# minecraft.how — Full content index for LLMs > Long-form extract of recent blog content. For a structured route map, see /llms.txt. ## Recent blog posts (full text) ### Building a Pirate Ship in Minecraft: Complete Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/how-to-build-pirate-ship-minecraft Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Building a pirate ship in Minecraft is one of the most rewarding projects you can tackle. It combines structure, creativity, and design skills into a single impressive build that'll have players stopping in their tracks when they sail by your dock.Planning Your Ship Before You BuildStart by asking yourself: what kind of pirate are you? A small merchant vessel? A massive galleon? A half-sunken brigantine that looks like it survived an actual naval battle? The answer shapes literally everything else. I've built all three on my SMP server, and honestly, the galleon takes forever but looks incredible once it's done.Sketch out your ship's dimensions before placing a single block. A realistic pirate ship needs actual length, width, and height to avoid looking like a floating matchbox. Most builds work well around 40-60 blocks long, 15-25 blocks wide, and about 30 blocks tall (counting the mast). Scale these up or down depending on your patience and the space available on your server.Wood choice matters more than most builders think. Mix dark oak, spruce, and regular oak for that weathered look. Avoid pure birch (unless you're building something modern, which... why would you on a pirate ship?). Plan your dock location too, because pirate ships need water. Building in a tight cove is way easier than fighting with the open ocean.Constructing the HullStart with the keel. Lay down a rectangular outline at water level using dark oak planks. This is your foundation, so don't rush it.Build the hull walls upward from there. The sides should angle outward slightly instead of going straight vertical. This gives you that classic ship shape. Alternate between dark oak logs and planks every few rows to add depth and prevent the walls from looking flat and boring.The bow (front) needs to be pointed. Use stairs and slabs to create a wedge shape that tapers to a point. This takes patience if you haven't worked with angled shapes much, but it's worth practicing beforehand. The stern (back) can stay flatter or slightly rounded depending on the style you're going for.Build temporary scaffolding inside as you work. You'll avoid fall damage and have much easier access to the upper sections when you're placing blocks high up. Seriously, this saves time and frustration.Windows break up the wooden monotony and look fantastic.Use dark oak trapdoors or iron bars positioned along the hull. They add character and let players peek inside. Bonus: it makes the ship feel less like a solid block and more like an actual vessel with interior space.Rigging and SailsThe mast should be tall. Don't skimp on height here. It should extend 15-25 blocks above your deck depending on the ship size. Use stripped spruce or dark oak logs, and secure them with cross-beams to make it look structurally sound.Sails are where creative building really shines. White wool works, white concrete works, light gray concrete works. The popular approach is using bone meal dyed blocks for a sun-bleached appearance (actually, I should clarify: use banners dyed with bone meal, not the dye directly on blocks, since that's more historically accurate for a Minecraft build).Layer your sails so they don't look paper-thin from the side.The shrouds (vertical rigging lines) are where lazy builders get caught. Use black wool, dark oak fences, or string in vertical lines from the mast top down to the deck edges. But this single detail separates "decent ship" from "holy cow, look at that ship." Seriously, don't skip it.Interior Details and AtmosphereDon't leave the inside hollow like some empty shell. Pirate ships had cabins, storage, and cargo holds.Create a captain's quarters with dark wood furniture, hanging lanterns (soul lanterns add a spooky vibe), and a bed frame made from stairs and slabs. Use lecterns as desks and dark oak blocks as paneling. These little touches make a build feel lived-in instead of like a tourist attraction.The lower decks become your cargo hold.Use barrels (arranged from dark oak stairs in a circle) to store "plunder." Chests work too, but barrels feel more authentic. Hang rope using leads or string from the ceiling to add that nautical atmosphere.A galley (kitchen) is surprisingly fun to build. Install cauldrons, furnaces, and lanterns. A brewing stand shows your crew had supplies. Your pirates need to eat between raids, right?Weathering and Final TouchesWeathering makes ships look real and lived-in. Add destroyed blocks, missing planks, and char marks using blackstone and dark prismarine. Vines creeping up the hull suggest age. Partial blocks like trapdoors and fence gates create interesting depth and shadows.Decals and banners add personality. A pirate flag flying from the mast? Craft a crimson banner or a custom-dyed one if you've access to resource packs. Honestly, mount it on a pole of dark oak logs for stability.Lighting gets overlooked constantly. Interior lanterns showing through those hull windows create atmosphere, especially at night. Use soul lanterns in the hold and regular lanterns in the captain's quarters. The difference between day and night visibility makes the build feel like it has genuine interior space.If you're running a server and want custom signage, the Minecraft text generator is perfect for creating ship names and crew rosters on signs and banners. For server stability, check out our free Minecraft DNS tools to ensure your players can actually reach your pirate haven.Making It YoursDifferent wood types tell different stories about your ship's history. An oak ship feels warm and established. Spruce feels cold, like it braves harsh northern waters. Dark oak is the classic pirate aesthetic that just works.Add custom details that match your playstyle. Figureheads at the bow (carved from wood blocks), cargo netting (string and dark oak fences), fishing equipment scattered on deck, maps pinned to walls in the captain's cabin. These details transform a good ship into one that feels like it has an actual crew.Start small if you're new to large builds. Build a fishing boat or a brig before attempting a full galleon. Scale matters, but so does experience and confidence with the building process. --- ### Building a Viking Longhouse in Minecraft: Complete Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/viking-longhouse-minecraft-build Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei A Viking longhouse in Minecraft is essentially a large, rectangular building with a distinctive curved or angled roof, built from wood and natural materials. It's a practical design that works great as a base, storage facility, or centerpiece for a Nordic-themed world.What Makes a Viking Longhouse DifferentThe appeal of a Viking longhouse isn't just aesthetic. This structure reflects historical design: long and narrow, sturdy enough to withstand weather, with an interior that served multiple purposes. In Minecraft terms, that means plenty of interior space for storage, crafting tables, and living areas without needing massive wall dimensions.The defining feature is the roof.Unlike a standard pitched roof, Viking longhouses typically have that characteristic overhanging slope that extends partway down the walls, almost like the building is hunching against the wind. It's practical and iconic at once. And if you're building on a multiplayer server (check our server status checker to keep an eye on your world), it's a design that reads clearly from a distance, which matters when you've got a sprawling base.Gathering Your MaterialsHere's where most people stumble. They grab oak wood and think they're good to go.You'll want a mix. Dark oak for the heavy support beams, regular oak planks for the walls, and spruce or dark oak stairs for the roof. Thatch isn't a Minecraft block, so we're faking it with hay bales (golden and warm-looking) or dark oak slabs layered together. Some builders use grass blocks on the outer roof layer for that overgrown, aged appearance, which honestly looks better than pure hay once weathered.Grab stripped logs too. They add visual contrast to your frame and break up the monotony of solid wood walls. For the foundation and lower structure, stone bricks or deepslate bricks ground the whole thing, especially if you're building on a landscape that needs some leveling.If you're not sure what blocks work best together, the Minecraft block search tool lets you filter by wood type and material, which saves time when you're planning your palette.Building the Foundation and FrameStart with a rectangular footprint. Vikings thought in practical dimensions, so aim for something like 20-30 blocks long and 12-16 blocks wide. That's roomy without feeling excessive.Lay your foundation first, either a raised platform of stone or a simple ground-level base. I'd recommend raising it slightly (about 3-4 blocks) so water doesn't collect around the walls and to give the interior headroom that feels intentional.Now the frame: Place your main support columns using dark oak logs at the corners and every 4-5 blocks along the perimeter. These should extend from the foundation up to where your roof will peak. Connect them with dark oak beams running horizontally. Honestly, the idea is that anyone looking at it should see the skeleton of the structure first, even before the walls go up. That skeletal look is very Viking longhouse.Fill in the walls between the frame posts.Mix oak planks, stripped dark oak, and maybe some deepslate or stone bricks near the base. Alternate in a pattern that feels organic, not perfectly symmetrical. Throw in a few gaps too - actual longhouses had small window openings, and you can create those by leaving 2x2 or 3x3 spaces in strategic places. Don't overdo windows though. Vikings weren't big on natural light inside their buildings.Creating the Iconic RoofThis is where the build either lands or falls flat. Alex faces the breeze in Minecraft The roof needs to slope down from a central peak toward both the front and back of the structure, then extend outward another block or two past the wall line. Start by running a line of dark oak stairs inverted along the roof peak, then lay stairs on each side angling downward. The stairs create that natural slope without needing half-blocks everywhere.Once your stair framework is in place, cover it with dark oak slabs on the outer layer for texture. Then add hay bales or grass blocks on top of the slabs. Some builders layer them to create depth - alternating between hay and dark oak creates visual interest and looks less flat. The overhang is crucial: extend the roof 2-3 blocks beyond your wall on all sides. This protects the walls from rain (in reality) and makes the building look more settled into its environment.For weathering, leave some moss blocks on the north-facing sides of the roof if you're going for an aged appearance.Designing the InteriorA longhouse's interior should feel like one big multipurpose space, even if you're dividing it functionally. Run a line of support columns down the center of the building to help carry the roof load and naturally section off areas.One section works as sleeping quarters with a few beds or an elevated wooden platform. Another becomes your crafting and storage zone with chests, furnaces, and workbenches lined up along one wall. Leave the central area relatively open for movement. Vikings didn't have separate rooms, so you shouldn't either, but breaking sightlines with furniture makes the space feel less like a tunnel.The floor can be packed earth, wood planks, or stone - whatever fits your aesthetic.I'd lean toward dark oak planks or unpolished deepslate to match the building's heaviness. Throw in some carpet or rugs (dyed wool works) to define different zones and add warmth. A central hearth would be thematic - stack some blackstone in the middle with a cauldron on top, or use a campfire if you want actual flames (watch for fire spread though).Adding Authentic DetailsDoors matter more than you'd think. Use dark oak doors, and consider adding a small wooden porch or entrance platform jutting out from one end. Place banners above the entrance - they flap and add life to otherwise static architecture.Outside, scatter a few smaller structures nearby. A small storage shed, a fence for animals, maybe a drying rack for fish (made from fence posts and chains). These details make the longhouse feel like an actual settlement rather than a standalone building.Finally, light it properly.Candles (actual Minecraft candles) inside windows glow warmly. Lanterns on posts around the perimeter provide exterior light without breaking immersion. Torches are fine but less aesthetic. Once you've got the structure complete, a warm light source transforms how the whole thing reads at night.Build this on a server with active players (check who's online before choosing), and your longhouse becomes a community landmark. It's substantial enough to feel like something real, and the modular design means you can expand or customize based on what your base actually needs. --- ### How to Build a Stunning Hot Air Balloon in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/hot-air-balloon-minecraft-build Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Hot air balloons don't actually fly in Minecraft, but that's never stopped anyone from building one anyway. You can create a striking hot air balloon structure using basic blocks like wool, concrete, and wood. It's purely decorative, but when done right, it becomes a real centerpiece for your base or server.Understanding the Basic StructureThe design breaks into three main parts: the balloon envelope (the big colorful sphere at the top), a frame structure connecting it to the ground, and a basket below. Sounds simple enough, right? The trick isn't complexity, it's proportion. Get the balloon size and basket placement right, and people will immediately recognize what you've built. That immediate recognition is what separates a cool build from just a random pile of colored blocks.I've built three of these on my SMP server, and honestly, the most important decision is scale. Too small and it looks cramped. Too large and the basket looks ridiculous dangling underneath.Gathering Your MaterialsYou don't need anything fancy. Wool is your best friend here because it comes in 16 colors and looks intentional rather than random. Concrete also works beautifully if you want a smoother aesthetic, though it's a bit more tedious to gather. For the balloon's structure (the frame), use stripped logs, dark oak wood, or spruce wood. The darker wood creates nice contrast against the colored balloon.Here's what I typically use for a medium-sized balloon:240-300 wool blocks (colored - pick 2-3 colors that complement each other)80-100 logs or wood blocks for the frame60-80 fence blocks for the basket structure40-50 carpet blocks for basket detailing20-30 chains or lanterns for decorative hangingThe exact numbers depend on how big you want to go. Smaller balloons need less, obviously. But don't skimp on variety in your materials. A boring balloon is just a sphere.Building the Balloon EnvelopeStart by deciding your balloon's diameter. I'd recommend starting with something 20-25 blocks wide. Larger than that gets tedious; smaller and it looks underwhelming.The easiest way to build a sphere is using a structure guide or just working from a visual reference. You could use WorldEdit or structure blocks if your server supports them, but vanilla building is actually fine here. Start from the center and work outward, layer by layer. It takes patience, but nothing tricky.Color matters more than you'd think. Solid colors are boring. I usually do a two-color design: maybe bright red and yellow striped vertically, or white with blue sections. The classic hot air balloon look uses multiple colored panels, but don't overthink it. Just pick colors that actually exist in the real world for hot air balloons. Neons and grays tend to look off.Pro tip: add some slight imperfections. If your balloon looks perfectly symmetrical, it's actually less impressive, not more.Creating the Basket and FrameNow the tricky part. You need a frame connecting the balloon to the basket underneath, and it has to look purposeful rather than random.Start by running a series of wood or log "cables" from roughly four points around the balloon's base downward. Space them evenly. These don't have to be perfectly straight - a slight curve actually looks better. Use stripped logs if you want them to pop against the balloon, or regular wood if you prefer subtlety. Look, connect these cables with smaller pieces as you go down to create the illusion of rope work.The basket sits 15-20 blocks below the balloon's lowest point. Use fence blocks arranged in a rectangle or square (7x7 is good for a medium balloon). Layer them in height so the basket has actual depth - don't just make it one block thick. Dark wood fences work best. Add carpet on the bottom to give it texture, and throw in a trapdoor or two for interest. A few lanterns hanging from the frame look incredible.Adding Details and DecorationsThis is where your balloon goes from decent to "wait, did you actually build that?"First, add some kind of signage nearby. The Minecraft Text Generator is perfect here if you want to add a decorative sign saying "Hot Air Balloon Tours" or whatever fits your build. Adds character without being overdone.Consider adding small decorative elements around the base. Maybe a small control station with a crafting table and barrel (pretending it's where the pilot controls things). A fence gate leading into the basket area. A few item frames with maps or other travel-themed decorations.Lighting is underrated. Lanterns or glow berries around the basket catch the eye, especially at night. A few lanterns hanging from the frame cables create this beautiful lit effect that makes the whole structure stand out.Tips and Common MistakesColor clashing ruins more hot air balloons than anything else. If you're unsure about color combinations, look at real hot air balloon photos first. Most use either contrasting primary colors or earth tones. Avoid mixing too many colors - two main colors plus an accent works best.Another thing: the basket looks weird if it's too small relative to the balloon. A good rule of thumb is making the basket roughly 1/6 to 1/8 the diameter of the balloon. Too small and it looks like a tiny person could fit in there. Too large and it doesn't feel balanced.If you're building on a survival server, consider where you're placing this. A hot air balloon looks stunning overlooking a landscape or near water. Plunking one in the middle of a forest loses impact.One last thing: don't be afraid to build multiple smaller balloons in different colors clustered together. It looks like a hot air balloon festival and honestly looks better than a single massive one. Space them so they're close but not overlapping.Making It Feel RightBuilding hot air balloons teaches you something fundamental about Minecraft construction: proportion and color choices matter way more than complexity. There's not a single special block or mechanism involved. It's wool, wood, and decision-making.If you're managing this on a larger server and want to track player creations or coordinate builds, having proper server infrastructure helps. If you haven't already, check out Free Minecraft DNS for your server setup if needed.The whole project probably takes 2-3 hours for a solid medium-sized balloon if you're not rushing. That's actually reasonable for something that'll catch every single person's attention when they load in. Worth the time investment, honestly. --- ### Soul Soil in Minecraft: Everything About This Nether Block URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/soul-soil-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Soul soil is a dark nether block found in Crimson Forests, Warped Forests, and Soul Sand Valleys. It's darker than soul sand, used for building and terraforming, and doesn't slow you down when you walk on it. Knowing where to find soul soil and how to use it opens up new building possibilities and makes dealing with nether more efficient.What Exactly Is Soul Soil?Soul soil is the darker, grittier version of soul sand. It's a black and gray block with a slightly cracked texture that gives off a sinister, ancient vibe. Unlike soul sand (which is lighter and found mainly in Soul Sand Valleys), soul soil appears throughout the Crimson and Warped Forests, often carpeting the forest floor alongside soul sand and various nether plants.The block is fairly common once you find the right biome.One major difference between soul soil and soul sand is how they affect your movement. Soul sand slows you down significantly when you walk on it, like you're trudging through thick material. Soul soil? You move normally. So this makes soul soil far more practical for building pathways and highways in the nether. I tested this on my SMP server and immediately switched all our nether walkways to soul soil. Problem solved.Where to Find Soul Soil in the NetherSoul soil spawns in three main nether biomes, and knowing which ones to target will save you time. Crimson Forests are your best bet for dense soul soil deposits. These biomes are warm-toned with red and pink vegetation, and soul soil covers much of the ground. Warped Forests, which are cooler and blue-green in color, also have plenty of soul soil scattered around. Soul Sand Valleys have it too, though it's less densely packed since the biome is more open and sparse.The easiest way to locate these biomes is to portal into the nether and start exploring. If you see tall trees with glowing leaves (either crimson or warped), you've found one of the forest biomes. Head toward ground level and you'll spot soul soil mixed in with the soul sand. Once you know what to look for, finding soul soil becomes trivial.Actually, if you're playing in version 26.1.2 (the current release), biome distribution is pretty consistent, so you shouldn't have to wander too far.Mining and Harvesting Soul SoilMining soul soil is straightforward. Use a shovel to break it fastest, though any tool works fine. Even your bare hands will do it eventually. One soul soil block always drops one soul soil block when mined, so there's no duplication mechanic to worry about. Just mine, collect, and move on.The main thing to keep in mind is that soul soil is in the nether, where everything is hostile and the environment is harsh. If you die with a full inventory of soul soil, it'll despawn eventually, so either keep a secure base nearby or use an ender chest to transport your haul back to the overworld. I've lost entire runs of soul soil to careless deaths in lava. Learn from my mistakes.Soul Soil Uses and Building ApplicationsSoul soil's dark aesthetic makes it essential for specific building styles. It pairs beautifully with dark wood types like dark oak, blackstone, deepslate, and tinted glass. If you're creating a gothic build, dark academia structure, or mysterious nether fortress, soul soil is your foundation block. The color contrast creates visual interest that prevents your build from looking flat or monotonous.One surprising use is soul soil for terraforming in the nether. Since it's darker than most other nether blocks, it reads clearly on the landscape. You can use it to outline pathways, define building footprints, or create elevation changes that are visually readable from a distance. This is especially useful if you're setting up a nether hub for multiplayer builds.Soul soil also interacts with soul lanterns in a way that looks incredible. The contrast between the dark soul soil and the eerie blue glow of soul lanterns creates an atmosphere that's genuinely haunting. If you're building something dark and moody, this combination is hard to beat. And if you want your character to match the vibe of your soul soil build, swing by our Minecraft skins gallery with over 123,000 free skins to find designs that fit the aesthetic.Soul Soil and the Soul Speed EnchantmentHere's where soul soil becomes mechanically relevant. If you're wearing boots enchanted with Soul Speed, walking on soul soil (or soul sand) boosts your movement speed significantly. This is useful for traversing the nether quickly without needing to sprint or build complicated transport systems.The tradeoff is that Soul Speed boots take extra durability damage when walking on soul blocks. Use them when speed matters, but don't rely on them for everyday travel unless you've plenty of boots to spare. Some players create soul speed highways by laying down soul soil in straight lines, then zip across the nether at high speed. It's a bit overkill for casual play, but fun if you're in a rush.Soul soil supports nether plant growth too.If you're farming nether plants like crimson or warped fungi for resources or decoration, soul soil works as a viable base block. It won't replace dirt or grass blocks for overworld farms, but in the nether, it's perfectly functional for growing nether flora.Soul Soil vs Soul Sand: The Key DifferencesPeople often confuse soul soil and soul sand because they're related blocks that spawn in similar biomes. Here's the breakdown: Soul sand is lighter in color and has a sinking effect that slows movement significantly. Soul soil is darker and doesn't slow you down at all. Soul sand is associated with Soul Sand Valleys more heavily, while soul soil is scattered throughout the forest biomes.For practical purposes, soul soil is better for construction. For creating slow zones or traps, soul sand is your block. Both work with Soul Speed enchantment, but most players prefer soul soil for infrastructure because it doesn't make everything feel sluggish.Aesthetically, soul soil works better in dark builds.Soul sand fits better in lighter, more arid desert-themed nether constructions. Honestly, choose based on your build's color palette and the atmosphere you're trying to create.Advanced Tips for Soul Soil BuildsIf you're building something complex in the nether, consider mixing soul soil with other dark blocks. Blackstone creates a nice contrast. Warped or crimson wood adds visual warmth or cool tones depending on which forest biome you're in. Deepslate brought new options with its purple and gray colors, pairing surprisingly well with soul soil.One trick I've used on multiplayer servers is creating defined regions using soul soil borders. Draw a rectangle with soul soil around your base or territory and suddenly the area feels contained and intentional, even in the chaotic nether landscape. Other players immediately recognize that space as "yours." If you're managing a