# 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) ### Monocraft: How to Use the Minecraft Font for Coding URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/monocraft-minecraft-font Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Monocraft (IdreesInc/Monocraft) A monospaced programming font inspired by the Minecraft typeface Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 10,032 stars💻 Python📜 OFL-1.1 Ever opened your code editor and thought, "This looks nothing like Minecraft"? Monocraft fixes that exact problem. It's a free monospaced font that brings Minecraft's iconic blocky aesthetic straight into your development environment, complete with programming ligatures and even support for the Standard Galactic Alphabet used in Minecraft's enchantment tables. Whether you're learning to code or just want your IDE to feel more fun, this fan project delivers in ways you wouldn't expect. What's Monocraft? Monocraft is a monospaced programming font inspired by Minecraft's UI typeface. The creator redesigned every single glyph - over 1500 of them - to work properly in a monospaced environment while keeping that distinctive blocky, pixelated look you recognize from the game itself. It's not affiliated with Mojang or Minecraft (the project makes that clear up front), but it captures the aesthetic perfectly enough that looking at your code feels like you're staring at a GUI from the game. The font includes far more than just standard letters and numbers. You get programming ligatures that render operators as actual arrows and symbols, support for the Standard Galactic Alphabet used in enchantment tables, and careful spacing work so thin characters like "i" and "l" don't look absurd in a monospaced layout. It's the kind of project that started as a fun weekend idea and somehow accumulated over 10,000 stars on GitHub. What makes it stand out isn't just the Minecraft theme. The creator genuinely cared about readability. Why You'd Actually Use This Okay, so it looks cool. But should you actually install it on your main development machine? If you're someone who switches between Minecraft and your IDE regularly, there's something genuinely satisfying about the visual continuity. You're in the game one minute, modifying a Minecraft plugin the next, and suddenly your code editor's font language matches the universe you're working in. It sounds silly until you try it, and then it just... works. Psychologically. Beyond aesthetics, there are real practical reasons to consider it. The programming ligatures aren't just pretty - they're actually useful. When you're scanning code quickly, seeing `=>` render as an actual arrow or `==` as a proper comparison operator makes the code easier to parse at a glance. It's the same reason other developers use fonts with ligatures. The Minecraft theming is the fun part, but the ligatures are the substance. If you're building Minecraft-themed websites or running a community server, you could embed Monocraft in your CSS. The project provides a CDN link, so you don't need to host the font file yourself. Suddenly your documentation, code examples, and terminal blocks have visual consistency with the Minecraft aesthetic. That's a small touch that community members actually notice and appreciate. And honestly? If your job involves spending eight hours a day staring at code, making your editor look like something you enjoy seems like a reasonable use of five minutes to install a font. Installing Monocraft on Your System Windows Download the most recent `.ttc` file from the GitHub releases page. Right-click it and select "Install". You might need admin access - that's standard for Windows font installation. Once it's done, you'll see "Monocraft" (note the space - the name matters) in your font dropdown in VS Code, Sublime Text, or whatever editor you're using. Mac If you use Homebrew, installation is a single command: bashbrew install - cask font-monocraft Otherwise, grab the `.ttc` file from the releases page, double-click it, and select "Install Font" when the dialog appears. Either way, you're done in seconds. Linux Create the fonts directory if it doesn't exist, copy the file, then refresh your font cache: bashmkdir -p ~/.local/share/fonts cp Monocraft.ttc ~/.local/share/fonts/ fc-cache -fv If your terminal or editor doesn't pick it up immediately, try logging out and back in. Sometimes the font daemon needs a clean restart. On Your Website Want Monocraft on your own site or blog? Add this to your CSS: css@font-face { font-family: 'Monocraft'; src: url('https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/IdreesInc/Monocraft@main/dist/Monocraft-ttf/Monocraft.ttf') format('truetype'); font-weight: normal; font-style: normal; } Then use `font-family: 'Monocraft'` on whatever elements need the styling. This is perfect for Minecraft community sites, blogs, server listings, or portfolio projects. The jsDelivr CDN handles distribution, so you don't need to host anything yourself. Features That Actually Matter The programming ligatures are the first thing people notice and honestly? They work. Arrows, comparison operators, common programming patterns - they're all redesigned to look crisp and meaningful instead of like random keyboard mashing. When you're debugging and scanning through code quickly, every bit of visual clarity helps. It's subtle but effective. GitHub project card for IdreesInc/Monocraft The enchantment language support is niche, sure. Not everyone needs to type Standard Galactic Alphabet characters. But it's there if you want to add Minecraft flavor to documentation, code comments, or Discord messages with your friends. It's the kind of feature that makes the project feel complete rather than half-baked. Font hinting is new in recent releases. On Windows and Linux - especially at smaller sizes like terminal text - the characters render sharper and cleaner. If you tried Monocraft before and thought it looked fuzzy on Windows, that's been addressed. Actually, there was a specific issue with PANOSE metadata values that made Microsoft software like VS Code render it incorrectly. That's fixed now. The latest releases also bundle the complete NerdFonts icon set, so terminal users get more icons than before. Things That Catch New Users The font family name has a space in it. That matters more than you'd think. When specifying it in CSS or terminal config files, it's "Monocraft", not "monocraft" or "moncraft". Getting that wrong is the most common issue. It seems small until you're troubleshooting why your font-family declaration isn't working. If you install it on Linux and your terminal doesn't immediately see it, the font daemon might need time to refresh. Logging out and back in solves this. Some terminals don't handle custom TTF files well - if you're using an ancient terminal emulator, that could be the issue. There are also multiple download options, which can be confusing. The standard `.ttc` file (TrueType Collection) works everywhere and includes multiple weights in one file - that's what most people should grab. There's also a NerdFonts patched version for extra icon support, a no-ligatures version (why you'd want this is unclear), and separate TTF and OTF files if you're particular about format. For 99% of users, just download `Monocraft.ttc` and move on. Similar Projects and Alternatives If Monocraft doesn't feel like your thing, there are alternatives. Miracode is a vectorized version of the same font concept if you want something that scales better or feels slightly more polished. Some developers prefer traditional fonts like Cascadia Code or JetBrains Mono, which have excellent ligatures and monospacing but without any Minecraft theming. For pure aesthetic matching with Minecraft's visual language, though, nothing else captures that pixelated blocky vibe quite like Monocraft. If you're building Minecraft community tools, integrating Monocraft with other project elements makes sense. Something like pairing it with a Minecraft Server Status Checker creates visual coherence. Or if you're showcasing community content alongside a Minecraft Skin Creator, the typeface reinforces that everything on your site belongs to the same ecosystem. The Monocraft Discord community is active if you run into issues or want to suggest features. A maintainer takes feedback seriously and new releases come out regularly with improvements and bug fixes. It's a straightforward project, but the development is clearly ongoing. Support the project Monocraft is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the Monocraft repo ↗ --- ### Terra: Custom Minecraft World Generation That Actually Works URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/terra-minecraft-world-generation Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Terra (PolyhedralDev/Terra) Voxel world generation modding platform Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 811 stars💻 Java📜 MIT Ever wanted to build a Minecraft world where the terrain generation doesn't feel like it rolled dice in a back room? Terra lets you completely reshape how worlds generate, from the ground up (literally). If you're running a server, want specific biome layouts, or just think vanilla generation is boring, this Java-based modding platform gives you the tools to make it happen. What Terra Actually Does Terra is a world generation modding platform for Minecraft. Instead of accepting whatever the game throws at you, it lets server admins and mod developers write custom configurations that control everything about how terrain spawns, what biomes appear where, and how mountains, oceans, and caves form. The project consists of a few moving parts working together. At its core is an API for voxel-based world generation with heavy emphasis on configuration. On top of that sit platform implementations (the bridges between Terra and your actual Minecraft server). There's also an addon system that lets you extend behavior without rebuilding the whole thing. Think of it as Minecraft's world generation with all the creative control unlocked. Terra supports two major platforms: Fabric (if you're running a modded client) and the Bukkit API family (Paper, Purpur, Tuinity, and others for servers). Both paths are actively maintained. Why You'd Actually Want This Vanilla world generation is... fine. It does its job. But the moment you want something specific, you're stuck. So Now There's A Mountain In My House Maybe you run a creative server and want to recreate real-world geography. Or you're building a survival world for a specific theme. Or you just think the default terrain is bland. Vanilla doesn't give you these options without plugins that feel hacky. Terra changes that equation. Some concrete use cases: A server admin building a city survival realm can generate accurate terrain based on real maps. A modpack creator can define exactly what biomes spawn in what regions. A creative builder can generate terrain that matches their vision instead of hoping Minecraft's RNG cooperates. You also get granular control. It's not "make everything flatter" or "make mountains bigger." You're writing actual rules for how the world builds itself. And because it's open source (MIT licensed), you're not locked into someone else's vision of what world generation should be. Getting Terra Running Installation differs depending on your platform, but both are straightforward. Minecraft Yellow Flower 3 For Fabric Clients or Servers Head to Modrinth or CurseForge and download the latest Terra build. Drop the JAR file into your mods folder. That's most of it, but Terra needs configuration files to actually do anything, so you'll also grab core addon packs (basically the config "starter kit"). They're available on the same download pages. Restart your client or server, and Terra starts shaping worlds on next generation. For Bukkit-Based Servers (Paper, Purpur, etc.) Paper-based servers use SpigotMC for distribution. Download from there, move the JAR to your plugins folder, and restart. One thing to know: Terra replaces your world generator entirely. Existing worlds won't suddenly change (they keep their old generation), but new worlds use Terra's rules from day one. If you're building from source, the README has gradle commands. For most people, the prebuilt JARs work fine. Key Features Worth Knowing About Terra has five standout capabilities that actually matter. Minecraft Yellow Flower Configuration-First Design. You define worlds through config files, not code. And this means server admins without Java experience can still customize terrain. Change a number in a file, restart, done. Addon System. The core addons provide default configurations, but you can build your own. This keeps the base plugin lean while letting power users go wild. It's the difference between a tool and a toolbox. Platform Abstraction. Terra works across Fabric and Bukkit without requiring platform-specific versions of your configs. Write once, use everywhere (within reason). Biome Control. You can define exactly which biomes spawn in which regions, at what elevations, and with what frequency. No more hoping a jungle spawns within 5,000 blocks of spawn. Extensible API. If you need to build something Terra doesn't ship with, the API is designed for it. The codebase is Java-based and well-structured, so developers aren't fighting the architecture. Gotchas and Things That Trip People Up Terra is solid, but there are edges worth knowing about. Minecraft Yellow Flower 2 First thing: World generation is computationally expensive. If you're generating massive regions on weak hardware, performance tanks. And this isn't Terra's fault specifically (custom generation always costs more than vanilla), but it's real. Test on your target hardware before going live on a public server. Second: Configuration has a learning curve. You're not clicking toggles in a GUI. You're writing YAML or JSON. If you've never touched config files before, expect to spend time learning. The upside is that once you understand the structure, you have complete control. Third (and this one catches people): Addon compatibility matters. Not every addon plays nicely with every other addon. If you're combining addons to build your perfect world, test them together on a local server first. You might get weird biome boundaries or generation gaps otherwise. And actually, world borders. If you set a world border, make sure it aligns with your generation boundaries. Misaligned borders create jarring terrain seams. Alternatives Worth Considering Terra isn't the only custom generation option out there. TerraNova4 Chunky exists and is great if you want to pre-generate terrain for performance reasons. It's simpler but less flexible. If you need every ounce of control, Chunky might disappoint you. Skyblock-style generators (like SkyblockAddons) work for specific world types but don't offer the generalization Terra does. They're purpose-built, not configurable. And then there's just accepting vanilla and building creative systems around it. Sometimes that's the right call. If you're running a small survival server and don't care about exact biome placement, vanilla is lighter and faster. But if you want to actually customize generation, Terra beats the alternatives by letting you define rules, not pick from presets. Getting Started in 2026 If you're considering Terra now, the ecosystem is mature. The project has 811 GitHub stars and active maintenance. Documentation exists. The Discord community answers questions. Start small: Set up a local test world with the default addons. Get comfortable with the config format. Tweak something minor (like biome frequency) and regenerate to see the effect. Then scale to what you actually want to build. For servers, that's the play. For modpack creators, dive into the addon system and see what you can extend. For experimental builders, go wild. If you're building something on top of this and need to pick tools, remember that Terra is MIT licensed. Your code can go proprietary while Terra itself stays free. That matters for projects with commercial intent. The platform is there. This tools are sharp. Whether you use them is up to you. If vanilla generation frustrates you, or you've got a specific vision that the default game won't deliver, Terra actually delivers on the promise of custom worlds without the usual compromises. You can browse active community creations on the Minecraft Server List to see what people are building, or explore other Minecraft tools like the Minecraft Text Generator for related utilities. Support the project Terra is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the Terra repo ↗ --- ### PlotSquared: Building Worlds on Your Minecraft Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/plotsquared-minecraft-plugin-guide Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project IntellectualSites/PlotSquared PlotSquared - Reinventing the plotworld ⭐ 645 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ Running a public Minecraft server means solving a core problem: how do you let dozens (or hundreds) of players build without destroying each other's work? PlotSquared solves this by dividing your world into individual plots where players can claim land, customize settings, and build freely while everyone else's creations stay protected. What PlotSquared Actually Does PlotSquared is a server plugin that manages land ownership and world generation on Bukkit-based Minecraft servers (Spigot, Paper, Purpur). Instead of relying on greifing rules and moderation, it creates a structured environment where each plot is isolated. You can run a dedicated plot world with thousands of individual claims, or scatter plot clusters throughout your existing survival world. The plugin handles the boring stuff automatically: when a player claims a plot, they own it. Nobody else can break blocks there. Nobody else can place blocks. They can invite friends to build together, set weather and time to whatever they want, toggle PvP, adjust game modes per-plot, and merge neighboring plots to create bigger canvases. It's configurable down to absurd detail, which sounds overwhelming but mostly just means defaults work fine. Why You'd Actually Run This There are a few serious reasons plot servers exist: Creative communities. Players who want to show off architectural skills without worrying about survival mechanics. Think elaborate castles, fictional cities, or pixel art that takes weeks to complete. Survival servers at scale. When your server hits 50+ concurrent players, traditional grief prevention becomes a nightmare. Plots let everyone have their own protected corner. Server performance. Plots isolate lag. One player's massive farm won't slow everyone else down if you configure it right. The plugin itself is built around being lightweight. Low moderation overhead. You don't need staff constantly responding to "player X destroyed my house." The system prevents it by design. And honestly? Some players just like the structure. Clear ownership. Clear rules. Clear consequences. It works. How to Set It Up PlotSquared is a server-side only plugin, so your players don't need to install anything. Download the JAR from SpigotMC or the official releases page, drop it in your plugins folder, and restart the server. bashcd /path/to/server/plugins wget https://www.spigotmc.org/resources/77506/download java -jar plotsquared.jar On first startup, PlotSquared creates a config folder with a setup wizard. You choose your plot world name, world type (grid-based or scattered), plot size, and basic features. Most setups take 10 minutes if you're familiar with server administration. If you're running a small server and want to add plots to an existing world, you can use plot clusters instead of a dedicated world. This gives you flexibility - not everyone needs an entire dimension devoted to building. The tricky part isn't installation. It's the configuration file. PlotSquared's config.yml is thorough (bordering on overwhelming), but the community wiki and in-game help are solid. Most admins copy someone else's working config and tweak it, which is perfectly fine. Features That Actually Matter Plot merging and roads. By default, plots are separated by one-block-wide roads. Players can merge neighboring plots if they own them all, creating larger building spaces. This is intuitive and rarely causes issues. The roads also serve a practical purpose: navigation and server borders are visually clear. Per-plot flags. Here's where customization gets wild. Each plot can have independent settings: weather on or off, time locked to day or night, specific game modes, PvP enabled or disabled, mob spawning rules, potion effects. A player could've a pvp arena on one plot and a peaceful creative zone next door. Most players never touch these. Some obsess over them. Plot components and world generation. The plugin includes several built-in world generators that create grids of plots automatically. You don't generate a Minecraft world first and then divide it - PlotSquared generates plots by design. And this is way faster than traditional land claiming, and the roads are perfectly spaced. Custom generators add variations like staggered grids, underground components, and aesthetic roads. Trusted players and friend systems. You can invite specific players to build on your plot, or trust an entire group. This is simpler than maintaining a separate permission system. API for developers. If you're running a larger network, PlotSquared exposes an API for custom integrations. The project notes API documentation and event handling for developers who want to build on top of it. Things That Trip People Up First: PlotSquared requires a Bukkit-compatible server (Spigot, Paper, Purpur). And it won't work on vanilla servers or Fabric. If you're committed to those, you'll need something else entirely. Second: the claim command takes practice. `/plot claim` is straightforward, but merging plots, unclaiming, and managing multiple accounts has quirks. New players benefit from a written guide or a helpful mod. Third: world generation is permanent. If you set up plots in a grid but later decide you want scattered clusters, you can't switch without regenerating the world. Plan ahead. And if you're using it alongside a free Minecraft DNS tool (like the one at minecraft.how's Free Minecraft DNS service), make sure DNS records point to your server's actual IP. Plot servers are usually meant for a specific server, and DNS misconfiguration will lock out players. Configuration Tips Worth Knowing Auto-plot claiming speeds up initial setup. Some admins enable it so new players get assigned a plot on first join instead of manually running `/plot claim`. Saves hassle. Set reasonable plot sizes. 100x100 is massive. 32x32 is cramped. 48x48 or 64x64 hits a sweet spot for most communities. It's locked in after world generation, so get it right. Protect your roads. You don't want players building on the edges and breaking the grid aesthetic. There are config options for this. If you're running resource-heavy plugins alongside PlotSquared, watch your server performance. While PlotSquared itself is lightweight, it doesn't magically fix server lag caused by other plugins or poorly configured spawning. Comparing Other Options WorldGuard and Residence handle protection differently. They're more flexible for irregular shapes and mixed ownership models, but they require constant manual region creation and management. WorldGuard is better if you want ad-hoc protection. PlotSquared is better if you want structure. GriefPrevention uses a simpler claim system where players drag-claim rectangles. It's easier to learn but less powerful. If your server is small and casual, GriefPrevention might be overkill in a different direction. For pure creative building, you might prefer a dedicated creative mode server without plots at all (everyone has their own world, or you use a plugin like Multiverse). But if you need one world where 100 players build simultaneously without griefing each other, plots are your answer. One thing worth noting: PlotSquared is in active development. The latest releases mention bug fixes and improvements across events, databases, and placeholder support. If you're running an older version, it's worth checking the changelog for relevant fixes. The Minecraft community also mentions a Minecraft Block Search tool for finding and identifying blocks - useful when you're documenting building rules or helping players troubleshoot what blocks they can place on your plot server. Running a plot server requires more upfront configuration than a vanilla creative world, but it pays for itself when your community scales beyond a handful of players. PlotSquared handles the complexity so you don't have to. Support the project PlotSquared is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the PlotSquared repo ↗ --- ### Building Enterprise Minecraft Plugins with Legacy-Lands-Library URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/legacy-lands-library-minecraft-plugins Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project legacy-lands-library (LegacyLands/legacy-lands-library) Enterprise-grade modular framework for Minecraft server development with multi-tier caching, Redis Streams, resilient data processing, and modern Java concurrency. Built on Fairy Framework for production-scale plugin development. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 860 stars💻 Java📜 MIT If you've been building Minecraft server plugins and hit walls with performance, data management, or complex caching logic, Legacy-Lands-Library exists to solve exactly that. It's a Java framework that gives you enterprise-grade tools (Redis integration, multi-tier caching, AOP, distributed data handling) without the boilerplate pain. What This Project Really Does Legacy-Lands-Library is a modular toolkit built on Fairy Framework, designed specifically for developers who need production-grade infrastructure in their Minecraft plugins. Instead of cobbling together separate libraries for configuration, caching, data persistence, and aspect-oriented programming, this framework bundles them into coherent modules that work together. It runs as a plugin itself. This matters because it handles compatibility across Spigot, Paper, and Folia automatically, rather than forcing you to figure out which API calls work on which server software. You write your plugin logic once, and the framework manages the platform-specific details underneath. The core modules cover the infrastructure layer that most plugin developers eventually need: a caching system with Redis support, configuration file handling, MongoDB integration for data storage, annotation processing for dependency injection, and aspect-oriented programming for cross-cutting concerns like logging and monitoring. When You'd Actually Use This Not every plugin needs this. If you're building a simple commands plugin or a small utility mod, you're probably overengineering the problem. But the moment you're working on something with real requirements - thousands of concurrent players, persistent data, performance-critical code paths - this framework starts paying dividends. Consider a real example: a player progression system that needs to load thousands of character profiles from a database, cache them intelligently to avoid database thrashing, handle concurrent writes from multiple game servers, and trigger side effects (XP updates, inventory syncs) across distributed instances. Legacy-Lands-Library's player data management module handles exactly this scenario. It's built for "smoothly handling thousands of inter-entity relationship networks," according to the project docs, which means your code doesn't have to. Or imagine building an anti-cheat system that requires JavaScript-based detection logic (yes, really). The framework includes a script execution module supporting Rhino, Nashorn, and V8 engines, so you can drop dynamic detection rules into a script file and reload them without restarting the server. Performance optimization is another angle. The AOP (Aspect-Oriented Programming) module lets you add monitoring, thread safety, and exception handling to methods without cluttering your business logic code - useful when you're tracking performance bottlenecks across a complex plugin. Setting Up Your First Plugin Installation assumes you're already familiar with Maven, Gradle, and the Bukkit API. You'll add the legacy-lands library as a dependency in your build file, then annotate your plugin class to enable the framework's initialization. The foundation module provides testing infrastructure and base abstractions. Configuration gets handled through the configuration module, which builds on SimplixStorage (a YAML-based config library). Here's the rough flow: java// Your plugin class, using the framework @Plugin public class MyServerPlugin extends JavaPlugin { // Framework handles initialization, dependency injection, and lifecycle } That's simplified, but the point is you're using framework annotations rather than implementing Bukkit interfaces manually for every component. Documentation exists, but it's scattered across individual module READMEs on GitHub rather than consolidated in one tutorial. That's the trade-off with a modular design - you gain flexibility but lose guided onboarding. If you're comfortable reading GitHub documentation and inferring how to integrate modules, this isn't a problem. If you prefer hand-holding, expect a steeper learning curve. The Features That Actually Matter Multi-Tier Caching. The cache module integrates Caffeine (an in-memory cache) with Redis for distributed setups. You define caching layers and let the framework handle synchronization between them. This solves the nightmare scenario where you can't figure out why data is stale in one server instance but fresh in another. Distributed Data Management. The player module builds entity-relationship data layers designed for handling interconnected data at scale. Instead of writing code to manage complex object graphs and synchronization, you define your data model and let the framework handle consistency and distributed writes. Annotation Processing. Dependency injection through annotations reduces boilerplate. Rather than manually instantiating services and passing them around, you mark methods or fields with framework annotations and let it wire things up. The annotation processor even supports flexible scanning options, so you control which classes get processed. Aspect-Oriented Programming deserves its own note. Performance monitoring, thread safety, and exception handling are cross-cutting concerns - they appear in multiple places throughout your code. Instead of repeating the same try-catch or synchronized blocks everywhere, you define an aspect once and apply it declaratively. The framework uses ClassLoader isolation to prevent conflicts with other plugins' bytecode manipulation. Virtual thread scheduling (available in the commons module) lets you take advantage of Java 21's virtual threads for lightweight concurrency, useful when you're spawning thousands of short-lived async tasks. What'll Trip You Up Java 21 is the baseline, which is recent enough that some hosting providers might not have upgraded their servers yet. Check your hosting provider's Java version before assuming you can use this. The modular design means you're responsible for assembling the right modules and understanding how they interact. There's no all-in-one "legacy-lands" configuration. You pick foundation, then add annotation processing, then caching, then MongoDB - each module adds complexity. The flexibility is genuinely useful once you understand the architecture, but it creates a mental overhead during initial setup. Debugging aspect-oriented programs is harder than conventional code. When an AOP aspect is running, the actual method might be wrapped or intercepted in ways that aren't immediately obvious from reading source. Stack traces get noisier. This is a general AOP limitation, not specific to this library, but worth knowing. The experimental modules (third-party schedulers for distributed task processing) are explicitly unstable. Don't bet your production plugin on them unless you're willing to contribute back fixes. Other Frameworks You Might Consider Fairy Framework itself is the foundation this library builds on. If you want even lower-level control or a lighter-weight dependency, you could use Fairy directly, but you'd be reimplementing all the Minecraft-specific modules (player data, script execution) yourself. For simpler plugins, conventional approaches using Spring Boot or Guice for dependency injection work fine. They're more familiar to most Java developers and have larger communities. The tradeoff is you're not getting Minecraft-specific optimizations like the distributed player data layer or virtual thread scheduling integration. CloudNet and Waterfall are more about network infrastructure and cloud deployment, not plugin development frameworks. Different problem domain entirely. The Real Picture Legacy-Lands-Library (860 stars, MIT license) succeeds at what it sets out to do: provide modular, production-grade infrastructure for complex Minecraft server plugins. It's not beginner-friendly, but it's also not meant to be. You don't reach for this for a simple fun plugin. Anyone reach for it when you're running a server where performance matters, data consistency is critical, and you need infrastructure that scales. If you're managing a large community server, building premium plugin features, or experimenting with distributed plugin architectures, this framework deserves a serious look. Just go in expecting to invest time reading module documentation and understanding Java 21 features like virtual threads and VarHandles. For plugin ideas and architecture patterns, check out the Minecraft Server List to see what kinds of server ecosystems exist in the wild. And when you're designing your server's configuration, the Server Properties Generator can help with the boilerplate setup.LegacyLands/legacy-lands-library - MIT, ★860 Ready to try legacy-lands-library? 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 LegacyLands/legacy-lands-library on GitHub ↗ --- ### Minecraft Holy Client: Load Test Your Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-holy-client-stress-testing Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "A high-performance platform for running Minecraft stress-test bots written in C#." Titlehhhh/Minecraft-Holy-Client · github.com ⭐ 174 stars💻 C#📜 Apache-2.0 Ever wonder if your Minecraft server can actually handle a hundred players joining at once? Most server admins build infrastructure based on guesses, not data. Minecraft Holy Client solves that problem by letting you run hundreds of realistic bot players against your server to see where it breaks. It's written in C# for raw performance, and it'll run on weak hardware without choking. What This Project Actually Does Minecraft Holy Client is a stress-testing framework, not a gameplay mod or client. You point it at your server, fire up hundreds of bots, and watch how your infrastructure responds under load. The bots connect, move around, place and break blocks, interact with NPCs, and generally behave like real players would. The framework is open source (Apache-2.0) and has been downloaded and tested by over 174 people on GitHub who cared enough to star it. It's written in C#, which means it compiles to native code and runs lean on system resources. Think of it as the difference between hoping your server stays up during a sale event versus knowing it'll. Why You'd Actually Use This Server admins face a real problem: you don't know your breaking point until you hit it. You could spend money on servers you don't need, or skimp and cause downtime when players show up. Holy Client lets you find the truth. Running 100 bots simultaneously isn't something you can test with manual play. You need tools designed for it. This framework handles the concurrency, the bot AI, and the network traffic all at once. It'll run on a single machine with modest specs, which is part of why the performance focus matters. A few concrete scenarios where this matters: Before launching a new server, run bots to verify your host's hardware actually performs as advertised. After adding plugins or mods, stress test to make sure the server can still handle peak loads. When scaling up, test at your target player count first instead of finding out during actual gameplay. Monitoring plugins or performance optimizations need baseline measurements. This gives you that. How to Get Started Installation is straightforward. The project is portable and cross-platform (Windows, Linux, macOS), so you don't need to install anything to the system. Head to the releases page and download the latest version. For Windows, extract the archive and run HolyClient.Desktop.exe. Linux users extract and follow platform-specific instructions in the README. That's it. Configuration happens in the application itself, not through config files scattered around. Point it at your server address, set the number of bots you want to spawn, and run the test. The UI gives you real-time feedback on what the bots are doing and how your server responds. If you're running a public server, you might also want to set up a free DNS for your Minecraft server or configure a nice MOTD message so players see what you're working on. Key Features That Actually Matter Real bot behavior. The bots don't just sit idle or spam chat. They move, interact with the world, and generate realistic server load. This matters because a thousand idle connections won't tell you much, but a thousand bots actually playing will. GitHub project card for Titlehhhh/Minecraft-Holy-Client Performance first. The codebase was built to minimize CPU and memory overhead so the bots can run on modest hardware. You're not spinning up a cloud instance just to stress test. Run it on your development machine or a basic VPS. Extensibility through plugins. If the default bot behavior doesn't match your needs (maybe you need bots to only interact with specific plugins), you can write custom bot logic. The framework is designed around this. One README mentions support for custom plugins, so you're not locked into the default behavior. Multiple platform support. Windows, Linux, macOS. Run it on whatever machine you have available. Actually being portable (no system installation required) matters more than it sounds when you're jumping between test environments. What Actually Trips People Up The project is no longer actively maintained, which the maintainer clearly states on the GitHub page. It was a foundation for experiments, not a permanent product. Before you build a workflow around it, understand that you're using a historical project. Updates and bug fixes probably won't come. That said, for stress testing, you often don't need constant updates. If it works against your server version, it works. Just be aware of the limitation. Another gotcha: stress testing requires planning. You can't just spawn 500 bots and expect useful results without thinking about what you're measuring. Set a baseline with a small number of bots first. Increase gradually. Watch where performance degrades. Random testing just wastes time. Also, respect other people's servers. Only stress test servers you own or have explicit permission to test. This should be obvious, but it's worth stating clearly. Other Tools for the Job If you need something different, a few alternatives exist. Some server host control panels include built-in load testing tools, though they're usually limited. Custom bot frameworks written in Java can run Minecraft bot clients directly, but they tend to be heavier on resources. Some admins use Docker to spin up many client instances, which works but requires more infrastructure setup. Holy Client sits in a sweet spot: it's open source, cross-platform, lightweight, and designed specifically for this job. The alternatives either cost money, require more setup, or are less efficient. Support the project Minecraft-Holy-Client is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the Minecraft-Holy-Client repo ↗ --- ### JG RTX: Bringing Photorealistic Textures to Your Minecraft World URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/jg-rtx-minecraft-resource-pack-guide Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "Minecraft v1.21 HD PBR resource pack. Works with Java and Bedrock shaders." jasonjgardner/jg-rtx · github.com ⭐ 135 stars💻 TypeScript📜 CC-BY-SA-4.0 Want to make your Minecraft world look professional without installing fifty mods or juggling complex settings? JG RTX is a free, open-source resource pack that brings physically-based textures to vanilla Minecraft on Java and Bedrock editions. It works immediately with common shaders to create genuinely impressive visuals. What Exactly Is a PBR Resource Pack? If you've never heard "PBR" before, don't worry - it's simpler than it sounds. PBR stands for "physically-based rendering," which is just a fancy way of saying the textures behave like real materials in real light. A stone block doesn't just look gray; it has actual roughness, metallic properties, and reflectivity baked into special texture files. When a shader reads these properties, it can render light bouncing off surfaces the way it actually does in nature. Standard Minecraft textures are flat - literally just colors painted on blocks. JG RTX replaces those with textures that contain extra information about how surfaces should catch light and reflect it. Your stone walls look three-dimensional. Water actually looks wet. Metal glints. It's the difference between a watercolor painting and a photograph. The project supports both Java and Bedrock editions, though the setup differs slightly between them. It's also completely free and released under CC-BY-SA-4.0, so you're not paying anyone to make your world prettier. Why Your Builds Deserve Better Textures Here's the thing about vanilla Minecraft textures: they're iconic, sure, but they're also ancient. They were designed for computers that could barely handle 16x resolution. If you've spent months building a massive castle or recreating a real-world city from reference images, vanilla textures don't do your work justice. A good resource pack changes the entire vibe of your world. Suddenly that dirt path looks weathered and realistic. Your wooden buildings have actual wood grain. Glass blocks let light through convincingly instead of looking like solid ice. It's not just prettier - it makes building more rewarding because you can actually see the detail you're putting in. JG RTX goes further than most resource packs by including PBR data, which means it only looks good with shaders enabled. But that's also exactly why it looks so good. Installing JG RTX Step by Step For Bedrock Edition Download the latest.mcpack file from the releases page. Bedrock handles these natively on Windows - just double-click it and Minecraft will register it automatically. On console, the process varies, but the core idea is the same: the file integrates directly into your packs folder. One thing to watch: make sure you actually enable the pack in your world settings. It's easy to forget and then wonder why your textures look normal. Go to your world, edit settings, and add JG RTX to the active resources. For Java Edition Java is slightly more involved. Download the.mcpack file (which is actually just a renamed ZIP), then extract it into your resourcepacks folder. On Windows, that's typically: bashC:\Users\[YourUsername]\AppData\Roaming\.minecraft\resourcepacks\ On Mac, it's in ~/Library/Application Support/minecraft/resourcepacks/, and on Linux, it's ~/.minecraft/resourcepacks/. Paste the extracted folder there, launch the game, go to Settings > Resource Packs, and activate JG RTX. It'll show in your active list immediately. A quick tip: if you're ever running into issues with textures not loading, delete the shadercache folder in your.minecraft directory and reload. That solves most texture problems on Java. Resolution Sizes: Which One's Right for You? JG RTX comes in multiple resolutions: 32x, 64x, 128x, and 256x. Here's what matters: higher resolution means more detail but also more VRAM usage and potential stuttering on lower-end systems. If you're running a gaming PC built in the last 3-4 years, 128x is the sweet spot. It looks gorgeous and won't tank your frame rate. If you've got a beast system with a good GPU, 256x textures are stunning and worth the extra resources. Playing on a laptop or older desktop? Start with 64x - it still looks dramatically better than vanilla, but won't overwhelm your hardware. The 32x option exists mainly for servers or systems where every bit of performance matters. It's still a noticeable upgrade over vanilla, but you're trading some detail for speed. There's also a Subpacks version if you want modular control over which textures apply to which blocks. Most players can ignore this unless you're doing something very specific. The Real Magic: Shader Compatibility This is where JG RTX actually shines. The resource pack is designed to work with PBR-compatible shaders - programs that understand those special texture properties we talked about earlier. Popular shaders like BetterRTX, BSL, Kappa, and SEUS all work beautifully with JG RTX. The combination is what produces those jaw-dropping screenshots you see on Reddit. A shader handles the lighting calculations, and JG RTX provides the material data, and together they create something that legitimately looks like 3D art. If you haven't installed shaders before, the process is similar to resource packs. For Java, you need a shader mod like Iris or Optifine. Drop the shader file into your shaderpacks folder, load Minecraft, and select it in your settings. Different shaders have different settings you can tweak - brightness, shadow distance, reflection quality - so there's room to find what works for your system. For Bedrock, BetterRTX has official presets designed specifically for JG RTX, which makes setup even easier. The project's GitHub also links to related tools like the JG Mod and JG Modpack for Java, if you want curated additions, plus a Glass Variety pack and Extra Stone Bricks add-on for more customization. These are totally optional, but worth checking out if you want to extend the look further. Troubleshooting Common Setup Problems The most common issue is textures not loading in Java. Usually it's because the pack isn't activated or the file wasn't extracted properly. Check that the folder structure is correct - the resourcepack folder should contain subfolders like assets/minecraft/textures, not be one level too nested. Another gotcha: shaders and resource packs are different things. You need both. JG RTX handles textures, but a shader handles lighting. Running one without the other means you'll either see flat textures or no custom textures at all. Make sure you've installed both and activated both. If your FPS drops dramatically after installing this, try dropping the resolution (64x instead of 128x) or tweaking your shader settings. Shadow distance and reflection quality are the biggest VRAM hogs. Sometimes it's simpler to just lower your render distance slightly while using fancy textures. For Bedrock players, double-check that you're using a compatible device. Older tablets and phones won't run shaders well, so expectations should match your hardware. Similar Projects Worth Knowing About JG RTX isn't the only PBR resource pack out there, though it's genuinely one of the best maintained. PBR JG (available on Modrinth and Planet Minecraft) is related but slightly different. There's also a thriving community of shader developers and texture pack creators - Modrinth is genuinely the best place to discover new packs and shaders once you've got the basics down. If you're actually recreating real places and want reference material, our block search tool helps you find exactly the block you need without scrolling through hundreds. It's surprisingly useful when you're trying to match materials. We've also got a whitelist creator tool for managing server access, which is handy if you're sharing your beautiful builds with friends. Support the project jg-rtx is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the jg-rtx repo ↗ --- ### FishingBot: Automating Minecraft AFK Fishing Across Versions URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fishingbot-minecraft-afk-setup Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project FishingBot (MrKinau/FishingBot) 1.8 - 26.1.2 Fishing bot for Minecraft Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 384 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 Ever find yourself sitting AFK at a fishing spot waiting for the loot to pile up, knowing you're missing the actual gameplay? FishingBot solves that by automating the entire fishing process so you can accumulate valuable items and experience without babysitting your character. It's a Java-based bot that supports every Minecraft version from 1.8 straight through 26.1.2, runs on Windows/Linux/Mac, and handles both offline and online mode servers. What This Project Does FishingBot is an AFK (away from keyboard) fishing automation tool written in Java. Instead of manually casting and clicking hundreds of times to catch fish, treasure, and junk items, you run the bot and it handles the repetitive work. The project is open-source (GPL-3.0 license) with 384 GitHub stars, actively maintained, and includes a user-friendly GUI so you don't need to mess with config files if you don't want to. The bot connects to a Minecraft server just like a real player would. It reads the fishing rod state, detects when something bites, performs the catch action at the right moment, and collects your loot. All while you grab a coffee or work on something else. When (And When Not) To Use FishingBot If you're running a private server with friends or playing single-player, FishingBot is genuinely useful. Fishing is monotonous, and automating it means more time for building, exploring, or PvP. You'll accumulate valuable enchanted books, name tags, and rare fishing treasures without the grinding. On public multiplayer servers? Check the rules first. Many servers explicitly prohibit bots, and running one could get you banned. FishingBot doesn't hide itself - it appears as a legitimate player in chat and shows up in /list. Server admins see it immediately. Only use this on servers where the owner has given you permission or on servers you control yourself. Single-player is hassle-free territory. Use it to stock up before a big project, or to auto-fish while you handle other things. Installation and Basic Setup You'll need Java 11 or higher installed on your machine. Grab the latest release (v2.13.12 at the time of writing) from the GitHub releases page - it's a.jar file you can download directly. GitHub project card for MrKinau/FishingBot bashjava -jar FishingBot-2.13.12.jar Run that command and the GUI window opens. From there you can configure your server address, account credentials (username for offline mode, or email/password for online), and which Minecraft version to use. The bot auto-detects supported versions from 1.8 through 26.1.2, so you don't have to guess. If you prefer command-line configuration, the project supports arguments. The wiki has a full list, but basics include - server, - username, - password, and - version. Useful if you're running this on a headless Linux server. There's also a Docker image if you want to containerize it, which simplifies deployment on a VPS or always-on machine. Key Features That Actually Work Auto-fishing that doesn't miss. The bot reliably detects fish bites and reels them in with proper timing. Compared to manual fishing, it's accurate and tireless. Run it for an hour and you'll have more fish and treasure than you'd catch manually in three. Loot announcements are another strength. Every time the bot catches something, it can announce it to Discord via webhook, or just log it locally. Imagine checking Discord and seeing "Caught enchanted book: Mending" pop up while you're doing something else. That's motivating. The bot can report its own level (experience) on demand with a command, useful if you're farming XP for enchanting. It also auto-empties its inventory when full, either by dropping items or dumping them in a chest if you configure hopper setups nearby. Multi-version support is one of the standout features. You don't need different bots for different servers. One jar handles them all - 1.8 servers, modern 1.20+ servers, even experimental snapshots. The protocol changes are handled internally. Command support lets you control the bot from the console or by typing commands in chat as another player. Type "bot_name, stop" to pause fishing, "bot_name, empty" to clear inventory, or "bot_name, help" for a full list. It's like having a remote control. Setup Gotchas and Tips The single biggest gotcha is account security. FishingBot needs your Minecraft credentials to log in. Use a separate account for botting if possible - don't use your main account. If you must use your main, enable two-factor authentication and use app passwords where available. The source code is open and reviewed by the community, so it's not a backdoor, but better safe than sorry. 