instead of the latest release. Then find 26.2 Snapshot 8 in the version dropdown. Hit Play. That's it. The launcher downloads and installs everything automatically. No websites you've never heard of. No sketchy files. Just click and wait a few minutes. One important thing: snapshots install separately from your main Minecraft. You're not overwriting your regular Java Edition. You can run snapshots and the release version side by side without any conflicts. What's Worth Testing Right Now New cave generation and mining mechanics are always worth your focus. Server owners especially pay attention here because caves can affect server performance significantly. Load up a world. Mine for a while. Look for lag spikes. See if chunk generation feels smooth or stutters. These are the kinds of real-world performance issues that Mojang can't catch with their own machines. New blocks are another obvious one. Try building with them. Mix them with old blocks. See if colors clash. See if anything clips in weird ways. New blocks often have unintended interactions with existing mechanics that nobody catches until thousands of people start building with them. If you're running a server, load a test world with your usual plugins or datapacks. See what breaks immediately. See what causes lag under load. That feedback is huge because Mojang can't test every plugin combination - they rely on server owners to catch those issues. And if you test something and it feels broken or overpowered or just... wrong, report it. That's the whole system. Why Spend Your Time Testing Obvious answer: you get new content a month before everyone else. But the bigger thing? Your feedback can literally kill a feature before it launches. If something's broken or doesn't feel right, players have historically pushed back hard enough that Mojang fixes it or removes it entirely. It doesn't happen constantly, but it happens. You're not just testing in a void. And there's something different about exploring a half-finished feature. When a new biome launches officially, millions of players are finding it at the same time. In a snapshot, you're basically discovering it first. You find secret spots and weird corners that will later become common knowledge. Feels good. Server admins: this is where you actually prepare. You catch compatibility issues early. Most players understand how new features work before your players expect you to know. You're not scrambling on launch day because you tested everything weeks ago. Testing Specific Features When you're testing, focus on what actually matters for your playstyle. If you're a casual single-player builder, test new blocks and how they feel to build with. If you're into mining, test caves and ores and how they distribute. If you run a server, focus on performance and plugin compatibility first. Portal mechanics especially matter if you're building anything with Nether travel. Use the Nether Portal Calculator to verify distances and placement work like you expect in the snapshot version. Sometimes coordinate systems shift slightly between versions, and you want to catch those discrepancies in a snapshot, not after launch. And if you're running a multiplayer snapshot server, make sure your server messaging is clear. The MOTD Creator tool helps you set up a message telling players it's a snapshot and they should expect crashes or balance changes. Players appreciate knowing what they're getting into, and it saves you from complaints later. How to Report What You Find Found an actual bug? Look, crashed? Something definitely feels broken? Hit the official Minecraft bug tracker. Mojang monitors it constantly during snapshot cycles. Post a clear description of what happened, what you were doing, and (if you can) the steps to reproduce it. Include your Java version and what plugins you were running if any. Here's a tip: search first. If fifty people already reported the same bug, don't file it again. Instead, comment on the existing report with "I can confirm this happens" or add details about how you hit it differently. Duplicate reports just create noise. If something isn't technically broken but feels unbalanced or weird, report it as feedback instead of a bug. The distinction matters. Mojang takes both seriously, but they need to know the difference. What Happens Between Snapshots Between Snapshot 7 and Snapshot 8, Mojang takes feedback, fixes crashes, and refines features. Sometimes new content gets added. Sometimes features get removed because they weren't working out. Sometimes a new mob or block goes through major visual changes based on what players said. It's basically iterative development, but transparent. You see every step. Folks who try this influence it directly. The closer snapshots get to release (usually 4-6 snapshots before launch), the fewer new features appear. Most changes become bug fixes and balance tweaks. At some point it becomes release candidate status where it's mostly just stability work. Worth Installing? Snapshot testing isn't mandatory. You can just wait for the official release if you prefer stability and polish. But if you like being on the bleeding edge, if you want to influence what Minecraft becomes, or if you just want new content right now... Snapshot 8 is waiting. Install it. Test it. Tell Mojang what you think. --- ### Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 