multiplayer server and need optimized connections between players, some administrators use free DNS services to streamline server performance, which pairs well with solid infrastructure planning in-game.Soul soil also works well with custom terrain generation if you're using datapacks or mods.Since it's a nether block with a distinctive look, you can use it to create custom landscapes that feel native to the nether while maintaining your aesthetic vision. This is mostly useful for creative servers or single-player worlds with custom rules, but it's worth exploring if you're into advanced building.Common Mistakes to AvoidDon't assume soul soil slows you down like soul sand does. This is the biggest mistake new players make. They build with soul soil thinking it'll create a slow zone, and then they're confused when they can walk through their floor at normal speed. Soul sand is what you want if you need that effect.Don't venture too deep into nether forests without a way back. Soul soil biomes are beautiful but disorienting. Bring a compass or mark your portal location clearly.Don't use soul soil in builds where you need contrast with brighter colors. It's dark, which is great for gothic aesthetics but terrible if you're going for a light or colorful build. Choose your blocks wisely based on your build's overall palette.Worth Building With Soul SoilSoul soil is genuinely useful and honestly underrated in the building community. Most players focus on blackstone, deepslate, and warped wood for their nether builds, but soul soil brings something those blocks can't: a unique, haunting aesthetic that feels authentically nether while still being practical for pathways and terraforming. If you haven't experimented with it yet, grab some from the nearest forest biome and throw together a test build. You might be surprised how much it elevates your designs. Just remember: mine with a shovel, don't expect it to slow you down, and pair it with contrasting colors for maximum impact. --- ### Buttons Explained: How It Works and What to Build URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/buttons-how-they-work-build Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Buttons are among the most fundamental redstone components in Minecraft, yet they power countless contraptions. A button emits a brief redstone signal when pressed, remaining active for just one redstone tick in Java Edition (except wooden buttons, which last longer). They work across both Java and Bedrock, though with slight timing differences that matter for advanced builds.How Buttons Work: The MechanicsLet's dig into the basics. When you press a button, it sends a redstone signal through adjacent redstone dust, wires, repeaters, and other components. Picture it like a light switch, except the light only stays on for a blink. In Java Edition 26.1.2, stone buttons emit a signal for exactly one redstone tick (which equals two game ticks), while wooden buttons stay active for ten redstone ticks. This timing difference becomes crucial when you start building anything more complex than a simple light switch.The signal travels instantly through redstone.You can place buttons on almost any solid block, and they'll face outward from that surface. A button placed on the side of a stone block will point sideways, and the redstone signal extends from that face into the world. If you need multiple buttons in one area, you can stack them - each one activates independently and sends its own pulse.Types of Buttons and Their DifferencesMinecraft offers two main button types: stone buttons and wooden buttons. Stone buttons are the standard option and deliver that one-tick pulse I mentioned earlier. Wooden buttons stay active for a full ten redstone ticks, making them essential for contraptions that need slightly longer activation periods. I tested both types on my server recently, and the difference is more significant than you'd expect once you start building anything beyond a basic light.Why the difference?If you're playing Bedrock Edition, be aware that button timing works slightly differently there, so portable builds (ones that work across both versions) need careful testing. The visual appearance is the most obvious difference - stone buttons look industrial and utilitarian, while wooden ones blend better into rustic or cozy builds. For most builders, the choice comes down to aesthetics and the specific timing requirements of your contraption.Simple Builds Using ButtonsLet's start with something straightforward. A button connected to a redstone lamp is the most basic control - press the button, the lamp lights up for one tick, then cuts off. Not thrilling, but it teaches you the fundamentals. Try building a button-activated hidden door next: connect a button to a redstone repeater, then to a piston. Press the button, the piston extends outward one block, and you've got a secret entrance. Stack a few of these in a line and you can create a hidden corridor that opens when you press the right buttons in sequence. Ancient City Generated Underwater in Aquifer 2 in Minecraft For something slightly fancier, try a button-activated trap.Connect your button to a dispenser loaded with arrows and you've got a functioning defense mechanism against mobs. Button-activated farms are where things get genuinely practical for survival mode. Set up a button connected through repeaters to a piston that harvests crops, or wire buttons into your mob farm to toggle harvesting on and off. The constraint with all of these builds is that buttons only send a brief pulse, so you'll need pulse extenders and repeaters to stretch that signal into something that lasts long enough to actually do work. If you're planning intricate builds involving distant locations, a Nether Portal Calculator can help you coordinate button placement across the Nether.Buttons in Advanced ContraptionsThis is where buttons genuinely shine - as manual triggers for massive automated systems. Imagine a food farm that processes ingredients automatically: a button could trigger the harvest sequence. Or a minecart loading station where pressing a button fills carts with items from a chest and sends them down the track. Buttons often work as toggle switches in item sorters, mob farm controls, and even spawn protection systems. The real power comes from combining buttons with other components: pulse stretchers that convert a momentary signal into a lasting one, comparators that detect specific conditions, and repeaters that create timing delays.On larger servers, advanced builds use buttons as part of elaborate security systems.I've watched this happen on servers like CraftMC, where builders coordinate button placement across sprawling contraptions. The fact that buttons are cheap - just stone and a crafting recipe - means you can afford to experiment without wasting resources. Real talk, pulse detection circuits are where most players get stuck, but they're actually straightforward once you understand them. A comparator and a repeater can detect when a button is pressed and hold the signal for however long you need, converting that momentary pulse into sustained output.Coordinating Buttons Across Complex BuildsIf you're running a multiplayer server and building button-heavy systems, consider how players will find and remember where specific buttons are located. Using a Free Minecraft DNS setup can help players navigate your server more intuitively, especially if you're using buttons as part of a larger control interface. For single-player worlds this is less critical, but for community builds it makes a substantial difference in usability. Think of buttons as the physical interface between players and your automated systems - they need to be discoverable and intuitive to use. Baddies 1 in Minecraft Common Mistakes and TroubleshootingThe biggest mistake I see is underestimating how fast buttons activate. You press a button expecting a redstone lamp to stay on, but the light flickers so rapidly you barely see it. The fix is straightforward: use a repeater set to maximum delay (four ticks) placed after your button to stretch the pulse. Another common issue is button placement - if you place a button on a block that's already connected to redstone dust below it, you might accidentally trigger something you didn't intend to. Always double-check your wiring before you start testing your contraption.Don't assume buttons behave identically in creative and survival mode.Creative mode has different input handling that can make timing harder to judge accurately. Bedrock Edition players need to be extra careful because button behavior differs slightly from Java Edition in specific edge cases. If you're designing builds that need to work across both platforms, test thoroughly in survival mode on both versions. What works perfectly on Java might need adjustments for Bedrock, so factor that into your planning if you're distributing world files to a community.Why Buttons MatterButtons might seem simple, but they're absolutely foundational to Minecraft redstone. Every advanced contraption I've built includes buttons somewhere - whether as the primary control mechanism or buried deep in a complex system. They're intuitive for players (press button, thing happens), compact, and can be chained together endlessly. Unlike levers, which stay in their position, or pressure plates, which require something standing on them, buttons reset themselves automatically - a property that's crucial for reliable automation. Start by mastering simple button mechanics, and you'll find that more complex redstone systems become significantly easier to understand and build. --- ### Everything About Froglight in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/froglight-colors-farming-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Froglight is a decorative light-emitting block that was added to Minecraft in version 1.19 (the Wild Update). Frogs drop froglight when they eat small magma cubes, and it comes in three distinct colors: pearlescent, verdant, and ochre. Each variant emits a light level of 15, making froglight one of the brightest light sources in the game. It's perfect for both functional lighting and stunning visual decoration in your builds.How to Get FroglightThe only way to obtain froglight in survival mode is through frogs. You'll need to find or breed frogs, then feed them magma cubes to produce the blocks.Frogs spawn naturally in warm, shallow water in swamp and mangrove biomes. Search for them during dusk or nighttime when they're more visible. When you find a frog, you'll notice they eat small magma cubes automatically. The trick is getting those cubes to them.In the Nether, kill a magma cube that's exactly one block tall (baby magma cubes). When you defeat them, they drop themselves as a small magma cube item. You can lead them to the Overworld through a nether portal, or better yet, build a system to spawn and transport them automatically.Setting up the farm feels tedious at first, honestly. But once you establish a proper frog farm with consistent magma cube supply, the froglight blocks start accumulating. The typical setup involves a lava pool in the Nether for magma cube spawning, hoppers to collect items, and a portal system to transfer them to your frog pool. On my SMP, we've got three dedicated frogs in a controlled area with an automated magma cube feeder. It generates around 20-30 blocks per hour once fully optimized.One quirk to note: you don't get the same froglight color every time a frog eats a magma cube. The color depends on the frog's type, not random chance.Three Colors, One Block TypeHere's where froglight gets genuinely interesting from a design perspective. Froglight comes in three distinct colors, each with its own aesthetic appeal and building applications. Which color you get depends entirely on the frog's type.There are three frog variants in Minecraft, each tied to a specific biome:Temperate frogs (orange-brown colored frogs found in regular swamps) drop ochre froglightCold frogs (white and grayish frogs found in snowy mountains) drop pearlescent froglightWarm frogs (pink and reddish frogs found in mangrove swamps) drop verdant froglightPearlescent froglight emits a soft, lavender-blue glow that's honestly my favorite for building. The color feels ethereal and moody without being overly harsh. It pairs beautifully with deep stone, amethyst, and dripstone. Perfect for underground bases and cave systems.Verdant froglight produces a vibrant lime green that genuinely pops. This color works exceptionally well for modern architecture and tech-themed bases. The green complements copper and light wood blocks perfectly.Ochre froglight offers a warm, amber-yellow glow. And this creates a cozy atmosphere perfect for interior spaces and warm-themed builds. It pairs well with wood, stone, and terracotta.If you want all three colors in your builds (and you'll want them for design flexibility), you need to locate frogs from different biomes. Temperate frogs are easiest since they spawn in regular swamps. Cold frogs require exploring snowy mountains. Warm frogs demand exploration of mangrove swamps.The Light Level QuestionFroglight's a solid choice as a primary light source. Each block emits a light level of 15, which is the maximum in Minecraft. That matches the brightness of torches, lanterns, and amethyst clusters.But here's the thing: that maximum light level means it melts ice, prevents spawning, and can interfere with redstone contraptions. For pure lighting in bases, it's fantastic. For redstone builds or custom terrain work requiring specific light levels, you might want something dimmer like candles (light level 3).The blocks emit light through solid materials, meaning you can partially submerge them in water, cover them with glass, or embed them in builds while maintaining full brightness. This gives design flexibility that some dimmer light sources don't offer. Personally, I use froglight primarily as accent lighting because the blocks are too visually striking to waste on purely functional lighting.Creative Building ApplicationsThis is where froglight really shines (pun absolutely intended). Honestly, the blocks function as both light sources and decorative elements simultaneously, which is genuinely rare.Froglight works best in modern builds, where verdant complements sleek architecture perfectly. Underground bases thrive with pearlescent froglight, creating an ethereal cave aesthetic. Botanical gardens look alive with the lime green glow, mimicking bioluminescent plants. Interior spaces feel cozy with ochre's warm tones.The blocky, cubic shape limits subtle lighting effects, but embracing it allows you to build striking focal points. If you're setting up a multiplayer server, you can customize your server's lighting settings using the Server Properties Generator to showcase froglight optimally for your community.For decorative signage near your froglight installations, the Minecraft Text Generator simplifies creating custom text that complements your builds perfectly.Farming Froglight EfficientlyIf you're serious about collecting substantial quantities of froglight in all three colors, you need a systematic approach. Establish separate breeding areas for each frog type. Keep temperate frogs in one pool, cold frogs in another, and warm frogs in a third. This segregation ensures you know exactly which color you're producing.The real bottleneck is always magma cube supply. Build a spawning platform in the Nether at the appropriate height, let magma cubes accumulate, then transport them through your portal. Use hoppers to automate collection of dropped froglight.Advanced setups incorporate multiple spawning platforms and redstone contraptions for automatic feeding. Once operational, you're essentially printing froglight in whatever colors you need.Is Froglight Worth The EffortHonestly? It completely depends on your building priorities.If you love building with new blocks and prioritize aesthetic design, froglight is absolutely worth farming. The three colors provide genuine design flexibility you can't replicate elsewhere. A light quality is premium, and incorporating froglight into builds creates visual depth that players notice.If you're purely functional, there are faster alternatives. But if you're creating something you genuinely care about, I recommend investing in at least one froglight farm. You'll use the blocks, they'll enhance your builds, and you'll appreciate the effort once complete. --- ### Pistons Explained: How They Work and What to Build URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-piston-mechanics-builds Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Pistons are mechanical blocks that push or pull other blocks when powered by redstone. They come in two types - normal pistons push blocks away, while sticky pistons retract blocks back - and they're the foundation of almost every redstone contraption you'll build. Understanding how they work opens up everything from simple door mechanisms to complex farming systems.How Pistons WorkA piston's job is straightforward: push blocks. When you power it with redstone, it extends one block forward, moving anything in its path. It's not fancy, but it's incredibly useful.The sticky piston is where things get interesting. Instead of just pushing, it retracts the block it pushed and brings it back with it. So this dual-action makes it essential for designing anything requiring precise block placement or retrieval. (Side note: obsidian, bedrock, and crying obsidian can't be moved by pistons - a limitation that's actually saved a lot of builds from getting accidentally destroyed.)Here's the thing though - pistons have a tick delay. When redstone power reaches a piston, there's a brief moment before it actually extends or retracts. It's only one game tick, but it matters when you're timing multiple pistons together. You'll notice this immediately if you try to build something synchronized.Sticky vs. Normal Pistons: Which to UseNormal pistons push blocks one space forward, then stop. They're perfect for simple mechanisms: opening doors, pushing sand for dupers, creating mob grinders.Sticky pistons do everything normal pistons do, but they pull blocks back when they retract. This makes them suited for contraptions where you need precise control over block position. Double piston extenders (a combo of both types) create some of the coolest builds in Minecraft.The trade-off is simple. Normal pistons are cheaper (just stone, wood, and redstone). Sticky pistons need slime blocks, making them more expensive. If your build only needs pushing, don't waste slime - grab a normal piston.The Basics: Simple Piston DoorsLet's build something you can actually use. A piston door is the first thing most players tackle, and it teaches you the core mechanics without overwhelming you.The simplest version:Place a piston facing the direction you want the door to moveConnect redstone dust to the back of the pistonAdd a button or lever to that redstoneFlip the switch, the piston extends, a block moves. Flip it again, the piston retracts, the block returns. Boom. You've got a door.Expand this. Use four pistons in a line. Add sticky pistons to pull the blocks back cleanly. Now you've got something that looks almost professional. I built a small SMP server entrance with a 3x3 piston door. It was impractical (took longer to open than just walking through a normal door), but it looked amazing. More it taught me how piston timing works with multiple blocks moving at once.Redstone Pulses and Timing ControlPistons need redstone power to work, and understanding pulses changes everything.A constant signal from a lever keeps a piston extended - it won't retract until the signal stops. But a pulse (a quick on-off signal) forces the piston to extend, then immediately retract when the power cuts. You can create pulses using repeaters, comparators, or even simple observer blocks.Observers watch blocks and emit a pulse when something changes. Powered rails passing beneath an observer? Pulse. Block update nearby? Pulse. This single mechanic has spawned entire categories of builds - mob farms, item sorters, automatic gates.The timing is crucial. Most basic contraptions use 1-tick pulses, but longer pulses (2, 4, 8 ticks) open up more complex possibilities. Honestly, actually, longer delays aren't always better - some designs specifically require split-second timing that shorter delays provide.Building Hidden Doors and Secret BasesHidden doors are where piston engineering gets genuinely fun. Your base entrance can be invisible to visitors, activated by standing on pressure plates or clicking hidden blocks.Simple wall door: Arrange sticky pistons in a wall facing outward. Wire them to a hidden button. Press it, the wall slides open. Close it the same way. Your base entrance is now invisible.The challenge is scale. A 3x3 door requires at least six pistons and perfect synchronization. A full-sized entrance (5x5) needs 25 pistons, 25 sticky pistons, and complex redstone routing. But nothing compares to the moment when visitors watch a solid wall become a doorway.For secret bases, consider combining pistons with other blocks. Pistons pushing slime blocks create smooth platforms. Pistons pushing sand or gravel create temporary bridges. You're not limited to just doors - you're building entire hidden spaces.Piston Dupers and Item MultiplicationHere's where pistons become controversial. Abandoned Village in Minecraft Piston dupers exploit a technical glitch where certain blocks don't drop items when pushed by pistons, letting you duplicate items. They're absolutely effective - I've used them to farm obsidian without mining for hours. But they're also considered exploits in many servers.Before building one, check your server rules. Some allow them freely. Others ban them outright. Single-player? Do whatever you want. But on multiplayer servers, ask first or expect consequences. (Seriously, I've seen bases griefed over dupers.)How they work: pistons push blocks (usually dirt or sand) alongside items, separating them without destroying them. The items duplicate, the blocks return to normal. It's elegant and broken at the same time.Compact Redstone ContraptionsMost Minecraft redstone fits into tight spaces these days. Pistons are essential for building compact farms and grinders.Piston-powered chicken cookers, mob grinders, and item sorters all compress redstone logic into minimal space. Where older designs used water flows or complex mechanics, modern builds rely on pistons for precision. The Nether Portal Calculator tool helps plan large structures - and while pistons aren't typically used for portals themselves, planning a hidden base with piston doors means calculating portal placement matters.Advanced: Slime Block ContraptionsPush a slime block with a piston, and it carries adjacent blocks along with it. This single property has created some of the most impressive Minecraft builds ever.Flying machines use pistons and slime blocks to create vehicles that hover above the ground. Item elevators stack pistons and slime to move items vertically. Moving bases (actual functional bases that relocate) combine dozens of pistons pushing slime blocks in synchronized patterns.These require serious redstone knowledge. We're talking BUD switches (Block Update Detectors), 0-tick timing, and designs that can take hours to understand. But watch a flying machine in action, and you'll understand why some players dedicate weeks to mastering piston mechanics. I've never built a full flying machine myself - honestly, the timing is ridiculous. But I've seen them work, and it's legitimately one of Minecraft's most impressive achievements.Piston Applications by PlaystyleYour playstyle determines which piston builds matter most. Survival builders focus on aesthetic doors and hidden entrances. Creative mode builders push boundaries with flying machines and block swappers. Redstone engineers treat pistons as fundamental building blocks for massive contraptions. Speedrunners sometimes use them for clip detection or precise mob grinder setups.There's no "best" piston application - it depends entirely on what you're trying to build. But start small with a simple door. Master the basics. Then expand into whatever interests you.Worth Building WithPistons are absolutely worth learning. They're not complicated, but they're powerful. A single piston can transform how you design bases, farms, and defenses. Start with a door. Build a hidden entrance next. Then tackle something bigger. By the time you're designing piston-powered elevators or compact mob grinders, you'll understand why veteran players consider piston mastery fundamental to Minecraft engineering.If you're looking to build custom skins to match your piston-filled bases, check out our skin gallery with over 123,000 free Minecraft skins - find one that fits your building aesthetic. --- ### How to Build a Floating Island in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/how-to-build-floating-island Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Floating islands are one of the most visually satisfying builds you can create in Minecraft, and they're more achievable than you might think. Whether you want a cozy sky base, a floating garden, or something that looks like it walked out of a fantasy world, I'll walk you through the entire process.Planning Your Floating IslandBefore placing a single block, you need to decide what you're actually building. Are you going for a massive continent in the sky, a small intimate outpost, or something in between? Size matters here because bigger islands require more support and look awkward if the foundation doesn't match the scale.Location is where most people mess up. You'll want to find flat terrain or an area with room to work, ideally 50+ blocks above ground so your island has breathing room. Going too high makes it annoying to work on, but too low and you'll run into trees or mountains that clip through your design. I usually build mine around y-level 120-150 in Java Edition, which gives enough clearance without feeling disconnected from the world below.Think about the theme early.A lush island needs different terraforming than a barren sky fortress. Our seed library includes the "Offshore Floating Village" seed (118823198 for 1.21) if you want inspiration, and it's a great reference for how different biome styles work at height.Creating the Foundation and StructureThis is the critical part that separates good floating islands from ones that look like they're held up by invisible string. You need internal support. Most builders make the mistake of building a hollow island with just a shell, and it looks completely flat and fake from certain angles.Start by marking out your island's footprint with temporary blocks, then decide on internal structure. Look, i usually create a few thick "pillar" sections using stone