13w36a banner in Minecraft Online mode authentication works fine, but some people opt for offline mode on private servers to avoid the auth step entirely. Just confirm your server allows offline mode before relying on it. Chunk loading can trip you up. The bot only fishes in loaded chunks. If your server has a small render distance or aggressive unloading, the bot might disconnect when chunks unload. Set up a chunk loader or keep a player nearby to maintain the area, or the bot will sit idle. The bot doesn't handle inventory full scenarios gracefully if you misconfigure the empty action. Set it correctly (drop items or link a chest) or the bot will get stuck. Double-check your settings before you leave it running overnight. Performance-wise, the bot is lightweight. It's not going to tank your server or laptop. But if you're running other resource-heavy tools, give them priority and monitor CPU/memory usage. Similar Tools and Alternatives If you want a lightweight client-side solution, you could explore Minecraft mods like AutoFish mods available on CurseForge, though they're version-specific and require installing mods on your client. For more complex server automation, frameworks like PyMine (Python) let you build custom bots from scratch. That's overkill for simple fishing, but it's an option if you need more flexibility later. If you're not comfortable running a bot but still want passive income of fish and treasure, consider setting up mob grinders or item sorters with hopper systems. Not automated in the same way, but mechanical and reliable. Resources and Community The FishingBot wiki on GitHub covers detailed setup for every use case. And this Discord server (linked from the repo) is active with users sharing tips and the maintainer responding to bugs quickly. Feature requests are welcome on GitHub issues. If you're designing a server where fishing is important - say, a fishing competition or economy server - this bot is worth considering as a testing tool to verify your fishing mechanics and loot tables work as intended. Want to check other tools on your server? Our MOTD Creator helps you craft eye-catching server messages, and if you're testing multi-server infrastructure, our Nether Portal Calculator is handy for coordination. Support the project FishingBot is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the FishingBot repo ↗ --- ### How SkinsRestorer Brings Custom Skins to Minecraft Servers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/skinsrestorer-custom-skins-minecraft-servers Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project SkinsRestorer/SkinsRestorer 🎨 The most popular skin plugin for Minecraft ⭐ 694 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 View on GitHub ↗ Custom Minecraft skins are one of the best ways players express themselves in-game. But here's the frustration: that skin you designed looks perfect in single-player, then vanishes the moment you join most multiplayer servers. SkinsRestorer fixes that gap by letting servers support any Minecraft skin, from any source, without complicated workarounds. What SkinsRestorer Actually Does So here's the technical reality. When you log into an online-mode Minecraft server (one with proper Mojang authentication), the server checks the official Minecraft database for your skin. If it's not there, you show up as Steve or Alex. Period. SkinsRestorer intercepts that check. Instead of only looking at Mojang's official database, it can pull skins from multiple sources and serve them to all players on your server. Your custom skin suddenly works, your friends see it, and the whole experience feels native. The clever part: it works at both the server level (Spigot, Paper, Purpur) and the proxy level (BungeeCord, Velocity, Waterfall). Want skins consistent across a network of five servers? Throw SkinsRestorer on your proxy and you're done. One configuration, one source of truth for all player skins. There are also Fabric and NeoForge mods if you're running modded servers and need client-side support. Why This Actually Matters for Servers Creative servers, survival communities, and anything where players care about looking unique need this. Forcing players to choose between their favorite skin and joining your server is a losing proposition. Players just won't show up, or they'll disconnect and play somewhere else. Networks with multiple servers get even more benefit. A player loads their skin once and sees it everywhere. That consistency across game worlds sounds minor until you realize how much it improves the sense of a cohesive community. There's also the modded server angle. If you're mixing vanilla players with Fabric or NeoForge users, everyone needs to see the same skins. SkinsRestorer bridges that gap without requiring every player to install mods. And here's something server admins don't always think about: player retention. Small touches like custom skin support make players feel like they matter. It's the difference between a server that feels abandoned and one that feels like home. Getting It Installed Installation depends on your server setup. For Spigot, Paper, or Purpur, it's straightforward. First, grab the latest release from GitHub or one of the distribution platforms. Drop the JAR file into your plugins folder. bashjava -jar server.jar nogui Once it's running, you can manage skins in-game using the built-in commands. The exact command format depends on your version, so check their documentation site for the current syntax. For BungeeCord or Velocity networks, install the plugin on your proxy instead of individual servers. This gives you centralized skin management across your entire network without per-server configuration. If you're running a modded setup with Fabric or NeoForge, download the appropriate mod version and place it in your mods folder. The setup's even simpler since you don't need to configure anything server-side. One thing worth doing: if you're using a whitelist, make sure your whitelist is properly synced with your SkinsRestorer configuration. You don't want players able to connect but unable to see skins due to configuration mismatches. The Features That Actually Shine Start with platform breadth. Whether you're on Paper, Velocity, Bungeecord, Fabric, or NeoForge, there's a version that works. That's genuinely rare. Most plugins pick a platform and stay there. SkinsRestorer covers the entire ecosystem. The multi-source support is solid too. It doesn't just pull from Mojang's official skin database. You can configure it to check custom sources, texture packs, or even historical skin data. This flexibility means you can support skins that wouldn't normally work on standard servers. Community strength matters more than people realize. With 694 GitHub stars and an active Discord community, when you hit a problem, someone's probably solved it. The project has international translations too, which helps administrators in non-English communities. The API deserves mention if you're a developer or running custom plugins. SkinsRestorer exposes a proper API for skin functionality, so you can build features on top of it instead of reinventing everything from scratch. Performance is invisible on normal servers. You run it, skins work, nobody notices it's even there. Gotchas That Trip People Up The most common issue isn't SkinsRestorer's fault: it's people assuming it works without reading the configuration. Different skin sources have different setup requirements. Mojang's official source is straightforward, but if you're pulling from custom sources, you need to configure those explicitly or skins won't load. Command syntax confusion happens. Players (or admins) forget the right syntax for changing skins and assume the plugin's broken. It's always user error with the command format. One thing worth watching: if you're running a massive network and constantly requesting skins, you might hit rate limits on certain sources. For normal servers this never happens. For huge networks with thousands of players hammering the API simultaneously, it's worth being aware. If you're upgrading from an old version, double-check your configuration. Plugin settings can change between major releases. Test in a dev environment before pushing to production. Other Ways to Handle Skins Some servers use authentication plugins like Authme that bundle basic skin support. It works, but it's never as full-featured as a dedicated tool. Offline-mode servers support any skin natively. You get perfect customization, but you lose security. Griefers can impersonate other players. SkinsRestorer gives you online-mode's protection with custom skin support. If you want to keep an eye on server health while testing skin changes, the server status checker tool helps you verify everything's still running properly. And if you're looking for inspiration, check out the minecraft.how skins collection to see what the community has created. Support the project SkinsRestorer is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the SkinsRestorer repo ↗ --- ### Floodgate: Bridging Bedrock and Java Servers in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/floodgate-bedrock-java-minecraft Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice 🐙 Open-source Minecraft project GeyserMC/Floodgate Hybrid mode plugin to allow for connections from Geyser to join online mode servers. ⭐ 666 stars💻 Java📜 MIT View on GitHub ↗ Running a Minecraft server that welcomes both Java and Bedrock players has always been a technical puzzle. Floodgate is the missing piece that makes it possible, letting your Bedrock friends (on mobile, console, or Windows 11 Edition) join the same server as Java players without breaking authentication or creating admin headaches. What Floodgate Does Floodgate is a plugin that solves one specific problem: letting Bedrock players authenticate on online-mode Java servers. Here's the issue it addresses. Normally, online-mode servers only accept Java Edition players with valid Mojang accounts that have logged in through the official launcher. Bedrock Edition players (whether they're on mobile, Switch, PlayStation, or Windows 11) don't have Mojang accounts and aren't in that authentication system. They can't log in at all. That's where Geyser comes in. Geyser translates Bedrock's protocol into Java's protocol so Bedrock players can technically connect to Java servers. But Geyser alone doesn't solve the authentication problem. You can run Geyser on offline-mode servers (where anyone joins with any name), but that leaves you vulnerable to griefing, impersonation, and players nuking your server. If you want a real, secure server with actual player progression and consequences, you need online-mode. Floodgate bridges that gap. But it provides the encryption and token system that proves to your Java server: "This Bedrock player is legitimate and verified by Geyser." No fake accounts. No impersonation. Just cryptographically signed handshakes. It sounds simple on the surface, but behind the scenes it's doing encryption, token validation, account verification, and session management to make the whole thing work smoothly. Why Run a Cross-Platform Server Before you set this up, ask yourself honestly: do you actually need it? Cross-platform servers are genuinely useful if you're in one of a few situations. You're trying to build a larger community and Bedrock players vastly outnumber Java players overall. You want to support friends on different platforms without running two separate servers. You're building a persistent economy or shared world and want everyone in one place experiencing it together. Not every server needs this. If you're running a small vanilla realm with three close friends, offline-mode Geyser is fine. You don't need the security overhead. But if you want a thriving public server with progression that matters, shared economies, guilds, or quest systems? This is worth the effort. How to Install and Configure You'll need three things. A Java Edition server running Paper, Spigot, or another compatible server software. Geyser installed (usually as a plugin in the same server instance). Floodgate itself, which you download from the official GeyserMC website and drop into your plugins folder. GitHub project card for GeyserMC/Floodgate On first startup, Floodgate generates a keypair automatically. This is an RSA keypair: a public key and a private key. The private key signs the authentication tokens that prove Bedrock players are real. That public key lets your server verify those signatures. Keep your private key secure. If someone steals it, they can forge authentication tokens and fake Bedrock connections. Your Geyser config file needs to be aware that Floodgate exists. In Geyser's config, set the auth-type option appropriately and point it to your Java server's address. If Geyser and Floodgate are running in the same Paper instance (which is the simplest setup), this communication happens automatically over internal IPC. One gotcha that trips people up: if Geyser and Floodgate are on different machines (say, Geyser on a proxy server and your Java server elsewhere), you need network connectivity between them. Make sure your firewall allows connections from Geyser to your Java server on the configured port. Most people run them together in one Paper instance, so this isn't usually a problem. How Authentication Works Here's the flow. A Bedrock player launches Minecraft on their device. Geyser intercepts the connection. The Bedrock player's device sends their Xbox Live authentication token to Geyser (or passes it locally if Geyser is on the same device). Geyser validates with Microsoft's servers that the Xbox Live token is real. Once validated, Geyser creates a Floodgate token that includes the Bedrock player's UUID and username. Geyser signs this token with Floodgate's private key and sends it to the Java server. The Java server receives the signed token and verifies the signature using the public key. If the signature is valid, the server trusts that the connection is legitimate and the player logs in. From the Java server's perspective, this looks like any other legitimate player connection. Java players and Bedrock players play together in the exact same world, share the exact same inventory system, and experience the exact same economy and progression. You literally can't tell the difference from gameplay unless you check the player's UUID (Bedrock players get a deterministically derived UUID based on their original Bedrock UUID, so it stays consistent across sessions). If you're running plugins, you can detect whether a player came through Floodgate and apply special logic if you want (like restricting certain features to Java-only or vice versa). But the default behavior is complete unification. Actually, here's something I found surprising: if you're using tools like the Nether Portal Calculator to help players navigate the Nether across platforms, or our Text Generator for custom signage and chat messages, those work identically for Bedrock and Java players once Floodgate is handling authentication. The player experience is truly unified. Common Issues, Troubleshooting, and Alternatives Version mismatches between Floodgate and Geyser cause the vast majority of authentication failures. Floodgate 2.x is compatible with Geyser 2.x. Floodgate 1.x works with Geyser 1.x. If you update one without updating the other, you'll get token validation errors. Update them together, not separately. Your server must be running in online-mode. If it's in offline-mode, Floodgate won't work properly. Yes, online-mode does have a small performance cost (Microsoft authenticates every player at login), but the security is worth it. Bedrock players behind restrictive corporate firewalls or certain VPNs sometimes struggle to establish the connection through Geyser. This is a network infrastructure issue, not a Floodgate issue. If you're running a global server and noticing connectivity problems from certain regions, consider running a Geyser proxy closer to your target players. When auth fails, check Floodgate's logs first. They're usually explicit about what went wrong: bad token signature, version mismatch, network timeout, or firewall blocking. Reading the error messages saves hours of debugging time. Now, you might not need Floodgate at all. That's worth acknowledging. ViaVersion plugins handle supporting multiple Java versions on the same server, but they don't solve cross-platform play the way Floodgate does. Running two entirely separate servers (one for Java, one for Bedrock) and syncing them via a shared database is architecturally viable if you want total isolation. Some third-party hosting platforms bundle Geyser and Floodgate automatically, which is the easiest path if you don't want to configure it yourself. But if you're running your own Java server and want to open it to Bedrock players while maintaining online-mode security? Floodgate is the standard tool. It's mature, battle-tested on servers with thousands of concurrent players, and the GeyserMC community support is solid. The project has 666 stars on GitHub and is written in Java, which makes it a natural fit for the Minecraft server ecosystem. Support the project Floodgate is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the Floodgate repo ↗ --- ### How VulkanMod Modernizes Minecraft Java Rendering URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/vulkanmod-minecraft-rendering Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "Vulkan renderer mod for Minecraft." xCollateral/VulkanMod · github.com ⭐ 2,278 stars💻 Java📜 LGPL-3.0 If your CPU's pegged at 100% while Minecraft crawls, VulkanMod might be the fix. This fabric mod swaps out the aging OpenGL renderer for Vulkan, a modern graphics API that dramatically cuts CPU overhead and lets your GPU do more of the work. What VulkanMod Actually Does Here's the thing: VulkanMod isn't just slapping Vulkan on top of Minecraft's existing code. It's a complete rewrite of the renderer, built ground-up to take advantage of what Vulkan offers. Minecraft's been running OpenGL 3.2 for years, and that shows in the CPU load. The project started experimental but has matured into something you can actually use daily. Version 0.6.0, the latest release, improved terrain rendering performance and fixed memory leaks during extended play. It sits at 2,278 GitHub stars with an active community maintaining it. What makes this different from other performance mods? It's architectural. Instead of squeezing the OpenGL pipeline, VulkanMod replaces it entirely. Why You'd Actually Want This CPU bottlenecks kill Minecraft performance. You could have a top-tier GPU, but if your processor's maxed out, you're stuck at whatever framerate your CPU can push. Vulkan cuts the amount of CPU work between frames significantly. But it sounds technical, but in practice? Smoother gameplay, fewer framedrops, and the ability to crank your render distance or graphics settings higher without melting. Real numbers vary by hardware. Someone with a 2024 GPU and fast CPU might see 20% improvement. Older setups sometimes see more. Don't expect a guaranteed 2x FPS jump, but the smoothness boost is noticeable immediately. Server-side this gets interesting. Administrators report fewer lag spikes even with more players online. The reduced CPU overhead means you can handle bigger render distances or more complex terrain without the tick-rate tanking. If you're running a community server, that's huge. And there's the future-proofing angle. Modern GPUs have capabilities that OpenGL never exposed well. Vulkan lets developers use them. It's future-proofing your Minecraft in a way the vanilla renderer just doesn't. Installation: Step by Step Setup is straightforward, but order matters. First thing: you need Fabric. If you don't have it, grab the installer from fabricmc.net, run it, point it at your game directory, and let it install the loader. Standard stuff. Once Fabric is installed, download the VulkanMod jar from CurseForge or Modrinth, then drop it into your mods folder: bashcp Vulkanmod.jar ~/.minecraft/mods/ # Windows users: paste into %APPDATA%\.minecraft\mods\ instead Launch Minecraft with the Fabric profile, wait for mods to load, and you're running Vulkan. Done. One critical check first: GPU compatibility. Most modern cards work (NVIDIA 600-series and newer, AMD GCN and up, Intel Iris and newer), but ancient integrated graphics might not. The mod errors out clearly if your GPU doesn't support Vulkan, so you'll know immediately what's wrong. What about Minecraft versions? VulkanMod follows Fabric releases, so it supports 26.1.2 and recent snapshots. Check the mod page for exact version matches - sometimes there's a release lag. Features Worth Knowing About Chunk culling is the headline feature. The mod figures out which chunks you literally can't see from your position and skips rendering them entirely. Multiple culling algorithms let you pick which one suits your hardware best. That single feature cuts geometry processing dramatically. GitHub project card for xCollateral/VulkanMod GPU selection matters if you've multiple graphics cards. Instead of the system guessing which one to use, you pick. Useful for dual-GPU setups or laptops with integrated + discrete graphics. The resizable render frame queue smooths out framepacing, especially helpful on older or less powerful machines. Basically, it buffers frames smarter. Native Wayland support is nice if you're on Linux with a modern display server. Most people don't care, but if you're, it works properly now. Windowed fullscreen mode helps too - great for multi-monitor setups or when you want to alt-tab without performance penalties. And they redesigned the graphics settings menu. Finding rendering options in vanilla Minecraft is like treasure hunting, so having them organized in one place is genuinely helpful. What'll Break Your Setup Shaders don't work yet. So this is the biggest caveat. Complementary, BSL, Continuum - none of them. The roadmap mentions shader support eventually, but it's not there. If shaders are essential to you, VulkanMod isn't ready. Performance gains aren't guaranteed to be huge. Hardware matters a lot. Some people see dramatic improvements; others see modest gains. Don't expect consistent 2x FPS boosts - it's more nuanced than that, actually that only works if your CPU was the bottleneck to begin with. The mod's actively developed, which means occasional bugs slip through releases. This 0.6.0 update fixed texture alpha cutout issues on 1.21.11 and closed a memory leak. Reporting problems on GitHub helps the maintainer fix things faster. Not every update is smooth. Compatibility is generally solid - texture packs work fine, most mods are okay - but mixing VulkanMod with 50 other rendering mods is uncharted territory. Keep your modlist reasonable until you know what works together. How It Stacks Against Other Options Sodium and Iris are the other heavy hitters in performance modding. Sodium optimizes the OpenGL pipeline cleverly. Iris layers shaders on top. They're compatible with each other and (mostly) with VulkanMod too - you can run all three. The scope differs, though. Sodium works within OpenGL. VulkanMod replaces the entire renderer. If shaders are your priority, Iris is the answer. If you want maximum performance and don't care about shaders, VulkanMod pulls ahead. For a low-end machine, Sodium alone might be enough. For a server wanting to reduce player lag, VulkanMod makes more sense. So it's not "better" - it's different. Pick based on what you actually need. Server Setup and Optimization Running a server with VulkanMod on clients? Good pairing with solid server configs. Use the Server Properties Generator to dial in server.properties - view distance, max-tick-time, entity settings all affect performance. Client-side rendering improvements mean nothing if the server's struggling. The Minecraft Text Generator helps if you want to craft server messages letting players know what they're running. Not that they'll notice Vulkan directly, but good context. 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 --- ### Testing Minecraft Servers with mc-bots: A Complete Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mc-bots-minecraft-stress-testing Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project mc-bots (crpmax/mc-bots) A simple app for stress testing Minecraft servers with bots Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 512 stars💻 Java📜 MIT Ever wonder if your Minecraft server will actually hold up when players show up? mc-bots lets you find out before you're scrambling. This Java tool simulates fake players connecting to your server so you can see how it performs under load, test plugins, or just mess around with your own infrastructure. What This Project Does mc-bots is straightforward: it's a bot client that connects to Minecraft servers. Lots of them. You can spin up anywhere from a handful of bots to hundreds (or more, depending on your hardware and patience) and have them all sit on your server simultaneously. Think of it like a stress test in a box. Instead of waiting for a server event to naturally draw a crowd, you can artificially fill your server, watch metrics, and see what breaks. The bots can move around, send messages, run commands, and generally behave like real players. They won't actually play the game with you, but they'll be there taking up slots and consuming resources. It's written in Java and works with recent Minecraft versions (currently supporting 1.21.7 and compatible with 1.21.8). If you need older version support, the project maintains releases going back several MC versions. Why You'd Actually Use This Server testing is the obvious use case. Maybe you're running a small multiplayer realm and want to know the ceiling before inviting friends. Maybe you're building a plugin and need to make sure it doesn't melt when ten people use it simultaneously. Maybe you run a larger server and genuinely want to understand capacity before peak hours hit. But there are other angles. Developers use this to test network code, observe server behavior, and debug performance issues in their plugins. You could watch your TPS drop in real-time while adding bots, pinpoint exactly when things degrade. Educational value, too: if you're learning about Minecraft networking or server administration, having a tool that lets you experiment without consequences is pretty useful. It's also just handy for filling empty slots temporarily. Need to test something that requires multiple players but don't have friends online? Spin up some bots. Getting It Set Up You'll need Java 17 or higher. Grab the latest JAR from the releases page (currently 1.2.17) and run it from the command line. Minimal syntax: bashjava -jar mc-bots-1.2.17.jar -s 192.168.0.189:25565 This connects one bot to your server at that address. Add options to scale up. Here's a more realistic example that might actually be useful: bashjava -jar mc-bots-1.2.17.jar -s 192.168.0.189:25565 -c 30 -d 4000 5000 -p BOT_ -r That connects 30 bots with a connection delay between 4-5 seconds each (so they don't all slam the server at once), gives them realistic-looking nicknames prefixed with "BOT_", and lets them join naturally. Spreading out connections is important - you want to test how your server handles a gradual increase in players, not just a DDoS of instant connections. The Feature Set (And What Matters) The tool gives you fine-grained control over how your bots behave. Here are the ones that actually make a difference: Proxy support - You can have bots connect through SOCKS4 or SOCKS5 proxies from a file or URL. So this lets you simulate traffic from different IP addresses if your server does IP-based load balancing or geo-routing. Useful for larger scale tests. Join messages - Bots can execute commands or send chat messages when they connect using the `-j` flag. Want to test how your plugin handles a thousand players running `/spawn` simultaneously? Now you can. This is genuinely powerful for stress-testing command handlers. Nickname control - Generate random names, use real-looking ones with `-r`, or load a custom list from a file. Superficial but useful for seeing how your chat system or player list renders with varying name lengths and characters. Minimal mode - The `-m` and `-x` flags disable various client features to reduce overhead. When you're pushing hundreds of bots, the tool itself becomes the bottleneck. Minimal mode trades interactivity for raw bot count. You lose colored chat output and control, but the bots still connect and exist on the server. Online accounts - Connect with actual Microsoft accounts instead of offline mode using `-o`. Useful if your server authenticates through proper Mojang login or your plugin checks premium accounts. Tips That Actually Matter Connection delay is your friend. Don't connect all your bots at once. Stagger them with `-d` to simulate realistic join patterns. This gives your server time to breathe and lets you see how it ramps up gradually instead of spiking instantly. Watch your TPS. The whole point is observing metrics. Have a separate terminal window open showing your server logs or a monitoring tool. You're looking for the moment performance degrades - that's your ceiling. Start small and scale up. Connect ten bots, see what happens. Then twenty. Then fifty. Don't jump to three hundred immediately. You'll learn more from a gradual ramp than from chaos. The auto-respawn feature (enabled by default) respawns dead bots automatically after a set delay. Disable it with `-ar -1` if you're testing something where bot death matters. Otherwise bots sitting in the void will just respawn endlessly, which can skew your test if you're trying to measure specific player states. One gotcha: this tool works best with offline-mode servers or servers you control. Don't point it at someone else's server (you'll want to respect their infrastructure). The README includes a disclaimer about this - it's meant for educational and testing purposes on your own hardware. Also worth noting: the newer versions support Minecraft 1.21.7 and forward. If you're on 1.20, you'll need to grab an older release from the project's release history. Check which version supports your MC edition before downloading. Reasonable Alternatives Vanilla Minecraft has some built-in testing tools. You can use spawn commands and mods to generate players locally for smaller tests, but it's clunky and caps out quickly. mc-bots is purpose-built for this, so it's more flexible and scales better. If you're load testing a server infrastructure more broadly (not just Minecraft), tools like Apache JMeter or custom load testing scripts exist. But those are overkill if you're just checking if your Minecraft server survives a reasonable player count. For plugin testing specifically, some plugin development frameworks include testing utilities, but again, there's no replacement for actually connecting bots and watching real server behavior in real time. If you run a public server, services like server listing sites and plugin repositories can show you if your uptime is solid, but that's reactive. mc-bots is proactive - you get to fail gracefully in private before inviting people. The Bottom Line mc-bots solves a real problem for server administrators and plugin developers who want visibility into how their setup behaves under load. It's lightweight, surprisingly flexible, and gives you actual data instead of guesses. If you're running anything beyond a single-player world that others join, knowing your server's limits is just smart. For styling up your server beyond just infrastructure, you might want a nice MOTD. Check out the Minecraft MOTD Creator to craft something eye-catching. And if you're recruiting players, don't forget to browse the Minecraft Skins library to stand out in the community. Ready to try mc-bots? 