8: The Multiplayer Revolution Java Actually Needed URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-snapshot-8-friends-multiplayer Published: 2026-05-20 Author: ice Minecraft Java Edition just got a fundamental social overhaul. You can now invite friends directly to your world, maintain a proper friends list, and play peer-to-peer without touching a single mod or server rental. This isn't a minor quality-of-life patch. The changes how Java players actually connect and collaborate. Java Edition Finally Gets Friends (In 2026) It's wild that we're in 2026 and Minecraft Java Edition is just now getting a native friends list. Bedrock has had this for years. Meanwhile, Java players have relied on third-party solutions like the Essential Mod just to maintain a basic social network. That gap is closing. The snapshot adds a dedicated Friends button accessible from both the title screen and the pause menu. Press it, and you see what your friends are doing right now. Online status, what world they're in, whether they're available to play. It sounds basic, but for a game that's emphasized local multiplayer and modded solutions for so long, this is genuinely significant. Finding friends is straightforward. You search for their username, send an invite, they accept or decline. Works exclusively with Java Edition (Bedrock friends stay on Bedrock), which makes sense from a technical standpoint but does create that familiar Java/Bedrock divide. Opening Your World to Others Once you've assembled your friends list, the real feature kicks in. You can open your single-player world to friends without any server setup. None. No port forwarding, no paid server rental, no complicated networking. There's a new Multiplayer Options menu that handles this. You toggle it on, your friends see that your world is available, they request to join, and boom. They're in your seed playing alongside you. If someone's being annoying, you block them. The system handles rejections gracefully too. This is huge for vanilla players who want collaborative building. Want to work on a shared castle, farm system, or massive redstone contraption with a friend across the country? You can do that now without mods. Peer-to-Peer Multiplayer Without Infrastructure The technical magic here is peer-to-peer connectivity. Your world runs on your machine. Your friend's client connects directly to your game instance (with some clever NAT traversal in the background, though Mojang hasn't detailed the exact implementation). This is fundamentally different from traditional multiplayer where a central server mediates all traffic. But it means: Lower latency in many cases No monthly server fees You maintain total control of who plays in your world Limited to whatever your connection and hardware can handle There are obvious limitations. You're not running a server, so your gaming PC becomes the host. If you disconnect, everyone disconnects. Performance depends on your machine and internet bandwidth. But for casual multiplayer with friends, it's infinitely more convenient than traditional options. The Hidden Design Win What's clever about this system: it respects how Java players actually play. Java's community built around mods, single-player experimentation, and self-hosted servers (actual servers, not Realms). But this friends system slots naturally into that culture. You're not forced into a Realms subscription or a third-party hosting service. Your world stays yours. Bedrock went the opposite direction, bundling Realms into the experience. Both approaches are valid, but this one fits Java's ethos better. Practical Stuff: Finding Players and Servers Now, friends lists are great if you've friends who play. What if you're looking to join an existing community? Java players typically find servers through word-of-mouth, Reddit, or Discord communities. If you're hunting for a specific type of server (survival, PvP, creative building), the Minecraft Server List is worth checking. For solo players or small groups building custom content, learning block mechanics becomes critical. The Minecraft Block Search tool can help you quickly find materials for your builds without leaving the game. Snapshots, Performance, and Installation Before you dive in: this is snapshot 8, not a full release. That means it's feature-complete enough to test but potentially unstable. Snapshots get weekly updates, bugs are common, and saves can break between versions. Install it alongside your stable Java Edition installation (Launcher handles this automatically). Create test worlds, not your main survival save. Use vanilla gameplay at first to get used to the new interface before introducing mods that might conflict. Performance in snapshots is often rough. If you notice lag that wasn't there before, report it. Mojang's actively gathering feedback right now, and actual player testing informs final polish before release. What This Means Java Edition's been coasting on modding and self-hosting culture for years. Look, bedrock got the bells and whistles, cross-platform play, Realms integration. Java stayed pure, stayed standalone, stayed for players who wanted absolute control. This friends system doesn't change that philosophy. It just stops pretending Java players don't want basic social features. You can invite friends. Anyone can see what they're up