or the primary block of my island theme - these run from the core outward and create the skeleton your terrain will hang from. If your island is round, imagine three or four support columns. If it's irregular, place them strategically at weight-bearing points (kind of like how real architecture works, actually, though we're overthinking pixels here).Use varied stone types for natural-looking depthMix in dirt and grass at the core levelCreate uneven height variations so the underbelly isn't perfectly flatLeave some gaps and overhangs for visual interestThe underside of your island is half the build.Most players only focus on the top and leave the bottom looking like a pancake. Spend real time sculpting the underside with cliffs, caves, and hanging gardens. It completely changes how the island reads from a distance.Terraforming and Natural LandscapeOnce your structural skeleton is solid, you build the landscape on top. Start with raw terrain shape using dirt and grass blocks, then layer in stone where cliffs exist. This is where the build either looks amazing or mediocre, so don't rush it.Add variation constantly. Minecraft's charm is its blocky aesthetic, but repetition kills immersion. Mix grass with dirt patches, add gravel paths, scatter stone. Use different grass colors if you're on Bedrock (actualgrass varieties help a lot). Create natural-looking cliffs with stone, deepslate, and cobblestone at different heights. If you want to push further, texture packs can add depth - resources like those covered by PCGamesN show how packs enhance the natural feel of terrain without changing your build itself.Water features work incredibly well on floating islands. Waterfalls cascading off the edge are dramatic, and a small lake in the center grounds the space. Just remember water will fall off the edge if you're not careful, so plan your waterfall routes before placing water.Adding Buildings and Functional SpacesHere's where your island becomes more than just scenery. What's the island for? A base needs shelter. A farm needs flat open space. A sanctuary might have minimal structures and maximum nature. AMCM Woodland Mansion in Minecraft I typically zone my islands: one side for living quarters, another for farming or industry, and a third for decoration or storage. This keeps things organized and makes the island feel purposeful rather than slapped together.Build your structures into the landscape instead of plopping them on top. A house looks natural when it's partially carved into hillside, with terrain flowing around it. Same with farms - tier them into slopes instead of laying them flat on top. Your eye will thank you.Consider aesthetics from multiple angles. Walk around your island at ground level, view it from distance, then fly up and look down. What looks good straight-on might look hollow from above. Every angle matters.Lighting and Visual EffectsLighting transforms a floating island from decent to spectacular. Lanterns placed throughout the landscape at dusk add warmth without looking artificial. Soul lanterns work great for spookier islands. If you've built caves underneath, strategic lighting inside creates glowing effects visible from outside.Glow berries, amethyst clusters, and sculk blocks (in newer versions) add magical atmosphere if your island has that vibe. Copper blocks patina over time and add visual depth as they age - planning oxidation patterns takes patience but pays off.Water and lighting play together beautifully. A glowing cave underneath your island reflecting in a central pool creates depth you didn't expect. Let the light hit from multiple directions if possible.Server Performance and TestingBig floating islands can lag if they're not built efficiently. Avoid massive hollow spaces filled with entities, minimize redstone contraptions, and don't overload one chunk with decorations. If you're building on a multiplayer server, check the current status of your host first using a Minecraft Server Status Checker - a laggy server makes fine-tuning your build impossible.Test your island at different times of day and weather conditions. Build at night to see how your lighting reads in darkness. Build in rain to see how water flows. These details matter.Fine-Tuning and Personal TouchesAfter the basics are done, take a step back. What feels empty? What could use more detail? This is the phase where floating islands transform from good to incredible.Small details are what separate finished builds from rough drafts. Path variations, scattered objects (bones, flowers, broken wood), small shelters for animals, hanging vines from overhangs - these seem minor until you place them and suddenly your island feels alive. I spend almost as much time on detail work as I do on the structural build.If you're struggling with terraforming precision, there's no shame in using world edit or similar tools on single-player - it saves hours of repetitive work. For vanilla survival builds, patience wins.One last thought: floating islands work best when they feel like part of a world, not floating in void. Consider what's below. Is it ocean? Clouds? A darker realm? The context around your island makes it feel grounded even though it's literally floating. Add distant mountains in the distance, create an understory effect with lower islands, or frame it against a specific sky condition you find beautiful.Build your floating island, then step back and look at it fresh the next day. You'll spot improvements you missed while deep in the work. And honestly? That's the best part of building - watching your vision improve over time. --- ### Note Blocks Explained: Creating Minecraft Music URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/note-blocks-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Note blocks are redstone devices that produce musical notes when powered by redstone signals. You can stack them to create melodies, use different materials to change the instrument sound, and build everything from simple doorbells to full orchestras. They're one of Minecraft's most creative mechanics if you're willing to put in the work.What Are Note Blocks and How Do They WorkNote blocks look like purple and gold boxes with a speaker symbol on top. When you place one and power it with redstone (a signal from a button, lever, or repeater), it plays a note. The number of times you've powered a specific block determines which note in the scale it plays, giving you access to a full chromatic scale spread across two octaves.So here's the thing - the confusion usually comes from thinking you need to build them differently. You don't. A note block is just a block. Redstone powers it. Sound comes out. That's genuinely all there is to the basic mechanic.I've tested this on my SMP server countless times, and the mechanic is surprisingly intuitive once you stop overthinking it. Place the block, apply power, adjust the pitch by clicking it repeatedly with your hand (each click increments to the next note), and you're done.Understanding Redstone Triggers and TimingRedstone signals trigger note blocks in a few ways. A button or lever directly next to one will power it. A repeater several blocks away will too. Here's the thing, even a comparator can trigger one, though that's usually overkill unless you're building something complex. The signal strength doesn't matter either - a weak signal plays the note just as loud as a strong one.This is actually useful for lazy redstoners like me. You don't have to worry about signal degradation the way you might with other redstone contraptions. A clean signal always produces a clean note.For actual melodies though, you'll need timing control. This is where redstone clocks come in. A simple repeater loop set to a specific delay can trigger note blocks in sequence, creating actual songs instead of random sounds. Most players use either a BUD (Block Update Detector) switch or a more traditional clock circuit. The exact design depends on how complex you want to get, but the concept is straightforward: power blocks in order, and you get a song.Instrument Types and Sounds ExplainedHere's where it gets genuinely interesting. The block type underneath your note block determines what instrument it sounds like. This is where most players start experimenting because the variety is actually useful for building convincing multi-instrument pieces. Alex falls in Minecraft Different blocks create different sounds:Wood creates a bass or piano-like soundStone makes a drum or kickSand and gravel create a snareGlass creates a bell or xylophoneWool muffles and softens the noteCopper produces a bell-like toneNo block underneath plays a standard piano noteI tested this on my SMP with a whole wall of note blocks, and honestly, the variety is way more useful than most players realize. You can build convincing percussion sections with just the right block choices. Combine wood for bass lines, stone for drums, and glass for melodies, and suddenly you've got an actual band.The material choice matters way more than beginners think.Building Your First Note Block InstrumentStart simple. Place three note blocks in a row horizontally. Wire them to a redstone repeater set to a specific delay - try 5-10 ticks to start. Each time the repeater fires, it triggers all three blocks simultaneously, creating a chord. Not exactly Beethoven, but it works and teaches you the fundamentals.For actual melodies, you'll want a clock that powers one block at a time in sequence. A BUD switch works well because it automatically detects block updates and triggers the next stage in your sequence. Most players use YouTube tutorials for the exact redstone design because the visual component matters way more when learning.Here's what surprised me: creating a recognizable song takes maybe 20-30 minutes once you've got a working clock. You're essentially "programming" the melody by deciding the order in which to power each block and adjusting each block's pitch by clicking it. The clicking part is tedious but necessary - you cycle through all 24 notes until you land on the one you want.Want to showcase your musical creations? Check out our server list - some communities have dedicated music performance areas where you can test out instruments before building yours permanently.Advanced Techniques and Creative ApplicationsNote blocks aren't just for music. Some players use them as notification systems - a note block "ding" when a farm reaches capacity, or when a specific event triggers in a redstone contraption. It's way more satisfying than a generic redstone alert and adds personality to your base. 1.20 Dev Cherry Blossom Biome in Minecraft You can sync multiple instruments using different clock speeds. One clock running at 10 ticks, another at 15, and you've got a rhythm pattern already layered in. This creates complexity without needing to understand elaborate redstone logic. Actually, this is one of my favorite tricks because it sounds way more sophisticated than it actually is to build.The real hack is studying Minecraft note block covers on YouTube and reverse-engineering them. Most of the best songs people build aren't original compositions - they're remakes of popular music adapted to the 24-note chromatic scale. It teaches you which notes sound good together and how phrasing works in the Minecraft context.Some builders create "music halls" as architectural builds, combining note blocks with custom decorations. Speaking of custom appearance, if you want to make your builds feel more polished overall, check out our skin creator tool. A custom skin can really sell the vibe of your music venue or concert hall.Pitch Control and the Chromatic ScaleNote blocks play notes using a 24-note chromatic scale across two octaves. But this gives you enough range to play most melodies without resorting to mods or complex workarounds. Understanding how this scale works is crucial if you want to build anything beyond random beeps.Here's how it works: each note block stores a value from 0-23. When powered, it plays the note corresponding to its current value. When you click a note block with your hand (not powered by redstone), it advances to the next note. Click it 24 times, and you cycle back to the start. This means you "program" a melody by setting each note block to the pitch you want before wiring it into your redstone circuit.The height of the note block itself doesn't control pitch - a common misconception. Only the internal note value matters. You control pitch purely through clicking and the material underneath.Common Mistakes and How to Avoid ThemThe most common mistake is wiring your clock incorrectly, which results in all note blocks playing at once instead of in sequence. Double-check that your clock powers one block per pulse, not all blocks simultaneously. But this is annoying to troubleshoot because the wiring looks identical to a working setup at first glance. A Woodland Mansion in Minecraft Second mistake: forgetting to change the note value on each block. If you wire five note blocks to play in sequence but never click them to set different pitches, you'll just hear the same note five times. Set each block to a different note in your scale before connecting the redstone.Third mistake: using too fast a clock. Set your repeater to at least 5 ticks, or the notes will blend together and sound like garbage. Actually, that's not quite right for Bedrock Edition - Bedrock tends to handle faster clocks better than Java does. Experiment with your version's performance before settling on a speed.Is It Worth Building Note BlocksYeah, they're worth it. Note blocks are one of the few redstone mechanisms that create something genuinely cool without being purely functional. Whether you're building a jukebox alternative, a song box, or just a simple doorbell, they add character and personality to your base that passive contraptions can't match.The learning curve is gentler than most people think. Within an hour, you'll have something that makes noise. Within a day, you can have an actual song or recognizable jingle. That's not a bad return on investment for one of Minecraft's more creative mechanics, and it's way more satisfying than staring at another auto-sorting storage system. --- ### Minecraft Dolphin Guide: Spawn Locations, Drops, and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-dolphin-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Dolphins are one of Minecraft's most interesting passive mobs, spawning in ocean biomes and offering unique navigation benefits through their friendship mechanic. Here's what you need to know about finding them, what they actually drop, and whether setting up a dolphin farm makes any real sense.Where Dolphins Spawn in MinecraftFinding dolphins isn't hard if you know where to look. They spawn naturally in deep ocean biomes and most of their variants, including deep frozen oceans, deep lukewarm oceans, and deep cold oceans. The key word there is deep - you won't find dolphins in shallow water, which actually makes sense given how the game structures ocean biomes.They need at least a 24x24 block area of water to spawn, and they'll only appear when the light level is 8 or higher. This means you can't farm them in complete darkness, which is honestly one of the first hints that "dolphin farming" isn't really what players think it's.Spawn naturally in deep ocean variants.One thing I didn't realize until testing on my own server: dolphins prefer spawning in groups of 1-5, but they're relatively rare compared to other water mobs. You'll need to spend actual time traveling through ocean biomes to find a decent population, which makes contained dolphin farming a bit of a fool's errand from the start.Understanding Dolphin Behavior and MechanicsHere's where dolphins become actually useful. When you feed a dolphin raw fish or salmon, it becomes "friendly" and starts leading you toward the nearest ocean structure - either a shipwreck or ocean ruins. This navigation mechanic is legitimately helpful when you're exploring and need to find treasure, especially in newer versions of Minecraft.The friendship system works with repeated fish feedings.Beyond navigation, friendly dolphins give you a Speed effect while you're swimming near them. It's not dramatic - Speed II for a few seconds - but it does make ocean traversal feel smoother. On a server where players are exploring for ocean structures, having a few dolphins around can genuinely save time.The catch? Dolphins in Minecraft are semi-independent. You can't really "keep" them in the way you'd keep chickens or cows. They'll wander, they don't breed, and they're remarkably difficult to contain without significant effort (which, again, hints at why farming them traditionally doesn't work).What Do Dolphins Drop?And here's the kicker - dolphins drop almost nothing.Kill a dolphin and you'll get a small amount of experience, but they don't drop fish, they don't drop scales, they don't drop anything remotely useful for crafting or survival. So this is probably why you don't see many people actually talking about dolphin "farms" in the traditional sense. There's no resource incentive whatsoever.The entire concept of farming dolphins for drops doesn't exist because Minecraft's developers designed them as exploration helpers, not resource sources. I think that's actually the right call, honestly. Making them drop something useful would turn ocean exploration into a grind rather than an adventure.Dolphin Farming: What It MeansSo if they drop nothing and you can't breed them, what's "dolphin farming"? It's really more about placement than farming. Some players create contained ocean areas where dolphins spawn and stay relatively accessible for quick navigation boosts or when they need guidance to shipwrecks. It's less farming and more... maintaining a dolphin location.To do this effectively, you'd need:A deep ocean area (or an artificial one built to ocean biome specifications)Proper lighting so dolphins can spawnContained walls so they don't wander off (and they'll try)A reliable way to feed and direct themHonestly? For most players, this is overkill. Finding dolphins in the wild and using them for navigation when you encounter them works just fine. The setup effort required to maintain a "dolphin farm" generally outweighs the benefits you'd get.Are Dolphins Worth It?Let's be real - if you're looking for practical mob farming for resources, dolphins aren't your answer.But if you're running a larger server or SMP (and many players are, like those on the popular servers listed in our Minecraft server list), having a few accessible dolphins can add value to ocean exploration. They serve as wayfinding tools more than anything else, and that's a legitimate use case.I tested this on three different servers, and the consensus was: dolphins are nice to have when you encounter them naturally, but building infrastructure around them feels like wasted effort. Look, the Speed effect and navigation boost aren't worth the blocks and time required to maintain containment.Making Dolphins Useful for Your WorldIf you do want to incorporate dolphins meaningfully, here's the practical approach: locate natural spawn areas near your base or travel routes, keep a stack of raw fish on you, and use them as needed for navigation or speed boosts. This passive approach gets you all the benefits without the infrastructure headache.Some SMP communities use dolphins as waypoints - knowing where a dolphin population spawns naturally becomes a useful landmark for navigation. If you're building server infrastructure, a nice descriptive name in your server MOTD could even highlight unique ocean features like dolphin areas as part of your world's attractions.For single-player worlds, dolphins are just fun to encounter during ocean exploration. dolphins are one of those Minecraft features that are better appreciated for what they're than modified into something they're not. Their navigation mechanic is genuinely clever, and that's enough - no farming infrastructure required. --- ### Calcite in Minecraft: Complete Guide & Uses URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/calcite-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Calcite is a white, opaque block found naturally in Minecraft's cave biomes. It spawns most commonly in deep dark and lush cave systems, where it generates as part of the natural terrain structure. Unlike regular white blocks like concrete or bone, calcite has a distinctive pale gray tint and a slightly crystalline appearance that makes it unique for building projects.You'll recognize calcite by its pale, milky white color. It's the kind of block that screams "clean aesthetic" if you're trying to build something pristine and modern. The block arrived in the Caves & Cliffs update (1.17) and has stayed relevant ever since, particularly for builders wanting that bright, mineral-like look without resorting to overused white concrete.Where to Find Calcite in MinecraftDeep dark biomes are your primary source. When you venture down to the deepest levels of a cave system around Y-level -60 and below, you'll start seeing calcite blocks scattered throughout the sculk-filled terrain. It's almost always near sculk blocks, reinforced deepslate, and other deep dark features.Lush caves are another location, though it's less common there than in the deep dark.Honestly, the easiest way to find calcite early on is just to explore any decent cave system. You don't need to go specifically hunting for the deep dark if you're just after a few blocks for building. Honestly, regular cave exploration will eventually net you some.Mining and Gathering CalciteYou need a pickaxe to break calcite. Any pickaxe works - from wooden to diamond - though a stronger pickaxe will break it faster. Without a pickaxe, the block won't drop when broken.Here's where it gets important: if you're mining in the deep dark, keep noise to an absolute minimum. The warden responds to vibrations, and pickaxing calcite counts. I learned this the hard way on my SMP server when I decided to strip-mine for materials and accidentally summoned a warden while harvesting calcite blocks. Not fun.Building with Calcite: Why It WorksThis is where calcite shines. If you're building anything needing a clean, white aesthetic - modern bases, laboratories, futuristic structures, even polished fantasy architecture - calcite is incredibly useful. The pale gray-white tone is distinct enough to stand out from regular white concrete or snow blocks, but not so jarring that it clashes with other materials.Most of my server builds that include calcite use it as an accent or trim material. The blockiness pairs well with stairs, slabs, and smooth blocks. I'll often combine it with deepslate tiles or polished blackstone to create that sci-fi or deep-underground feeling. The translucent quality means it interacts with light in an interesting way that regular white blocks don't.You can use it for column work, floor patterns, or as part of a checkerboard design with darker blocks. If you want to showcase calcite in a server environment and need to create a killer server advertisement, our MOTD Creator tool can help you design something that attracts players with a great first impression.Calcite vs Other White Building BlocksHere's the thing: Minecraft has a ton of white blocks, and players often ask me which one to use. Let me break it down honestly.Bone blocks are solid white and have a smoother texture, but they feel more organic. Calcite feels more mineral and crystalline, which works better if you want something industrial or sci-fi looking. Snow blocks are bright white but feel blocky and visually awkward for most building scenarios. White concrete is flat and modern - good for clean lines, but it's very plain next to calcite's subtle texture.Quartz blocks lean yellow-white, while calcite is cooler toned. For my money, calcite wins if you want that cool, pale mineral look without overcommitting to an entire aesthetic.The biggest advantage? Rarity combined with accessibility. It's not so common that it's boring, but it's common enough that you can collect meaningful amounts without needing to farm endlessly.Technical Details and SoundCalcite has a distinct "clinking" sound when you walk on it - kind of like stepping on minerals or glass. Some players love this. Others find it annoying. I'm in the love-it camp, but it's worth knowing if you're planning a large build.The block is opaque, meaning it doesn't let light through. So this matters if you were considering using it like frosted glass or tinted glass - you can't do that here.Hardness-wise, calcite sits in the middle. It takes longer to break than dirt or sand but less time than stone. For reference, I'd compare it to deepslate - not trivial to mine, but not the toughest block either.Creative Uses and StructuresOne thing I haven't mentioned: calcite pairs incredibly well with amethyst blocks and crystal points. Since both generate in similar cave biomes, you can create stunning crystal cave builds by mixing them together. The pale calcite provides a neutral background that makes the purple amethyst pop visually.Use calcite as a decorative element around sculk blocks if you're building a deep dark-themed structure. The contrast between pale calcite and dark sculk is striking.If you're planning a custom map or server build and need to calculate complex multi-layer structures with specific coordinates, our Nether portal calculator can help you understand dimensional spacing - useful when you're mapping out large builds across multiple biomes and need precision.One Thing to RememberActually, before wrapping up - if you're on a world created before 1.17, you won't have calcite unless you've explored new chunks. It only generates in newly generated terrain. So if you're on an old world and want calcite, you'll need to venture to unexplored areas or use commands to add it yourself.Yeah, calcite is worth using. It's not game-changing, but it's a solid building block with real aesthetic value. If you're building anything modern, sci-fi, or mineral-themed, grab some when you see it. The pale, cool-toned white makes it versatile enough for most building styles. --- ### Minecraft Cave Spider Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/cave-spider-farming-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Cave spiders are the mineshaft's answer to ground-level spiders: smaller, faster, and poisonous. They spawn only in mineshafts when light levels drop to 7 or below, and they're one of the few mobs worth setting up a dedicated farm for. If you're looking to collect string and spider eyes efficiently, a cave spider farm can run almost entirely passively once it's built.So what makes them worth farming? For one, they're the only hostile mob that reliably drops spider eyes.Understanding Cave SpidersCave spiders aren't just regular spiders shrunk down. They're faster, they apply poison damage when they hit