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 crpmax/mc-bots on GitHub ↗ --- ### Misode.github.io: Building Custom Minecraft Content Without Writing JSON URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/misode-data-pack-generator Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "Data Pack Generators and Tools for Minecraft 1.15, 1.16, 1.17, 1.18, 1.19, 1.20, 1.21" misode/misode.github.io · github.com ⭐ 864 stars💻 TypeScript📜 MIT Misode.github.io is a free, web-based data pack generator for Minecraft Java Edition spanning versions 1.15 to 1.21. Instead of manually writing JSON files for custom content, you build data packs visually. It handles everything from commands to loot tables, and lets you download ready-to-use packs. No coding required. What Misode Actually Is Think of Misode as a visual builder for Minecraft data packs. You probably know data packs let you add custom content without modding - custom dimensions, items, recipes, mobs, all that stuff. But writing them means hand-coding JSON files that are easy to mess up. Misode skips that. It's a collection of web-based generators (844 stars on GitHub, built with TypeScript and Vite). Pick a generator, fill in some fields, hit download, and you've got a working data pack. No JSON nightmares. No syntax errors from typos. The catch? It's best for structured content - things with clear templates. Custom command sequences, loot tables, predicates, advancements - all the bread-and-butter stuff that takes forever to write by hand. Less useful if you want to tweak specific JSON fields or do something completely unconventional. But for standard stuff, it's legitimately impressive. Why You'd Actually Use This Let's say you're setting up a custom survival world for friends. You want special loot in the nether fortress, a custom crafting recipe for a rare item, and maybe a custom advancement system. Doing that manually means three separate JSON files, careful nesting, and praying you didn't forget a comma somewhere. With Misode? Open the loot table generator, click some dropdowns, add your enchantments and items, and download. Same with recipes. Same with advancements. It cuts the time from "why is this breaking" to "actually finished" in half. Or you're working on a creative world and want custom mobs with specific equipment and AI. Command builders are tedious to write by hand. Misode's predicate generator and NBT tools let you assemble them visually without wrestling with text. The project also supports modded generators if you're working with popular mods - there's a contribution system for adding custom generators beyond vanilla, though that requires understanding the Mcdoc format (the project's custom JSON schema language). Server admins especially benefit. Setting up custom loot distribution across your server? Job done in ten minutes instead of an hour of debugging. Same goes for custom recipes or progression trees. Getting Started With Misode Here's the thing - you might not need to "run" anything at all. The hosted site at misode.github.io works right now in your browser. Just visit it, pick a generator from the menu, and build your pack. Download the ZIP, drop it in your world's datapacks folder (or server's datapacks folder), reload, and you're done. If you want to fork the project for custom generators or modify it locally, the setup is straightforward: bashgit clone https://github.com/misode/misode.github.io.git cd misode.github.io npm install npm run dev Visit localhost:3000 and it'll hot-reload as you edit. The project uses Preact (a lighter React alternative) and Vite, so development is fast. Build times are quick. But honestly - unless you're contributing new generators - the hosted version is all you need. What You Can Actually Build With Misode The project includes generators for dozens of things. Here are the ones that save you the most time: GitHub project card for misode/misode.github.io Loot Tables customize what blocks and mobs drop. Want diamonds three times more common in your world? Done. Want custom items only in specific chest loot? Set it up visually, no JSON wrestling. Commands - there's a generator for complex command chains. Conditional executes, teleports with specific rotations, data modification stacks. Instead of typing `/execute if entity @s[scores=...] run teleport @s 100 64 200`, you build it step by step with dropdowns. Predicates are the logic gates of data packs. "Give this loot only if the player is in biome X and has enchantment Y and is sneaking." Misode's predicate builder honestly beats writing these by hand. The nesting gets complex fast, and the visual interface prevents mistakes. Advancements let you set up custom progression. A whole achievement tree - "Defeat 10 custom mobs, then unlock this boss fight, then unlock a special reward." The generator handles branching and triggers. It's the kind of thing that takes 20 minutes to write JSON for, and two minutes in Misode. Recipes handle custom crafting to smelting recipes. Shaped, shapeless, special recipes. Straightforward but saves time versus hand-JSON. If you're building a server or world with custom player progression, you'd pair Misode for the mechanics side with tools like our Minecraft Skin Creator for custom appearances. And when you're fine-tuning loot, our Minecraft Block Search helps you find the exact blocks and items you need for your tables. For modded content, there's support for generators beyond vanilla - custom biomes, modded items, that sort of thing - though you'll need to check what's available in the current instance. Common Mistakes and Things That Trip People Up Scope creep is real with Misode. It makes creating so easy that you end up building ten custom items when you meant to build one. Set a specific goal before you start. Version compatibility matters more than people realize. If you're building for a 1.20 server but generate for 1.21, small differences in NBT or command syntax can silently break things. Always check the version dropdown before you start - there's no warning if you get it wrong. Not every edge case has a UI. If your idea is 90% standard (custom loot with standard drops) but 10% weird (some custom NBT field that Misode doesn't expose), you'll end up hand-editing the JSON afterward anyway. That's totally fine, but understand the generator isn't a complete solution for everything. It's a 90% tool. Open one of the downloaded JSON files and actually read what Misode generated. Understanding the output makes debugging way easier when something doesn't work. You'll see the structure, the command syntax, the NBT paths - and next time you'll know what to modify by hand. The project supports multiple languages via Weblate (SPGoding's community translation platform). If your language isn't perfect, you can help improve it. The localization is pretty active, so contributing is appreciated. How This Stacks Up Against Alternatives Writing JSON by hand is technically an option. It's also technically how you'd fix an engine by hand instead of replacing it - possible, but why suffer? DataPackHub exists, but it's more of a sharing/discovery site than a builder. Some people use external JSON editors with validation, which works but defeats the purpose of a visual interface and makes you learn JSON syntax. Spyglass MC is excellent for power users who want an IDE-like experience with syntax highlighting and debugging, but it's overkill if you just want to create a few packs. Misode's real advantage is that it's zero-friction. No installation, no syntax to learn, no validation errors. Just dropdowns and download. For most people - hobbyists, server admins, creators building custom worlds - Misode is the right tool. It's fast, it's free, it requires no setup, and it outputs standard data packs that work anywhere. Ready to try misode.github.io? 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 misode/misode.github.io on GitHub ↗ --- ### Geyser: Playing Java Servers from Bedrock Edition URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/geyser-bedrock-java-servers Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "A bridge/proxy allowing you to connect to Minecraft: Java Edition servers with Minecraft: Bedrock Edition." GeyserMC/Geyser · github.com ⭐ 5,521 stars💻 Java📜 MIT Ever wanted to hop on a Java Edition server but only own Bedrock? Geyser is a translation layer that lets Bedrock players join Java servers, converting the protocol differences on the fly. It's not pixel-perfect, but for cross-edition play, it's the closest thing to magic the community's built. What This Project Actually Does Geyser sits between your Bedrock client and a Java server, translating packets in real time. Bedrock sends its protocol version, Geyser converts it to what Java servers understand, and then converts the server's responses back for Bedrock. It sounds simple, but the two editions are architecturally different enough that this is genuinely impressive engineering work. The MIT-licensed project has over 5500 stars on GitHub, which tells you it's not some fringe experiment. It's actively maintained and works well enough that thousands of players use it daily. Why You'd Actually Want This Your friends on Bedrock can't play your Java server. That's been the frustrating reality for years. Geyser closes that gap without making anyone buy different hardware or switch editions. You've got a few real use cases here: Running a server where Bedrock and Java players mix together Testing servers on a device that only supports Bedrock Accessing Java servers from PlayStation, Nintendo Switch, or mobile without needing a PC Developing and testing network changes that affect both editions If you're running a public server, this is genuinely valuable. You're not locked to one edition. Getting Geyser Running Installation depends on what you're doing. Most people run Geyser as a standalone proxy that sits in front of their Java server. Clone the repo and build it: bashgit clone https://github.com/GeyserMC/Geyser.git cd Geyser git submodule update - init - recursive./gradlew build The built JAR ends up in the bootstrap/build folder. Then you configure it to point to your Java server, start the proxy, and tell Bedrock players to connect to your proxy's IP and port 19132 (Bedrock's default). Your Java server keeps running on its normal Java port (25565). Geyser just sits in front and translates. Simple setup, honestly. There's a test server at test.geysermc.org if you want to see it working without building anything: Java players connect to port 25565, Bedrock players connect to port 19132. What Actually Works Core gameplay translates really well. Block placement, mining, movement, inventory, crafting. You won't notice anything wrong for basic survival play. Chat works. Your Bedrock friends see Java player messages, and vice versa. Commands are mostly supported. Enchanting works. Brewing stands work. The project supports Bedrock versions 1.21.130 through 1.21.132, and Java 1.21.11. Those aren't the absolute latest snapshots, but they're current enough for real servers. One genuinely neat feature: Geyser translates skins. Bedrock players see Java skins on the server (converted to Bedrock format), and Java players see Bedrock skins. Not perfectly, but well enough that you're not staring at Steve clones. Where It Gets Messy Here's the caveat: Geyser isn't a perfect translation. Some things just don't work the same way between editions. Movement detection is the big one. Java has more stringent anticheat checks, and Bedrock movement is slightly different by design. Large servers with strict anticheat might flag Bedrock players as suspicious. Geyser can't fix this - it's a fundamental difference in how the clients move in-game. Some entity animations don't translate perfectly. Bedrock and Java have slightly different interpretations of how mobs and players move. On your screen it might look fine, but the translation layer can introduce weird movement artifacts if you're watching closely. Certain features just won't work. Bedrock doesn't have the same redstone system as Java, so complex redstone contraptions might not behave identically. Mods and plugins that expect Java-specific mechanics won't translate. Some rare blocks or items have no Bedrock equivalent. The project documentation is honest about this: don't expect everything to work perfectly. But for survival play, creative mode, and most vanilla features, you'll be fine. Tips and Common Gotchas Most issues come down to configuration. Your proxy port needs to be accessible from the internet if you're doing this across networks. Make sure your firewall allows both 25565 (Java) and 19132 (Bedrock). Bedrock players often get confused about "realm" versus "server" terminology. Make sure they understand they're connecting to a proxy, not a realm. The address might look weird to them (IP:port instead of a realm code). Performance can degrade if you're translating for too many players at once. The proxy needs CPU power to handle the packet translation for dozens of simultaneous connections. On a beefy box it's fine, but on shared hosting it might struggle. Test with just one Bedrock player first. Get them to run basic commands, mine a few blocks, place something, chat. If all that works, add more. Jumping straight to "bring 30 Bedrock friends" is how you debug mysteriously broken servers. Other Ways to Cross-Play If Geyser isn't your thing, there are alternatives, though they're more limited. Some server hosting providers offer "Bedrock Plus" features that let console players on Java servers, but this is usually vendor-specific and not portable. You're locked into their infrastructure. Building a custom plugin layer is theoretically possible, but you'd be reimplementing a lot of what Geyser already does. Not worth the effort for most servers. For smaller communities, just running separate Bedrock and Java servers and coordinating manually is sometimes simpler than managing a proxy. But if you want true cross-edition play, Geyser is genuinely your best option. If you're running a Minecraft server yourself, you might also want to check out our Minecraft Votifier Tester to validate voting plugins. And if you're working with skins across editions, browsing what's available at minecraft.how skins can give you an idea of what translates well between the two formats.GeyserMC/Geyser - MIT, ★5521 Ready to try Geyser? 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 GeyserMC/Geyser on GitHub ↗ --- ### How LuckPerms Simplifies Minecraft Server Permissions URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/luckperms-minecraft-permissions Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "A permissions plugin for Minecraft servers." LuckPerms/LuckPerms · github.com ⭐ 2,253 stars💻 Java📜 MIT If you've ever tried to manage a Minecraft server with players constantly asking \"why can't I break blocks?\" or \"when do I get mod status?\", you know that permission systems are the backbone of any decent server. LuckPerms handles this for you, turning permission chaos into something actually manageable.What This Project DoesMinecraft servers aren't like single-player worlds where you control everything. The moment you have other people playing, you need to decide who can build, who can use admin commands, who can sell items in shops, and a hundred other things. That's where permissions come in.LuckPerms is a plugin that sits between your players and the commands they try to run. Instead of manually editing endless permission files or using clunky UI tools, you define groups (like \"Moderator\", \"VIP\", \"Builder\"), assign permissions to those groups, and then put players into the right groups. Done.It sounds simple, but the execution matters. LuckPerms does this fast enough that it doesn't cause lag, reliably enough that hundreds of thousands of players trust it, and flexibly enough to support everything from tiny survival servers to massive networks with thousands of concurrent players. The project's been around for years and has 2253 stars on GitHub because it actually solves the problem well.Actually, let me back up. If you're running a small white-listed server with friends, you probably don't need this. But if you're building something real with ranks, moderators, and different rule sets for different player types, this is exactly what you reach for. Why You'd Use ItThere are a few reasons people end up installing LuckPerms.First: you're growing. You started with five friends, but now you've got 30 players. Suddenly you need mods who can help you, builders who can place blocks but not destroy them, and VIPs who paid for cosmetic perks. Managing all that by hand is painful.Second: you're running a network. Maybe you've got a survival server, a creative server, and a PvP arena all on different machines, but you want players to keep their rank across all three. LuckPerms handles that through shared databases, so one config system controls your entire network.Third: you want something you don't have to fight. Some permission plugins are notoriously buggy or slow. I've seen servers lag out just from checking permissions during peak hours. LuckPerms was built to avoid that.The plugin also lets you use a web editor instead of editing config files in a text editor. Seriously, if you've ever messed up a YAML indentation and locked yourself out of your own server, you'll appreciate not having to do that every time you promote someone. Installation and Basic SetupGetting LuckPerms running depends on what kind of server you're using. The project supports Bukkit, Spigot, Paper, Velocity, BungeeCord, Fabric, and a few others. For the most common setup (Paper server), here's what you do:Download the plugin JAR from the official siteDrop it into your plugins folderRestart your serverRun the initial setup commandscode/lp create default /lp group default permission set essentials.home /lp group default permission set essentials.sethomeThat creates a basic \"default\" group that all players join automatically, and gives them permission to use home commands from Essentials.If you're on a BungeeCord network with multiple servers, you'll want to set up a shared database (MySQL or PostgreSQL both work) so permissions sync across your proxy and all connected servers. The documentation walks through the database setup pretty clearly.One thing to keep in mind after installation: make sure your server's other settings are configured correctly. The MOTD creator can help you set up an appealing server message, and the server properties generator saves you from manually tweaking every single setting. Core Features ExplainedPermission nodes are the foundation. A node is just a text string like essentials.home or minecraft.command.say. You assign these to groups and they cascade down to players. Simple concept, but there's real power in how flexibly you can organize them.Groups are where the actual work happens. You create \"Moderator\", \"VIP\", \"Builder\", whatever structure makes sense for your server. Then you assign permissions to those groups. A VIP might get shop.discount but not admin.ban. A moderator gets admin.ban but not admin.restart. Each group can inherit from other groups, which prevents you from duplicating the same permissions across five different rank configs.The web editor (usually at localhost:8080 while you're setting up) lets you create groups, add permissions, and see what each rank can actually do without diving into config files or running dozens of commands. For me, this was way more intuitive than the command line, especially when first learning the system.Storage options are flexible. You can store permissions in a YAML file (simple for small servers), a SQLite database, MySQL, or even MongoDB. For anything bigger than a single server, using a database makes syncing permissions across multiple servers way easier.Permission inheritance deserves its own mention because it's clever. If your \"Helper\" group inherits from \"Member\", then Helper gets everything Member has plus whatever extras you define. This is powerful for large servers with complex rank hierarchies.Wildcards are another feature that saves time. Instead of listing essentials.home, essentials.sethome, essentials.teleport individually, you can just assign essentials.* to give access to all Essentials commands. Most plugins support this, though you should check the docs for your specific plugins. Common PitfallsPermission nodes are case-sensitive. I've watched admins spend an hour wondering why permissions weren't working, only to discover they typed Essentials.home instead of essentials.home. It's annoying, but it's also consistent.Inheritance order can surprise you too. If you've overlapping permissions (one group allows something, another denies it), the order matters. Generally, deny takes precedence, but you've to think about your group hierarchy carefully.Testing permissions before letting players loose is easy to skip. Use /lp user [playername] permission check [node] to verify someone actually has a permission before they complain it's broken. It saves debugging time later.Server type compatibility matters. A Bukkit plugin is different from a Velocity proxy plugin. Both use LuckPerms, but they've slightly different features and command sets. Make sure you're downloading the right version for your setup.Caching can cause weird behavior if you're not careful. If you edit permissions directly in the config files instead of using commands, you sometimes need to run /lp sync to reload everything. Using the web editor or commands avoids this issue entirely. AlternativesPermissionsEx was the old standard before LuckPerms took over. So it works, but it's slower and doesn't get as much maintenance love. If you're already using it, migrating to LuckPerms is doable.GroupManager is another option, especially if you're running an older Bukkit server. It's simpler, which is good for tiny servers, but it doesn't scale as well as LuckPerms for larger networks.There are also some third-party web-based management tools that hook into LuckPerms, but honestly, once you learn the commands or the built-in web editor, you don't really need a separate tool. 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 --- ### AuthMeReloaded: The Authentication Plugin Every Server Needs URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/authme-reloaded-minecraft-security Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project AuthMeReloaded (AuthMe/AuthMeReloaded) The best authentication plugin for the Bukkit/Spigot API! Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 798 stars💻 Java📜 GPL-3.0 If you're running a Minecraft server, account security isn't optional. AuthMeReloaded solves a problem that shouldn't exist in the first place: players getting their accounts stolen right under your nose. It locks down authentication so only the real player can log in, blocking imposters before they even load into the world. What This Plugin Does in Plain English AuthMeReloaded is a Bukkit/Spigot authentication plugin that forces players to log in before they can do anything on your server. No moving. No typing commands. No accessing inventory. Nothing until they've proven they're who they claim to be. The core idea is straightforward. A player joins, gets prompted to create or enter a password, and only then can they interact with your world. It's especially important if you run your server in offline mode, where Minecraft's account verification doesn't exist. But it's equally useful for online-mode servers as an extra security layer against compromised accounts and opportunistic griefers. Version 5.7.0 brought serious improvements to stability and reliability, with fixes to reconnect handling, mail delivery, and concurrent access issues that plagued earlier builds. Why You'd Actually Want This Picture this: you build an incredible town with your friends. Someone logs in as another player and starts tearing it apart. By the time you notice, half your work is gone. And this happens on servers without authentication every single day. AuthMeReloaded prevents that scenario entirely. Here's what actually gets protected: Offline-mode servers - where anyone can claim any username. Authentication becomes your only defense. Alt accounts and stolen credentials - even if someone knows a player's password, they're locked out if they can't reach the server to brute-force it. Account takeover during reconnects - the 5.7.0 release fixed a nasty edge case where a player's entities and mounted vehicles weren't restored reliably after disconnect. Now they're. Spam and bot attacks - the built-in AntiBot system kicks players with suspiciously short or long usernames before they flood your server with garbage. And yes, there's session support. Log in once, stay logged in across reconnects so you're not typing your password constantly. It's a quality-of-life feature that survives actual use, not something that breaks on edge cases. Setting It Up Installation is standard Bukkit plugin stuff. First, download the latest build. The current release (5.7.0) requires Java 17 or higher, which most modern servers already run. If you're still on Java 11, you'll need to update before upgrading from an older AuthMe version. bashcd /path/to/server/plugins wget https://github.com/AuthMe/AuthMeReloaded/releases/download/5.7.0/AuthMe-5.7.0.jar Drop the JAR in your plugins folder and restart the server. AuthMeReloaded generates a config file automatically on first load. bashplugins/AuthMe/config.yml That config file is where everything lives. Register settings, login delays, email recovery rules, database backend, allowed countries, and hundreds of other options. You don't need to touch most of them. The defaults work fine for a standard server. Database setup is optional but recommended for larger communities. SQLite ships as the default (no setup required), but you can point it at MySQL if you want accounts synced across multiple servers. The project handles both cleanly without weird workarounds. Key Features Worth Knowing About Email recovery that actually works - forget your password? Players can use `/forgot_password` to reset via email. The 5.7.0 release fixed SMTP reliability by moving mail delivery off the main server thread, so emails send asynchronously and don't freeze your game. Previous versions would lock up your server while waiting for SMTP. Not anymore. Two-factor authentication - enable 2FA and players add an extra security layer. It's not forced on everyone (which would be annoying), but it's available for players who want it. Country-based access control - whitelist or blacklist entire countries using MaxMind GeoIP data. Someone logging in from a VPN in a blocked country? Kicked. And this is less about security and more about compliance or regional restrictions if your server has those needs. ForceLogin for admins - admins can force-login as another player via console if they need to investigate something or help someone stuck. It's a backdoor designed for legitimate use, not account hijacking. Limbo protection - when a player joins, they're stuck in a safe zone (limbo) until authenticated. They can't move out of spawn, can't see other players, can't cause trouble. The 5.7.0 release fixed stale disk limbo data that would accumulate if players quit during the authentication flow. That was eating storage for no reason on some servers. Tips and Gotchas Authentication feels smooth if configured right, but there are a few things that catch new admins. First: test your email settings before going live. The plugin can send recovery emails, but if your SMTP configuration is wrong, frustrated players won't get their password reset links. Set up a test account, try `/forgot_password`, and verify the email arrives. This takes ten minutes and saves hours of player complaints. Second: the y = 0 teleport bug was real in older versions. Players who got teleported to authenticate sometimes ended up at y = 0 and took fall damage in the void. Version 5.7.0 fixed this, but if you're running an older build, update. Third: spawning unregistered players in the wrong place. If you allow players to join without registering (which you probably don't), but they're not forced to register either, they can end up spawning somewhere weird. Actually, scratch that, just enable forced registration. It's simpler. One more thing: concurrent access on SQLite. If your server is small, you probably won't notice. But SQLite can only handle one write at a time. If fifty players try to log in simultaneously (like during a restart), SQLite gets bottlenecked. The 5.7.0 release improved concurrent handling, but if you're planning a bigger community, migrate to MySQL early. It scales properly. And one tiny note, actually, that only works on 1.20.4+. The newer versions of ProtocolLib that AuthMe uses dropped support for older Minecraft versions. Check your server version if you're running something ancient. What You Can Customize Nearly every message is translatable. Player sees "Please register" but you want it in Spanish or Russian? Translations exist for a ton of languages already. If your language isn't supported, create a translation file and submit it to the project. The maintainers have always been responsive about adding community translations (which is genuinely cool). Commands are translatable too, as of 5.7.0. This is a nice quality-of-life improvement for international servers where players aren't all using English. If you're building a server with custom branding, you can swap the authentication messages entirely. Instead of "Please log in with /login password", make it say whatever fits your server's vibe. It's all in config. Alternatives Worth Considering AuthMeReloaded dominates the space, but alternatives exist. LoginSecurity is simpler if you want a lightweight option (though it's less maintained). MultiLogin handles multi-server authentication if you're running a network and want one account across servers. But for single-server setups and communities that want feature-rich authentication with email recovery and 2FA built in, AuthMeReloaded is the default for a reason: it works, it's stable, and the developers actually maintain it. If you're building a server and want to add custom skins to your world, check out the Minecraft Skin Creator. Or if you want to customize your MOTD, the Minecraft MOTD Creator can help you generate a compelling server description that shows up in the server list. Ready to try AuthMeReloaded? 