to. Folks who try this can collaborate without leaving vanilla. That's the win here. The Essential Mod isn't obsolete (it still handles cosmetics and other social features), but it's no longer essential for basic multiplayer. Mojang just solved the problem the community had been solving with mods. Try it. Test it in a creative world with a friend. The feature's rough around the edges (snapshots are like that), but the foundation is solid. But this is the direction Java Edition needed to move. --- ### Minecraft 26.2-Snapshot-8: Native Multiplayer Finally Arrives for Java URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-snapshot-8-native-multiplayer Published: 2026-05-20 Author: ice Snapshot 8 brings the feature Java players have been asking for since basically forever: native multiplayer without mods. You can now invite friends directly to your world via a new friends list, with peer-to-peer connectivity doing the heavy lifting. No Essential Mod. No third-party servers. Just you and your buddies playing together on the same world. Why Java Edition Desperately Needed This Java Edition's been the awkward kid in the room for multiplayer. Bedrock Edition got built-in social features ages ago, but Java players were stuck choosing between running dedicated servers (tedious), using mods (requires setup), or doing weird workarounds with port forwarding (genuinely painful). For a game that's supposed to be about relaxing with friends, there's been nothing relaxed about it. The community's been screaming about this for years. What Mojang finally realized is that not everyone wants to manage a Minecraft server. Some people literally just want to load their survival world, tell their mate, "hey, I'm on," and have them join in two seconds. Revolutionary concept, I know. The Friends List System Works (Finally) You now have an actual Friends button. Title screen, pause menu, doesn't matter. Hit it and boom - you see who's playing, who's in a world, who's just hanging out at the menu. It's straightforward enough that my little cousin figured it out without asking, which is the bar we should be hitting. Adding friends is as painless as it should've been from the start. You can also manage invites - send them out, retract them, block people who won't stop spamming requests (you know the type). The system shows you exactly what your friends are doing without any of the Discord-plus-Minecraft juggling you had to do before. One caveat though: this only works with Java Edition friends. No cross-play with Bedrock Edition players. That's probably a technical limitation that'll take time to solve, but for now, you're staying in the Java ecosystem. Hosting Your World Is Simple Now The real magic is in the Multiplayer Options menu. Open your world, enable multiplayer, send invites. That's the flow now. You're not fiddling with port forwarding or managing server properties through a command line. Technically, your PC becomes the host. It's running peer-to-peer connectivity, which sounds fancy but just means your friends connect directly to you instead of going through a middleman server. Lower latency, less complexity, fewer things that can break. You don't need to understand any of that though - it just works. If you want to go deeper and understand server fundamentals for later (maybe you'll want a proper server someday), our Server Properties Generator is there when you're ready. It helps you tweak the settings that actually matter, even though snapshot 8 abstracts most of this away for casual play. And if you're getting fancy about it? Set a good MOTD. Make your world inviting. Our Minecraft MOTD Creator makes that part fun instead of fighting with text formatting. It's a small thing but it makes a difference when friends are jumping into your world. Peer-to-Peer Multiplayer (Why It Matters) Alright, quick technical tangent. Peer-to-peer means no central authority. You're not trusting your world to someone else's server - you're directly connected to your friends' clients. This is objectively better for latency and puts control in your hands. The downside exists too, though. If your internet hiccups, your friends feel it. If your PC crashes, the world goes down. You can't play your own world if your computer is off. For casual play with actual friends? Not a problem. For hosting a massive public realm? You'll probably want a proper dedicated server eventually. But for the common case - "I want to play with my mates on my survival world" - this crushes it. What's New Specifically in Snapshot 8 Snapshot 8 builds on snapshot 7's foundation with stability improvements, bug fixes, and refinements to the invite system. Look, the testing phase picked up a lot of edge cases, so Mojang's been iterating based on community feedback. Things like invite timeouts, friend request handling, and permission controls all got tightened up. You'll also notice the party system is more solid now. Creating groups, managing who can access what, dealing with disconnects - it all feels less janky than snapshot 7. Snapshot 8 is where the feature stopped feeling experimental and started feeling like something you'd actually rely on. If you jump in from an earlier snapshot, you might see your friends list reset or need to re-add people. Worth it though. Is This Good Enough? For what it's supposed to do? Yeah, it's solid. Essential