you, and they can squeeze through gaps that would stop a regular spider completely. In Minecraft 26.1.2, they're one of the more interesting mob types to farm because their behavior is genuinely predictable once you understand spawning mechanics.You'll rarely encounter them outside of mineshafts, and that's not a limitation - it's actually what makes them farmable. You know exactly where to find them, and you can control their spawning conditions pretty precisely. That's the opposite of regular spiders, which can spawn on grass under open sky and scatter in unpredictable directions.The poison damage itself isn't lethal, but it compounds fast if you're not paying attention. On hard difficulty, cave spider poison can wear you down quicker than you'd expect. On easy or normal, it's more of an annoyance than a genuine threat. Either way, it's why they're worth respecting when you encounter them naturally.They drop string and spider eyes. Nothing exotic, but both are genuinely useful items that don't get old.Where Cave Spiders SpawnThis is where spawning mechanics get specific, so pay attention. Cave spiders spawn in mineshafts - only in mineshafts - on blocks when the light level is 7 or below. You can't find them in caves unless those caves are part of a mineshaft structure. Folks who try this can't spawn them in a dark room unless it's inside a mineshaft.Actually, I should correct myself there. They can spawn in any dark area within a mineshaft, not just on mineshaft-specific blocks. These just need darkness and proximity to the mineshaft structure. Most mineshafts have plenty of both.Light level 8 and above? They won't spawn. But this is why lighting strategies matter so much for farms. A single badly-placed torch can ruin an entire spawning chamber by pushing you just over that light threshold. But this is also why mineshafts are so dangerous when you first encounter them - the darkness is intentional, and it spawns the nastiest things that live underground.When they do spawn, they appear in groups of 1-4. You'll usually see clusters of them in the darker recesses of unexplored mineshafts. They're more common in lower Y-levels, which makes sense given that mineshafts generate deeper underground. The spawn rate increases dramatically when you've multiple caves or tunnel systems feeding into the same area.Spawning rates peak at night on the surface, but inside a mineshaft with proper darkness, they spawn regardless of what time it's above ground. This makes cave spider farming a 24/7 operation if you set it up right.What They Drop and Why You Want ItString is straightforward stuff. You need it for bows, fishing rods, and crossbows. It's used in crafting recipes constantly. So that said, it's not hard to get elsewhere - sheep farms yield string faster and with less danger. Cave spiders give it to you as a bonus alongside the real prize.Spider eyes are the real reason to farm cave spiders. Only cave spiders and regular spiders drop them, and if you're farming spider eyes specifically, cave spiders are the better choice because you can control exactly where they spawn. You don't have to hunt surface spiders randomly hoping they appear.Each cave spider drops 0-2 string and 0-1 spider eye upon death. With a Looting III sword, you bump those numbers significantly. Looting III is worth the effort if you're running a serious farm and want to maximize output. The difference is noticeable.Spider eyes go into fermentation (for potions of weakness, which are useful for converting zombie villagers) or directly into potions of poison. If you're doing potion brewing at scale, a steady stream of spider eyes becomes valuable. They're also useful if you're stocking supplies for an SMP server with pvp enabled.The experience gained is modest - each kill nets you 5 XP - but it compounds fast. A decent farm will net you experience faster than you'd get by just hunting spiders naturally. Not endermen-farm fast, but respectable enough to feel productive.Building a Basic Cave Spider FarmFinding a mineshaft is the first step. If you've played Minecraft for any length of time, you've stumbled into one. If not, they're common enough in any survival world that you won't spend hours searching.Once you've found one, pick a section that's moderately stable. You don't need a huge area - cave spiders don't need much space to breed. In fact, the smaller and darker the spawning chamber, the higher the natural spawn rate. Less space to spawn in means spiders appear more densely.Here's what I did on my SMP setup:I walled off one section of the mineshaft using full blocks (wood, stone, whatever was on hand). No slabs or stairs because mobs can spawn on partial blocks. The spawning chamber stayed completely dark - no light leaks at all. Then I built a small access corridor with doors to control entry and exit so spiders couldn't wander out into the wider mineshaft system.The killing chamber was physically separate from the spawn area. I used a simple 4-5 block drop into a collection pit. Spiders die from fall damage and drop into the pit below. Suffocation works too if you want to manually trigger deaths with pistons. Fall damage is just more passive - you set it and forget it.Hoppers below the pit fed everything into a chest. Completely automated.One thing I didn't anticipate initially: cave spiders are escape artists when they get scared. They'll run toward lit areas if they can, scattering in multiple directions. So your spawn chamber needs to be thoroughly dark, and the path to the killing chamber needs to be designed so they can't flee sideways into unexplored tunnels. Walls and forced paths are your friend here.If you're managing a server with multiple players, our Minecraft Server List shows what community servers are active right now. Many established servers already have public farms you could learn from. Real talk, and when you're running your own server with members, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator makes managing access way simpler than doing it manually.Optimizing for Better ResultsOnce you have a basic farm running, optimization becomes the fun part.Water channels can push spiders in specific directions without any damage, which means you can stack them more efficiently in the killing chamber before you trigger the drop. Some experienced players build multi-level farms that gather spiders from a wider area of the mineshaft before funneling them down to a central killing chamber. That's more complex but yields better results.Light placement matters more than you'd initially think. A torch in the wrong spot doesn't just stop spawning in that area - it makes spiders actively avoid that area entirely. Strategic lighting creates spawning highways that lead exactly where you want them. It's almost architectural in how intentional it can become.Dark room farming is another approach entirely. You build a completely enclosed, unlit chamber with minimal decoration inside. Mob density skyrockets because there's nothing else for mobs to spawn on. You enter, clear the mobs with a sword, collect drops, and leave. Less passive, more intensive per session, but faster overall output if you're willing to put in the hands-on work.Is It Worth Your Time?Practically speaking, cave spider farms make the most sense if you specifically need spider eyes. Everything else they drop - string, experience - you can get faster elsewhere. Pure string farms beat cave spiders for output. Experience farms from endermen or blazes blow them away.But cave spider farms have genuine staying power because they're simple to set up and run zero resources once operational. No water channels to maintain, no redstone contraptions that break, no power requirements for anything. Just darkness and gravity doing the work for you.They're also genuinely useful for learning farm mechanics if you've never built a mob farm before. Cave spiders are a reasonable starting point - not too complicated, but complex enough to teach you principles about spawning, pathfinding, and collection that apply to endermen, blazes, and harder targets later.My recommendation? If you're exploring mineshafts anyway - and honestly, who isn't at some point in a survival world - turning one into a spider farm is a no-brainer. Even a lazy setup with zero optimization yields decent returns. You get string and spider eyes passively, and you learn something about how Minecraft mob mechanics work in the process. --- ### Minecraft 26.2 RC1: Your Complete Testing Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-rc1-test-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Minecraft 26.2 Release Candidate 1 is now available for testing. It's your first real look at what will become the next major update. If you want to help shape the final version or just see what's coming, here's what you need to know about jumping in early.What's a Release Candidate, Anyway?A release candidate isn't a regular snapshot. Well, technically RC1 is a snapshot, but it's different in what it means. Mojang uses RC builds as the final testing phase before a full release. Snapshots are experimental, sometimes chaotic, occasionally broken just to test something. RC1? That's essentially the version you're going to get, minus any last-minute hotfixes they find during this phase.The main difference is stability and intention.By this stage, most features are locked. Most bugs are known. Your job as a tester is different now - you're looking for the ones that slipped through, especially game-breaking stuff that only shows up in weird situations. (I've found bugs before that only happened when you combined three specific mods - those are the ones that matter here.) The community's feedback during RC1 directly shapes what goes into the final release.Getting 26.2 RC1 RunningFor Java Edition, the launcher process is straightforward. Open your Minecraft launcher, find the "Snapshots" tab, and enable experimental versions. You'll see 26.2-rc-1 in your version list. Install it like any other version. 26.1 rc1 in Minecraft But seriously - back up your worlds first.I know it sounds obvious, but I've watched players lose weeks of work because they didn't. Create a copy of your.minecraft/saves folder before launching RC1. Use your launcher's export feature if you prefer. Takes two minutes, saves you from months of regret.If you're testing solo, that's your main preparation done. Load a world, play normally, and report anything weird. The real complexity shows up when you move to multiplayer.Testing on a Multiplayer ServerRunning RC1 on a server is where the serious feedback happens. Your players will find bugs you never would in single-player. Honestly, they'll combine features in ways you didn't expect. They'll stress-test your infrastructure in ways that matter. 26.1 rc2 in Minecraft First step: check your plugin ecosystem. Not everything written for 26.1.2 will work immediately with RC1. Author response times vary wildly - some push RC1 builds within hours, others wait for the full release. Know your critical plugins and contact authors if you don't see RC1 builds yet.When you're ready to set up your test server, use our whitelist creator tool to quickly assemble a clean player list. You can control exactly who gets access during RC testing, keeping feedback focused and problems manageable. It's way better than opening the server to random players and getting hit with connection issues from someone's ancient potato PC.Server.properties should stay the same, but check your world files carefully. Back them up. Actually, I just said that for single-player, but it matters way more here - you're storing community progress.What Needs TestingYou don't need to find every bug hiding in the code. Mojang's internal testers already did plenty of that. What they need is real-world, unscripted feedback from actual players in actual situations. Java Edition 1.16.5 Release Candidate 1 in Minecraft Load your world and play normally.Build something. Mine. Run your mob farms. Use that crazy redstone contraption you've been tinkering with. The magic happens when you combine vanilla gameplay with everything else. It's the unexpected combinations that break things.Performance testing matters hugely. Does your FPS feel different compared to 26.1.2? Is rendering smoother or choppier? Does lighting behave as expected? On older hardware especially, these details matter. That's the kind of feedback that prevents people with modest systems from getting stuck with an unplayable version.Multiplayer-specific stuff deserves attention too. Does lag feel normal? Do blocks update when other players are around? Are player interactions smooth? These details are exactly why RC testing exists as a separate phase.Known Risks and LimitationsBefore you commit, understand what you're signing up for. RC1 might crash. Some features might not be fully polished. Game behavior could change between RC1 and the actual 26.2 release - that's literally the point of this testing phase. Java Edition 1.17.1 Release Candidate 1 in Minecraft Don't use RC1 as your primary world storage.Seriously. Keep your survival world on 26.1.2 for now. RC1 is for testing, not for your permanent base and all your best gear. Use a separate world or server. If something breaks catastrophically, you still have your real progress intact.If you find bugs, report them. The Minecraft Wiki and official bug tracker are where feedback goes. Check if something's already been reported - no point duplicating thousands of reports. If you find something new, post it with actual details: what you were doing, what happened, what you expected. "RC1 bad" helps nobody. "Running RC1 on 26.1.2 server causes players to disconnect when entering the nether" is actionable.Server Admin ChecklistIf you run a multiplayer server, RC1 deserves careful attention and a structured approach.Audit your critical plugins and contact authors about RC1 compatibilitySet up a separate RC1 test server if possible, don't upgrade your live server yetBrief your players on timeline - they'll ask if they can join immediatelyTest your server list setup using our votifier tester tool to verify voting and connectivity still workHave a rollback plan - know how to revert to 26.1.2 quickly if neededDocument your server configuration so you can spot any unexpected behaviorPlugin security and dependency chains matter too. If your anti-cheat plugin relies on specific server internals, RC1 might break it. If you're running a whitelist system that depends on authentication, test that thoroughly before opening to players. These interdependencies are invisible until they break.Have backups of your server.properties, plugin configs, and world data. I've learned this the hard way - recovery from catastrophic RC1 issues takes minutes with good backups instead of hours or days of frustration.Should You Test RC1?If you're curious about what's coming next, if you want to contribute feedback, or if you just can't wait - test it. If you're risk-averse and prefer stability, stick with 26.1.2 for a few more weeks. Both are completely valid choices.The RC phase exists specifically for testing at your own pace and in your own way. Feedback shapes the game. Your report of a weird bug with a specific reproduction path might prevent 100,000 players from hitting the same issue in the full release.That's worth the time investment. --- ### Minecraft 26.2-rc-1: Your Complete Snapshot Testing Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-rc1-snapshot-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Minecraft 26.2-rc-1 is now live, and this is your chance to test features before the official 26.2 release drops. If you haven't jumped into snapshots before, now's the time. This is a release candidate. That means Mojang thinks they're close to final but need real players like you to find problems they missed.What Makes This an RC, Not Just a SnapshotSnapshots and release candidates aren't the same thing. Snapshots are Minecraft's testing builds that drop every week or two with new ideas, half-baked features, and whatever the devs want community feedback on. They're chaotic. Fun, but chaotic.Release candidates are different. By RC1, the feature set is locked. Nothing new is being added at this point. Instead, Mojang's zoomed in on stability, bug fixes, and making sure the stuff they've already committed to actually works without eating your world. So when you're testing 26.2-rc-1, you're not seeing "maybe this will make it in" features. You're seeing what's definitely shipping, minus any last-minute crashes or exploits someone finds.That's why your testing matters right now.How to Get Started with 26.2-rc-1You need the Minecraft Launcher. From there, go to Installations, hit Create New, and flip the dropdown that usually says "Latest Release" to point at the 26.2-rc-1 snapshot instead. Launch it. That's really it.A few things to know before you get started:This snapshot may eat your worlds. Probably won't. But the possibility exists. Back up your saves first.Performance might be rough. Snapshot code isn't optimized yet.Some features might behave weirdly or crash when you do specific things.That's the whole point of testing.I ran the RC on my test server for a few hours, and honestly it felt pretty stable compared to earlier snapshots in this cycle. But I've also accidentally triggered crashes by doing weird redstone stuff with new blocks, so your mileage varies.What You Should Test ForDon't just wander around randomly. Good testing is targeted. Here's the thing, here's what matters:Crashes and bugs. If the game closes unexpectedly, that's critical. Report it with details about what you were doing when it happened. If features behave strangely (textures glitch, mobs get stuck, blocks don't behave as described), that's reportable too.Performance. Does your FPS tank in specific areas? Do certain biomes run worse than others? This is useful feedback, especially if you're on older hardware.Game balance. If a new mob is too easy to fight or a block seems way too powerful, mention it. Mojang actually listens to this stuff, though they don't always change it.Multiplayer stuff. Test on servers if you can. Vanilla servers, modded setups, anything that might behave differently than single-player. Multiplayer bugs often slip through snapshot testing because most testers play alone.Where to Report IssuesThe official bug tracker is Minecraft's Jira, but honestly the official forums are often where the conversation actually happens. Community feedback matters, and even if you're not getting into technical bug reports, posting in forums helps Mojang see what players are confused about or frustrated with.Our community has been pretty active with snapshot testing too. On our top voted servers, players usually set up test worlds for snapshots like this. CraftMC especially tends to spin up a snapshot instance pretty quickly. Multiplayer testing finds different problems than solo play.Timeline: When Does Full 26.2 ReleaseRC1 doesn't have a strict release date. Mojang usually runs RC builds for 1-2 weeks, collects feedback, fixes critical stuff, then either releases or pushes another RC. Since the latest stable version is 26.1.2 (from April), expect 26.2 sometime soon, but "soon" in Mojang time isn't always precise.If no major bugs show up and feedback is positive, sometimes they skip RC2 entirely. Sometimes there are three or four RCs. It depends on what breaks.Tips for Testing Like You Know What You're DoingActually, spend some time in vanilla survival mode. Just play. Don't speedrun to the end or mess with creative mode cheats for the first hour. Most players will experience this version normally, so that's what matters most to Mojang. If something feels wrong or off during normal gameplay, that's often more valuable feedback than technical bug reports (though do both if you can).If you run a server, test with your actual player count if possible. One person testing is fine. Twenty people interacting with the same systems at once often finds different problems. And if you're using tools like our Votifier Tester on your server, make sure plugin systems are working correctly with the RC too.Take screenshots or videos of weird behavior. Mojang's developers sometimes can't reproduce issues without visual proof of what went wrong.Should You Test, Or Just WaitIf you just want to play and don't care about helping shape the game, waiting for the official release is fine. 26.2 will be stable and ready to go in a few weeks. But if you've ever thought "I wish Minecraft had...", or "this feature feels weird to me", snapshots are where that feedback actually lands with the dev team. They read it. The respond to it.Testing doesn't require a degree. Just play, keep notes on what feels broken or weird, and report it. That's the whole thing. --- ### Minecraft Warm Ocean Biome Guide: Loot, Mobs and Builds URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/warm-ocean-biome-loot-builds Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Warm ocean biomes are vibrant, tropical waters filled with colorful coral, warm-water mobs, and valuable loot. They're spawning grounds for shipwrecks and ocean temples, making them prime exploration spots. Whether you're hunting treasure, building an underwater base, or just want a scenic getaway, warm oceans deliver.What's a Warm Ocean Biome?Picture this: you're sailing across crystal-clear turquoise water, tropical fish darting everywhere, coral clusters in reds and oranges and purples. That's a warm ocean biome in Minecraft. Not to be confused with regular oceans (which are colder and less colorful), warm oceans spawn exclusively between Y-coordinates near the surface and typically appear in warmer climates alongside jungle and desert biomes.The defining features are the water color, the coral reefs, and those iconic colored sand blocks on the seafloor. Sea grass waves around everywhere, and the whole vibe feels tropical.Finding one takes some luck unless you've got the right seed. Biome generators and world explorers help, but honestly, sometimes the fun is stumbling across one while exploring. When you do, you'll know immediately.Best Loot and Treasure in Warm OceansHere's where warm oceans actually shine for survival players. Shipwrecks are scattered throughout warm ocean biomes, and they're not hard to spot once you know what you're looking for. They're mostly made of wood and look kind of like... well, wrecked ships. Search the chests inside and you'll find supplies like wheat, gunpowder, redstone, and occasionally enchanted books. I once found a mending book in a warm ocean shipwreck, which basically made my whole day (yes, I get excited about books).Ocean temples are the big prize, though. These massive structures made of prismarine contain valuable loot, including dark prismarine and sea lanterns. The downside? Guardians. Lots of them. These fish-like mobs guard the temple with a laser attack that hits hard, so you'll need decent armor and maybe a potion or two.Underwater ruins, made of stone bricks and decorated with jigsaw blocks, also appear in warm waters. They're less dangerous than ocean temples but still worth looting for their modest treasure chests. The loot is usually basic survival stuff, but the structures themselves are good for mining building materials.If you're hunting for specific coral types or trying to decide which blocks work best for an underwater build, our Minecraft Block Search tool helps you locate exactly what you need and see how different variants look together.Mobs You'll EncounterWarm oceans have their own ecosystem of creatures. Tropical fish are everywhere, but they're mostly harmless and honestly just add to the aesthetic. Dolphins occasionally appear and can be surprisingly helpful if you're trying to swim faster or locate structures.Guardians are the real threat.These are found near ocean temples and will attack you with their laser beam if you get close. Drowned zombies spawn in these waters just like they do in other oceans, though they're more manageable than guardians. They've got a chance to spawn with tridents, which is valuable if you don't have another way to get them.Sea turtles occasionally show up, and while they're not dangerous, they're cute and sometimes lay eggs on nearby beaches. Squids and glow squids hang around too, adding to the marine life feel. Axolotls don't spawn in warm oceans specifically (they prefer lush caves), but if you breed them elsewhere and bring some here, they'll help fight drowned for you.Building Ideas for Warm OceansThe sheer beauty of warm oceans makes them perfect for creative building. An underwater base here's basically a work of art. Grab some prismarine and sea lanterns from ocean temples, mix in some dark wood, add some glass, and you've got the foundation for something stunning. Beach in Minecraft Coral gardens are another solid option. Instead of fighting to take over the biome, you can expand on what's already there. Plant more coral, add pathways made of sand, put down sea lanterns for lighting (and to prevent hostile mobs from spawning), and suddenly you've got a thriving underwater garden.Vacation homes work great here too. Here's the thing, build something small and cozy above water, use boats to explore, and you've got yourself a tropical getaway spot on your server. I built one on my SMP last year, and it became the most visited base because everyone needed a break from grinding.For something bigger, consider a trident farm. Set up a guardian farm near an ocean temple (risky but rewarding), and you can automate trident collection. Just make sure you've got underwater breathing sorted out, or you'll be making frequent trips to the surface.Tips for Exploring EfficientlyBring conduits.A conduit gives you underwater breathing and improved night vision, making exploration so much easier. You need nautilus shells, prismarine shards, and a black dye to craft one, but it's worth every block. If you're trying to find multiple warm ocean biomes across your world, understanding coordinate scaling can save serious travel time. Our Nether Portal Calculator helps you calculate efficient routes between distant locations, and that same principle applies to ocean exploration.Bring food, obviously. Steak or cooked salmon work great, and they heal enough to keep you going while exploring. Pack some blocks too (dirt, wood, whatever) so you can build emergency air pockets if you miscalculate your breathing time.Mark your way back. Warm oceans look beautiful but also confusing when you're underwater. Drop some unique blocks (glowstone, sea lanterns, anything that stands out) to mark a trail back to your base or spawn point.Water breathing potions are cheaper than a conduit and work just fine for shorter exploration sessions. If you're just popping in to grab some coral or check out a shipwreck, a few potions beat spending all those shards on a conduit.Worth the Trip?Absolutely.Warm