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 AuthMe/AuthMeReloaded on GitHub ↗ --- ### Getting Started with Pumpkin: The Rust-Built Minecraft Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/pumpkin-rust-minecraft-server-guide Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Pumpkin (Pumpkin-MC/Pumpkin) Empowering everyone to host fast and efficient Minecraft servers. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 7,462 stars💻 Rust📜 GPL-3.0 When you think "Minecraft server," you're probably picturing Java chewing through RAM while you're trying to run a vanilla survival world. Pumpkin flips that on its head. It's a Minecraft server written entirely in Rust, designed to be faster and more efficient while still supporting the Minecraft you know. What This Project Actually Does Pumpkin is an alternative Minecraft server implementation. Instead of running the official Java server or something like Paper, you'd run Pumpkin and connect with your regular Minecraft client. It speaks the Minecraft protocol fluently - both Java and Bedrock editions, which is a big deal if you're trying to unify a player base across platforms. The whole thing is built on Rust, which means it's compiled to native machine code rather than running through a virtual machine. That translates to tighter resource usage and better multi-threading support. In theory, your server does more with less. But here's the honest part: Pumpkin is still under heavy development. It's not a drop-in replacement you'd throw at production tomorrow. It's a project worth watching and experimenting with, especially if you're curious about where Minecraft infrastructure might head. Why You Might Actually Use It Let's be realistic about who this is for. Pumpkin Head Outside in Minecraft If you're running a massive public server with thousands of concurrent players, you probably want proven software. Pumpkin's not there yet. But if you're experimenting, hosting a small private network, or just curious about how Minecraft servers work under the hood, Pumpkin is genuinely interesting. The Rust approach opens doors that traditional Java servers can't easily walk through - better performance, lower CPU overhead, potential for custom behavior without Java's constraints. You'd also use it if you care about the technical story. Rust forces safer code patterns than C++, which matters when you're building something people trust with their game worlds. And the multi-threading story is cleaner than Java's garbage collection headaches. Getting It Running Installation depends on your platform. The project's documentation walks you through it, but the general flow is: clone the repo, build with Rust's Cargo package manager, configure with a TOML file, and launch. Pumpkin map in Minecraft bashgit clone https://github.com/Pumpkin-MC/Pumpkin.git cd Pumpkin cargo build - release The configuration happens in TOML, which is more readable than Java properties files. You define server behavior, network settings, and features you want to enable or disable - the flexibility angle the project emphasizes. If you're coming from vanilla server properties, the TOML structure will feel familiar, though organized differently. For reference on how traditional Minecraft configuration works, the Server Properties Generator can help you understand what those settings do before you translate them to Pumpkin's format. Performance and Compatibility Performance is where Pumpkin flexes. Rust's performance characteristics are genuinely different from Java. You get: MinecraftSquare Lower memory footprint - No garbage collector pauses, more predictable resource usage Better multi-threading - Rust's borrow checker ensures thread-safe code without the overhead Java carries Faster chunk loading - The project specifically highlights chunk management as optimized Configurable features - Disable systems you don't need and free up those resources On compatibility, Pumpkin supports the latest Java edition (version 26.1.2 as of early 2026) and Bedrock, which is a genuine advantage if you want cross-platform play. But that said, it doesn't implement every feature of vanilla yet. Combat, some entity AI, and certain redstone mechanics are still in progress. The world generation, player mechanics, inventory system, and most core systems work. Teleporting, hunger, experience, mob spawning - all there. But if you're running a heavily redstone-dependent server or need advanced mob behavior, you might hit rough edges. What's Still Missing This is the important part that separates "cool project" from "ready to use." Creeper Pumpkin Advancements aren't implemented yet. Villager AI is a work in progress. Custom entity AI behavior exists but isn't complete. Plugins are planned but not here. Redstone (beyond basic mechanics) is on the roadmap. The issue tracker lists specific features tracked across Protocol, World, Player, Entities, and Server domains, and some of them are frankly extensive - chunk generation, entity-specific AI, and full command support are ongoing work. That doesn't mean it's broken or unusable. So it means you need to match your use case to what's implemented. A survival server? Probably fine. A technical server relying on complex redstone? Not yet. A creative mode only server? Actually a solid fit. When to Consider Alternatives Paper is the obvious comparison - it's the most popular high-performance Java server, with plugin support and tons of battle-tested optimization. It's production-ready, has a massive ecosystem, and honestly, unless you specifically want the Rust angle, Paper wins. Pumpkin Minecraft server configuration interface showing TOML settings and chunk loading optimization details Spigot works if you want a more vanilla-like experience with moderate customization. Bukkit if you're digging into history. Fabric if you want mods instead of a custom server at all. And then there's Velocity or BungeeCord if you're thinking about proxy-based networks. Pumpkin supports both, which is good architecture design on their part. The real question: does the Rust performance story justify the development lag? For most people, no. For people experimenting or interested in infrastructure, absolutely. If you're curious about how Minecraft servers handle specific mechanics, Pumpkin's codebase is also readable Rust - way clearer than diving into obfuscated Java bytecode. And if you're interested in block mechanics and testing specific behaviors, the Block Search tool can help you verify what you're testing against in vanilla. Ready to try Pumpkin? 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 Pumpkin-MC/Pumpkin on GitHub ↗ --- ### Arnis: Recreate Real Places in Your Minecraft World URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/arnis-minecraft-world-generator Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice "Generate any location from the real world in Minecraft with a high level of detail." louis-e/arnis · github.com ⭐ 15,163 stars💻 Rust📜 Apache-2.0 Ever looked at a map and thought, 'I wish I could build that in Minecraft'? Arnis does exactly that. But it takes real-world geography from OpenStreetMap and elevation data, then generates detailed Minecraft worlds complete with terrain, buildings, and roads. No hand-building required. Just pick a location, hit generate, and suddenly your hometown or favorite city exists in-game. What This Project Actually Does Arnis is a free, open-source tool built in Rust that transforms geographic data into playable Minecraft worlds. The project grabs building footprints, street layouts, and terrain information from OpenStreetMap, processes it all, then outputs a Minecraft Java Edition world file (1.17+) or Bedrock Edition format. One result isn't a boring height map; it generates actual structures with roofs, roads with realistic surfaces, vegetation, and proper topography. Released with 15,163 GitHub stars, it's become one of the most popular geographic generation tools in the community. The latest version (2.6.0) added Overture Maps integration for even more building detail, improved roof algorithms for complex structures, and actual Minecraft server compatibility. Why You'd Actually Use This The obvious angle: recreate your hometown or visit famous cities at scale. But there's more to it. Building massive cities in vanilla survival is... a lot of work. I'm talking weeks or months of grinding. With Arnis, you skip the busywork and get to the fun part: customization. Players use it to drop into a real-world layout and then add their own touches - clean up generation artifacts, adjust building heights, add custom interiors, plant trees where they fit better. You get the structure and geography done for free, then bend it to your vision. It's also genuinely useful for learning architecture. Want to study how streets connect in a real city, or how buildings align in a dense urban area? Arnis gives you a reference model to explore and analyze. And if you're running a creative multiplayer server, this is a one-click way to give your players a massive pre-built world to collaborate on. Getting It Installed The setup is straightforward. Head to the GitHub releases page and download the appropriate binary for your OS: Windows: `arnis-windows.exe` Linux: `arnis-linux` (inside the `.tar.gz`) macOS: `arnis-mac-universal` (universal binary) For Linux, you'll want to extract and make it executable: bashtar -xzf arnis-linux.tar.gz chmod +x arnis-linux./arnis-linux Windows users can just double-click the `.exe`. On macOS, you may need to allow it through Gatekeeper the first time. The GUI opens with an interactive map. Use the rectangle tool to select your area, choose your world scale (larger = more detail, longer generation), pick your Minecraft version, and click 'Start Generation'. That's it. Features That Actually Matter Real terrain generation. Height maps aren't just flat or blocky; Arnis uses actual elevation data to create natural-looking mountains, valleys, and slopes. If your real location has hills, they'll exist in your world. Building with visual detail. The 2.6.0 update overhauled how buildings are rendered. You get roof overhangs, corner quoins, varied roof styles (gabled, hipped, flat), and even fountain generation for plazas. Complex building footprints from OpenStreetMap are now handled properly instead of generating weird blocky shapes. Customizable scale and spawn control. You can adjust how many real-world meters equal one Minecraft block. Want 1:1 scale for tiny details, or 1:10 for a broader overview? Your choice. You also set the spawn point, world border, and which buildings get interior generation. Minecraft server compatibility. Earlier versions had issues with server worlds. The latest build uses modern post-1.18 chunk format, so worlds import cleanly into multiplayer servers without corruption. Multiple language support. The GUI is available in many languages, including English, German, Spanish, French, and others. If you're playing Minecraft in your native language, Arnis respects that. Gotchas and Real Tips Generation time scales with area size. A 2km x 2km section might take 10 minutes. A 20km x 20km area could take hours. Plan accordingly. Not all buildings generate interiors by default (for performance reasons). You can toggle interior generation in the settings, but it slows things down. Test with a small area first if you're unsure what your PC can handle. The output is a raw Minecraft world file. It's not a schematic. You can't undo generation once it happens in your world - generate in a test world first if you want to tweak settings. Also, the tool creates a world folder; make sure you've enough disk space. Larger generations can easily be several gigabytes. OpenStreetMap data varies in quality by region. Dense urban areas are detailed and accurate. Rural areas might have missing buildings or incomplete road networks. Arnis can only work with what OpenStreetMap provides, so don't expect perfection everywhere. One thing that surprised me: tree canopies were clipping into generated buildings in earlier versions. The current release fixes this, but if you're on an older version, you might need to manually remove tree overlap or disable vegetation generation. Community and Resources The project has an active Discord community and full documentation on the GitHub wiki. If you run into issues, the community is helpful, and the maintainer (@louis-e) actively works on improvements. The site also mentions MapSmith, a browser-based version if you want generation without installing anything. It has limitations (smaller max area, fewer customization options), but it's useful for quick testing. Similar Tools Terrain generation isn't new to Minecraft, but Arnis is specifically focused on realism and geographic accuracy. Other tools exist: Worldpainter lets you hand-paint terrain and then export; Minecraft itself has custom world generation options. But none directly import OpenStreetMap data the way Arnis does. If you want something simpler and less technical, there are web-based map generators that create schematics you can paste into your world. They're easier but produce less detailed results. Cuberite (a Minecraft server implementation) has its own terrain generation, but it's focused on performance rather than accuracy. If accuracy and detail matter to you, Arnis outclasses the alternatives. Once you've built your world, you can dress it up with custom skins and share it with friends. The testuser skin, joakim2tusen skin, and other community skins from minecraft.how work perfectly in these generated worlds. Many players explore their generated cities with different skins to see how they look from various perspectives. Support the project arnis is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. Open the arnis repo ↗ --- ### Building Minecraft Houses That Actually Look Good URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-house-design-tips Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Building a beautiful house in Minecraft comes down to three things: color, shape, and detail. Most players focus on one or two and ignore the rest. We'll cover all three, plus landscaping and common mistakes, so you can stop building boxy eyesores. Color and Material Choice Make or Break Your Design The biggest mistake I see? Using every single block type in one build. Oak planks, spruce, birch, stone, cobblestone, andesite, diorite - all crammed together because "variety is good." It's not. Your color palette should be tight. Pick a primary block (oak wood, for example), then add 2-3 complementary colors maximum. Maybe oak + dark oak + stone. That's it. Everything else becomes accent details. Why does this matter? When your eye scans a building, consistency reads as intentional. Chaos reads as amateur. Play with how different blocks look together before committing to a design - place them next to each other in a test world first. Pro tip: darker blocks feel heavier and more grounded. Lighter blocks feel airy. If you're building a cottage, light oak with white concrete works great. Building a medieval castle? Dark oak, blackstone, and grey concrete tell a completely different story. Shape and Proportion Separate Interesting from Bland Every good build breaks the boxy mold. Rectangular structures work for barns and warehouses in Minecraft, sure. But most houses should have visual interest in their outline. Add a peaked roof instead of a flat one. Vary the roofline height. Use diagonal lines with stairs or slabs to break up walls. Sloped roofs make an enormous difference. Use stairs, slabs, and rotate them to create angles. The classic peaked roof uses stairs arranged in a staircase pattern - going up from both sides to meet in the middle. It takes more blocks than a flat roof, but your house immediately looks ten times better. Windows matter too. Not just for function - for proportion. Evenly spaced windows create rhythm. Asymmetrical windows feel more organic and cottage-like. Large windows belong on modern builds. Smaller windows fit medieval designs. Details Turn Good Houses into Memorable Ones Details are what separate a respectable build from a "wow, that's actually impressive" build. Think chimney. Staircase inside with windows to the side. Flower boxes on the sill. Little decorative walls around the perimeter. Overhanging eaves using stairs and slabs. A proper foundation with different block types at ground level. The Minecraft Wiki has pages dedicated to building techniques - trapdoors, buttons, and wall decorations are covered well there. But honestly, the best approach is to look at a build you admire, study what details it uses, then experiment with similar techniques on your own work. Small details compound. One flower box looks nice. Three flower boxes with different flowers looks designed. And here's where player skins come in - if you're building a house that matches a theme, you might want skins that fit. If you're building a medieval castle, check out skins like HouseSimpson or Trickswag for inspiration on what aesthetic you're going for. Landscaping Completes the Picture A beautiful house sitting on bare dirt looks unfinished. 24 Advice That You Must Listen Before Embarking On House Pichers | house pichers Create ground variation around your build. Add a foundation - a raised platform with retaining walls. Plant trees strategically (not everywhere, but intentionally). Use paths with different block types to guide players toward your entrance. Water features work great too. A small pond, a stream, even a decorative water channel can make a design feel purposeful and mature. Gardens look better when bordered. Bushes and vegetation should feel placed, not random. Actually, this is where a lot of players go wrong - they treat landscaping as afterthought decoration instead of part of the overall design. Your landscape should support your house's architectural style. A modern minimalist house shouldn't have a wild overgrown garden around it. A cottage should feel nestled into nature. Plan the landscaping as part of the design process, not as something to slap on at the end. Think about symmetry too. Symmetrical landscaping looks formal and planned. Asymmetrical feels natural. For a farmhouse, asymmetrical works better. For a manor or mansion, symmetry adds grandeur. Common Building Mistakes to Avoid Flat roofs on houses (unless it's intentionally modern). Exposed foundations without texture change. Windows that are too small or weirdly spaced. Using too many different wood types because they "look similar enough." One error I see constantly: doors placed without any surrounding structure. A door should be framed - recessed into the wall or have some kind of entrance porch. It should feel intentional, not like an afterthought. Same goes for windows - a window floating in a bland wall looks worse than no window at all. Overuse of stairs as decoration is common too. Stairs add visual texture, but too many create visual noise. Use them for eaves, rooflines, details - not just slapped all over randomly. Lighting changes everything. Make sure your house actually has light sources placed thoughtfully. Lanterns on walls, lights visible through windows at night, properly lit interiors. A beautifully designed house in total darkness loses half its impact. Build Variations for Different Styles Modern houses use clean lines, large windows, and minimal decoration. Think concrete, stripped wood, white wool. Keep it simple and geometric. Medieval builds work with dark oak, stone, and archways. Peaked roofs are essential. Add torch sconces, iron bars, thick walls. Cottages are where you can get creative with landscaping. Warm wood tones, overhanging roofs, garden borders. Reference skins like PatrickStar or GreesDesign if you're looking for that cottage aesthetic vibe. Fantasy builds lean into color variation and unusual shapes. Curved walls using irregular block patterns, varied roof heights, magical-feeling details like colorful concrete and custom trees. For builders who want to study specific techniques, OskarTricks56 has great design-focused work that shows how details fit together. The key is picking a style and committing to it. A house that tries to be modern and medieval and fantasy all at once just looks confused. Putting It All Together Start with your color palette. Three to four blocks max. Decide on a style - is this medieval, modern, cottage, fantasy? Choose a roofline that fits that style. Add details that support the theme. Then landscape around it. Make sure windows, doors, and details feel placed intentionally, not randomly. Most importantly: iterate. Build something, step back, look at it from distance. What feels off? The proportion? One colors fighting each other? Too many small details competing for attention? Change it and keep improving. The difference between an okay house and a great one isn't talent - it's intention. Think about every block you place and why it's there. --- ### Minecraft Command Blocks: Essential Commands for Builders URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/command-block-commands-builders Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice What Are Command Blocks and Why Builders Need Them Command blocks are arguably one of the most powerful tools in Minecraft for anyone serious about building. They let you execute commands instantly without typing anything into chat, which means you can automate doors, create teleporters, trigger effects, and build entire systems that respond to player actions. Here's the thing: mastering command blocks separates builders who rely on redstone logic from those who can create complex, responsive builds in minutes. You can find command blocks in the creative inventory, or grab them with /give @s command_block in survival mode if cheats are enabled. Once placed, right-click to open the interface and start typing. Essential Command Block Commands Every Builder Should Know Teleportation Commands The most practical command block setup is teleportation. Building a custom doorway? Use this: /tp @a[x=100,y=64,z=100,distance=0..2] 200 64 200 This teleports anyone within 2 blocks of coordinates (100, 64, 100) to position (200, 64, 200). Need precision? The coordinates filter makes it dead simple. Just adjust the distance value to expand or shrink the trigger zone. You can also use /tp @s to teleport only the player who activated the command block, or /tp @a to move everyone. By the way, if you're building complex portal networks, you might want to check out our Nether Portal Calculator for coordinating overworld and nether positions. Give and Clear Inventory Commands Equip players automatically with gear the moment they step into your custom arena or race course. /give @a[distance=0..5] diamond_sword{Enchantments:[{id:sharpness,lvl:5}]} 1 Before handing out items, clear their inventory first: /clear @a Or target specific items: /clear @a diamond_sword removes only diamond swords. The bracket syntax lets you add enchantments directly, so every sword comes pre-enchanted. That's something you'd normally need to craft and enchant manually. Chat Messages and Action Bar Text Make your build feel alive by sending messages to players. /title @a actionbar {"text":"Welcome to the Arena!"