Mod was doing this before, but having it native in the base game is huge. You're not depending on a third-party team anymore. Updates come with Minecraft itself. Servers still exist and will always be relevant. Modded servers, minigames, role-playing communities - those aren't going anywhere. But the gap between vanilla Java multiplayer and "basically usable multiplayer" just got a lot smaller. And that was the entire point. One thing to flag: if you're paranoid about world security or grief, snapshot 8's permission system gives you control that mods never really could. You can be granular about who gets in, what they can do, and whether they're permanently blocked. No more worrying some random with a mod exploit breaks your stuff. So yeah. Is this the multiplayer revolution some were hoping for? Not quite - Bedrock Edition's still got deeper features. But is this what Java players actually needed? Absolutely. --- ### Minecraft 26.2 Snapshot 7: Java's Social Makeover URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/java-friends-multiplayer-snapshot-7 Published: 2026-05-19 Author: ice Snapshot 7 of version 26.2 finally does what mods have been doing for years: it brings native multiplayer and friends functionality to Minecraft Java Edition. No more third-party addons. No more complicated setup. Open your world, invite your friends, and play together. That's it. The Friends List That Java Needed Let's be honest. Java Edition went way too long without a built-in friends system. You could join servers, sure, but inviting someone to your single-player world? Real talk, that required Essential Mod, which isn't exactly lightweight, or you were stuck dealing with external Discord links and IP sharing. Snapshot 7 changes that. There's now a dedicated Friends button accessible from both the title screen and the pause menu. Click it, and you'll see what your friends are doing. Online. Offline. Playing on servers. It's straightforward, which honestly feels revolutionary for Java Edition. The system works with Java Edition players only (so don't expect to see your Bedrock friends here), but that's a reasonable limitation. Getting Java users to even have a native friends list is the real win. Opening Your World to Others The new Multiplayer Options menu is where the magic happens. You can now invite friends directly to your single-player world without abandoning your progress or converting everything to a server. For casual players who just want a friend or two to visit their base, this is game-changing. You invite friends through the menu. They receive an invitation and can accept or decline. If they accept, the world opens up for peer-to-peer connectivity. No server hosting fees. No complicated port forwarding (though it's still technically possible to configure, if you're into that). The system also lets your friends invite you. And if someone gets annoying? You can block them directly from the menu. Peer-to-Peer Multiplayer Without the Headaches Here's the technical part that actually matters: Mojang's implemented direct peer-to-peer connectivity for Java Edition. That means your worlds connect without passing through official servers. Lower latency. More privacy. Faster response times when you're mining together or building something elaborate. This was Essential Mod's main appeal back in the day, honestly. The fact that Mojang is building this functionality directly into the game eliminates a major pain point. You don't need to trust a third-party mod developer with your world files anymore. There's one caveat (which is worth noting, even though I generally avoid that phrase): the peer-to-peer system works best when one player hosts and others connect. It's not peer-to-peer in the sense of a fully decentralized network, but it's still vastly better than the old workarounds. Organizing Your Multiplayer Setup If you're planning to bring your friends together, take some time to think about server rules and whitelist management. Snapshot 7 doesn't automate all the tedious admin stuff, and for good reason. You'll still want to organize what's allowed on your server and who gets access. Tools like our Minecraft Whitelist Creator can help you quickly generate a whitelist for players you trust. It beats manually entering usernames. And if you're building collaborative structures, you might need to reference blocks and coordinates, which is where the Minecraft Block Search comes in handy for tracking specific materials. Setting up systems early matters. Build your whitelist before inviting people. Decide on shared resources and building rules in advance. Trust me, those conversations get messy after someone's already halfway through the world. When Does This Hit the Main Release? Snapshot 7 is testing right now. Full release dates for these features haven't been officially locked in, but Mojang's moving at a solid pace. Snapshots typically spend 2-4 weeks in testing before becoming part of a major release. Version 26.2 is expected to hit full release sometime in the coming weeks, though Mojang keeps that kind of schedule pretty close to the vest. The good news is that if you want to test these features right now, you can grab the snapshot and experience them. Just remember snapshots can be unstable, so definitely back up your worlds if you're testing on a world you care about. And