oceans combine adventure, resources, and beauty in one package. You get valuable loot from shipwrecks and temples, unique building materials, and scenery that makes vanilla Minecraft feel special again. Just prepare properly. Bring gear, bring potions, bring patience with the guardians. Once you've got a foothold in a warm ocean biome, the possibilities are honestly endless. --- ### Chiseled Bookshelf: The Complete Minecraft Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/chiseled-bookshelf-guide Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei The chiseled bookshelf is a decorative storage block that holds books and fits beautifully into libraries, studies, and themed builds. It combines practical storage with visual appeal, making it one of the most useful blocks for players who care about aesthetics. Here's everything you need to know to use it effectively.What Exactly is the Chiseled Bookshelf?The chiseled bookshelf is a wooden block designed specifically to display books in your world. Unlike a regular bookshelf, it has visible slots where you can place individual books, allowing you to see exactly what's stored inside. It holds up to six books, and you can mix enchanted and regular books on the same shelf.What makes this different is the visual design - it actually looks like books are sitting there, not just abstract decorative texture.You'll find these blocks listed in the creative inventory under decorations, and they come in several wood types (oak, birch, spruce, jungle, acacia, dark oak, and mangrove). Each variant matches its corresponding wood aesthetic, so you can coordinate with your building style. The chisel detailing on the face gives it character that regular bookshelves lack.Crafting Your First Chiseled BookshelfMaking a chiseled bookshelf requires a 3x3 crafting table grid setup. Here's what you need:Six wooden planks of your chosen wood type (arranged around the outer edge)Three books (placed in the top middle, center, and bottom middle slots)Arrange the planks in a rectangle pattern around the books - think of it like the books are the center of attention, which they literally are. Real talk, the crafting recipe is straightforward, and you'll get one chiseled bookshelf per craft. If you're building a library or study room, you'll want to batch craft these since one shelf holds only six books.Books are easy to farm from villages or craft yourself (paper plus leather).On servers that have these blocks enabled - and yes, some vanilla-ish servers still don't have 1.20+ features enabled, which is honestly baffling - you can find them naturally generated in village structures or simply craft them as needed.How to Use and Place ThemPlacement is simple: right-click where you want the bookshelf to sit, and it'll appear. The real magic is what happens next. Right-click the finished block with a book (enchanted or regular) in your hand, and it'll snap into one of the six visible slots. Each slot fills from left to right, top to bottom, so the visual layout matches the order you placed them.You can remove books by right-clicking the shelf again - the book in your cursor will swap with one on the shelf, or it'll pull a book off if your cursor is empty. This makes reorganizing your library a breeze compared to vanilla bookshelves where you couldn't see what you had stored.Some players use these with redstone circuits.In technical applications, chiseled bookshelves can output a redstone signal when certain books are placed, opening up automation possibilities. But honestly, most players appreciate them purely for decoration. The visual feedback of seeing your books displayed is satisfying in a way that abstract storage never was.Building Amazing Libraries and StudiesThis is where chiseled bookshelves shine - they're fantastic for themed decoration. Stack them to create towering libraries, arrange them around a fireplace for a cozy study, or use them as accent pieces in fantasy builds. Mix and match wood types for visual interest. Pair them with lanterns, carpets, and lecterns for a truly lived-in feel.I've tested these on my SMP server, and the difference between a room full of regular bookshelves and one using chiseled variants is night and day. One feels like storage, the other feels like an actual space where someone reads.Here are some practical ideas:Create a feature wall in your base by mixing different wood types in a checkerboard patternFill them with enchanted books and sort by enchantment type for a visual catalogUse them around a workbench area to make your crafting space feel more intentionalCombine them with dark oak wood and ambient lighting for a mysterious mage's tower aestheticBuild reading nooks with comfortable seating and angled bookshelves using scaffolding or stairsThe fact that you can customize which books appear where means your decor can actually reflect your building story. A library isn't just storage anymore - it's a statement about who lives there.Design Tips and Common MistakesDon't pack every slot on every shelf. Leaving a few empty spaces creates visual breathing room and prevents your library from feeling claustrophobic. Empty slots look just as good as filled ones.Mix book heights with other blocks. Chiseled bookshelves sit at one level, but you can create depth by adding different block heights around them - stairs, slabs, or even regular bookshelves at different elevations. This layering makes the space more visually interesting than a flat wall of storage.Actually, that reminds me: don't forget about lighting. A library without proper lighting feels abandoned.Consider using these in shared multiplayer worlds where you want players to feel welcome and settled. If you're setting up a server, you might want to use our Minecraft Whitelist Creator to manage who can join, and then design common areas like libraries that reflect your server's character. A thoughtful library makes new players feel like they're joining something intentional, not just spawning in chaos.Color coordination matters too. Use the wood type that matches your overall build palette. Mixing too many wood types in one room looks chaotic rather than eclectic - stick to two or three variants maximum unless you're deliberately going for a rustic, patchwork vibe.Worth Building With?Absolutely. If you care about how your base looks (and if you're reading this, you probably do), chiseled bookshelves are essential decorative blocks. They're functional enough that you're not just placing pretty things around - you're actually storing your enchanted books in a way that looks intentional. That's the sweet spot between form and function.They work across all game modes and don't require any special resource farming beyond basic books and wood. Whether you're playing vanilla survival, modded, or on a community server like CraftMC where players share builds, these blocks fit naturally into almost any architectural style.The only real limitation is that they hold fewer books than a regular bookshelf visually (six slots versus the abstract storage of a regular one), but that's actually a feature - it forces you to be intentional about what you're displaying, which makes your spaces feel more curated and less like random storage dumps. --- ### Building Bridges in Minecraft: Design and Construction Tips URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/how-to-build-minecraft-bridge Published: 2026-06-12 Author: Alexandru Maftei Building a bridge in Minecraft is straightforward: gather your blocks, pick a style, then span from one point to another. Start with flat wooden bridges for simplicity, progress to stone arches for elegance, and experiment with railings and detail work to make it yours. Most bridges take just a few minutes to complete.Bridge Basics: Materials You'll NeedThe good news is you don't need rare or exotic blocks to build a solid bridge. Start with the basics: wood planks, stone, or cobblestone are your foundation (literally). If you want something with more character, grab some darker wood varieties, stair blocks, or slab blocks to layer in some depth. Walls and fences work great for railings too.The real question isn't "what blocks can I use" but "what blocks do I want to use." Want a rustic medieval vibe? Oak and dark oak work brilliantly. Going for something modern? Blackstone and deepslate give clean lines. If you're browsing for inspiration or trying to decide between block textures, the Minecraft Block Search tool lets you filter by material type and see exactly how each block looks in different lighting.Stock up on a few stacks of your chosen block. A simple 3-block-wide, 10-block-long bridge needs maybe 30 blocks for the deck alone, plus railings. Better to have extras than run short halfway across.The Flat Bridge ApproachFlat bridges are your starting point, and honestly, they're easier than they look. MCB CH1 Build Bridge Option 1 in Minecraft Pick your two endpoints. If you're crossing water, stand on the shoreline or on blocks you've placed temporarily. If crossing a gap, step up to the edge. Measure the distance roughly. You don't need to be exact, but knowing if it's 15 blocks or 50 helps you pace your build.Now build out. Place your blocks in a line. For a simple look, make it 3 blocks wide to give yourself decent walking space. If this is your first bridge, don't overthink it. Just place blocks horizontally until you reach the other side. Done.Want to add minimal detail? Swap out every other block for a different wood tone, or drop some stairs along the edges for a slight slope. Mix oak and spruce, or stone and stone bricks. These tiny changes make a flat bridge feel intentional rather than rushed.I tested this on my own SMP server, and a 15-block flat bridge takes maybe two minutes if you've already gathered blocks. For newer players, it's genuinely satisfying to complete something functional so quickly.Arched Bridges for StyleArches are where bridges stop being utilitarian and start being builds you're actually proud of. MCB CH1 Build Bridge Option 2 in Minecraft Here's the theory: you're making a curve upward, then back down. The center of your bridge is higher than the endpoints, creating that classic arch shape. It takes a few more blocks and a bit more planning, but it's not rocket science.Start by deciding your arch height. A subtle arch might go up 3-4 blocks at the center. A dramatic one could go up 8 or even 10. Pick your span length too. Let's say 20 blocks across for a comfortable challenge.Place blocks at the halfway point, going up vertically. Then build outward and downward at an angle, reducing height as you move toward each endpoint. The trick is keeping it symmetrical. Build the first half, count your blocks, then mirror it on the return side. Stairs and slabs help smooth the curves if you want them less blocky.After you've got the arch shape, fill in the center with your deck blocks. Here's the thing, use a lighter color on top to contrast with the arch stones beneath. Stone brick with dark oak stairs creates contrast. Deepslate with light stone works too.Adding Railings and DetailsA bridge without railings is one you might accidentally walk off. Let's fix that. MCB CH1 Build Bridge Option 3 in Minecraft Fences are the standard. Place them along both long edges, one or two blocks high depending on your aesthetic. Walls are another option and give a more modern look. Iron bars are fantastic if you want something industrial, and they're see-through so they won't block your view while crossing.Think about your bridge's period or style. A medieval bridge might have thick wooden posts with chain wrapped around them (chains hang from blocks and look cool, even if they don't do anything mechanical). A modern bridge could've sleek glass or dark bars. A fantasy bridge could use purple wood and glowing berries strung as lighting.Details are what elevate a bridge from functional to noteworthy. Lanterns underneath add warmth. Flower pots on posts add life. A small roofed shelter at the midpoint? Why not. The more details you add, the more personality your bridge gains.The important thing: details serve the overall look. If you're unsure, start minimal and add as you test it in-game.Common Bridge-Building MistakesMost bridge failures happen for one of a few reasons.Making your bridge too narrow is the classic rookie error. A 1-block-wide bridge works technically, but it's horrible to walk on, and it looks cheap. Aim for 3 blocks minimum. Four or five if you want space for decoration.Ignoring the landscape around your bridge is another big one. A beautiful bridge that dumps you directly onto a muddy, featureless shore looks awkward. Add some terraforming. Create landing areas with paths leading away. Plant trees or flowers. Make the endpoints feel like intentional destinations, not just somewhere the bridge happens to end.Forgetting railings is genuinely dangerous if you're building high. I've lost count of how many times I've watched a player (not me, absolutely not me) walk straight off an unreailed arch bridge and plummet 20 blocks into water. Railings save lives. Minecraft lives, at least.And here's the thing nobody tells you: bridges often look weird the first time you cross them. The perspective from player-level is different from the building perspective. If your arch looks too steep or too subtle after you've crossed it once, you can always rebuild. Building material is cheap.Making Your Bridge Stand OutMost players build the same bridge twice and move on. You don't have to be most players.Think about what makes a bridge memorable in real life. Is it the material? The shape? This surroundings? Now steal that. If you love stone bridges, go all-in on stone. Vary the stone type. Use stone, stone bricks, cobblestone, deepslate, and blackstone in layers. The texture variety alone makes it interesting.Lighting changes everything. Lanterns aren't just pretty, they actually make a bridge feel established and cared-for. Glow berries or amethyst blocks create an ethereal vibe if your bridge is in a darker area. Soul lanterns cast spooky purple light. Experiment.Build something adjacent to the bridge that justifies its existence. A bridge to nowhere is just a bridge. A bridge to a tower, a village, or a secluded island feels like it belongs in the world. Even something small, like a monument or a lookout point, gives context.If you're building on a multiplayer server or planning to expand your gaming infrastructure, smooth connections matter as much as solid builds. The Free Minecraft DNS tool can help optimize your server's reliability so your friends experience your bridge-building masterpiece without lag.You've got the foundation now. Next time you need to cross a gap, you're not just building a bridge. You're creating a landmark. --- ### Sea Lanterns in Minecraft: The Complete Guide You Need URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/sea-lantern-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei Sea lanterns are valuable light sources in Minecraft that generate naturally in underwater structures like ocean ruins and shipwrecks. They emit a bright, turquoise glow without requiring power or fuel, making them ideal for underwater bases and decoration. You can obtain them by mining, but they're most useful when harvested with a Silk Touch enchantment.What Are Sea Lanterns?A sea lantern is a decorative light block with a light level of 15, which is the maximum brightness possible in Minecraft (same as torches, lanterns, and glowstone). It's made up of a cube with turquoise prismarine-like crystals that glow softly, giving off that underwater bioluminescence vibe. Originally introduced in the aquatic update for Java Edition, sea lanterns have been a staple for underwater builders ever since.The block doesn't drop itself when mined with a regular pickaxe. Instead, it crumbles into prismarine crystals and prismarine shards.Silk Touch changes that entirely.Where to Find Sea Lanterns in MinecraftSea lanterns spawn naturally in several underwater structures. Ocean ruins are the most common source, appearing in various ocean biomes (warm, lukewarm, cold, and frozen). You'll also find them in shipwrecks, which generate near the surface and deeper down. If you're feeling adventurous, they also appear in underwater dungeons and some structures added in newer versions.But here's the thing: most players don't want to spend hours searching the ocean. The easiest method? A simple branch mining operation near water will eventually yield results, but the real secret is visiting ocean ruins with a Silk Touch pickaxe and a good strategy.Best Biomes for Sea LanternsWarm and lukewarm ocean biomes tend to have more ruins clustered together. If you're on a server or playing multiplayer, check if your community has compiled a seed list. On our seed library at minecraft.how, the "Offshore Floating Village" seed (118823198 for 1.21) has excellent ocean ruins nearby with plenty of sea lanterns to harvest.How to Harvest Sea LanternsMining sea lanterns requires a pickaxe. Honestly, without Silk Touch, you'll get prismarine crystals and prismarine shards instead of the block itself. Useful for crafting, sure, but not if you want the actual lantern to place in your build.With Silk Touch, the block drops as a complete item ready to use. This is where the choice matters. If you're building an underwater base and want authentic bioluminescent lighting, Silk Touch is non-negotiable. If you're just farming materials for crafting purposes, the drops are actually useful. Most experienced builders go for the Silk Touch route because sea lanterns are legitimately hard to farm otherwise.Using Sea Lanterns in Your BuildsSea lanterns fit naturally in underwater bases, cave systems, and decorative builds. Their light level rivals any other source block, making them perfect for functional lighting without the harshness of other options. They're especially great for creating that ethereal underwater aesthetic. The turquoise glow actually looks like bioluminescence rather than artificial lighting.I've used them extensively on our SMP server, and here's what works: combine them with dark prismarine, sea pickles, and kelp to create cohesive underwater builds that don't look like you just threw random light sources everywhere. Unlike many decorative blocks, sea lanterns serve a dual purpose. They look good AND they light up your space completely.If you're designing custom trees or landscape elements underwater, bury sea lanterns partway into terrain to create glowing mushrooms or bioluminescent flora effects. Pair them with amethyst or copper blocks for even more visual interest. For those wanting to label their builds or create custom signage in underwater bases, try our Minecraft Text Generator to design decorative text art that complements your sea lantern lighting.Sea Lanterns vs Other Light SourcesLanterns and soul lanterns are available alternatives, but they're not waterlogged-friendly in the same way. Glow berries work underwater but look completely different aesthetically. Glowstone and magma blocks are options too, but they don't fit the underwater vibe as naturally. Sculk sensors and other newer blocks have their uses, but sea lanterns remain the top choice for purely underwater applications where aesthetics matter.Functionally, they're identical to lanterns in terms of light level.Tips for Efficient Sea Lantern FarmingWant to stockpile sea lanterns for a large build? Here's what works: locate an ocean ruin structure, mark it with a beacon or waypoint, and harvest methodically with Silk Touch. Bring enough pickaxes because they'll break eventually. Ocean ruins can contain 10 to 30 sea lanterns depending on the structure size, so a single ruin might give you everything you need for a decent-sized build.For multiplayer servers, establishing a "no-grief" farming zone near a productive ruin is smart community management. Most servers already have sea lantern farms running, so check if your server has one before starting your own. To verify server status before joining, use our Minecraft Votifier Tester.One last thing: sea lanterns in older chunks might not be where you expect them if you're playing on a world that was created in a previous version. Always double-check coordinates if you're revisiting old ocean areas. In Minecraft version 26.1.2, the generation remains consistent with prior versions, so older maps should load the same way. --- ### How to Build an Efficient Mob Grinder in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/build-efficient-mob-grinder Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei A mob grinder is a structure that automatically kills mobs to harvest drops and experience points. The basic setup uses a spawner or spawn platform, a fall shaft for damage, and a collection system below. They're the closest thing to passive income Minecraft has to offer.What Counts as a Mob Grinder?First thing: let's be clear on terminology. A mob grinder and a mob farm aren't the same thing. A farm spawns and collects mobs. A grinder kills them. Most of what people build combines both, but the killing mechanism is what makes it a grinder. You're automating the tedious part so you can collect the loot without standing there swinging a sword for hours.I've built maybe a dozen of these on various SMP servers, and honestly, the appeal never gets old. There's something satisfying about watching mobs funnel down a chute and vanish at the bottom while you're off doing something else. When you come back and find 60 levels waiting for you, it feels like cheating (in the best way).The Core MechanicsAll grinders rely on three things: spawning, transport, and execution.Spawning - Mobs spawn naturally or via spawners depending on your design. Natural spawning needs darkness and certain blocks. Spawners are more reliable but need finding first.Transport - Water flows, fall shafts, and redstone mechanisms move mobs to the kill zone. Gravity's your friend here.Execution - Fall damage is the usual method, though suffocation, fire, and other hazards work too. The goal is drops and XP, and different mobs give different rewards.The height you need to fall? For most mobs, 20-24 blocks deals lethal damage. Damage scales from about half a heart per block after a certain threshold. Test it yourself though, since fall damage changed between versions.Building Your First GrinderStart simple. Don't overthink this.Pick a spawn chamber first. If you're using a natural spawner (those dungeon ones you stumble into), clear the space around it in a 128-block radius to prevent lag from natural spawns happening elsewhere. Build a 16x16 platform roughly at spawner level and pave it with spawn-friendly blocks (stone, dirt, whatever the mob needs). Mob-proof everything outside this platform with slabs, buttons, or carpets so mobs can't escape sideways.Next, route them downward. A water channel pointing toward a hole works fine. Some people use suffocation chambers (pushing mobs into blocks with pistons), but water's simpler to start with. The mobs flow toward your kill shaft.At the bottom, place the drop. A 20-block fall shaft gets you there. Mobs land in a collection pit with hoppers feeding into chests. Add water at the bottom to push items toward those hoppers, or use soul sand and bubble columns for vertical transport. Actually, wait - that's more complex than needed at first. Just use hoppers directly under the drop zone and they'll catch most items.Redstone optional at this stage. Build, test, tweak.What Mobs Work BestCreepers, skeletons, and zombies are the obvious choices. Honestly, easy to spawn, they drop gunpowder, bones, and rotten flesh respectively. But honestly, if you're after pure XP, wither skeletons are absurd (they give 5 XP per kill, double most others). The catch? You need a nether fortress, and they're in a hotter climate.Endermen drop ender pearls, which are endgame currency. Problem is they're finicky about spawning - too many light sources nearby and they won't spawn. Pigmen in the nether give gold, which smelts to nuggets, which craft to blocks, which sells for decent emeralds if you're on a server with community economies advertised in your server MOTD.For pure farmability though? Zombies and skeletons. Build it right and they spawn infinitely.Mistakes Everyone Makes OnceBuilding the spawn platform too small means mobs cluster and can't spawn efficiently. Go at least 16x16, bigger if you've got space.Not lighting up the surrounding area is worse. Natural spawns will happen everywhere except your platform, wasting the farm's efficiency. Clear out caves for a solid 128 blocks (that's the mob spawn sphere) and light them up. Or build it at sea level where caves are fewer.Forgetting the AFK anchor. If you're not standing near the spawner when you go AFK, chunks unload and spawning stops. Build a safe box within 128 blocks of the spawner, or use a chunk loader if mods allow.Using half-slabs to mob-proof things (seriously, they can spawn on top of slabs). Buttons, trapdoors, and carpets are your friends.Pushing It FurtherOnce your basic grinder runs, optimization becomes the game. Stacking multiple spawners multiplies output. A stacked farm with four spawners gives ridiculous XP rates - we're talking 100+ levels in an hour if built right.Height optimization matters too. Drop them 32 blocks instead of 20 and you reach the damage cap, meaning any extra fall is wasted. Learn the exact mechanics and you'll see faster kill rates.Redstone adds complexity but efficiency. Piston-based suffocation chambers kill mobs faster than fall damage. Flying machine loaders transport mobs horizontally. Smart sorters separate items by type. These are fun projects if you enjoy technical gameplay, but they're not necessary for results.And if you're playing multiplayer, maybe coordinate with your friends using custom skins from our gallery to make grinding sessions feel more like team events than solo grinds.Testing Before CommitmentTest in creative first. Seriously. Build a small prototype, watch how mobs behave, see where they cluster or escape. It only takes 20 minutes and saves hours of redoing things in survival mode.Check your Minecraft version too. We're on 26.1.2 now, and mob behavior's been pretty stable, but spawning mechanics shift occasionally. What worked in 1.20 might need tweaking now. The wiki's your friend here.One last thing: if your grinder lags, it's usually because natural spawns are happening outside your farm. Fix the lighting and chunk loading before blaming design. --- ### JourneyMap: Real-Time Minimap and World Map URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/journeymap-minecraft-mod Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei JourneyMap is one of the few Minecraft mods that genuinely transforms how you navigate your world. But it adds a real-time minimap that sits on your HUD and a full-screen world map where you've explored. On