} /say You've entered restricted territory The /title command is cleaner than chat spam because it shows in the action bar (that space above the hotbar). Use /title @a title for large messages, /title @a subtitle for secondary text, or /title @a times 10 70 20 to control how long it displays. The three numbers mean fade-in, stay, fade-out (all in ticks). Building Automated Systems with Command Blocks Door Automation Custom doors are a classic. Place a pressure plate (or tripwire hook for invisibility), set it to output a redstone signal into a command block, then add: /execute as @a[distance=0..3] run setblock 50 64 50 air This destroys a stone block at (50, 64, 50) when someone nearby activates it. Replace air with another block type to place blocks instead. For fancier setups, use /fill to affect multiple blocks at once: /fill 50 64 50 52 66 50 air replace stone That clears a 3x3x1 area of stone blocks. Lighting and Particle Effects Make builders actually excited to enter your space. /particle firework 50 65 50 1 1 1 2 This spawns fireworks particles at coordinates (50, 65, 50) with random spread (1 1 1) and speed (2). Other fun ones: end_rod, glow, witch, totem_pop. Chain multiple command blocks together if you want layered effects. Light something up permanently? Try: /setblock 50 65 50 light[level=15] In Java 26.1.2, the light block is invisible and emits full brightness. Perfect for hidden lighting rigs. Sound Effects Sound makes everything better. /playsound entity.player.levelup master @a 50 65 50 2 1 The format is: /playsound [sound] [category] [player] [x] [y] [z] [volume] [pitch]. Categories include master, music, record, weather, block, hostile, neutral, player, ambient, voice. Pitch values below 1.0 lower the sound, above 1.0 raise it. Some builders pump pitch to 2.0 for comedic effect. Advanced Tricks for Complex Builds Conditional Command Blocks Here's where things get really interesting. Right-click a command block and toggle "Conditional." Now it only executes if the previous command block succeeded. Minecraft - Sheep Spleef (Command Block Mini Game) Set up a chain: First block: /testfor @a[score_kills_min=10] (check if anyone has 10+ kills) Second block (conditional): /give @a[score_kills_min=10] diamond_block (reward them) Third block (conditional): /say Victory! (announce it) The second and third blocks only run if the first one succeeds. Scoreboard Integration Track player progress with scoreboards. Create one: /scoreboard objectives add kills playerKillCount Then display it: /scoreboard objectives setdisplay sidebar kills Now every player's kill count shows on the sidebar. From there, command blocks can react to score changes, making your builds genuinely interactive. Race tracks can track lap times. PvP arenas can award points. Farms can count items harvested. Repeating vs. Chain vs. Impulse Blocks You'll notice command blocks have different types in the right-click menu. Impulse: Runs once when powered by redstone (the default). Repeating: Runs every tick (20 times per second) while powered. Use sparingly or your server will lag. Chain: Runs when the previous block succeeds, no redstone power needed. Perfect for sequences. If you want repeating behavior, actually use a repeating block. If you want something to run once per click, use impulse. Common Mistakes to Avoid Not setting the correct target selector. @a means all players, @s means the executor, @p means the nearest player. Using @a when you meant @s will affect every single person on the server. Forgetting to enable cheats. You can't place command blocks in survival without /op status or cheats enabled. Using repeating blocks for chat spam. If you wire a repeating command block to output /say hi and leave it powered, your chat fills up instantly. Never a good idea. Overlooking syntax. A single bracket, quote, or comma out of place breaks the whole command. The game will tell you "Incorrect syntax" but not where. Copy-paste carefully. Setting Up Command Blocks on Your Server If you're running a multiplayer server and want to give builders access to command blocks without full admin status, that's trickier. You can use permission plugins (if you're on a modded server) or selectively op specific builders for testing. Make sure anyone with builder privileges understands that command blocks let them affect all players, so trust matters. If you're managing a whitelist-only server, our Minecraft Whitelist Creator can help you maintain consistent player lists while you tinker with builds. Going Deeper: Resources and Next Steps Once you're comfortable with the basics, experiment with: Data tags and custom model data for custom items NBT (Named Binary Tag) for advanced entity manipulation Functions (command blocks executed from.mcfunction files) for organized systems Armor stands positioned precisely for decorative builds The Minecraft Wiki has exhaustive documentation. Reddit's r/Minecraft and r/MinecraftCommands communities are helpful. Watch builders like Mumbo Jumbo or Gnembon demonstrate command block tricks in action. Start simple. Build a teleporter. Then add a door. Then chain them together. That's honestly how everyone learns. --- ### How to Find and Beat the Ender Dragon in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/beat-ender-dragon-guide Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice The Ender Dragon is the final boss you're meant to fight in Minecraft, and beating it officially ends the game. But before you can even see it, you've got to find the stronghold buried deep underground, gather the right gear, and prepare for one of the toughest fights in vanilla survival. Here's what you actually need to know. Locating the Stronghold The stronghold isn't just sitting around waiting for you to stumble into it. You need Eyes of Ender to find it. These little floating projectiles will lead you directly to the nearest stronghold, but only if you craft them first. To make Eyes of Ender, you'll need ender pearls (dropped by Endermen) and blaze powder (crafted from blaze rods you get from the Nether). Combine one ender pearl with one blaze powder, and boom, you've got an Eye of Ender. You'll want to make several, honestly. They break sometimes when they reach the stronghold, so having extras saves you from another trip to the Nether. Throw an Eye of Ender and watch it float toward the stronghold. It'll travel horizontally through blocks and air until it gets close. Follow it, throw another one, rinse and repeat. The eyes will dig deeper and deeper until they finally point straight down into the ground. That's your entrance. What if you're having trouble finding Endermen? They spawn in the End dimension, obviously, but also in dark places like caves and the Nether (though they're rarer there). Actually, wait, scratch that about the Nether. Endermen don't spawn in the Nether in current versions. Your best bet for Endermen grinding is to find a dark cave system or wait until night in an open area where they can spawn. Don't make direct eye contact with them though, or they'll get aggressive. Preparing Your Gear and Resources Walking into the End dragon fight with leather armor is a great way to die immediately. You want protection. Aim for full diamond or netherite armor, with at least Protection II or III on each piece if you can enchant. You'll also want a sharp sword (diamond at minimum), a bow with Power and Infinity enchantments, and a shield to block the dragon's charges. Food is essential. Bring stacks of cooked meat or golden apples if you've got them. The dragon's breath attack damages you, so healing items aren't optional. Your inventory should look something like this: sword, bow, shield, healing food, blocks for building (like dirt or stone), and maybe a pickaxe in case you need to dig. Torches are nice for marking your path back. Leave the gold, diamonds, and valuables at home though. If you die, items disappear after five minutes, and losing gear you spent hours mining would be painful. Enchantments that actually matter Sword: Sharpness V, Fire Aspect (optional), Knockback II Bow: Power V, Infinity, Flame Armor: Protection IV on all pieces, Feather Falling on boots Boots: Feather Falling IV (takes fall damage out of the equation) If you're running a server, check out the Minecraft server list for survival servers where you can practice fighting the dragon with other players first, or even find servers with dragon fight events. The Stronghold and Finding the Portal Frame Once you've dug down to the stronghold, things get a little maze-like. You're looking for the End Portal frame, which sits in a specific room surrounded by frames with Eyes of Ender already placed in some of them. This is the real entrance. The room has 12 frame blocks arranged in a rectangle. You need to place Eyes of Ender in each empty frame to activate the portal. Throw or place your remaining Eyes of Ender into each frame until the portal opens. This costs you one Eye per frame, so make sure you brought enough. And here's the part people sometimes miss: the stronghold contains plenty of other rooms with loot like enchanted books, iron, and gold. You can raid these while you're there. Just don't get distracted for too long. The Dragon Fight Itself Stepping through that portal is a wild moment. The dragon's immediately visible, flying around the arena with a healing bar above the island. Your job is to destroy the healing crystals on top of the obsidian pillars first, then attack the dragon itself. Player fighting the Ender Dragon in the End dimension with purple crystals above obsidian pillars There are nine crystal towers. Destroy them from lowest to highest to avoid taking unnecessary damage from falling crystals. Your bow is the best tool for this. Get to high ground, aim up, and pepper each crystal with arrows until they explode. Once all nine are gone, the dragon becomes vulnerable to your sword. The dragon will charge at you. When it does, dodge to the side or use your shield to block. Get in close with your sword after it passes, hit it a few times, then back off. Repeat this pattern until its health drops. It'll try to heal itself by flying back to the center of the island, but without crystals, that won't work anymore. Surviving the fight The dragon breathes a purple cloud that damages you over time. Stay out of that as much as possible. Your shield blocks most of its charge attack, which is your main way of avoiding damage. Healing food keeps you alive between hits. Some players build a small pillar to stand on for better positioning, which is honestly smart. The fight usually takes 10-15 minutes depending on your DPS and healing items. Just stay patient, keep hitting, and don't panic if your health drops low. You've got this. After You Win Beating the dragon gives you a ton of experience, triggers the end poem, and creates an exit portal. You'll respawn back at your spawn point. That's technically "beating" Minecraft, though of course, there's way more to do after that. If you want to challenge yourself further, many servers have combat arenas or competitive events. You can even find custom challenges using tools like the text generator to create unique signs and markers for your own challenge maps. Some players fight the dragon multiple times. The fight gets easier once you know the pattern. Others go straight to building epic bases or exploring the Nether dimension. It's your world. Common Mistakes to Avoid Not bringing enough Eyes of Ender (you'll need at least 12) Showing up with stone tools thinking it'll be fine (it won't be) Forgetting healing food and dying to stupid mistakes Standing under the crystal pillars when they're exploding Bringing your best gear in case you die (separate your equipment into essentials and backups) The Ender Dragon fight is intense, but it's totally doable if you prepare. Get your gear, find that stronghold, and take it down. You've been working toward this the whole game. --- ### Minecraft Warden Complete Guide: How to Find and Defeat It URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-warden-guide-defeat Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice The Warden is Minecraft's most dangerous mob - a blind, colossal creature that hunts purely through vibration detection. It has 250 health (125 hearts), deals crushing damage even through armor, and can kill most unprepared players in seconds. You'll either find it intentionally and prepare for combat, avoid it through careful stealth, or do both. Most players actually encounter all three scenarios on their journey through the Deep Dark. Understanding the Warden This creature exists in exactly one place: the Deep Dark biome, which only generates at the lowest levels of the world (below Y-level -32). The Warden looks like a massive humanoid figure with impossibly long limbs and no visible eyes. It doesn't see in any traditional sense. Instead, the Warden hunts entirely through vibrations. Everything creates vibrations - walking, running, jumping, breaking blocks, placing blocks, eating, drinking from bottles, firing arrows, even activating redstone. The Sculk blocks that dominate the Deep Dark are specialized to detect and transmit these vibrations through the ground. Spawning works specifically: activate a Sculk Shrieker three times without leaving the Deep Dark biome, and the Warden emerges. You can do this accidentally just by exploring and triggering shriekers, or intentionally if you're prepared for battle. Once it emerges, it doesn't despawn. It hunts. It'll chase you across the biome until you die or leave. The stats are brutal. Melee attacks deal about 16 damage even through Protection IV armor. Ranged sonic attacks deal additional damage and can catch you completely off-guard. With 250 health, a single Warden represents more raw HP than most players carry in healing items. Locating the Deep Dark The Deep Dark is intentionally rare. You won't find it by digging straight down - generation is specific to certain depths and structures. Most players locate it through dedicated cave exploration, particularly when exploring massive systems that extend deep underground in Minecraft 26.1.2. Recognition is instant once you see it. Sculk blocks cover the ground, walls, and ceiling in blue-green hues. Sculk Sensors emit eerie sounds when triggered by vibrations. The ambient light is dim and oppressive. There's often flowing water but few other biomes mixed in. Sculk Shriekers are block-like structures scattered throughout, usually in clusters. Triggering one creates a vibration and levels up an invisible "warning level." Trigger three times total, and the Warden spawns. If you're hunting intentionally, locate a shrieker and prepare your arena first. Stealth and Avoidance Tactics Here's honest advice: most players' first encounter with the Warden ends in death. That's not failure - it's learning the biome. Avoidance is a perfectly valid strategy, and many experienced players prefer it. Minecraft (5) The Warden detects vibrations within a certain radius. Beyond that radius, you're invisible. Crouch constantly in the Deep Dark - this is non-negotiable if you want to avoid detection. Crouching reduces vibration output by roughly 50% or more. Walk slowly. Don't sprint unless already detected and running for your life. Practical tactics: place Wool blocks as paths beforehand. These materials absorb vibrations instead of transmitting them. Never break blocks near the Warden - block-breaking creates massive vibrations. Avoid water buckets, they're noisy. Don't eat openly. The Darkness Effect is your warning. When the Warden gets close (roughly 20-30 blocks), the screen darkens and fades to black at the edges. The Warden is applying a status effect, signaling that it's aware and hunting. At this point you have seconds to decide: flee the biome or prepare for combat. If you flee, the Warden will lose your trail if you leave its detection range or exit the biome entirely. It doesn't follow you into other biomes. And this is how most players survive their first Deep Dark visit. Defeat Preparation and Combat Strategy Commitment to fighting means preparation is everything. This isn't a boss fight with a gimmick or weak point. It's pure combat testing your gear, skill, and healing reserves. Armor: Netherite with Protection IV on all pieces is the bare minimum. Feather Falling IV on boots is crucial since the Warden knocks you around. Unbreaking III helps your gear survive. Without Protection IV, the Warden's melee attacks become dangerously unpredictable. Weapon: Netherite sword with Sharpness V is standard. Knockback I or II helps create distance. Some players prefer axes for critical strike damage, but swords offer better attack speed for sustained fighting. Healing: bring far more than you think you need. Golden apples, golden carrots, regular food - anything with high saturation. You'll use 20-40 healing items in a serious fight if you're not perfectly skilled. This is where most solo players lose fights, not from damage output but from running out of healing. Combat itself: keep moving constantly. Standing still lets vibrations accumulate. Strafe around the Warden, land hits, back away. Jump attack for critical hits. Expect 30-60 seconds of sustained fighting if you're experienced. Newer players often take longer. The Warden uses two attack patterns. Melee swipes if you're close, dealing immediate damage. Ranged sonic blasts that shoot out and deal area damage. Ranged attacks are harder to predict and often catch unprepared players off-guard. Positioning matters significantly. A large open arena gives you space to move and dodge. Tight terrain makes the fight exponentially harder. Some players build arena structures beforehand - flat ground, high ceiling, open space. Others fight in whatever area they triggered the Warden. Group fights are possible but trickier than solo attempts. Multiple players attacking while one tanks works, but the Warden's aggression makes coordination essential. If you're running a multiplayer server and want to organize Warden hunts with friends, set up a whitelist for your Warden-hunting crew to keep the group focused and prevent interruptions from other players. The Reward (or Lack Thereof) Here's where the Warden differs from standard boss fights: defeating it gives you 5 experience orbs. That's it. No rare drops, no trophy item, no treasure chest spawning. The Warden is designed as a pure skill challenge, not a loot farm. EVERYTHING ABOUT WARDEN The actual reward is the achievement, personal accomplishment, and bragging rights. Some players set up dedicated servers running custom Warden challenges for leaderboards. If you're running such a server, use a custom MOTD to announce the challenge and draw interested players. After defeating the Warden, you're free to explore the rest of the Deep Dark, hunting for Sculk catalyst blocks, collecting Sculk for building, or simply looting the biome's rare resources. The Warden is one element of Deep Dark exploration, not the final boss of Minecraft. Should You Fight the Warden? Real talk: for most players, the answer is no. There's no loot, no progression, no mechanical necessity. The Warden exists as a challenge for experienced players who want to test themselves against Minecraft's toughest mob. If you accidentally trigger the Warden while exploring, dying to it is completely normal. If you're exploring the Deep Dark for resources, avoiding the Warden is the correct play. If you're seeking the ultimate combat challenge, then yes, preparing and fighting is worth the effort. Minecraft doesn't require you to defeat the Warden. It's optional, designed for players who've conquered everything else and want one final test. --- ### Coolest Minecraft Redstone Contraptions and Machines URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/coolest-minecraft-redstone-contraptions Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Redstone contraptions are Minecraft's answer to engineering. You've got players building fully automatic farms, sorting systems that'd make a computer scientist jealous, and logic gates that somehow manage to turn dirt blocks into calculators. It's honestly one of the most creative aspects of the game that nobody talks about enough. What Makes a Redstone Contraption Actually Cool First, let's clarify something: not every redstone build deserves the "cool" label. A simple door opener is functional. A redstone contraption that's actually cool solves a real problem, looks decent doing it, and makes you go "wait, how did they do that?" when you first see it work. The best redstone builds usually share a few things. They're compact, they're practical, and they do something your server actually needs. That last part matters more than people realize. A massive, lag-inducing contraption that sits idle isn't cool, it's just wasteful. Fully Automatic Farms That Actually Work Automatic farms are the bread and butter of redstone engineering. We're talking about contraptions that harvest crops while you're off doing something else entirely. The simple ones use water and gravity to push items into hoppers. But the truly impressive builds? They use sophisticated hopper locking systems, comparators reading item levels, and mechanisms that switch between different crops automatically. Someone on Reddit showed off a design that switches between wheat and beetroot farming based on what your storage needs. It uses a redstone comparator to read a chest, then routes water differently depending on signal strength. Took them weeks to build, and it saves hours of actual farming time. That's the kind of contraption that sticks with you. If you're running a server, you'll want reliable farms. When you're setting up your world, check out the Server Properties Generator to optimize settings for farms that don't tank your performance. Kelp and Bamboo Farms These are deceptively simple but incredibly powerful. Growing tall plants vertically and using water currents to push them into hoppers creates XP farms and fuel sources faster than you can process. The trick is stacking multiple columns to push the farm's output into a single collection point. Done right, you get more resources than you could ever use. Mob Grinders Building a mob grinder isn't just about dropping mobs from a height. A well-designed system uses fall damage to leave mobs with one hit of health remaining, then collects them automatically in a way that lets you grab the XP without suffocating in items. Sorting Systems and Item Management Want to know what separates "okay" redstone players from people who actually understand the game? It's sorting systems. We're talking about contraptions that take a chaotic mixture of items and dump them into specific chests based on what they are. It's part logistics, part engineering puzzle. A basic sorter uses hoppers with different delay times (achieved by putting items in upper slots) to pull specific things out of a hopper line. Advanced builds use item frames, armor stands, and redstone comparators to identify items based on their stack sizes in specific containers. One creator built a system that sorts 27 different items simultaneously using a single hopper line. The precision required is honestly ridiculous. The coolest part? Once you understand the logic, you start seeing applications everywhere. Building an automatic storage system. Creating a crafting setup that sorts components. Making a shop where items automatically distribute to different chests based on a randomizer. Multiple Item Filtering Sorting one or two items is easy. Sorting dozens? That's where it gets interesting. Some builders use multiple hopper lines running in parallel, each handling a different subset of items. Others use clock systems that cycle through different filter settings in sequence. The designs that handle 40+ different items are basically Minecraft's version of industrial sorting robots. Door Locks, Combination Locks, and Security Systems Not all cool contraptions are about farming or efficiency. Some are just clever applications of logic gates and timing. Combination locks that require you to press buttons in the right order before a door opens. Locking systems that prevent multiple players from entering the same area simultaneously. Timer-based vault doors that seal themselves after X minutes. These exist somewhere in the weird intersection of practical and show-offy. Sure, a regular door works fine. But a redstone lock system? That's impressive. It's the difference between a house and a base that feels intentional. The simplest version uses a loop of repeaters creating a pulse that opens a door for a brief moment, then closes it again. You need to get through during that window. More advanced builds use RS-NOR latches (combination logic gates) to require multiple button presses in sequence, or hopper comparators that prevent the door from opening if the wrong item is inside a specific container. Piston Contraptions That Defy Reality Pistons are Minecraft's most chaotic redstone component. They're incredibly powerful but also temperamental. Push too many blocks and they jam. Time them wrong and nothing happens. But when a piston contraption works? It's magic. 3x3 vault doors that slowly seal a room. Elevators that lift you dozens of blocks straight up. Moving bridges that extend when you step on a pressure plate. These aren't just practical, they're architectural statements. Some of the best servers in the world are defined by their piston contraptions. It's how players remember the place. The most infamous redstone engineer on this is Mumbo Jumbo, who built stuff in recent versions (currently 26.1.2) that honestly shouldn't work but absolutely does. Instant-breaking mining machines. Jigsaw-block flying machines. It's gotten to the point where watching him build is just accepting that physics is a suggestion. Flying and Moving Machines These push redstone to its limits. A machine that moves an entire structure through the air using slime blocks and pistons requires perfect timing and a deep understanding of how entities interact with moving blocks. Get one thing wrong and your flying base becomes a flying disaster. Water Current Elevators and Complex Transportation Sometimes the coolest contraptions aren't obviously redstone at all. A water elevator powered by soul sand and magma blocks gets you up or down. But add some redstone logic to make it directional? To make it switch between up and down based on where you're standing? Now you've got something. The most efficient transportation networks use combinations of redstone contraptions working together. Automatic loading systems at rail stations. Powered rails controlled by comparators. Transit hubs with smart routing that sends minecarts to different destinations based on what's inside them. If you're managing multiple worlds or servers, you probably want reliable infrastructure. Setting up your server properly makes a huge difference. The Free Minecraft DNS tool helps if you're running multiplayer infrastructure across multiple connections. Logic Gates and Redstone Computers This is where people lose their minds. Someone will build a functioning calculator out of redstone. A binary adder that actually does math. A computer that runs programs written in bytecode. These don't have a practical use in a normal Minecraft world (you could just... use a real calculator). But they exist because someone wanted to prove it was possible. And that's kind of the point of the coolest redstone contraptions. They're at the intersection of "I can" and "should I." And the answer is always yes. Learning how logic gates work teaches you something fundamental about how computers actually operate. RS-NOR latches, AND gates, XOR logic... suddenly you understand bits and binary. It's wild that a block game can accidentally become a computer science education tool. The Future of Redstone Building Redstone mechanics keep changing. New blocks and features get added. The Minecraft wiki is constantly being updated with new tricks and optimizations. What works perfectly in one version might need tweaking in the next. But that's also what keeps the community engaged. Every update brings new possibilities. New materials to work with. New applications for existing mechanics. Someone will inevitably figure out an exploit or clever timing system that nobody expected. The best redstone players aren't following tutorials at this point. They're experimenting. Breaking things. Building something that shouldn't work and then being shocked when it does. --- ### Best Minecraft Modpacks for 2026: Complete Rankings URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/best-minecraft-modpacks-2026 Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice If you've been staring at vanilla Minecraft for months wondering what else exists out there, modpacks are the answer. Not the tiny single-mod additions, but the complete overhauls that transform how you play entirely. I've tested what's worth your time in 2026, and honestly, the modpack ecosystem right now is at its best. What Makes a Modpack Actually Worth Playing A modpack isn't just a random folder of mods shoved together. The ones that stick around have purpose. They're built around a vision - whether that's tech progression, exploration, combat difficulty, or just pure chaos. The difference between a good modpack and an annoying one is usually how well the mods talk to each other. Version matters more than people think. Most quality packs now target Minecraft 26.1.2 or earlier stable versions. The 1.20.x series, which is what 26.1.2 is based on, has rock-solid mod support. Jumping to snapshots is asking for broken configs and crash loops. I've learned this the hard way on three different servers. Balance is everything. If one mod makes diamonds worthless, or if progression trees fight each other, even the coolest features fall apart. The best modpack creators spend weeks (sometimes months) tuning recipes, rates, and requirements so nothing feels broken. Top Modpacks: Ranked by Playstyle For Pure Exploration: Vault Hunters Vault Hunters took what players loved about roguelike dungeons and built an entire modpack philosophy around it. You find vault stones, unlock dungeons, and fight your way through procedurally generated challenges. Each run feels different because the modpack genuinely randomizes threat levels, treasure distribution, and mob combinations. Verstecktes Gate für Base Kombi Galacticraft und Mekanism Minecraft Tutorial What makes it click is the progression pacing. Early game doesn't feel like a slog through item grind - you're actually exploring and fighting within hours of starting. By mid-game you're tackling harder vaults. By late game, the best loot genuinely requires skill and preparation. Fair warning: it's harder than vanilla. For Tech & Creativity: Create Together Create Together is what happens when you take the Create mod (that mechanical engineering dream) and surround it with complementary mods instead of bloat. It's got automation, yes, but the focus is building interactive machines that actually do things visually. You're not clicking a UI; you're watching your contraption work. I've spent entire sessions just designing one factory setup. The contraption network requires planning. Belts have bandwidth. Mechanical power has real costs. You can't just slap down fifty machines and call it done - you've to think about layout, gear ratios, and supply chains. Perfect for people who like to build. For Progression & Challenge: Sevtech Ages (Updated) Sevtech Forces you to progress through ages. Stone age, bronze, steel, industrial, atomic. Each age unlocks new mods and mechanics, so you can't just beeline to endgame content. You're forced into intermediate tech, which sounds restrictive but actually keeps things fresh. The pacing is deliberate. Veteran players can still blast through if they min-max, but casual play takes real time. It respects that not everyone wants everything solved by day three. For Magic & Mystery: Ars Nouveau Magic modpacks get overlooked honestly. But Ars Nouveau does something different - it lets you actually craft your own spells instead of just memorizing recipe combinations. You build spell components, combine them, and create totally custom abilities. It's like Minecraft's enchanting system finally got the depth it deserved. The learning curve is real though. New players need to sit down and understand how spell crafting works. That said, the payoff is worth it because magic feels powerful without being overpowered. For Skyblock Style: ATM (All The Mods) Skyblock All The Mods made a skyblock variant that includes, well, basically all the popular tech mods. Applied Energistics, Mekanism, Thermal, Immersive Engineering - they're all here. The challenge is managing resources on a limited island. You'll spend early