honestly, this is shaping up to be a must-play update for anyone who plays Java Edition with friends. After years of watching Bedrock get all the social features, Java Edition is finally catching up. What This Means for Java's Future This update signals that Mojang's committed to modernizing Java Edition beyond just adding new blocks and biomes. Social features, quality-of-life improvements, better multiplayer support. These aren't flashy, but they're the kind of changes that keep a game alive and fun for casual players. For content creators and streamers, this opens up new possibilities for collaboration. Running a friends-only world is suddenly viable without server hosting costs or technical complications. For everyday players, it means you can finally stop feeling like Java Edition is stuck in 2012 for multiplayer. The peer-to-peer system especially feels like the future. As Mojang iterates on this, we'll probably see even more improvements. Better connection stability. Reduced latency. Maybe eventual support for larger player counts without needing a dedicated server. --- ### Minecraft Live at TwitchCon: What the Community Needs to Know URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-live-twitchcon-updates Published: 2026-05-19 Author: ice Minecraft just dropped some serious announcements at TwitchCon, and honestly, it's the most exciting multiplayer news Java Edition has gotten in years. The peer-to-peer connectivity that's been baked into Bedrock for a while is finally coming to Java, which means inviting friends to your world no longer requires running a server, managing ports, or wrestling with mods. Yeah, that's kind of huge. The Big Java Edition Overhaul: Native Multiplayer Without the Hassle For the longest time, Java Edition players had two choices: use a janky third-party mod like Essential (which, don't get me wrong, is incredible) or deal with port forwarding, server hosting, and a lot of frustration. The new multiplayer system in snapshot 26.2-7 changes that calculus entirely. You open a world, hit the new Multiplayer Options button, and boom - you can invite friends directly. It works peer-to-peer, so there's no server in the middle. The UI is straightforward. Friends List button at the title screen or pause menu. You see who's online, what they're playing, and whether they've actually opened their world to visitors (because let's face it, not everyone wants randoms showing up). The catch right now? It's Java-only. If your friend's on Bedrock, you're still out of luck. But that's a pretty standard boundary in the Minecraft universe, so nobody's shocked. I tested this on my own server the moment the snapshot hit. Inviting someone and watching them load in without any port-forwarding nonsense felt weird at first. Actually thought something was broken because it was too easy. The performance is solid though - no crazy latency, and I didn't see any sync issues with block updates or item drops. Console Versions Getting Their Due PlayStation 5 is finally getting a native version. It's wild that we're in 2026 and the PS5 has been running the PS4 version this whole time, but Mojang's been busy. The new build runs natively. That means 4K and 60fps like Xbox already had. That's table stakes for current-gen consoles, but at least it's happening now. The testing phase has been underway for a bit, and the community feedback's been incorporated to smooth out any rough edges. No word yet on what extra bells and whistles they're adding beyond feature parity with Xbox Series X|S, but honestly, native performance was the bottleneck, so that alone is worth celebrating if you're a PlayStation player. Xbox players have been enjoying the upgrade since last December, so this levels things out across the console ecosystem. Both platforms now get the full experience on current-gen hardware. What This Means for Streamers and Builders TwitchCon had a ton of Minecraft content creators in one room for the first time in ages. The conversation kept coming back to the same thing: multiplayer just got a lot more accessible. Streamers who've been hosting Realm subscribers or running complicated hosting setups can now just... open their world. The infrastructure barrier basically evaporated. Multiplayer building projects are about to explode in popularity. I mean, they've always existed, but now your cousin in another state can literally walk into your world with zero technical setup. That's going to change how people build and collaborate. One streamer I talked to mentioned using the Nether Portal Calculator to coordinate massive nether highway projects with chat members. With native peer-to-peer now, they don't need to worry about server costs or latency - just friends and builds. Server Status and Stability Questions With peer-to-peer multiplayer handling friends, the next question's obvious: what about larger communities and servers? The announcement doesn't replace traditional server hosting - it's specifically for inviting friends to your personal world. If you're running a 50-player PvP server, you'll still need proper hosting infrastructure. That said, plenty of people are wondering if they should check server status before opening their world to friends. Some of the testing builds had occasional sync hiccups, though nothing catastrophic. Use the Minecraft Server Status Checker if you want