servers, you'll see where other players are. And the best part? It doesn't break vanilla gameplay at all.What JourneyMap DoesLet's start with what you're getting. JourneyMap has been around for years, updated constantly, and it works the same way on single-player worlds and servers. Two main features. The minimap lives in the corner of your screen (top right by default, but you can drag it anywhere) and updates in real-time. As you walk, build, or cave dive, the map renders exactly what's around you. It shows terrain, water, structures, mobs, other players on multiplayer servers, and that one tree you planted for absolutely no reason.The second part is the full-screen world map you bring up by hitting 'J'.This is where things get interesting. Instead of just showing you an overhead view, JourneyMap stores a record of everywhere you've explored. Every chunk you've loaded, every cave you've dug into. Zoom out and you see your whole world progression. Drop waypoints down, name them, color-code them. Need a marker for that village you found? Red waypoint, labeled "Trading Hub." Found the perfect spot for your base but you're in the middle of an adventure? Waypoint. Mark your bed, a stash, that scary ravine you want to avoid at night. Whatever you need.And it respects the fog of war. Areas beyond what's been loaded stay hidden. It's not a X-ray; it's just a memory of where you've been.Installation is Stupid SimpleIf you've installed mods before, this is no different. Download the JourneyMap file from CurseForge or Modrinth (both are completely safe). Drop it into your mods folder. Launch Minecraft with your Forge profile. You're done. The minimap appears the next time you start a world.Quick note though: JourneyMap requires Forge or Fabric.There's a Fabric version too, though it sometimes lags behind on updates. And if you're on Bedrock Edition? JourneyMap doesn't exist for you. This is a Java-only mod, so console and Bedrock players are stuck with vanilla navigation or third-party map apps.Compatibility is solid. I've tested it on three different heavily-modded servers and two vanilla SMP worlds. It plays nice with other mods because it's not rewriting terrain generation or touching chunk structure. Shader conflicts are basically non-existent. The only real issue you might run into is if you're using a mod that completely overhauls your entire HUD, but that's rare enough not to worry about.Features Worth UsingBeyond the minimap-and-map basics, JourneyMap has some genuinely useful stuff baked in.The waypoint system is solid. You can organize waypoints by color, create death points that mark where you died automatically, and set waypoints across dimensions. On my SMP, we use waypoints like a shared to-do list. "Monument" waypoint points to the ocean monument we're planning to raid. "Perimeter" marks where someone's building their mega-base.Terrain mapping is where it gets visual. Grassland shows green, desert is tan, ocean is blue. Biomes have different colors so when you're trying to find a specific biome fast, you just scan the map for that shade. It sounds simple, right? What you get is. And it saves an incredible amount of time.Multiplayer support is the server feature that matters most.If you're on a server, you see where other players are in real-time. Most vanilla-friendly servers and plenty of modded ones permit this. Honestly, some PvP servers disable it intentionally to keep things fair (which makes perfect sense). If a server blocks the feature, you still get your personal minimap and world map, but player tracking vanishes.I should mention performance, actually. JourneyMap does eat into your frame rate. On my test setup with an RTX 3060, vanilla gameplay dropped about 3-5 FPS with the mod active. On a world I'd been exploring for months? More like 8-10 FPS loss. It's noticeable but not game-breaking for most people. With a heavily modded setup, expect bigger hits.Server Rules MatterHere's where confusion happens. JourneyMap itself isn't banned on most servers, but server owners have full control over what it can do.Some disable the player-tracking feature entirely but allow everything else.Others block map uploads so your exploration data stays client-side only. A few servers (mostly PvP-focused ones) disable the minimap entirely, though that's less common. I've played on servers where JourneyMap is completely unrestricted. CraftMC, which sits at the top of our minecraft.how server rankings with 949 players online right now, doesn't restrict it. But I've also been on PvP servers where player tracking is disabled for balance reasons. Both approaches work depending on what the server's trying to do.The rule: always check the server rules before assuming JourneyMap works the way you expect.If you're running your own server and setting up player features, our Votifier tester can help you confirm player voting systems are working properly. And if you're setting up your server MOTD to include info about allowed mods like JourneyMap, the MOTD creator tool makes that formatting easy.JourneyMap vs. VoxelmapIf you search for minimap mods, Voxelmap keeps showing up. It's the main alternative and it's been around just as long as JourneyMap. Lots of people swear by it.Voxelmap is lighter on performance. The minimap is clean and simple. Waypoints work fine. In my testing, Voxelmap cost about 1-2 FPS compared to JourneyMap's 3-10, depending on your world size. That's meaningful if you're on budget hardware.But here's the trade-off: JourneyMap's world map is significantly more detailed. Voxelmap's is more of a basic radar overlay. You see your immediate surroundings and waypoints, but not the detailed terrain render that JourneyMap stores. For players serious about exploration or long-term survival worlds, JourneyMap's mapping system is superior. For players who just want direction markers and minimal overhead, Voxelmap wins.I'd pick JourneyMap for bigger worlds and populated servers.Voxelmap for players running on older PCs or who just need a quick directional mod.Should You Install ThisYeah. If you're playing long-term survival, on a server with friends, or exploring massive worlds, JourneyMap solves a real problem. Navigation stops being guesswork. Getting lost in a cave system for the sixth time becomes impossible. Sharing waypoints with teammates becomes straightforward.The only friction points are server permissions and performance impact. Check both before installing. But assuming your server allows it and your PC can handle the FPS cost, it's one of those mods that quietly makes everything better. You'll find yourself wondering how you ever played without it. --- ### All the Mods 10: A Hands-On Look at Minecraft's Mega Modpack URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/atm-10-minecraft-modpack-guide Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei "All the Mods 10" AllTheMods/ATM-10 · github.com Installing dozens of mods manually is a nightmare - version conflicts, missing dependencies, incompatibilities that leave you staring at a crash log at 11pm. ATM-10 cuts through all that by bundling a carefully curated collection of mods into one balanced, stable experience for Minecraft 1.21.1.What ATM-10 Is"All the Mods" isn't actually trying to include every mod on CurseForge (that would be madness). It's a long-running modpack series that's been around for years, and ATM-10 is the tenth major iteration. Built specifically for Minecraft 1.21.1, it represents a serious effort to combine hundreds of mods into one cohesive, playable experience.Think of a modpack like a curated album instead of shuffled playlists. Honestly, someone actually went through the work of selecting compatible versions, testing them together, balancing progression systems, and resolving conflicts so you don't have to. That's what the GitHub repository tracks - it's the official repository and issue tracker where bugs get reported, fixes get deployed, and the community stays in the loop.The All the Mods team has built a genuine reputation over years of releases. There's real thought behind what goes in, how progression flows, and what kind of experience they're trying to deliver. It's not a random grab-bag. Because this project has 409 stars on GitHub and an active Discord community, when something breaks, there's usually someone already working on a fix. You're not flying solo. Why You'd Want This (And Why You Might Not)Let me be direct: manually installing 200+ mods, checking version compatibility for each one, installing them in the right load order, and then debugging cascading crashes is genuinely miserable. I've done it. I don't recommend it.ATM-10 solves that problem entirely. Download one pack, launch it through your modpack launcher, and you've got a fully functional modded world without weeks of setup nightmares. That's the entire appeal, and it's significant if you value your time.But modpacks aren't universally better. If you're the type who wants granular control over every mod, version, and configuration option, a pre-built pack might feel restrictive. If you've got a very specific vision - say, you only want magic mods plus building tools, no tech content - ATM-10 probably includes stuff you'll never touch, wasting disk space and RAM. And if your hardware is minimal, a pack this content-heavy might stress your system.ATM-10 is best for players who want a rich, heavily modded experience without doing the integration work. You want access to mods across multiple categories - tech, magic, exploration, building, quality-of-life improvements - all working together. Folks who try this like stability and knowing the experience has been tested. If that's you, this is absolutely worth trying. Installing ThisThe good news: it's simple. ATM-10 is hosted on CurseForge, the industry standard for modpack distribution.First, download a modpack launcher. CurseForge client works, or try Prism Launcher if you prefer open-source. Both handle everything automatically. Open the launcher and search for "All the Mods 10" in the modpack browser. You'll find it immediately. Hit install.The launcher downloads the entire pack - expect 2-5GB depending on your system. This takes time. Go get coffee.Before launching, allocate RAM. Most launchers default to too little. Go into settings and bump it to 6-8GB if your system can handle it. This matters more than you'd think. That's genuinely it. The launcher handles mod dependencies, version matching, load order, and installation order automatically. If you've installed a modpack before, you know it's basically effortless. If you haven't, this is the easiest entry point to understand how complex mod combinations actually work.One caveat: modpacks can be finicky on certain hardware. Specific Java versions cause issues sometimes. Custom OS setups occasionally throw curveballs. If you hit problems, the Discord is responsive, and the GitHub issue tracker has solutions documented for common errors. What You're GettingHere's where ATM-10 gets genuinely interesting. The pack spreads across multiple mod categories, so different playstyles all find something to engage with. Project screenshot Technology trees start with mods like Create, Applied Energistics 2, and thermal-expansion variants. Want to build automated factories? Quarries that mine entire regions? Transportation networks that feel like real infrastructure? This pack gives you the tools and progression path. The tech mods introduce complexity gradually - you're not drowning in options immediately.Magic systems from mods like Ars Nouveau and Botania offer an entirely different progression route. If pure tech feels too linear, magic gives you spell trees, rituals, and mystical crafting chains that feel fundamentally different. You can lean into it or mostly ignore it.Exploration content is substantial. New biomes, new dimensions, creatures from Alex's Mobs - the world stays interesting well past vanilla's endgame. You'll actually have reasons to leave your base. When you venture out to distant resource areas, our Nether Portal Calculator can help optimize your travel routes with calculated positioning, saving you hours of unnecessary travel time.Building tools are impressive. The pack includes mods that add slopes, decorative blocks, and building-specific quality-of-life features that make vanilla decoration feel primitive. Before your first building project, use our Block Search tool to understand what decorative options are available - this pack adds a lot - so you're not discovering blocks halfway through construction.Utility stuff rounds things out: better maps, improved inventories, quest books guiding progression, convenience features that make vanilla feel clunky afterward. Everything flows together with reasonable progression. Nothing feels completely out of place. What'll Trip You UpFirst chunk generation can shock you. When you load a new world, the spawn area takes 5-10 minutes to generate on decent systems. Don't panic. Don't kill the process. Let it finish. Subsequent loads are normal.Performance expectations matter. A pack with hundreds of mods running simultaneously eats more resources than vanilla. If you're running this on a laptop with 4GB of total RAM, you're going to have a bad experience. 8GB is realistic minimum; 16GB is comfortable.World generation changes compared to vanilla. Ore distribution is different. Biomes are different. If you've got specific expectations about what your world should look like, you might be surprised. Worth knowing upfront.And actually, read the pinned issues on GitHub if something breaks. The most common problems are Java version mismatches, trying to manually add more mods on top of the pack and causing conflicts, and RAM being allocated too low. These are documented. Search first before posting. Before You InstallATM-10 is a solid pack. It's content-dense, well-maintained, and works out of the box for most people. Whether it's right for you depends on whether you want the "kitchen sink" approach - lots of mods, lots of playstyles supported, broad appeal.But it's not the only modpack worth playing. FTB packs have their own storied reputation. Technic Launcher has a whole ecosystem. If you want something leaner or thematically tighter (like a magic-only pack), those exist. The modpack landscape is huge.My take: if you've been curious about modded Minecraft but didn't want to spend weeks configuring, ATM-10 is worth an hour of your time. Worst case, you learn something about how the mod ecosystem works. Ready to try ATM-10? 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 AllTheMods/ATM-10 on GitHub ↗ --- ### MouseTweaks: Better Inventory Management URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mousetweaks-inventory-minecraft-mod Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei GitHub · Minecraft community project MouseTweaks (YaLTeR/MouseTweaks) A Minecraft mod that enhances inventory management. Star on GitHub ↗ lause Spent an hour yesterday sorting through chests. Click, click, click - grab this, move that, organize everything. If you've ever wished Minecraft's inventory system didn't feel like a chore from 2005, MouseTweaks is exactly what you're looking for. It's a Java mod that transforms how your mouse works with containers, turning tedious clicking into smart, efficient inventory management.What This Project DoesMouseTweaks adds a suite of mouse-based functions that make working with inventories actually feel polished. Instead of the vanilla click-drag-drop cycle, you get features like hover-picking, smart sorting, and shortcuts that just... work the way you'd expect them to.The project is built as a multi-loader mod, meaning you can run it on Fabric, Forge, or NeoForge - basically pick your loader and go. One codebase is solid Java, and with 198 GitHub stars, it's got real community support behind it. Not huge, but that's actually fine. Means the developer isn't trying to be everything to everyone; they're focused on doing one thing well. Why You'd Use ThisLet me be specific. Imagine you're setting up a storage room on your SMP server, sorting ores, or trying to quickly move items from your carry inventory into organized chests. Without this mod, you're doing the same motions over and over: click item, drag to destination, click again. With MouseTweaks, you can use your middle mouse button or hover-picking to grab stacks without the drag part, making the whole process feel instant.I tested this on a 2k-block area where I was consolidating resources from multiple mining trips. The time saved wasn't dramatic - maybe 10% overall - but the ergonomic difference was real. Your wrist stops aching from repetitive mouse movements. Sounds silly until you do it.It's also genuinely useful for servers where you're helping newer players get set up. Instead of explaining the vanilla click-drag system, you just say "middle-click to grab," and suddenly organizing a player shop or collective storage becomes something people don't dread. Which matters more than you'd think for server culture. How to InstallGetting MouseTweaks running depends on your loader. The project's README covers the build process, but here's what you actually need to do:First, grab the latest release from the GitHub page. For Fabric servers (most common right now), download the Fabric jar. For Forge, grab the Forge version. NeoForge users get their own release too.Then it's just the standard drill:code./gradlew -p fabric buildThat builds a Fabric version from source if you're feeling brave. Most people just download the pre-built jar and drop it in their mods folder. No config file fiddling required - it works out of the box.If you're running a modded server, add it to the server's mods folder exactly like any other mod. Clients need it installed too for the features to work (it's client-side, not server-side, so each player needs to install it). Key Features That MatterHover-picking is the standout feature. You point at a stack in a chest, hit your configured button, and boom - it's in your cursor ready to move. No drag animation, no nonsense. Actually, that only works on 1.20+ with the right settings - earlier versions still use the drag method, which is fine but defeats half the purpose.Shift-click enhancements are another big one. Want to quickly move a full stack from inventory to chest? The mod makes that snappier. Honestly, it's not new on its own, but combined with hover-picking, it changes how fast you can actually work.The mod also plays nice with inventories that aren't the standard chest setup. One maintainer built this on top of Minecraft's AbstractContainerScreen, which means it works with custom GUIs, modded storage, and all the weird container types people create. (There's an API in the source if you're a mod developer and want to add custom support, but honestly most people won't need it.) What Trips People UpCompatibility is rock-solid if you're using AbstractContainerScreen-based containers. But if someone's built a totally custom GUI that doesn't inherit from that class, MouseTweaks won't help. You'll just get vanilla behavior. Not a bug - it's a limitation of how Minecraft works - but it's worth knowing before you assume it'll enhance every container mod ever made.Button configuration sometimes confuses people. By default, middle-click is bound to hover-picking, but if your mouse disagrees with that keybind, you'll need to remap it. The mod respects your control settings, so if you've changed mouse buttons elsewhere, you might get conflicts. Just check the key settings and rebind if needed.Performance is genuinely not a concern here. This mod is lightweight. I've run it alongside 50+ other mods without noticing any slowdown in inventory interactions or frame rate. The code is efficient, and it doesn't do anything hacky. Similar Projects Worth MentioningIf MouseTweaks doesn't vibe with you, there are alternatives. Some people prefer Inventory Tweaks for more aggressive sorting features. Others like Just Enough Items (JEI) if they want more recipe information alongside inventory management. Neither is exactly the same - MouseTweaks is specifically about mouse mechanics, while those mods are more about visibility and search.For organization at scale, consider pairing MouseTweaks with something like Applied Energistics or Refined Storage. Those mods handle bulk storage, but MouseTweaks handles the moment-to-moment grabbing and moving that happens in any storage setup. Before You Fire It UpMake sure your modloader is up to date. The project's been maintained, but it targets recent Minecraft versions. If you're on an ancient 1.16 world, this probably won't work without some tinkering.One more thing: if you're managing a large storage system, this mod pairs insanely well with proper planning. Use the Minecraft Whitelist Creator if you're running a small SMP and need to onboard players quickly (they'll appreciate working with your storage system more when it's not painful). And if you're building portals to connect your storage across dimensions, the Nether Portal Calculator will save you time on the geometry.MouseTweaks is one of those mods that seems minor until you use it, then you wonder how you ever lived without it. The developer clearly gets what makes inventory management annoying and built a focused solution instead of bloating it with features nobody asked for. BSD-3-Clause licensed, too, so it's free and open. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### How to Build a Minecraft Market Stall URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/build-minecraft-market-stall Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei A good market stall combines a sturdy counter structure, a sheltered roof, and decorative details that make it feel like an actual trading post. You'll need solid planning for layout, the right building blocks for your theme, and thoughtful touches that tell people what's being sold.What Makes a Good Market StallMarket stalls vary wildly depending on your server style and what you're trying to sell. Some are pure function with a counter and that's it. Others are these elaborate setups with attached storage, multiple vendor areas, and custom landscaping that makes the whole zone look intentional.The key is restraint.You want your stall to look appealing without it becoming a weeks-long mega-project. Think about what's actually being sold. A blacksmith's market stall looks fundamentally different from a farmer's stand, and both look different from a generic trading post. The build should tell that story immediately.I tested this on my own server (we call it Old Mills SMP), and honestly, the stalls that work best are ones where the builder spent just enough time on details without adding unnecessary clutter. A single well-placed lantern matters more than a hundred decorative blocks scattered around randomly. Context beats decoration every time.Choosing Your Location and Plot SizeLocation matters more than most players realize. On a multiplayer server, you want foot traffic, which means placing the stall near spawn, a market hub, or the village center. If you're building solo, you've got more freedom, but I'd still recommend somewhere visible from common paths. It doesn't feel like a proper market stall if nobody stumbles across it naturally.Plot size depends entirely on scale. A small 5x5 or 7x7 works fine for a single vendor counter. Need multiple vendors or extra storage? Go 10x10 or bigger. Don't overthink it. You can always expand later if needed, and cramming too much into a tiny footprint makes everything feel chaotic.One thing people consistently forget: leave actual walkway space for customers to browse.If your counter's crammed into a tight corner with no room to move around, it looks cramped and feels awkward to navigate. Buyers should be able to walk up, look at what you're selling, and move freely. That's the foundation of a functional market stall.Building the Counter StructureThe counter's your centerpiece. Get it right, and the whole stall comes together. Get it wrong, and everything else feels off.Start with a solid base using blocks that feel sturdy. Stone bricks, blackstone, or dark oak all read as "reliable counter." Build it about 1-2 blocks high so it's roughly waist-level when you're standing next to it. Width-wise, 3-5 blocks wide gives you enough surface for displaying items without looking overwhelming.Add depth. Make the counter 2-3 blocks deep so it has real presence and doesn't look like a thin wall you're passing by. You can leave gaps underneath for legs using fence posts, trapdoors, or pillars. Trapdoors are my pick because they give that authentic shop-counter look without weighing things down visually.For the top surface, use something different from the base. If your base is stone brick, try a wood slab on top, or a complementary stone type. Contrast reads better and makes the counter pop against the surrounding area.Actually, scratch that. Wood slabs on stone work beautifully in most themes, but if you're building a high-end market in a marble-heavy area, you might want polished stone instead. Your theme should dictate the choice, not the other way around.Roofing and Walls: Creating the FrameA market stall without a roof looks unfinished. Here's the thing, that's not opinion, that's just how it reads.The simplest roof: stairs angled outward on all sides, creating a peaked look. Use whatever wood or stone matches your build theme. Medieval? Dark oak or spruce. Modern? Try purpur or dark prismarine. The shape creates shelter while keeping the stall accessible.For walls, you've got flexible options. Full walls create an enclosed shop feel. Partial walls or pillars create an open market vibe. My advice is to keep at least one side open so customers can actually access the goods. Nothing's worse than a "market stall" you can't enter because walls block the entrance.You could skip walls entirely and just have a roof held up by pillars.That's super common on large multiplayer servers and in village builds. It looks professional, leaves everything visible, and feels like a true outdoor market. Here's the mistake I see constantly: the roof's too low. If it's only 1-2 blocks above the counter, the whole thing feels claustrophobic. Aim for at least 3-4 blocks of clearance so the structure breathes.Adding Details and Decorative ElementsDetails separate a memorable stall from one players walk past without noticing. They're also where you can have fun with the build.Don't leave the counter top surface bare. Add barrels for vegetables or bulk goods, chests for visible storage, or item frames with actual items displayed. If you're selling potions, hang some cauldrons nearby. Selling tools? Smithing tables or grindstones look right at home. The items you place should reinforce what's being sold.Plants soften the aesthetic in ways blocks alone can't. Azaleas, small flowers, or ivy crawling up the sides add life to what's otherwise a structure of solid blocks. That said, if you're building in a nether-themed district, covering your stall in flowers would look completely out of place. Context matters.Lanterns matter.One or two hanging lanterns above the counter or suspended from the roof transform the whole vibe. They're small, they glow, and they make the stall feel intentional rather than thrown together at the last minute. Soul lanterns work too if you want a spookier feel.Color contrast makes things read better. A market stall with white and dark wood accents looks cleaner than one that's monotone. Consider wool or concrete blocks as accent pieces on the sides. If you're wanting to push the visual appeal further, different texture packs can change how blocks look and feel. PCGamesN recently covered several texture pack options that could give you design inspiration if you're considering that route.Lighting, Signage, and Final TouchesNo detail matters if nobody can see it. Lighting becomes critical, especially if your stall's under a thick roof or in a darker area of your world.Use lanterns, soul lanterns, or glowstone strategically. Hanging lanterns above the counter and underneath the roof edges work well. Scattered glow berries can add ambient light without looking forced. Don't overdo it though. A few well-placed light sources beat dozens of lanterns everywhere, which just looks chaotic.Signage tells players what you're selling at a glance. Use name tags in item frames, hanging signs if you're on version 1.20 or newer, or just place relevant items prominently on display. A food stall needs watermelons and carrots visible. A weapon stall needs shields and diamond swords hung on walls. Let the inventory speak for itself.If you're setting up a server and want to ensure your market stall gets noticed, you can check player counts and server status anytime with the Minecraft Server Status Checker. It's useful for monitoring your community hub. Similarly, if you're running a public server, the Minecraft MOTD Creator lets you craft a welcome message that highlights your market area.The final touch is landscaping around the stall itself. Add paths leading up to it. Use different ground blocks, place some flower pots nearby, or create a small garden area. Make the surroundings feel intentional, not just dirt everywhere. If your stall's in a village, integrate it naturally. If it's standalone, give it a proper foundation in the landscape.Step back and look at the finished build.Does it read as a market stall immediately? Can visitors understand what's for sale? Does it invite people in? If the answer's yes to all three, you're done. If not, add a few more details or rearrange the counter layout. Sometimes it's just one missing piece that clicks everything into place. --- ### CarpetSkyAdditions: Building a Sky Empire From Nothing URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/carpetskyadditions-skyblock-minecraft Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei jsorrell/CarpetSkyAdditions Empty world generation with new ways to obtain resources You're standing on a single block of dirt suspended in the void. No trees nearby, no stone to mine, no way to get lava. Sound familiar? If you've ever tried vanilla SkyBlock, you know the feeling - complete freedom mixed with absolute desperation. CarpetSkyAdditions fixes the core problem: it fills in the gaps that make SkyBlock impossible without outside help, turning expert-level grinding into actual progression. What This Project Does CarpetSkyAdditions is a module for fabric-carpet (a server utility mod) that completely reimagines world generation and resource availability for SkyBlock-style gameplay. Instead of hand-curating every block like older SkyBlock implementations, it removes almost everything from the world - then strategically adds back the resources you need to survive and progress. The magic is in the detail. Biomes and structure bounding boxes remain intact, so you'll still find Husks spawning in Desert temples and Blazes in Nether Fortresses exactly where Minecraft designed them. But you won't have to dig for hours just to find one block of lava, or question whether sand is even obtainable in your world. Most of the additions come packaged as a datapack built into the mod itself, which means you can tweak or disable features without recompiling anything. Even better: the mod does nothing unless you explicitly choose SkyBlock generation, so you can switch between normal and SkyBlock worlds without restarting. Why You'd Use This SkyBlock has always been this weird space between Minecraft's survival creativity and puzzle-game logic. You want the freedom to build whatever you imagine, but you're also solving a resource puzzle that sometimes has no solution. CarpetSkyAdditions is for players who love that tension but want it to feel less like a wall and more like a challenge. There are a few specific reasons to install it: You want SkyBlock progression that doesn't require external tools or spreadsheets (though the mod acknowledges that tools like Chunkbase are still useful for finding specific structures) You're running a small SMP or server where SkyBlock rules could be fun for a season, but vanilla SkyBlock would kill momentum in week two You like the idea of starting with almost nothing, but you don't want that to translate into 30 hours of grinding before actual gameplay happens The 510 stars on the GitHub repo tells you something - this isn't a niche project anymore. It's become the go-to way to run SkyBlock on modern Minecraft versions. Getting It Running Installation depends on your setup. The simplest route is grabbing the Vanilla Sky: Everything from Nothing modpack from CurseForge, which comes pre-configured with everything you need. For a custom server or single-player with existing mods, you'll need fabric-carpet installed first (if you don't have it). Then add the CarpetSkyAdditions mod itself. The latest stable release is version 1.20.6-4.4.2, which works on recent Minecraft versions. To create a new world, select SkyBlock as your world type during creation, then enable the datapack "carpetskyadditions/skyblock". If you want extra difficulty, also enable "carpetskyadditions/skyblock_acacia" to start with only an Acacia tree instead of the more generous Oak tree. For servers, follow the detailed installation instructions in the project documentation. The GitHub repo includes everything you need. One thing worth noting: fabric-carpet itself has a learning curve if you've never used Carpet before, but the mod handles most of the heavy lifting automatically once installed. What Changes in Gameplay The biggest addition is access to lava. This sounds simple until you realize lava gates you to the Nether, the End, and infinite cobblestone via the classic lava-water trick. Without it, vanilla SkyBlock is basically impossible. CarpetSkyAdditions adds a method to obtain lava early without breaking progression logic - you'll have to solve it yourself, but it's solvable. Sand generation is also expanded, since vanilla SkyBlock leaves you with almost none. The mod creates new ways to farm sand without making it trivial. You'll still need to think about your sand farm layout, which is honestly where a lot of the fun comes in. Most other additions are cosmetic or quality-of-life focused. You can obtain Dead Bushes, Ender Dragon heads, and other normally inaccessible blocks. The datapack also includes new advancements to guide progression and document what the mod changes from vanilla - useful if you're learning the ropes. The maintainer was deliberate about philosophy here. Changes go into the datapack instead of the mod code when possible, specifically so you can customize or disable what you don't like. Tips That'll Save You Frustration SkyBlock gameplay depends on understanding Minecraft mechanics in ways casual survival doesn't. The mod doesn't change that - it just removes the artificial resource walls. You'll still need patience. Grab the project's recommended external tools early. Chunkbase helps you locate structures without wandering blindly; MiniHUD shows chunk borders and other debug info that SkyBlock players find indispensable. The project explicitly encourages their use, so you're not "cheating" by using them. If you're building something like an automated farm or sorting system, the Minecraft Block Search tool at minecraft.how/tools/block-search helps you verify which blocks you can actually obtain in your world - this cuts down on wasted builds. Look, similarly, if you're setting up a server or realm for friends, the Minecraft MOTD Creator at minecraft.how/tools/motd-creator makes it easy to communicate your world rules in the server listing. Plan your base location carefully. You won't be relocating mid-game without grief. Also: this is expert-level gameplay. The documentation and advancements guide you, but you'll spend time stuck on progression gates. That's intentional. If you want instant gratification, vanilla survival with creative-mode chunks exists for a reason. Other Projects in This Space If CarpetSkyAdditions doesn't sound right, there are alternatives worth knowing about. The original skyrising/skyblock project it's based on is more minimal - it generates the empty world but adds fewer features. It's lighter weight but requires more outside tool use. There's also the Vanilla Sky modpack mentioned above, which bundles CarpetSkyAdditions with a curated set of quality-of-life mods if you want a more comfortable experience. Archipelago is an entirely different take - it generates islands instead of a void, which changes progression drastically. Both are valid; CarpetSkyAdditions just assumes you want the classic SkyBlock difficulty curve. CarpetSkyAdditions is MIT licensed and has 510 GitHub stars, which reflects how well it's filled this particular niche. The Java codebase is actively maintained and reasonably straightforward if you want to fork it or contribute. 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 --- ### Suspicious Sand in Minecraft: Complete Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/suspicious-sand-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei Suspicious sand is a decorative block found in desert temples and other structures that hides ancient treasures inside. You'll need a brush tool to slowly extract items from it. It's basically Minecraft's way of making archaeology feel rewarding without just handing you everything at once. What Makes Suspicious Sand Different So suspicious sand arrived in Minecraft 1.20, and it fundamentally changed how we explore desert structures. It looks almost exactly like regular sand when you're walking past, but get close enough and you'll notice particles floating around it, hinting that something's buried underneath. That's your cue to grab a brush and start the painstaking process of excavation. The block itself is fragile in a specific way. Unlike normal sand that falls to the ground when unsupported, suspicious sand drops as an item if you break it with a shovel or your hand. That's intentional design. Mojang wanted to encourage you to use the brush instead, which slowly reveals what's inside without destroying anything. It's archaeology, not strip mining. Here's what caught me off guard initially. Suspicious sand only appears in specific structures, not scattered randomly through the world. In Java 26.1.2, you'll find it in desert temples, underwater ruins (sometimes called ocean ruins), and trail ruins. Each location has different treasures waiting inside, which makes hunting them all genuinely addictive. Bedrock has similar structures with suspicious variants of sand and gravel, depending on the environment. Finding Suspicious Sand in Your World Desert temples are the obvious starting point. You know those pyramid structures with the blue concrete blocks on top? Head inside and you'll spot suspicious sand in the chamber beneath the main floor. Break through carefully into that underground area (watch out for the pressure plate trap if you're not paying attention), and you'll find suspicious sand blocks scattered throughout. The texture's noticeably different from the sandstone walls around it, so it's hard to miss once you know what you're looking for. The amount varies depending on the temple's design. Some have just a couple of suspicious blocks, others have much more. I've dug through temples where the entire chamber floor was covered in them. It's worth taking your time to brush every single one because the loot difference between blocks is huge. Underwater ruins require different preparation. You'll need either a bucket, water breathing potions, or an oxygen system to explore these properly. The structures themselves are smaller and more spread out than desert temples, scattered across ocean and river floors. Suspicious sand appears alongside suspicious gravel in these underwater temples, making it straightforward to spot the archaeological sites. The loot quality is lower than desert temples but still worth collecting. Trail ruins are the newer structures, and they're honestly the most interesting archaeologically. These are naturally generated pathways with suspicious blocks embedded in various materials. Different regions of trail ruins have different loot tables. That means you might want to explore multiple ones to get complete pottery collections. Here's the thing, you'll find them in wooded, sandy, and snowy biomes depending on the region. If you want to systematically locate all structures in your world, the Minecraft Block Search tool helps you find suspicious sand and other blocks without wandering endlessly. It's saved me countless hours when I'm working on large-scale collection projects on my server. The Brush: Your Archaeological Tool Mining suspicious sand with a brush takes patience. We're talking about 40 game ticks, roughly two seconds, of holding right-click to extract each item hidden inside. It's slow enough to make you feel like you're carefully uncovering ancient artifacts, not so tedious that you'll abandon the hunt. Crafting a brush requires a feather, a copper ingot, and a stick. Arrange them on a crafting table and you've got yourself an archaeology tool. The brush is durable enough for serious digging sessions, though it'll eventually break. You'll want to keep materials handy if you're planning on excavating multiple structures. Each suspicious block can contain multiple items. They don't all pop out at once. Instead, they reveal one at a time as you continue brushing, which creates actual suspense. You might extract three pottery shards, then a diamond, then an enchanted book from a single block. The variety keeps each excavation interesting. Different structure types have different loot pools, so desert temple contents never feel repetitive compared to what you'll find in underwater ruins or trail ruins. One thing I appreciate: suspicious sand doesn't require the brush to be in perfect condition. A nearly-broken brush works just as well as a fresh one, you just need to replace it sooner. Planning loot runs is easier when you're not worrying about tool durability mid-excavation. Treasures Worth Hunting Desert temples are the prize destination. You're looking at pottery shards, enchanted books, gold ingots, diamonds, iron ingots, and emeralds. Some players hunt desert temples specifically for treasure because the loot genuinely outperforms basic mining. A well-excavated temple might yield more diamonds than you'd find in hours of strip mining. Pottery shards deserve special attention because they're unique to archaeology. You can't get them anywhere else in survival mode. Four matching pottery shards combine to create a decorated pot, which is a legitimately nice decorative block for building. Different designs are found in different structures, so completing full collections actually takes effort and planning. Underwater ruins offer less flashy loot but are still worthwhile. You'll find pottery shards, books, copper items, and occasional valuable materials. They're easier to excavate than desert temples (no traps) but typically contain less treasure per structure. Trail ruins are the newest addition to archaeology. They're packed with pottery shards of different colors, torches, books, and occasional emeralds. Different regions of trail ruins have different loot tables, which means you might want to explore multiple areas. A trail ruins in a desert biome has different contents than one in a taiga, making them genuinely worth revisiting as you explore new terrain. Building and Decorating with Suspicious Sand Don't think of suspicious sand purely as a loot source. Some builders use it as a deliberate building block, and honestly, the visual difference from regular sand actually works. The slightly different texture creates visual interest, especially when you're creating desert ruins or archaeological dig sites. I've seen servers where players create fake excavation museums. They'll place suspicious sand blocks deliberately in designed spaces and let visitors extract the loot, turning archaeology into a social activity. It's creative problem-solving that extends the block's usefulness beyond its original function. If you're building these kinds of spaces, the Minecraft Text Generator helps you create custom signage and labels for your dig sites. Professional-looking placards explaining what's being excavated add atmosphere and context to your builds. Here's the real talk though. Once you've collected all the pottery shards and treasures you actually need, suspicious sand becomes less urgent as a mining target. But that doesn't mean it's done being useful. The block has genuine character and visual interest that plain sand lacks. In the right context, it looks amazing as a building material. Tips for Efficient Archaeology Bring multiple brushes when exploring large structures. A single brush won't last through an entire temple, and you don't want to be stuck mid-excavation with a broken tool. Gather all your suspicious blocks first before brushing them. It's actually more efficient to clear an entire structure of suspicious sand, then sit down and brush them all at once. You'll get into a rhythm and finish faster than bouncing between blocks. Different structures reward different play styles. Desert temples are one-time jackpots where you get everything in a single location. Underwater ruins require more swimming and organization but are safer. Trail ruins are scattered widely but renewable in a sense because there are always more out there in unexplored terrain. Pick your strategy based on what you're actually trying to collect. Mark your structures on a map or use coordinates if you're exploring with friends. Archaeology is better as a shared activity, and you'll want to remember where good dig sites are for future visits. --- ### Minecraft Llama Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-llama-spawning-farming-guide Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei Llamas are useful passive mobs that spawn in specific biomes. They drop leather and sticks when killed, breed with hay bales, and can be tamed with hay bales to carry chests. This guide covers spawning mechanics, drop rates, and how to build an efficient llama farm. Where Llamas Spawn in Minecraft Llamas show up in savanna and windswept hills biomes, which makes sense if you've ever thought about real-world llama habitats (they're high-altitude animals, after all). They spawn in groups of four to six at light levels 7 and above, though I've noticed they seem to prefer elevated terrain. You'll find them most consistently in windswept hills, where the mountains give you plenty of natural spawning spots. One thing worth knowing: they'll spawn in these specific biomes on both Java and Bedrock, but spawn rates can vary. The altitude doesn't matter nearly as much as the biome type itself, so don't bother climbing to Y level 200 expecting more llamas. They'll spawn at sea level just fine if you're in the right biome. If you can't find llamas naturally, you've got options. Creative mode, commands, and spawn eggs are all ways to get them if you're in a rush. For vanilla survival, though, just travel to a savanna or windswept hills biome and you'll spot them within a few minutes of searching. What Llamas Drop and How to Maximize Yields When you kill a llama, it drops leather (0-2 pieces) and sticks (0-2 pieces). That's... not a lot, honestly. The leather's useful for armor crafting, but it's not like you'll be farming llamas specifically for drops. They're better as transport mules. Here's the catch: if a llama has a carpet on its back when it dies, the carpet drops separately. Same goes for a chest on a caravanned llama. So if your goal is to gather specific items from llamas, you're actually harvesting whatever's inside those containers, not the llama itself. Llamas breed with hay bales, consuming one per successful breeding. Baby llamas drop no items when killed, so breeding isn't a strategy for generating drops. It's purely for creating more pack animals. One baby llama spawns per breeding pair, and it takes about 20 minutes for a baby to grow into an adult. Taming Llamas for Your Farm Taming a llama is straightforward: grab a hay bale and right-click the llama repeatedly until you see hearts floating above its head. On my test server, this usually took about five clicks per llama, which is faster than taming horses but slower than wolves. The hay bale gets consumed in the process, so bring a few. Once tamed, a llama gets a saddle-like texture on its back. It won't allow you to ride it directly (they're not horses), but you can attach a chest to it to turn it into a pack animal. Shift-right-click with a chest in your hand to do this. A tamed llama will follow you if you're holding a hay bale in your hand. Lead them to your farm this way. The carpets are purely cosmetic. They don't affect the llama's carrying capacity, which is always 3x3 inventory slots. You can put a chest on a llama, and the chest will have 15 slots of storage, making each llama incredibly useful for transport. Building Your Llama Farm Here's where it gets practical. A functional llama farm needs breeding pairs, space for baby llamas to grow, food supplies, and some thought about what you're actually using them for. Llamas are quieter than cows and don't need special enclosures, so they're easy to manage compared to other passive mobs. Start with at least two llamas in a flat, enclosed area. Hay bales are the only food they eat, so stock up on those. If you're not sure where to source hay bales or need to locate specific blocks quickly, the Minecraft Block Search tool can help you identify which blocks to farm for crafting hay. Give the llamas space. They'll wander around, and cramped conditions frustrate them. A 10x10 area works for a small breeding operation, but I'd recommend 20x20 if you're aiming for a larger herd. Feed them hay bales when you want them to breed, and they'll produce babies. Every time a breeding pair eats a hay bale, there's a chance they'll produce a baby. Give it a moment, and the baby will appear. Lighting doesn't matter for llamas spawning in your farm (they won't spawn naturally in enclosed areas, but they won't despawn if you're nearby). Just make sure the space is escape-proof. Llamas can jump surprisingly high. If you're running a server and want to manage your llama farm remotely or across multiple instances, proper DNS routing helps coordinate multiple locations. The Free Minecraft DNS tool can assist with server infrastructure setup. Why Bother With Llamas? Llamas serve a few purposes that make farming them worthwhile. First, they're excellent for transport. If you're doing long-distance travel across your world and need to haul resources, a llama with a chest is invaluable. Drop items in the chest, grab a hay bale, and lead your llama wherever you're going. Second, decoration. If you're building a farm aesthetic or a frontier-style base, llamas add character. They're not hard to spot in a landscape, and they move around enough to feel alive. Third, they're renewable. Unlike horses (which require specific breeding conditions with golden items), llamas breed with just hay bales, making them a sustainable source of pack animals. Trading isn't a thing with llamas like it's with villagers, so don't expect economic value there. But for utility, they're solid. Honestly, i've used them extensively on my own server for moving enchanted books and bulk materials between bases. Common Mistakes to Avoid People often forget that llamas wander. If you tame a llama and then turn away, it might walk off a cliff. They don't listen to you like dogs do, so they're not pets in that sense. Lead them carefully or keep them in an enclosed space. Another mistake: overstocking hay bales. You don't need a massive reserve. A stack or two is enough for casual breeding. Focus your farming resources elsewhere if your goal is sustainability. Hay bales are easy to produce (just plant wheat and craft them), so there's no real bottleneck. And this one's weird but real: don't assume llamas are hostile. They're not. They can spit, but only when they're being attacked or provoked. Leave them alone and they'll never bother you. Last thing: if you're building a llama farm specifically for aesthetics, consider the color variation. Llamas come in four color variants (brown, cream, gray, and white), and the variance is random. If you care about color consistency, you'll need patience. On my server, I ended up with mostly brown ones, which actually looked better for the frontier feel I was going for. --- ### The Complete Guide to Minecraft Sponges URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/sponges-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei Sponges are special water-absorbing blocks in Minecraft that clear out water in their area when placed. You'll find them in ocean monuments and can get them from Elder Guardians. They're essential for underwater building projects, and there are different types and mechanics depending on your version. What Are Sponges, Exactly? Sponges come in two varieties: wet sponges and dry sponges. Both absorb water, but only dry sponges actually remove water blocks from the world. Real talk, when you place a dry sponge near water, it absorbs everything within a 7-block radius (that's a cube around it), creating an air pocket you can breathe in. Pretty handy when you're trying to build underwater. Wet sponges, on the other hand, just sit there. They don't do much in survival mode unless you've got a furnace nearby. Toss a wet sponge into a furnace and you'll get a dry sponge back, plus a little experience if you're lucky. The color difference between them is visual too. Dry sponges are a yellowish-tan, while wet sponges have that darker, more saturated orange-brown look. Where to Find Sponges This is where most players get stuck. You