hours setting up ore generation, water, and basic resources. Mid-game becomes about optimizing production lines. Late-game is pure creativity - you've got everything unlocked and the freedom to build whatever you want. Some people hate resource scarcity in skyblocks. Others think it's the entire point. If you're in the second camp, ATM Skyblock delivers. How to Pick the Right Pack for You Ask yourself one question first: Do you want guided progression or sandbox freedom? Packs like Sevtech and Vault Hunters guide you. Create and ATM Skyblock let you breathe. Neither is wrong; it depends what exhausts you in regular Minecraft. Quad Bike in Arma 3 Altis Life gefahrlos fahren Tutorial Next, check if you actually like the mods included. I've seen people bounce off amazing packs because they included one mod they hated. Read the mod list. Look at what progression feels like. Watch a YouTube series if there's one. Finally, test it in singleplayer first. Modpacks on multiplayer servers sometimes work differently than singleplayer due to config tweaks, and you don't want to invest 20 hours only to realize the pack doesn't run well on your connection. Spend an hour solo, get a feel for it, then jump on a server if that's your jam. Installation Essentials Use a proper launcher. Curseforge, MultiMC, or Prism Launcher all handle modpack installation way better than trying to manually download everything. They manage Java versions too, which matters more than people think. Wrong Java version equals crash city. Teleporter von Mekanism Minecraft Tutorial Block Light Allocate RAM properly. Most modpacks need at least 6GB. Tech-heavy ones like All The Mods perform way better with 8-10GB. If you're stuttering constantly, your RAM is the first suspect. You can also customize modpacks after installation. Don't like a specific mod? Remove it. Worried about a feature being overpowered? Edit the config. Just know that removing core mods sometimes breaks things, so test in singleplayer before bothering your friends. Other Tools Worth Mentioning While you're building in your modpack, don't sleep on the utility tools available online. If you're working on server messaging or decoration, the Minecraft MOTD Creator makes server previews look clean and professional. And when you're trying to find exactly which block you need for that build idea, Minecraft Block Search saves you from scrolling through the entire creative menu. Common Issues & How to Fix Them Modpacks crash on startup? Ninety percent of the time it's a mod conflict or JVM argument issue. Check the crash log (yes, actually read it). Most modpack communities have Discord servers where you can paste your error and get help within minutes. It's worth asking before googling. Lag spikes in mid-game? Chunk loading or entity spam. Reduce render distance if you're on a weak PC. Disable some chunk loaders if you're playing multiplayer and some player loaded too many. Mods feel boring or too easy? Crank up the difficulty settings. Most packs have configs for scaling. Or just do what I do sometimes: add a second modpack for more challenge and run both. See which one calls you back more. Final Thoughts Modpacks aren't for everyone - some people love vanilla and that's completely valid. But if you've hit that wall where Minecraft feels routine, a good modpack is like relearning the game. Suddenly there are systems to master, builds to create, dungeons to conquer, or machines to optimize. Start with one that matches your playstyle. Give it a real chance - at least 5-10 hours before deciding it's not for you. Most of the joy comes from understanding how everything connects. The modpack scene in 2026 is genuinely good. Pick one and see what clicks. --- ### Minecraft 26.1.2 Data Packs and NBT Changes Explained URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/data-packs-nbt-minecraft-26-1-2 Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Minecraft 26.1.2 brought some significant shifts to how data packs and NBT data work, and if you're running a custom server or building a complex map, you've probably already felt it. The changes aren't catastrophic, but they're substantial enough that old workflows break, and understanding what shifted will save you hours of debugging. What Changed with Data Packs in 2026 Data packs in 2026 got stricter. Mojang essentially said: we're tightening validation. That means packs that worked fine in 25.x with loose JSON formatting or deprecated commands are now throwing errors on load. It's not malicious, it's just the direction the game is moving. They want clarity. The biggest change? Strict type checking on numeric values in JSON files. Before, you could throw a string where a number belonged and Minecraft would sometimes coerce it. Not anymore. If your damage value needs to be an integer, it has to be explicitly an integer in the JSON, not "8" as a string. I tested this on three different servers, and every one had at least a handful of functions that broke because someone (possibly me) had copy-pasted values without cleaning up the formatting. The pack format version for 2026 is now 57. Anything below that gets rejected entirely, no warnings, no fallback. If you're still running pack format 46 or earlier, your pack simply won't load. This is actually good for maintenance long-term, but it means you need to update everything. NBT Format Shifts and JSON Compatibility NBT (Named Binary Tag) data is the backend of Minecraft storage. Every entity's attributes, every block's properties, your inventory contents, all of it lives in NBT. In 2026, Mojang made a decision that affects how data pack creators interact with this system. The shift toward JSON serialization is nearly complete now. Here's what that means: where you used to work directly with raw NBT syntax in commands, you're now working with JSON representations that get converted to NBT under the hood. It's cleaner on the surface (JSON is more readable than raw NBT), but it also means properties have stricter naming conventions. Underscores matter. Capitalization matters. A property that was "CustomName" in the old format is now always lowercase in the JSON spec. Actually, that's not quite right for all properties. Some retain their original casing for backwards compatibility. The real issue is inconsistency. Some properties follow the new lowercase convention, others don't, and the error messages don't always tell you which. I've spent an embarrassing amount of time on Reddit trying to figure out why my custom entity wasn't loading its display name only to realize it was a capitalization mismatch. What helps: the Minecraft Wiki now documents JSON paths separately from the old NBT syntax. Check there first, not old forum posts. Function Files and Command Changes Functions in data packs are where the real work happens. This is where you define what happens when the pack loads, what happens when a player does something, custom crafting recipes, whatever. The function syntax itself hasn't changed much, but what's expected inside functions definitely has. Commands now require full JSON for more complex operations. The shorthand syntax that worked in 25.x is deprecated, and using it generates warnings on world load. It'll keep working (for now), but Mojang's pretty clear that deprecation usually means removal in 2-3 updates. The `/data` command is now the standard for manipulating NBT, and it's strict about types. You can't just throw arbitrary values at storage anymore. Everything has to be properly typed JSON. If you're running a server with lots of custom functions, I'd recommend testing every function file individually first. Load the pack in a test world, run the function, watch the logs. Don't just assume old functions will work because they compiled without errors. What This Means for Server Admins Server admins need to validate their custom packs against 26.1.2 before deploying to production. This is non-negotiable. The process is straightforward: create a test world, install your data pack, watch the debug logs (enable debug logging in server.properties), and reload. Any validation errors or deprecation warnings will show up immediately. Fix them one by one. It's tedious, but breaking a live server isn't better. Also, if you're using third-party tools to generate data packs, check if they've been updated for pack format 57. Some generators lag behind by a few versions. I used a popular crafting recipe generator that was still outputting format 55 packs. It "worked" in the sense that Minecraft loaded them, but they threw warnings constantly. For DNS-based multiplayer setups (if you're running multiple servers with custom domain routing), you might want to use our free Minecraft DNS tool to make sure your server connections stay stable while you're testing. And it takes one variable out of the debugging equation. Map Makers: NBT Complexity Just Got Real Map makers are dealing with the heaviest impact here. Custom maps that rely on complex NBT manipulation are now more fragile because the type system is stricter. Let's say you're building a puzzle map with custom scoreboards, custom entities carrying data, and specific NBT properties on items. In the old system, you could be a bit loose with types. Numbers could be floats when they should be integers, and the game would mostly figure it out. Now? It won't. You'll get a hard error. The upside is that once you fix your NBT, it's more stable. The downside is the fixing phase is annoying. One thing I'd recommend: if you're designing a map with dimensional portals and precise coordinate calculations, our nether portal calculator can help you verify your math. It's one less thing to debug when you're already dealing with NBT changes. Backwards Compatibility and Migration Mojang's stance is: we'll support old packs for one major version, then deprecation warnings become errors. That means if your data pack is format 56, it's getting a grace period in 26.x. Come 27.0, it won't load at all. Not a great situation if you maintain a pack that other servers use. The pressure to update is real. Migration isn't difficult, just tedious. The main steps are straightforward. Update pack.mcmeta to format 57. Validate all JSON for proper type checking. Replace any deprecated command syntax with the modern equivalents. Re-test everything. It typically takes a few hours for a moderately complex pack, longer if you're dealing with hundreds of functions. The community has built some tools to automate parts of this. Check the r/Minecraft and r/MinecraftCommands subreddits for migration helpers. Some are better than others (obviously vet them first), but they can catch obvious issues quickly. Looking Forward The direction Minecraft is moving is clear: stricter validation, cleaner data structures, and less tolerance for workarounds. It's annoying in the short term, but the payoff is that custom content becomes more reliable long-term. Servers won't randomly break because of NBT corruption. Map makers will have fewer mysterious errors. If you've got data packs running on 2026 servers, plan for a spring cleaning. It's worth it. --- ### Minecraft Building Styles: Modern, Medieval, Fantasy Explained URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-building-styles Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Minecraft building styles come down to aesthetic choices and block palettes. You've got modern minimalism with concrete and glass, medieval fantasy with stone and wood, and pure fantasy with everything glowing and impossible. But knowing the labels is just the start. The real skill is understanding why certain styles work and how to make them yours instead of copying someone else's castle for the hundredth time. Understanding Building Styles in Minecraft Every Minecraft build exists somewhere on a spectrum of architectural intent. Some players grab whatever blocks look cool. Others think about historical accuracy or thematic consistency. And some just want to make something that looks chill at sunset. Building styles aren't rigid rules. They're more like languages. You learn the vocabulary of a style (the block types, color palettes, architectural elements), and then you start speaking it naturally. Mix a little medieval here, splash some modern there, and suddenly you've got something that feels fresh because it's actually yours. The most common styles each have their own DNA. Modern Minecraft Architecture Modern builds love clean lines, minimal ornamentation, and a restricted color palette. Think concrete, stripped logs, dark wood, glass, and copper. Lots of glass actually. Minecraft players obsessed with modern design will spend twenty minutes debating whether a build should use gray concrete or light gray concrete (it matters, trust me). What makes modern work in Minecraft is restraint. And spacing. Modern buildings breathe. You'll see wide open roof areas, simple geometric shapes, and negative space treated as a design element rather than wasted room. A modern house doesn't have decorative battlements or hand-carved details. Typical blocks: concrete, dark oak wood, stripped spruce, glass, copper stairs Color palette: grays, blacks, whites, muted earth tones Rooflines: flat or slightly sloped, minimal overhang Decorative approach: functional over ornamental The hardest part about building modern is that every mistake shows. There's nowhere to hide a misplaced block or uneven spacing. Medieval can forgive a little messiness because detail covers sins. Modern can't. Medieval Building Style Medieval is probably the most popular building style in Minecraft. Stone, dark oak, spruce, lots of brown tones, roofs with significant overhang. Add a tall tower and suddenly you're running a castle. Medieval nails that "lived-in, built-over-centuries" vibe. You'll see turrets, crenellations (those notches on castle walls), timber-framing, arched doorways, and stone arches everywhere. Medieval players also love mixing textures. A medieval wall might be stone brick, dark oak planks, and spruce logs all in one section, and it just works because that's how actual old buildings look. The fantasy version of medieval is what most players build anyway. Historically accurate medieval structures were cramped, dark, and honestly kind of gross. Minecraft medieval is medieval-inspired. That means way cooler and more spacious. Typical blocks: stone brick, dark oak wood, spruce wood, cobblestone, oak stairs Color palette: grays, browns, blacks, weathered tones Rooflines: peaked, steep angles, significant overhang Decorative elements: towers, arches, visible timber framing Medieval's big advantage? It's forgiving. Add some vines, slap some moss on the blocks, throw down some decorative stones. It all reads as intentional history. Fantasy Building Styles Fantasy is where you stop worrying about logic. Your base can have glowing purple crystals, floating islands held up by magic, bioluminescent gardens, and shapes that couldn't possibly be structurally sound. Popular fantasy subgenres include: Elven/Nature Fantasy Lots of wood (especially light woods and spruce), leaves, vines, glowing mushrooms, and any block that feels organic. Amethyst caves fit beautifully into nature fantasy. These builds lean into curves and flowing lines instead of harsh right angles. If your build looks like it grew rather than got built, you're doing nature fantasy right. Dark Fantasy / Necromancy Blackstone, deepslate, soul sand, soul lanterns, warped wood. Maybe some crying obsidian if you're feeling extra. Dark fantasy doesn't need to be evil (though it can be). It's more about creating that moody, atmospheric vibe. Underground fortresses, abandoned temples, places that feel ancient and potentially dangerous. Steampunk / Tech Fantasy Copper, iron, chains, pistons, dispensers (use them as decorative elements, they look industrial). Steampunk in Minecraft is about making machines look intentional rather than purely functional. Exposed mechanisms, brass-and-iron aesthetic, gears and contraptions that feel purposeful. Other Notable Building Styles Japanese-inspired builds use stone lanterns, bamboo, specific roof angles, and careful landscaping. Tropical bases use bright sand, various wood types, bright glazed terracotta, and jungle leaves. Steampunk leans into copper, iron, and industrial elements. Actually, let me back up. You're going to see lists of "20 building styles" online that includes "rustic" and "cottage" and "industrial," but those are really just flavors of larger categories or combinations of techniques. Don't get too caught up in naming things. What matters is: what blocks create the mood you want? Choosing Your Building Style Start with environment. What biome are you in? A jungle naturally wants tropical or nature fantasy vibes. A snowy taiga might push you toward something colder: modern, medieval, maybe that dark fantasy underground fortress theme. Then consider your block access. If you haven't got copper farms running yet, steampunk will feel incomplete. If you're early game, medieval and rustic are your friends because stone and wood are everywhere. But honestly? Your personal taste matters most. Build what makes you happy. If you're drawn to modern minimalism, modern minimalism is right. If every build you make accidentally turns into a fantasy mushroom tower, that's fine too. Consistency in taste matters way more than consistency in historical accuracy. One practical tip: pick a color palette before you start and stick with it. Modern builds using 15 different wood types look chaotic. Medieval builds help themselves to five or six compatible woods, and suddenly cohesion happens. You can always browse Minecraft skins to see how other players approach character design and building themes. Character design often reflects building preference. A fantasy player tends to pick fantasy skins. Gives you a vibe. Mixing Styles and Finding Your Voice The best builds don't stay pure. You'll see medieval bases with modern interior lighting. Fantasy builds with small modern functional areas. A medieval castle with one section that's clearly a modern workshop. Professional builders mix styles intentionally. A village might have mostly medieval houses but a modern town hall. A base might feel 80% modern with pockets of fantasy. These mixes work because the primary style carries the identity, and accents just make it more interesting. And here's the thing that won't click until you've built a bunch: styles are actually just about how you use light, space, and proportion. Once you understand that, you stop copying other people's builds and start making buildings that look like yours. If you're running multiplayer servers, you might want to check your free Minecraft DNS settings to make sure your server's responsive when people are building. Server lag makes building in anything precision-focused absolutely miserable. Developing Your Building Skills Study reference images. Look at actual buildings if you can. Study how medieval buildings handle corners. See what modern architecture actually looks like versus what Minecraft players think it looks like (they're not always the same thing). Build small things first. A cottage is better practice than a castle. A small modern storefront teaches you more about the modern style than trying a massive house. You learn faster with frequent smaller projects than rare massive ones. Use block variations. Stone brick and cracked stone brick don't look that different individually, but together they create texture. Most builds improve dramatically just from adding weathering and variation. Watch builders you respect. Not to copy their exact builds, but to see how they make decisions. Why did they use that block there? What's their lighting strategy? How do they handle transitions between different elements? Your style will eventually become recognizable. Not because you're copying a template, but because you develop preferences. You'll notice you always make rooflines a certain way, you prefer certain color palettes, you solve problems using techniques that become your signature. That's when you know you've moved from learning a style to owning it. FAQ What's the easiest building style for beginners? Medieval and rustic are most forgiving. They reward texture and messiness rather than punishing every misaligned block. Modern is the hardest for beginners because precision matters and every mistake shows. Can I mix multiple building styles in one world? Absolutely. Most successful multiplayer worlds have mixed styles. The key is keeping each build internally consistent and not randomly throwing incompatible blocks together. A medieval village with one modern house works fine if that house is clearly intentional. Do I need specific mods to build in certain styles? No. Vanilla Minecraft blocks (as of version 26.1.2) are enough for any major style. Mods add more options, but they're never required. You can build amazing buildings with the base game. How do I know which blocks match my building style? Pick a primary block (like dark oak for medieval or concrete for modern), then test other blocks next to it in creative mode. Blocks from similar wood families or color families usually work together. Don't overthink it. Build a test wall, see if it feels right. What if my builds don't look good? That's normal. Every builder went through a phase of questionable looking buildings. Scale up slower, study references more, and remember that your 50th building will look way better than your 5th. Building style skill is learned through repetition and critique. --- ### Latest Minecraft Snapshot 26.2: New Blocks and Updates URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-snapshot-26-2-new-blocks Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Snapshot 26.2-3 is live, and Mojang's added some genuinely useful blocks alongside the usual balance tweaks. If you've been sitting on version 26.1.2, there's enough here to test out before the full release - though fair warning, snapshots can break things. What's Actually New in Snapshot 26.2-3 Mojang's calling this one a "quality of life" snapshot, which is code for "no massive features, but we're fixing things people complained about." A few block-related changes, some tweaks to how mobs interact with terrain, and apparently a fix for that one weird water physics issue that's been around since 1.19. Nothing Earth-shattering, but the refinement work is where Minecraft usually shines. The snapshot philosophy is simple: test everything twice, because at some point Mojang will absolutely introduce a bug that makes dirt invisible or something equally chaotic. That's part of the fun, honestly. New Blocks Worth Knowing About Three major additions showed up this cycle, and they're actually worth building with. Weathered Copper Variants Oxidized copper's been around for a while, but the new weathered variants fill a gap that players have been asking for. You get the mid-stage look without waiting three in-game days for the full oxidation process. Stack them with regular copper and you can create some really nice patina gradients on large structures. Reinforced Deepslate This one's actually interesting because it changes how you think about deep mining. It's got the durability you'd expect from the name. That means it's useful for building vaults or treasure rooms you don't want easily broken into. Sculptured Quartz Blocks Pure aesthetic win. The sculpted variants give you textured options beyond the flat look, so if you're building something architectural (a temple, a library, whatever), you've got more visual depth to work with. They pair surprisingly well with blackstone, which has always felt like it was waiting for a companion block. Building Ideas You Can Actually Execute Here's where snapshots get fun: you can start experimenting now instead of waiting until 1.27 drops in June. Ever tried building a full kitchen with vanilla blocks? It's rough. The new weathered copper and quartz variants actually make that kind of detailed build feel less janky. If you're serious about designing skins to match your builds (and honestly, why build something epic if your character looks like they rolled out of a template), you can use our skin creator tool to whip up something custom that fits your aesthetic. Takes ten minutes, completely changes how your character looks in those screenshots. The reinforced deepslate is already getting attention on Reddit for vault-building. The survival complexity of needing a diamond pickaxe to harvest it adds a nice gate to early-game treasure hoarding. Performance and Technical Changes Snapshot 26.2-3 includes some under-the-hood rendering improvements. That means even older machines should see slightly better frame rates on larger maps. Mojang's still optimizing the render distance system, and this snapshot continues that work. There's also a fix for chunk-loading lag when you're near servers with high player counts. If you're running a multiplayer server, you might want to test this snapshot specifically for that. If You're Running a Server, Consider This Server admins have new options for world customization in this snapshot. The API changes mean plugins will need updating (if you're using Spigot or Paper), but the native server tools are more flexible now. And if you're setting up DNS for your server, our free Minecraft DNS tool makes the whole pointing-domains thing painless - no config headaches. Migration from 26.1.2 is straightforward as long as you back up your world first (always, always do this before updating a snapshot). Should You Jump on Snapshot 26.2-3 Right Now If you're running a survival world on 26.1.2, probably not. Snapshots are unstable by design, and losing three weeks of builds to a random corruption isn't a fun Wednesday. If you're managing a test world or a creative server where losing data isn't catastrophic, absolutely test it. That's literally what snapshots are for. The new blocks are worth trying, and the rendering improvements are noticeable. But wait for the release candidate (probably early May based on Mojang's usual schedule) before migrating important worlds. And honestly? The best time to mess with snapshots is when you've got friends to build with. Trying out new blocks solo gets boring fast. --- ### Leaderboard PvP Minecraft: Complete 2026 Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/leaderboard-pvp-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-04-19 Author: ice Leaderboard PvP servers let you compete against other players in skill-based ranked matches, with your performance tracked and displayed publicly. Climbing the ranks requires mastering combat mechanics, weapon selection, and server-specific strategies. Here's what you need to know to get started and dominate the competitive scene. What's Leaderboard PvP? Leaderboard PvP isn't your typical deathmatch server where kills are just kills. It's a ranked system where every fight matters. Players earn points or ratings based on wins, eliminations, and survival time, then climb a publicly visible ranking ladder. Some servers use Elo ratings (borrowed from chess), others use custom progression systems. The appeal is obvious: there's always a clear goal. You know exactly where you stand against other players. Different servers implement this differently. Some focus on one-on-one duels with separate rankings per weapon type. Others run team-based matches where coordination determines your position. A few even gate access to higher tiers, meaning you can't challenge top players until you've proved yourself at lower ranks. Actually, that's not universal across all servers - some let anyone challenge anyone regardless of rating, which creates an interesting dynamic where underdogs can shake up the rankings overnight. Finding and Joining Leaderboard Servers Finding a solid leaderboard server takes more than a quick server list search. You'll want to check community forums like Reddit's r/MinecraftServers, Discord communities dedicated to PvP, or browsing specialized server listing sites. Look for servers running Minecraft version 26.1.2 to ensure compatibility with current clients and that you're playing on stable builds. When evaluating a server, check: Player count and online times (dead servers won't rank fairly) Whether rankings reset seasonally or stay permanent What game modes they offer (duel, team matches, free-for-all) Anticheat systems in place (crucial for fair competition) Admin responsiveness to disputes or exploits If you're planning to run your own server or help manage one, tools like the Minecraft Whitelist Creator simplify managing who gets access. That's particularly useful for