to verify your connection's solid before inviting people over for a big building session or event. Performance-wise, peer-to-peer means your machine is doing the hosting. That's different from a dedicated server, so upload speed and overall PC load matter more than they used to. The Friends List Was Long Overdue This is almost embarrassing to say out loud, but Java Edition didn't have a built-in friends list until now. That's what modders have been filling for how long? The new Friends button lives right at the title screen and pause menu, shows who's online, and lets you see what world they're in. It's basic, but basic is what was missing. Once you add someone, they can request to join your world if you've got it open. You can accept or block them. The blocking feature is important - we all know that one person. One notifications are minimal and non-intrusive, so it doesn't feel like you're being pestered every time someone tries to connect. What Happens Next The multiplayer features are in snapshot 26.2-7 right now. That means they're under testing and feedback cycle. Expect a few iterations before the full release, probably some bug fixes and balance passes on things like world size limits (not sure if there's a cap on how many friends can be in one world simultaneously, though early testing suggested it's pretty generous). Cross-platform play between Java and Bedrock still isn't on the table, which... honestly, I get why. The code bases are too different. Real talk, but if you've got friends on both versions, at least you can now do the Java side properly without essential mods. Mojang's also hinting at more social features down the road. Nothing concrete yet, but the foundation's there now. Once this ships to the full release, expect a ton of new groups and communities to form around this stuff. Building collectives, speedrun races, adventure maps - all stuff that was possible before but way more friction than it needed to be. The announcements at TwitchCon basically said the multiplayer experience is about to stop being a technical problem for Java players and start being about just... playing together. That's the win here. --- ### How to Use the New Java Edition Friends List URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/java-friends-list-feature Published: 2026-05-18 Author: ice Java Edition finally has what Bedrock players have had for ages: a built-in friends list and peer-to-peer multiplayer system. Arriving in snapshot 26.2, you can now invite friends directly to your world or jump into theirs without needing a server. What's New in Snapshot 26.2 For years, Java players wanting smooth multiplayer without running a server have turned to the Essential Mod. It does exactly what you'd expect from its name (makes essential social features work). Now Mojang's bringing that functionality into vanilla Java officially, and it's about time. The update adds two main things: a friends list you can access from the title screen or pause menu, and a new Multiplayer Options menu that lets you open your world to specific players. They can join directly through peer-to-peer connections, meaning no server costs, no port forwarding, no complicated setup. You open your world, send an invite, they join. That's the whole flow. Before this update, your multiplayer options were basically: run a server yourself (technically complex, ongoing cost), rent hosting (monthly expense), use Realms (subscription), install the Essential Mod (good, but not official), or find some other third-party solution. Every single option required extra infrastructure or software that shouldn't have been necessary for basic "play with a friend" functionality. Now? None of that. Vanilla Java is catching up. One important note upfront: this is Java Edition only. Your Bedrock friends won't show up on the list, and you can't invite them to vanilla Java worlds. If you've got a mixed group, you'll still need a server or Realms for that crossplay. But if your crew is all Java players, this is exactly what you've been asking for. How to Get Started and Invite Friends The friends list is easy to find. At the title screen, there's a new Friends button (just click it). Already in a world? Pause the game and you'll find it in the menu there too. Clicking it shows everyone on your friends list and their current status: who's online, whether they're in a world, if they're actively playing. The list pulls from your Microsoft account contacts, so if you've added people as friends through the launcher or account system, they'll appear here. Your existing friends sync automatically. No need to re-add them or deal with invitation systems. Sending an Invite Once you've got someone on your list, inviting them is straightforward. Open the Multiplayer Options (available through the friends list), hit invite, and select who you want to join. They'll get a notification that you've invited them, and they can accept to jump in directly. No waiting, no server boot time, just instant access to your world. The nice part is you can do it from the pause menu too. You're deep in a build, realize you want your friend to see what you've done, and suddenly you can just invite them without logging out. No server admin panel to navigate, no whitelisting, no permissions config. Just click and they're in. Requesting to Join Someone Else's World The opposite direction is equally simple. You can request access to a friend's world from the friends list, and they get the notification. They can approve it and you're in, or they can decline (or block you if you keep pestering them, which is fair). It's Discord-style friend request logic applied to Minecraft worlds. The peer-to-peer connection handles all the technical complexity. Your friend isn't running any server software. The game just creates a direct connection between your machines. That's why it's faster and more responsive than connecting to a distant server. Why This Matters for Java Players Server hosting, mods, workarounds (Java players have always had options for multiplayer, but none of them were built-in). You either rented a server (monthly cost), ran one yourself (power consumption, bandwidth, complexity), or installed the Essential Mod (useful, but still an external addon). All solutions work, but they're compromises. Bedrock Edition's had basic friends-and-invite functionality forever. Microsoft baked it in from launch. Java always felt like the complicated cousin (more moddable, sure, but missing features that most games include as standard). The gap between the two platforms was smaller than people realized. This update closes that gap. Not completely. There are still plenty of ways Java and Bedrock differ architecturally. Honestly, but for simple "play with friends" functionality, Java now matches Bedrock's simplicity. That's significant. And honestly, peer-to-peer is better than some server options. You get lower latency, no middleman bottleneck, and none of the lag you sometimes hit when connecting through a distant dedicated server. For small friend groups (which is what most casual multiplayer is), direct connections are actually the superior technical approach. Mojang's solution is simpler than the alternatives and more efficient. If you're concerned about multiplayer performance while testing, check the Minecraft Server Status Checker to monitor latency and connection stability. It helps you diagnose issues if either player experiences lag or disconnects. Things to Know Before You Jump In This is a snapshot feature, so it's still in development. The UI, behavior, and specific mechanics might change before 26.2 officially releases to the main branch. Some bugs are normal at this stage. But that's also why it's worth testing now (you can provide feedback on what works and what doesn't). You're going to want stable internet and decent upload bandwidth. Peer-to-peer multiplayer works best when both players have reliable connections. Patchy WiFi or slow upload speeds will create latency and disconnections. It's not a dealbreaker for casual play, just something to be aware of. One more thing: if you're going to be playing together, make your character look good. Our Minecraft Skin Creator tool lets you design a custom skin from scratch. First impressions matter, even in vanilla Java, and a fresh character design makes multiplayer sessions more fun. Java's multiplayer just got significantly easier. No mods required, no servers to manage, no monthly costs. Just a friends list and direct peer-to-peer connections between players. It's a feature that probably should've shipped years ago, but it's here now in snapshot 26.2, and it fundamentally changes how casual multiplayer feels in Java Edition. If you've been sitting on the fence about trying the snapshot, this alone is reason enough to download it and test it out. --- ### How to Reclaim Minecraft PvP: BukkitOldCombatMechanics Explained URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-combat-bukkit-old-mechanics Published: 2026-05-17 Author: ice kernitus/BukkitOldCombatMechanics Spigot plugin to configure combat mechanics for 1.9 onwards .0 Ever set up a PvP server only to watch your players complain about the combat feeling sluggish compared to 1.8? Yeah, that's the problem Minecraft's introduced after 1.9. If you're running anything from 1.9 onwards and want finer control over your combat mechanics, you need to know about BukkitOldCombatMechanics. What BukkitOldCombatMechanics Does This is a Spigot and Paper plugin that gives you granular control over Minecraft combat without rewriting your whole server. Think of it as a toolkit for tweaking the 1.9+ combat system back toward something that feels snappier, or mixing old and new mechanics however you want. The core idea: after 1.9, Minecraft introduced attack cooldowns that made combat feel methodical and punishing. Some servers love that. Others hate it. BukkitOldCombatMechanics lets you dial in exactly what your players experience on your terms. It handles weapon damage values, attack speeds, knockback physics, shield behavior, armor durability, and about a dozen other variables. More you can set different rulesets per world or even per player, so your survival world can run vanilla rules while your PvP arena runs tighter, faster combat. Built in Kotlin and actively maintained (214 stars on GitHub, latest release from early 2026), this isn't some abandoned side project. Why You'd Use This Let's talk concrete scenarios. You're running a minigames server and you want your dueling arena to feel crisp and fast, but you don't want to break vanilla gameplay for your survival players. That's exactly what modesets do. Assign the "classic" ruleset to your arena and "vanilla" to everything else. Players can even pick their own ruleset if you let them. Or maybe you're running a faction server and you've noticed everyone just spam-clicks to death because cooldowns feel punishing. You could dial back the cooldown timer, adjust knockback to be more forgiving, and suddenly combat feels more like player skill and less like waiting. PvE servers sometimes want to tweak armor or weapon damage to make combat feel less tedious without going full-survival-mode. So this plugin gets you there in minutes instead of hunting for a dozen incompatible mods. The other thing worth noting: if you run a mixed environment (some players love new combat, others want the old feel), you can support both without splitting your server or running separate instances. Installing It (The Right Way) This is straightforward, but there are a couple things to know. First, grab the jar from the official Hangar page or GitHub releases. Version 2.4.0 is current as of early 2026 and supports Minecraft 1.9 through the latest release (26.1.2). bashcd your-server/plugins wget https://github.com/kernitus/BukkitOldCombatMechanics/releases/download/v2.4.0/OldCombatMechanics.jar Drop it in, restart your server, and the config file generates automatically. Now the important bit: before you tweak anything, understand that the config.yml uses a "modules" system. Each feature (cooldowns, damage, knockback, shields, etc.) is its own module. If you don't need it, disable it. There's zero performance penalty for disabled modules. Edit your config.yml to pick which modules matter for your setup. yamlmodules: attack-cooldown: enabled: true armour: enabled: true sword-blocking: enabled: false After changes, run /ocm reload in-game and it applies instantly. No restart needed. Features That Matter Attack Cooldowns. This is usually the first thing people want to tweak. Real talk, you can adjust or remove the 1.9+ cooldown entirely, set a global hit delay, or leave it vanilla. If you're aiming for that fast-paced 1.8 feel, this is where it starts. Weapon Damage. Pre-1.9 tools had different damage values. Swords did more, axes were more varied. If your players are nostalgic for those numbers, enable this module and configure per-tool damage. Knockback Control. One of the most satisfying tweaks. You can adjust player-to-player knockback, fishing rod knockback, and knockback from explosions independently. But this changes the feel of PvP more than almost anything else. Higher knockback = more spacing, more strategy. Lower knockback = closer fights, faster exchanges. Sword blocking restores right-click blocking (the old mechanic where you held right-click with a sword to reduce damage). On newer Paper versions, this includes the proper animation. If you're running a version that supports it, this alone can make older players feel at home. Armor and Durability. Scale armor protection and how fast tools wear out. Some servers want armor to matter more (high protection), others want it fragile to keep players geared up constantly. Things That Trip People Up The biggest gotcha: modesets are assigned per world, not automatically. You create a modeset in the config, assign it to a world, then players can only switch modesets if you give them permission or if you've enabled the command. Also, reflection caching means the plugin hooks into server internals. It's designed to be lightweight, but on servers with old or unusual setups, sometimes compatibility gets weird. The maintainers have fallback code for this, but test in your dev environment first if you're paranoid. One more: if you use PlaceholderAPI (and most servers do), the plugin integrates cleanly. If you're using PacketEvents for something else, double-check they don't conflict. They shouldn't, but packet modifications can surprise you. And here's something that catches new users off-guard: Spigot and Paper have minor differences in how they handle collision boxes and reach calculations. Paper 1.21.11+ has native attack range adjustment. Earlier versions don't. Read your version's support matrix in the config before assuming reach tweaks will work. Similar Projects Worth Knowing About If you want to customize combat and modesets feel like overkill, there's CombatLogX (focused on preventing combat logging, not mechanics), and various lightweight combat-only plugins scattered across SpigotMC. But none combine the modularity and per-world config the way BukkitOldCombatMechanics does. There's also the option of just running Paper with built-in combat tweaks, but you get less control and fewer features. Is This Worth Your Time? If you're running a PvP server or minigames hub, yes. The modularity means you're not forced into a package deal. If you're running pure vanilla survival and your players are happy, don't fix what isn't broken. The install takes five minutes. Testing takes another thirty. If you've had even one conversation with players about combat feeling "off," this is worth a shot. One last thing: while you're thinking about server customization, make sure your server list is properly configured if you're looking to grow. Check out the Minecraft Server List to see how to get listed, and if you need coordinates for anything, the Nether Portal Calculator is useful for planning spawn areas. 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 ---