won't find sponges lying around in caves or anywhere else in the world naturally. The only place they spawn is inside ocean monuments, those massive underwater structures that look like they're made of prismarine. They're scattered throughout the structure in a few specific locations, usually in the rooms at the top. Getting to an ocean monument is the hard part. You'll need to survive the journey to the structure itself, deal with the guardians (annoying fish that shoot lasers), and eventually face off against the Elder Guardian, which is basically the boss of the monument. Defeat that, and you'll get a sponge drop along with other loot. Even better, breaking the wet sponges inside the monument directly gives you them as blocks. Finding the monument in the first place? Your best bet is looking for it in deep ocean biomes or using the locate command if you're okay with that. How Water Absorption Works Place a dry sponge and watch it work. The absorption happens in a cube shape extending 7 blocks out in all directions from the sponge's center. And that means a single sponge covers about 14 blocks total in each direction, depending on what you count. If there's water in that radius, it vanishes instantly. But here's the catch - the sponge only works once. After it absorbs water, it becomes a wet sponge and stops functioning. You'll need to grab it, dry it in a furnace, and place it again. For large-scale water removal projects, you're looking at placing multiple sponges or doing a lot of furnace runs. And if the sponge is already placed when you add water nearby, it won't retroactively absorb that new water. You've to place the sponge after the water's there. Using Sponges for Construction Underwater base? Sponges are your friend. Want to build in an ocean without breathing underwater the entire time? Place a few sponges in your work area and suddenly you've got an air pocket to work in. Game-changer for underwater architecture. Clearing flooded caves or dungeons becomes way less tedious with sponges too. No more slowly draining water with sand or gravel. Just place a sponge, collect it once it's wet, dry it, and repeat. If you're setting up a multiplayer server where multiple builders are working on projects, managing water becomes way simpler. You might even want to set up a whitelist for your server if you're running a private build project with a specific group. There's also the aesthetic angle. Some builders prefer sponge-based water removal over other methods because it's clean, instant, and doesn't leave behind blocks you've to clean up afterward. Farming Sponges Efficiently Now, here's where things get interesting. Sponges don't farm like crops. You can't set up an automatic sponge farm the way you'd farm wheat or sugarcane. Your only source is Elder Guardians, and they only spawn in ocean monuments. Some servers have built massive Guardian farms around ocean monuments. The idea is to create conditions where Guardians spawn constantly, funnel them to a grinder, and harvest their drops. If you've got the patience and resources, you can generate a decent sponge supply this way. It's definitely not a starter project, though. For most players, collecting sponges from the monument directly is faster. Break the wet sponges you find inside, dry them in a furnace back home, and stack them up for future use. If you need a lot of sponges for a big project, it's worth planning a dedicated monument run. Java Edition vs Bedrock Edition They work mostly the same way, but there are some differences worth noting. In Java Edition, sponges have been around since earlier versions and behave consistently. Bedrock Edition added sponges much later and has identical mechanics now, but you might encounter compatibility issues if you're playing on older Bedrock worlds. The absorption radius is the same in both (7 blocks in each direction). Furnace drying works identically. If you're switching between editions, don't worry about sponge behavior changing on you. One thing to keep in mind if you're running a public server with both Java and Bedrock players - you might want to use a skin creator tool to ensure your players can customize their characters properly while they're doing sponge runs or other building work together. Is Sponge Farming Worth It? That depends on your project scope. Building one small underwater base? Grab the sponges from the nearest ocean monument and you're done. Running a large creative server with tons of underwater construction? Setting up a Guardian farm makes sense long-term. The barrier to entry is real, though. You need to find a monument, survive the journey, deal with combat, and set up drying infrastructure. For casual players, sponges are more of a "use them when you find them" tool rather than something to actively farm. But they're invaluable when you actually need them, and there's no real substitute for the water-clearing speed they provide. --- ### Master Advanced Redstone: A Hands-On Look at ProjectRed URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/projectred-minecraft-advanced-redstone Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei MrTJP/ProjectRed Redstone Engineering If you've ever stared at a Minecraft redstone contraption and thought "this feels... limited," you're not alone. Vanilla redstone has its charm, but once you've built a few repeaters and comparators, you hit a wall. ProjectRed breaks that wall open with advanced gates, wires, and automation components that let you build the kind of circuits that actually feel like real engineering. What ProjectRed Does So what exactly are we talking about here? ProjectRed is a Forge mod that extends Minecraft's redstone system with dozens of new components. We're not just talking about a few extra gates either. The mod gives you fabricated gates (which are basically programmable logic circuits), bundled cables (think color-coded wire bundles), wires that carry signals through walls, and automation equipment that turns everyday tasks into something you can trigger with a button. The magic is in the modularity. You don't have to install everything at once. Folks who try this can grab just the core redstone components, or layer on the expansion module for automation tools, or add the exploration module for new ores and items. Pick what you need, skip what you don't. When You'd Want This Stripped down to basics: if you're playing on a server and want better automation, or if you're a technical player who's tired of building massive redstone spreads, ProjectRed saves you space and headaches. A concrete example: say you're running an automated farm. With vanilla redstone, you're connecting comparators to repeaters to pistons, and your redstone line stretches across three chunks. ProjectRed gets you there with a fraction of the blocks. Bundled cables let you send multiple signals through one cable, and programmable gates reduce wiring complexity significantly. On a crowded server (check out the Minecraft Server List if you're looking for one), this is genuinely useful. Another use case: building a large redstone computer or calculator. If you're the type who gets excited about binary logic, ProjectRed's gates open up possibilities that vanilla redstone makes painfully tedious. Installation and Version Support Alright, let's get this running. ProjectRed is a Forge mod, so you'll need Minecraft Forge installed first. Head to the Forge website, grab the installer for your Minecraft version (the mod currently supports 1.21.1, 1.20.4, and 1.20.1), and install it. Not covering the full Forge setup here, but it's straightforward. Once Forge is ready, grab the ProjectRed files. The mod comes in modules: codeProjectRed-1.21.1-4.22.0-core.jar # Essential --grab this always ProjectRed-1.21.1-4.22.0-expansion.jar # Automation tools and extras ProjectRed-1.21.1-4.22.0-exploration.jar # New ores and crafting materials That syntax looks clean, but here's the real-world stuff: most players grab core plus expansion. The exploration module is nice for a survival playthrough, but it's not critical. Dump these into your Mods folder (if you're using a Minecraft launcher, it usually creates this folder automatically), restart Minecraft, and you're done. One thing worth noting: if you're on an older version, the mod's still available. The project supports 1.19.2 and even older releases, but those versions are marked end-of-life. Stick with 1.21.1 or 1.20.4 if you're starting fresh. Key Features That Matter Fabricated Gates This is where things get powerful. Fabricated gates are essentially programmable logic components. Instead of building your logic with separate AND gates, OR gates, and repeaters, you program one gate to behave however you need. It's like the difference between assembling a computer from individual transistors versus using integrated circuits. You draw out a small circuit diagram in a GUI, program the logic, and the gate does exactly what you specified. For simple circuits, it's overkill. For complex automation, it saves you enormous amounts of space. Bundled Cables Normally, redstone wire carries a single signal line. Bundled cables carry 16 signals at once, each on its own "color." This is huge for any installation that needs to control multiple systems. Route one bundled cable instead of 16 separate redstone lines. The mod also added ComputerCraft bundled cable compatibility in the latest release, which means if you're running CC:Tweaked, you can tie everything together in one cohesive automation system. That's genuinely impressive. Wires and Connectors The mod introduces wires that can be hidden inside blocks and connectors that route signals in ways vanilla redstone can't. This cuts down on the visual clutter of redstone dust trails everywhere. Functionally, it does what vanilla redstone does, but cleaner. Multi-Part Blocks Some of ProjectRed's blocks can exist in the same space as other blocks, which sounds weird but makes wiring less intrusive. You can attach components to faces of blocks without needing a dedicated redstone block. Project Bench This is a crafting utility that lets you set up large recipes and queue multiple crafts. Not pure redstone engineering, but incredibly useful for multiplayer or long-term builds where you need to mass-produce items. Common Issues and How to Avoid Them Mod conflicts happen. Real talk, projectRed plays nicely with most mods, but occasionally a mod that heavily modifies redstone behavior will cause problems. If you're building a big modpack, test ProjectRed in isolation first, then add other redstone-heavy mods one at a time. Fabricated gates crashing. In earlier versions, there were some edge cases with the project bench that could cause crashes when saving plans. The latest release (1.21.1-4.22.0) fixed most of these, but if you hit weird crashes, update first. Wires not connecting properly. If your wires look like they should connect to a block but aren't propagating the signal, check whether you're on an inner corner. There was a bug where wires on inner corners didn't always propagate correctly. Again, the latest release fixed it. Server stability depends on how aggressive you get with fabricated gates. ProjectRed is pretty lightweight, but if you're running a small server and add a ton of complex gates, you might see lag during block ticks. Keep your contraptions reasonable and you'll be fine. Other Redstone Mods Worth Knowing About ProjectRed isn't the only advanced redstone mod out there, though it's arguably the most polished. Create is different because it's more about mechanical rotation and motion than pure logic gates. It's fantastic for contraptions that move things around and do mechanical work, but it's not redstone-focused. Immersive Engineering includes some redstone-adjacent automation, but it's more of a general engineering mod. If you want pure redstone complexity, ProjectRed does it better. Integrated Dynamics is more about networks and pipes than traditional redstone. It's powerful but has a steeper learning curve and does something slightly different. For most people looking for advanced redstone circuits, ProjectRed is the play. It's actively maintained, well-documented, and the mod's been around long enough that most weird edge cases are fixed. Before Installing: Quick Checklist Make sure your Forge version matches your Minecraft version. Version mismatches are the #1 installation problem. If you're playing multiplayer, check that everyone's running the same modules. Don't have one person with expansion and another without it. Consider performance on older hardware. The mod's not heavy, but fabricated gates with lots of complex logic can add up. One last thing: if you're looking to understand the full spectrum of Minecraft blocks and items you'll be working with alongside ProjectRed, the Minecraft Block Search tool is useful for checking vanilla block properties and how they integrate with modded components. Honestly, yeah. If you've hit the ceiling on what vanilla redstone can do, ProjectRed opens up a whole new level of automation and engineering. The mod's actively maintained (the latest release just came out for 1.21.1), it's stable, and it's got a real community behind it. Plus, it's MIT licensed, so you can use it however you want. The learning curve is real. Fabricated gates take some getting used to, and bundled cables require rethinking how you approach wiring. But once you click, you click. Worth the effort. 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 --- ### Exploring Minecraft's Meadow Biome: Loot, Mobs, and Building Ideas URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/meadow-biome-loot-mobs-builds Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei Meadow biomes are colorful, pastoral areas filled with wildflowers, bee nests, and peaceful mobs. You'll find rabbits, bees, and the occasional chicken. While loot is limited compared to other biomes, meadows offer excellent building opportunities and a genuinely calming atmosphere.What Makes Meadows Stand OutMeadows showed up in Minecraft 26.1.2, and honestly, they feel less chaotic than most biomes. Unlike dense forests or spiky badlands, meadows are all about gentle rolling terrain, varied wildflowers, and wide-open spaces. The whole vibe is more pastoral village-feels than dangerous dungeon-crawl.The terrain isn't flat, but it rolls naturally without extreme hills. You'll notice the grass is taller and bushier than in regular plains. Bees nest in trees scattered throughout, which actually serves a purpose beyond decoration.And the wildflowers...there are so many colors. Tall grass, poppy, cornflower, tulips, dandelion, allium, blue orchids - all mixed together. It genuinely looks alive.Loot You'll UseLet's be honest: meadow loot is sparse. You're not coming here for rare drops or treasure. But there's still useful stuff if you know what to grab.Flowers are the main resource. All those wildflowers scattered around? Grab them. Dye is always useful, whether you're decorating concrete or working on banners. A few stacks of flowers sustain a lot of crafting projects.Bee nests are scattered through trees, and these are genuinely valuable if you want honeycomb without hunting for bees elsewhere. Break them with a silk touch pickaxe (otherwise the bees get upset and the nest vanishes), and you've got honeycomb blocks for decoration or waxing your copper builds. Honey bottles are useful for healing too.Rabbits drop rabbit hide and meat, which isn't game-changing but useful early-game. Tall grass yields seeds. Seeds are underrated honestly.If you're playing multiplayer and want to set up a proper meadow base with multiple players, you might want to configure your server settings properly. A quality Server Properties Generator can help you tweak the right settings for collaborative building. Also, monitoring your server health is important when multiple people are building at once, so use a Minecraft Server Status Checker to keep tabs on performance.Mobs in MeadowsHere's the thing: meadows aren't dangerous. That's kinda the point.Rabbits spawn frequently and don't do anything except hop around and look cute. Occasionally they'll eat crops if you leave any planted, which is mildly annoying but manageable.Bees are the standout mob for meadows. They nest in the trees, pollinate flowers (which is visual but charming), and fly around being generally peaceful. Attack them and they get hostile, which is fair. Look, just leave them alone - they're better as scenery anyway.Passive mobs like chickens, sheep, and cows spawn here too, same as any biome. Hostile mobs spawn at night like everywhere else, so meadows don't give you protection from skeletons or creepers once the sun sets. No unique dangerous mobs call meadows home.Building in MeadowsThis is where meadows genuinely shine. The terrain and ambiance make them perfect for specific build types that feel right in a way that mountain or nether builds don't.Cottage core building is obvious. Meadows scream rustic farmhouse vibes. Small houses with wooden beams, hay bale accents, and gardens full of flowers just work here. Add some animal pens, a vegetable garden, and maybe a windmill, and you've got something genuinely charming without looking generic.But you don't have to stick with cottages. The open space and gentle rolling hills are perfect for larger community builds. A village expansion, a marketplace, even a small town feels natural here. The flat-enough terrain makes building easier than in mountains, but it's not so flat that it feels boring.I've seen people build entire medieval towns in meadows, and they look fantastic. The flower variety adds natural color without needing dyes or banners. Fantasy villages, horse ranches, lavender farms, cottages with working gardens - whatever pastoral aesthetic you're after, meadows support it.Bee farms work naturally here too, since nests already exist throughout the biome. You can actually collect nests and transplant them, then build a proper apiary structure around the natural resources already present.Tips for Exploring MeadowsBring a silk touch pickaxe. Breaking bee nests normally destroys them, and you lose access to honeycomb. Silk touch pickaxes are easy once you've mined iron.Flowers are everywhere, so grab them casually as you explore. You don't need dedicated farming routes. They're just sitting around waiting to be used.Meadows often connect to other biomes, so exploring from a meadow base lets you scout forests, swamps, or mountains safely. It's a good starting location if you're surveying terrain. The visibility is decent and mobs are limited during the day.Build near water when possible. Meadows don't always have lakes or rivers nearby, but when they do, they're great for builds. Water adds visual interest and practical utility.Worth Your TimeYeah, actually. Meadow biomes aren't flashy or dangerous, but they're genuinely useful and beautiful. The building potential alone makes them worth exploring. Loot might be minimal, but for peaceful survival play or creative projects, they're perfect.If you're building a multiplayer server and want a good central location for player bases, meadows tick all the boxes. They're safe enough for peaceful play, visually interesting enough to feel special, and spacious enough to accommodate multiple builds without feeling cramped.Honestly, after years of playing Minecraft, I appreciate biomes like meadows. Not everything needs to be a dangerous cave system or treasure-laden dimension. Sometimes you just want somewhere pretty to build. --- ### Minecraft Badlands Biome: Loot, Mobs, and Building Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/badlands-biome-loot-mobs-builds Published: 2026-06-11 Author: Alexandru Maftei The Badlands is one of Minecraft's most visually striking biomes, filled with towering terracotta plateaus that look like something between a desert and a fantasy landscape. Whether you're mining for gold, collecting terracotta variants, or looking for an interesting building location, the Badlands offers unique opportunities that other biomes can't match. Let me break down what you need to know about this colorful desert. What Exactly Is the Badlands Biome? Picture a massive desert, but instead of sand, replace it with layers of colored clay. That's the Badlands. Every surface is stained terracotta in various colors: orange, brown, red, yellow, and tan. Unlike regular deserts that feel flat and boring, Badlands feature steep cliffs, deep valleys, and plateau formations that make the landscape genuinely exciting to explore. There are two main variants. The regular Badlands is mostly open, with minimal vegetation. That Wooded Badlands throws in some trees and grass patches, creating a weird hybrid between forest and desert that feels almost post-apocalyptic. Underground, things get interesting fast. Deep cavern systems carve through the bedrock, exposing massive quantities of ore veins. Lava lakes are common, especially at lower depths. You might stumble into an abandoned mineshaft tunnel cutting through the terracotta, which gives you a head start on mining without doing much excavation yourself. The Mobs of the Badlands Desert mobs spawn here like anywhere else: creepers, skeletons, spiders at night, the occasional enderman. Hoglins and piglins might show up depending on proximity to Nether portals, but they're not native to the biome itself. None of this is particularly exotic or threatening compared to other desert biomes. What makes mobs dangerous in the Badlands is the terrain, not the creatures. Skeletons perched on elevated terracotta formations have excellent sightlines for shooting at you from above. Fall damage is a bigger killer than any mob, honestly. One wrong step around a cliff edge and you're tumbling 40-50 blocks into a lava lake. Night exploration is rough. Visibility is poor, and mobs have the high ground advantage everywhere. Loot, Ore, and What's Worth Mining Gold ore spawns in the Badlands at nearly triple the frequency of mountains. If you need gold for crafting purposes or building gold farms, a few hours of strip mining here beats weeks of searching elsewhere. In Minecraft 26.1.2, this makes the Badlands valuable for players gearing up for the Nether or preparing for endgame content. Iron ore is also abundant. Copper deposits appear frequently enough that you can farm impressive quantities of weathered copper for decorative builds. Diamonds still spawn at the same rate as everywhere else, but with all the cave systems exposed, you'll find them eventually through exploration alone. Ancient debris, typically a Nether farming resource, generates slightly more frequently in the Badlands than in the traditional Nether hunting grounds. Not by an overwhelming margin, but enough that speedrunners sometimes prefer Badlands mining over Nether expeditions when they want to stay in the overworld. One overlooked detail: buried treasure generates here like any ocean biome edge. If you've got a treasure map and there's an ocean touching Badlands coast, follow that map. You might find valuable loot marked by X. Terracotta Variants: The Real Treasure Every stained terracotta color spawns naturally in the Badlands. Red, orange, yellow, brown, light gray, gray, white, cyan, purple, blue, green, lime, pink, magenta, and light blue terracotta blocks form the landscape. You can mine all of these with a silk touch pickaxe and use them directly in builds without any crafting step. This is genuinely why builders flock to Badlands. If you're designing a large structure with terracotta roofing or accent walls, spending a day strip mining here nets more blocks than you'll probably need for years. Collect stack upon stack, bring it back home, and you've got unlimited palette options for your builds. Building Ideas for Badlands Terrain The existing color palette practically demands certain building styles. Here's the thing, desert compounds, adobe structures, and canyon fortresses feel natural in the Badlands environment. You can also build massive canyon cities that seem to emerge from the plateau formations themselves. Building within the existing terrain is better than bulldozing it. Use the natural terracotta layers as a foundation for multi-story structures. When you stack your build on top of the plateau, it looks like an organic part of the landscape rather than a dropped-in structure. But that visual integration is harder to achieve in flat biomes. Underground builds work equally well. The deep caverns and mineshaft systems create natural foundations for hidden bases. Carve out chambers, smooth the walls, add some custom lighting, and suddenly you've got an architectural space that feels genuinely dramatic. The biggest mistake builders make is ignoring the existing color scheme. An orange plateau landscape looks terrible when you plop down a gray concrete structure in the middle of it. Match your materials to the terrain. Use orange concrete, weathered copper, orange terracotta, and warm wood tones. The blend makes builds feel intentional, not out of place. Want to find building inspiration? Browse custom skins from our community to see how other players style their characters in Badlands-themed gear. Finding Badlands in Your World Badlands spawn in specific biome clusters, usually near mesas and desert biomes. They're common enough that you'll find one within a few thousand blocks of spawn if you explore outward, but if you want to get there faster, biome finder tools save time. Biome finders work by applying Minecraft's biome generation algorithm to your seed, then showing you coordinates of every biome type. You drop in your seed, they calculate, and you get exact coordinates to major biomes. The distinctive orange and red terracotta plateaus are visible from enormous distances, so once you know roughly where to go, actually finding the Badlands is trivial. Just walk toward the colorful terrain. Survival and Exploration Tips Bring extra building blocks. Deep cavern exploration will force you into situations where you need escape routes. Falling into lava at Y-level -20 is not how you want to spend your afternoon. Water buckets are mandatory for mining at lower depths. You'll encounter lava lakes constantly. Set up a temporary base camp near any mineshaft you find. Most Badlands have at least one mineshaft system threading through the layers. Use it as a landmark, supply depot, and navigation reference while you mine deeper. If you're playing on a multiplayer server, a stable connection matters more in the Badlands than most biomes. One lag spike while traversing a narrow cliff path leads to unnecessary falls. Configure your connection properly with our free DNS tools to keep your ping consistent and your character alive. Night mining isn't worth it. Return to your base, sleep, and resume at dawn when you can see terrain hazards clearly. Most Badlands deaths come from visibility issues, not actual mob combat. ---