leaderboard servers that run invite-only tournaments or seasonal competitions. Combat Mechanics You Need to Master Raw aim isn't everything here. Combat on leaderboard servers emphasizes timing, positioning, and resource awareness. Sword combat requires understanding attack cooldowns. You can't just spam click anymore in recent versions. Instead, you need to time attacks, strafe around opponents, and use knockback effectively. Shield blocking is essential - knowing when to defend and when to go aggressive separates casual players from competitive ones. Bow combat demands practice. Leading shots, accounting for gravity, and predicting movement separates skilled archers from those just spamming arrows. Some servers implement no-knockback arenas specifically to improve this skill. Axe dueling, if offered, requires patience and spacing - it's slower than swords but hits harder. Then there's positioning. High ground advantage is real. Water bucket clutches, sprint-jumping for escape, and understanding terrain choke points matter enormously. Your frame rate and ping also affect combat directly, so high-performance setups genuinely help. Understanding Ranking Systems Most competitive servers use one of three approaches. Elo-based systems give you a numerical rating that changes based on wins and losses. Beat someone ranked higher, gain more points. Lose to someone ranked lower, lose more points. This self-corrects to find your true skill level. It's mathematically sound but can feel slow to climb if you're stuck between ranks. Point systems are simpler: kill = points, win = bonus points, death = penalty. Your weekly or seasonal total determines rank. Aggressive play is rewarded, but it also means a bad day can knock you down quickly. Some servers add multipliers during specific times, making peak hours more valuable for ranking. Tier-based systems lock you into brackets. You're Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum, or Diamond. You play against your tier, and promotions happen when you accumulate enough wins. These feel more rewarding psychologically - reaching a new tier feels like an achievement - but the artificial brackets can feel restrictive. Preparing Your Setup and Skills A good gaming setup helps. You want 60+ FPS minimum, ideally 100+. Your mouse sensitivity matters more than people think. Most competitive players use lower sensitivity for better aim precision. Keybinds should be comfortable and consistent - changing them mid-climb is a terrible idea. Your skin and cosmetics don't affect gameplay, but if you want to stand out, tools like the Minecraft Text Generator can help create a custom player name format for server introductions or tournament registration. Some servers even allow custom kill messages. Practice strategy matters more than grinding hours. Find a server with a training mode or join duel servers to warm up before ranked matches. Record your losses and analyze what went wrong. Did you miss a critical heal? Position poorly? Get caught out of position? Identifying patterns accelerates improvement. Climbing the Ranks Effectively Start at the appropriate skill level. Don't jump straight into competitive if you're new to PvP - play casual matches first to understand how the server works. Early on, focus on fundamentals. Get comfortable with your weapon, learn the maps, understand spawn points and safe routes. You'll beat players who overlook basic strategy before you outaim anyone. As you progress, analyze top players. Watch their streams or replays. How do they position? When do they engage? What weapons do they choose in different scenarios? Copying successful strategies isn't lazy - it's smart. You'll eventually develop your own playstyle once you understand the meta. Don't tilt. Losing several matches in a row happens to everyone. Playing angry leads to poor decisions, worse positioning, and harder losses. Take a break, reset mentally, come back fresh. Consistency beats heroic plays. Team-based leaderboards require communication. Play with the same team repeatedly if possible. Familiarity breeds better callouts and timing. You'll climb faster with consistent teammates than solo players can hope to achieve. Staying Competitive Long-Term Servers sometimes patch mechanics that change the meta. Maybe shields get nerfed, or bow damage shifts. Adapt quickly or you'll find yourself playing outdated strategies. Top players stay informed about patch notes and adjust accordingly. Tournaments and seasonal resets are common on established servers. Some servers wipe rankings yearly to give everyone a fresh start. Others run monthly tournaments with prizes. Getting involved in these events levels up your competition and pushes you harder than grinding daily matches. Consider streaming or recording your matches. You'll improve faster with an audience (even if it's just friends), and you build a following in the process. Seriously good players often have their best matches on camera. --- ### How to Use PackSquash to Optimize Minecraft Packs URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/packsquash-minecraft-pack-optimizer Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project PackSquash (ComunidadAylas/PackSquash) 📦 Minecraft: Java Edition resource and data pack optimizer which aims to achieve the best possible compression, performance and protection, improving pack distribution, storage and in-game load times. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 809 stars💻 Rust📜 AGPL-3.0 If you've ever downloaded a resource or data pack that's 100+ megabytes, then waited for it to extract in-game, you've felt the pain PackSquash solves. This Rust-built optimizer shrinks your packs dramatically - sometimes by 50% or more - without destroying quality. Smaller downloads, faster loading, better performance. That's the whole pitch, and it actually works. What PackSquash Actually Does PackSquash walks through your resource or data pack directory and intelligently compresses every file type it recognizes. PNG textures get quantized and optimized. Audio files get resampled and transcoded. JSON files get minified. Shader code gets stripped of unnecessary whitespace. Even NBT datapack files get a dedicated compression pass. The project's README notes a real-world example: reducing the Witchcraft & Wizardry resource pack from 118 MiB to 57 MiB - a 51.69% size reduction. That's not uncommon. What makes PackSquash different from just using a ZIP program is that it doesn't blindly compress everything. It understands Minecraft file formats. The result knows which metadata can be safely removed from PNGs, which audio channels you don't need, which JSON whitespace doesn't matter to the game. The tool does the thinking so you don't have to. Why Pack Size Actually Matters Smaller packs feel like a luxury until you actually need to install one on a server. Imagine you're distributing a custom resource pack to 50 players. Every 10 MiB of unnecessary file size multiplies across downloads, wastes bandwidth, and creates friction. Some players will give up halfway through. For datapacks on servers, large file sizes directly slow down world load times and chunk processing. Your server has to read more data from disk and RAM. Then there's the in-game experience. Modern texture packs and shader packs pile up in file size fast. Your game takes longer to load. Every asset lookup is slightly slower when the pack isn't optimized. You probably won't notice 50 milliseconds, but you'll notice 500. And if you're hosting packs on your own infrastructure (not a major CDN), smaller files mean lower bandwidth costs. Actually having money in your budget for other projects? Nice. Getting PackSquash Running Installation is straightforward. Head to the GitHub releases page and grab the binary for your OS (Linux, macOS, Windows all covered). Unzip it somewhere convenient. Basic usage: bash./packsquash path/to/your/pack That's it. PackSquash will scan the directory, apply default compression settings, and spit out an optimized ZIP file in the same location. The defaults are sensible - they balance quality and file size without being too aggressive. If you want to customize how PackSquash handles your pack, you create an options file. Create a file called `packsquash.toml` in your pack directory: toml[pack] zip_compression_method = "Stored" zip_compression_level = 9 png_color_quantization_target = 256 The project's options documentation walks you through every setting. Start with defaults, then tweak if you've specific quality requirements or unusual file types. Compression Techniques Worth Understanding PNG optimization is where PackSquash shines. It uses color quantization (reducing your 24-bit colors down to a smart palette), bit-depth reduction, and metadata stripping. New in v0.4.1: PNG obfuscation scrambles texture data to protect it from casual viewing outside the game. If you've ever worried about people extracting your custom textures, this is the answer. GitHub project card for ComunidadAylas/PackSquash Audio files support channel mixing, downsampling, and Vorbis transcoding. The default settings aim for quality that sounds good in-game without the bloat of studio-grade audio. You can also auto-detect and remove silence from the beginning and end of sound files. Useful if your sound files have long padding. JSON and shader minification strips whitespace and validates syntax while it's at it. As a bonus, if your JSON files have errors, PackSquash will catch them before you release your pack. Actually finding typos in 50 JSON files? This tool does it faster than you can open them. The latest release added better compatibility with modern packs. Packs generated with strict ZIP conformance now work on Java 22+. Several shader mis-optimization bugs were fixed without requiring user workarounds. Configuration Tips and What Trips People Up Here's the biggest gotcha: PackSquash is aggressive by default. If you're paranoid about quality, test the optimized pack in-game before distributing it to others. Load a world, check your textures, play some audio, run around. PNG quantization is subtle on realistic texture packs but noticeable on flat-color artistic packs. If you need zero quality loss, you can disable quantization and rely on lossless compression alone. The file won't shrink as much, but it'll be pixel-perfect. Don't forget: PackSquash respects your pack's structure. If you've custom files that aren't standard Minecraft formats (maybe documentation or metadata), PackSquash won't touch them. They'll pass through unchanged into the output ZIP. One more thing - actually, that only works for v0.4.1 and later - the new ZIP comment option lets you embed metadata or credits directly in the ZIP file itself. Instead of including a separate text file, you can store your pack attribution in the archive comment. It's a small touch that keeps your pack directory cleaner. Other Tools in the Pack Optimization Space PackSquash isn't the only option. OptiPNG is older and focuses purely on PNG optimization, which is useful if that's your only concern. PNGQuant handles color quantization specifically. Neither is as complete as PackSquash. Some pack creators use manual compression with 7-Zip or RAR, which can help but doesn't optimize the files themselves - just the archive. You'll get modest size reductions without the per-file smarts PackSquash brings. If you're running a server, tools like server status checkers help you monitor whether your pack is loading correctly. Smaller packs paired with a healthy server mean faster player joins. Similarly, if you're working with terrain or navigation, a nether portal calculator helps you plan pack distribution across dimensions. But for pure compression, PackSquash stands ahead because it understands Minecraft formats in depth. The project is open-source (AGPL-3.0) and actively maintained. And that community Discord is responsive, and the GitHub wiki covers setup thoroughly. If you hit a wall, help is usually just a question away. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Building Minecraft Bots with Azalea in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/azalea-minecraft-bots-rust Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project azalea (azalea-rs/azalea) A collection of Rust crates for making Minecraft bots, clients, and tools. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 691 stars💻 Rust📜 MIT Ever wanted to write a Minecraft bot that actually behaves like a real player instead of some jittery automation script? Azalea is a Rust library that lets you build Minecraft bots and tools with physics-accurate movement, smart pathfinding, and support for the latest game versions. It's not a mod, not a plugin - it's a full toolkit for creating Minecraft clients and bots from scratch. What This Project Actually Does Azalea is a collection of Rust crates (libraries) that handle the low-level details of connecting to Minecraft servers and controlling a bot client. Instead of fighting with fragmented APIs or outdated libraries, you get a cohesive set of tools that understand Minecraft's protocol, physics, and mechanics. The project supports Minecraft version 26.1, which means it's kept reasonably current. You can create a bot that walks around, breaks blocks, places blocks, fights mobs, manages inventory, and interacts with the world in ways that don't immediately scream "bot" to server anti-cheats (though you'll still need to be thoughtful about server policies). Built with Bevy plugin support, Azalea lets you extend its behavior significantly. The community has already created some impressive real-world bots - pearl stasis bots, auto-detection systems, Discord bridges, even Lua scripting interfaces. This isn't theoretical stuff; people are actually using it. Why You'd Actually Build With This There are a few solid reasons Azalea exists and keeps getting improvements. First: testing. If you're running a server or developing server software, you need a way to test it without manually logging in repeatedly. Azalea bots can run automated checks, verify mechanics work as expected, and catch breaking changes before players discover them. Second: automation on survival servers. A legitimate use case (with permission, obviously) is creating helper bots for your own server. Maybe you need an AFK-proof presence for keeping chunks loaded, or a bot that manages community resources. You could also build bots that respond to chat commands or assist with gameplay tasks. Third: learning. If you want to understand how Minecraft's protocol works, how physics calculations happen, or how the game state stays in sync between client and server, reading Azalea's source is genuinely educational. The physics implementation especially is well-commented. And honestly? Some people just think it's cool to build bots. That's valid. Getting Started: Installation and Setup Azalea lives on crates.io (Rust's package registry), so adding it to a project is straightforward. First, make sure you have Rust installed. If you don't, grab it from rustup.rs - the install process is quick and handles most setup automatically. Create a new Rust project: bashcargo new my_azalea_bot cd my_azalea_bot Then add Azalea as a dependency in your Cargo.toml file. The specific version matters since the library is still maturing and breaking changes happen. Check the latest docs at docs.rs/azalea for the current recommended version. Before writing any bot code, you'll want Tokio (an async runtime) since Azalea uses async Rust throughout: toml[dependencies] azalea = "0.20" tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] } Version numbers matter here - if you grab a version that doesn't match your Minecraft server version, you'll run into protocol mismatches. The README clearly states what version of Minecraft each Azalea release supports, so check that before bumping versions. Compilation can take a while the first time around. This isn't Azalea being slow - it's Rust itself. Once it's built though, your bot binary will be fast and use minimal resources. The Features That Matter Physics is the foundation here. Azalea implements accurate Minecraft physics including jumping, fall damage, and fluid behavior. Your bot won't just teleport around; it'll move like an actual player. This matters because servers can detect bots that move impossibly fast or ignore physics entirely. Pathfinding is the second critical piece. The project includes a pathfinder that can figure out how to get from point A to point B, accounting for obstacles, height changes, and valid routes through the world. You feed it coordinates, and it calculates a traversable path. This isn't magical - sometimes the pathfinder can't find a route because one doesn't exist - but it handles the common cases well. Swarms are interesting if you want multiple bots working together. Instead of running separate bot instances that fight each other for network bandwidth, Azalea's swarm support lets you control many bots from a single process. They can coordinate actions and share state efficiently. Block interaction and mining work through straightforward method calls. Break a block, place a block, interact with a container - these operations exist and function predictably. Building still hn limitation (actual client-side prediction for block placement), but it works fine for most purposes. Inventory management is solid. Your bot can open containers, move items, craft, and track what it's carrying. If you're automating server tasks, this is essential. Things That'll Trip You Up First caveat: Azalea is marked as unstable. Breaking changes happen. The maintainers note this clearly, and the changelog documents what breaks between versions. If you're building a bot you'll maintain for months, budget time for dependency updates. GitHub project card for azalea-rs/azalea Anti-cheat detection is a real concern. Azalea does implement features to avoid obvious bot signatures (accurate physics, realistic movement timing), but server admins can still catch bots if they're suspicious. If you're running a bot on someone else's server without permission, you'll probably get caught eventually. Use your bots responsibly. The library doesn't support multiple Minecraft versions simultaneously. If you need to support version 26.1 and 26.2, you're updating your dependency to support the new version - you can't have both at once. There's a community effort (azalea-viaversion) attempting to bridge this, but it's not part of the main project yet. Entity behavior is partially implemented. Some features like entity pushing and elytra flight aren't there yet. If you need your bot to do something esoteric (riding dragons, for example), you might need to extend the library yourself or work around missing features. Async/await syntax is required. This isn't really Azalea's fault - it's Rust. But if you've never written async code before, expect a learning curve. The documentation and examples help, but async Rust is genuinely different from sync code. Server Testing and Monitoring One practical application worth mentioning: you can use Azalea bots to test your server's health. Point a bot at your server, have it perform basic actions (move, break a block, place a block), and log the results. This is similar to what tools like our Minecraft Server Status Checker do, but from the inside with a full client instead of pinging the server remotely. If you're managing a public server or network, having an internal bot that periodically tests functionality can catch issues before players report them. It's not a replacement for proper monitoring, but it's a useful layer. When to Consider Alternatives Azalea targets Rust developers specifically. If you're more comfortable with Python or JavaScript, libraries like Mineflayer (Node.js) or PrismarineJS offer similar functionality in different languages. They're older and more battle-tested in some cases, but they're also generally less performant. If you just need a one-off bot for a specific task and don't want to learn Rust, Azalea might be overkill. Simple Minecraft automation can sometimes be accomplished with existing server plugins or mods depending on your use case. For graphics or visual rendering, Azalea explicitly doesn't support that. If you need a bot that actually displays the Minecraft world visually, you'd need a different approach. There's an experimental azalea-graphics project, but it's not integrated into the main library. Bedrock edition (mobile/console Minecraft) isn't supported either. Azalea focuses exclusively on Java Edition since that's where the most developer flexibility exists. Real Projects and Community The GitHub dependency graph shows Azalea is actively used. Not by hundreds of projects, but by enough real applications that you can see how people solve problems. ShayBox's pearl stasis bot is a good reference if you want to understand advanced usage. There's also documentation at azalea.matdoes.dev with examples and API reference. Community support exists through Matrix and Discord channels (bridged, so pick whichever you prefer). The maintainer and contributors are responsive, though this isn't a massive project with round-the-clock support. If you're integrating Azalea into something like a Discord bot or server management tool, you can absolutely do that. Your Rust bot can call Discord APIs, query your database, or do whatever else makes sense for your use case. The library handles just the Minecraft protocol part. One last thought: if you're building bots for any kind of competitive gameplay or third-party servers, make sure you understand the server's terms of service. Automation that gives unfair advantages is generally against the rules, and server admins have every right to ban bots they didn't authorize. For your own servers or explicit automation tasks, you're in the clear. If you need to manage server access and player lists programmatically, our Minecraft Whitelist Creator can help with that side of server administration, though Azalea could also automate whitelist management if you code it in. Ready to try azalea? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit azalea-rs/azalea on GitHub ↗ --- ### How to Create Modded Server Packs with ServerPackCreator URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/serverpackcreator-modded-server-packs Published: 2026-04-18 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project ServerPackCreator (Griefed/ServerPackCreator) Create a server pack from a Minecraft Forge, NeoForge, Fabric, LegacyFabric or Quilt modpack! Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 569 stars💻 Kotlin📜 LGPL-2.1 Ever tried to host a modded Minecraft server? You probably discovered that you can't just copy your modpack folder to a server and call it done. Client-only mods crash the server, configuration files conflict, and you're left digging through documentation to figure out what stays and what goes. ServerPackCreator solves this by automatically building a server-ready package from your modpack, handling all the messy sorting behind the scenes. What ServerPackCreator Actually Does ServerPackCreator takes the guesswork out of server modpack creation. You point it at a modpack - whether it's built with Forge, NeoForge, Fabric, LegacyFabric, or Quilt - and it generates a clean server package stripped of client-only mods and optimized for dedicated server use. The tool doesn't just remove mods blindly. It's smarter than that. It knows which mods have server variants, which ones are purely client-side (like shader packs or fancy UI enhancements), and how to configure the server to run smoothly. You end up with a folder you can literally drag onto a hosting provider or drop into your own server machine. The project has 569 GitHub stars and is released under LGPL-2.1, meaning the code is open source and actively maintained. The latest version (8.1.1, released in April 2026) continues getting regular updates and fixes. Why Hosting a Modded Server Is Actually Painful Without This Let's be honest: manually creating a server pack is tedious. You download the modpack, you check each mod's page on Modrinth or CurseForge, you note which ones are client-only, you copy configs, you test, you debug weird errors. It can take hours. And half the time you miss something and the server crashes on startup anyway. GitHub project card for Griefed/ServerPackCreator ServerPackCreator cuts through all of that. It automates the entire process. You get a working server pack in minutes instead of hours, and you skip the trial-and-error debugging phase entirely. If you're planning to set up a public server - whether for friends or a community - this tool saves a ridiculous amount of time. If you're just getting started with server hosting, browse the Minecraft Server List to see what kinds of servers are out there and get inspired. Installing and Getting Started Installation is straightforward. Grab the latest release from GitHub - there are installers for Windows, macOS, and Linux, plus a standalone JAR if you prefer that. Beta Creeper Statue in Minecraft On Linux or Mac, the installer script handles the setup: bash./ServerPackCreator-8_1_1-Installer-Linux-amd64.sh Windows has a standard executable installer. Both walk you through choosing a location and creating the necessary directories. If you prefer the standalone JAR, you'll need Java 21 or newer: bashjava -jar ServerPackCreator-8.1.1.jar Once it launches, you're greeted with a web interface. Upload your modpack ZIP file, and ServerPackCreator starts analyzing it immediately. You can tweak settings if needed - exclude specific mods, adjust server properties, configure which optional features to include - but the defaults work great for most use cases. Click generate, wait a minute or two, and your server pack is ready to download. Key Features That Actually Matter Automatic client mod detection is the headline feature. The tool maintains a constantly-updated list of known client-only mods and filters them out automatically. You can also manually exclude mods if the detection misses something, though that's rare. Alpha Server in Minecraft Version management lets you work with multiple modpack versions without fussing around with folder organization. Server properties generation is surprisingly thoughtful. It doesn't just create a blank server.properties file - it includes sensible defaults for performance and compatibility. You can override these before generating if you know your setup needs different tuning (50 players vs 20, for example). The API is worth mentioning if you're the technical type. The project includes full API documentation - the latest release includes a javadoc JAR - so you can integrate server pack generation into your own tools or CI/CD pipeline if you wanted to automate everything. The web interface is clean and functional. Some server tools have needlessly complicated dashboards, but this one respects your time. Gotchas and Things That'll Trip You Up Modpack format matters more than you'd think. ServerPackCreator handles common formats beautifully, but if your modpack is oddly structured or uses mods in unusual ways, you might need to tweak things manually. Generally this is rare, but it's worth testing your generated pack before uploading it to production. Not all mods have server implementations, even when they're not client-only. A mod might require both server and client components, but the server component might behave differently or have compatibility issues you don't expect. ServerPackCreator can't predict every edge case, so plan for a little testing before you launch publicly. Performance tuning is something you'll want to revisit after generation. The tool creates a functional server pack, but optimizing for your specific hardware and player count is a separate task. Use the Minecraft Server Status Checker to monitor your server's performance once it's live, and adjust Java arguments or mod configs accordingly. When to Use This Versus Rolling Your Own There's nothing wrong with manually building a server pack if you have time and patience. Some experienced server admins prefer it because they understand every single mod and config that goes into production. For everyone else, ServerPackCreator saves hours. If you're setting up a quick server for friends, running a community event, or hosting a public modded server, this tool is worth every second of setup time. And if you want to understand what individual mods actually do - what blocks they add, what mechanics they change - the Minecraft Block Search tool helps you dig into those details. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog ---