# 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 Your First Automatic Farm in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/automatic-farm-minecraft-guide Published: 2026-05-04 Author: ice Automatic farms handle crop harvesting, ore collection, and more while you're off doing something else. The key is redstone mechanics and water flows that push items into collection systems. Once you understand the basics, you can build farms that run forever without touching a thing. What is an Automatic Farm and Why Build One? An automatic farm is exactly what it sounds like: a farm that harvests itself. You set up the mechanics once, and the farm keeps producing. No more standing around with a shovel waiting for crops to grow. It's one of those Minecraft concepts that seems complicated until you actually build one, then you realize it's just applied physics. The real value shows up after 20 minutes of operation. Most automatic farms rely on three core ideas: water pushing items, hoppers sorting them, and either player proximity or timer-based mechanics triggering the harvest. Crops need water and light to grow, but once they're mature, breaking them and collecting the drops is pure logistics. Redstone handles the logistics. Since Minecraft 1.15 added bees and honeycomb, bee farms became viable too. Actually, that's not quite right for all versions - Bedrock got bees earlier - but the Java edition is what we're focusing on here with version 26.1.2. You'll save hundreds of hours if you're playing a long survival world. Types of Farms Worth Building First Not all automatic farms are created equal. Some are dead simple (wheat or melon), others require understanding observer blocks and piston mechanics. Here's the thing, here's what actually makes sense to start with: Minecraft automatic farm with redstone pistons, water channels, and hopper collection system Crop Farms (Wheat, Carrots, Potatoes): Water flows down, mature crops break, water carries items to a collection point. These teach you the fundamental concept without headaches. Melon and Pumpkin Farms: Similar water-based collection, but the items spawn beside the stem instead of where you break it. Slightly trickier positioning. Sugarcane Farms: Probably the simplest setup for sheer item throughput. Pistons push mature sugarcane into water channels. Mob Farms: These require spawning mechanics knowledge and dark rooms. Save these for when you understand redstone timing. Bee Farms: You need to keep bees calm and collect honeycomb or honey bottles. Not particularly efficient compared to crops, but satisfying to set up. Start with wheat. Seriously. Essential Materials and Layout Basics Before you start digging, gather these materials. Most are straightforward to obtain on your first day: Minecraft automatic farm with redstone pistons, water channels, and hopper collection system Water buckets (for the farm mechanism) Hoppers (item collection - you'll need about 10 to start) Chests (storage for collected items) Redstone repeaters (for timing if you want automation) Observer blocks (detect when crops mature) Pistons (push items into water) Building blocks (whatever you want - dirt, stone, wood) The basic layout is this: grow crops in rows, place water channels between rows to collect drops, funnel that water toward hoppers leading into chests. Everything flows downhill from there. Hoppers are the bottleneck early on, not materials. Building Your First Wheat Farm Step by Step Here's the easiest automatic farm to start with. This design uses gravity and water, zero redstone required. Minecraft automatic farm with redstone pistons, water channels, and hopper collection system Step 1: Choose Your Location and Dig Find a flat area, or flatten one yourself. Mark out a rectangle about 30 blocks long and 16 blocks wide - adjustable, but this size is comfortable to manage. Dig down about 3 blocks deep. You need room for the farm above and the collection channel below. Step 2: Build the Growing Area Fill your dug-out area with farmland. Plant wheat in rows separated by one block. The one-block gaps between rows will become your water channels. You can also use alternate rows if you prefer: row of wheat, row of water, row of wheat, row of water. Either way works. Light is essential. Add torches every 12 blocks or use a roofed structure with lighting recessed into the ceiling. Step 3: Add Water for Growth Water needs to reach farmland within 4 blocks horizontally (or 1 block down) for crops to hydrate. Place water every 4 blocks in your gaps. Don't let it flow toward your collection channel yet - just let it sit. Step 4: Build the Collection Channel Below Below your wheat farm, dig out another channel that runs the length of the farm. This should be 1 block wide and slope toward a single collection point. At the far end, place hoppers in a staircase pattern leading into a chest or double chest. Step 5: Connect Water to the Collection Now comes the clever part. In your growth areas, dig down at one end and let the water flow downward into your collection channel. When you break the wheat manually or use pistons to break it, the water carries every drop down into the collection system. Items flow to your chest automatically. Test it: break one block of wheat by hand. Watch the items float toward your chest. Step 6: Add Automation (Optional but Worthwhile) For true automation, you need the crops to break themselves. Place pistons above alternating rows of wheat with the piston heads facing down. Connect those pistons to an observer block above the crops - the observer detects when wheat reaches maturity (by age 7), and triggers the pistons to push the wheat plants down. The plants break, items flow down, everything gets collected. One timing element: add a redstone repeater set to 2-3 ticks between the observer and the pistons so the items have time to separate before collection. If redstone timing feels overwhelming right now, just break crops manually at first. You'll learn the redstone patterns fast enough. Understanding Redstone for Farm Automation Redstone is the glue holding automatic farms together. You don't need to be a redstone genius, but a few concepts matter: Minecraft automatic farm with redstone pistons, water channels, and hopper collection system Observer Blocks detect state changes. When wheat grows from age 6 to age 7, the observer sees that change and sends out a one-tick pulse. That pulse can trigger pistons, droppers, whatever you want. Repeaters delay signals and lock them in. If you set a repeater to 4 ticks, the signal travels slower. This prevents pistons from firing too fast and items jamming up. A 2-3 tick delay is usually enough for crops. Timing is everything. Too fast and items back up. Too slow and you're not harvesting efficiently. Test it out. Comparators read container fullness. If you want your farm to pause when chests are full, a comparator can detect that and lock the redstone circuit off. This prevents item loss. Most farms don't actually need all this complexity at first. The key insight: redstone is just electricity in block form. Signals travel down wire, trigger mechanisms, and repeat as needed. You're not inventing anything new - you're just arranging known patterns. Every farm design is a remix of observer-repeater-piston loops. Scaling and Optimization Width Over Length: If you've one farm 30 blocks long, building another one 30 blocks long is often better than stretching the first to 60 blocks. Multiple independent farms mean you can upgrade one without breaking others. Storage Planning: A single double chest fills fast. Plan your storage based on how long you'll leave the farm running. Sugarcane farms produce insane item stacks - you might want four double chests just to keep up. Lighting Efficiency: Recessed lights (torches on the underside of blocks) save space and look better. You can also use soul lanterns or sea pickles if you want the look. One more practical tip: label your farms. If you're running multiple designs, you'll forget which one does what. Use a text generator tool to create custom signs with fancy fonts naming each farm by type and output. It saves you from standing there trying to remember if this wheat farm or that one is hooked up to your smelter. The difference between a functional farm and a well-organized farm system comes down to documentation and backup storage. If you're running a multiplayer server and want to showcase these farms to visitors, build them somewhere accessible. Some servers use votifier systems to highlight player builds - a carefully designed automatic farm setup looks impressive in those showcases. Build with visibility in mind, and consider using the Minecraft Votifier Tester to ensure your server's visibility is maximized if you're hosting. Automatic farms are worth the setup time. You'll run them for years in a single world, and the time investment pays back in hours saved. --- ### LeviLamina: Bedrock Modding Essentials URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/levilamina-bedrock-mod-loader Published: 2026-05-04 Author: ice "A lightweight, modular and versatile mod loader for Minecraft Bedrock Edition, formerly known as LiteLoaderBDS" LiteLDev/LeviLamina · github.com ⭐ 1,553 stars.0 Want to add custom gameplay features to Minecraft Bedrock but don't know where to start? LeviLamina is a mod loader that removes the technical barriers and gives you the API tools to build mods with C++. It's what makes extending Bedrock Edition actually possible. What This Loader Does LeviLamina is fundamentally a bridge between you and Minecraft Bedrock's internal systems. But it provides the hooks, APIs, and event infrastructure that official channels don't expose. Without it (or something like it), modding Bedrock means fighting the game's closed architecture. LeviLamina was formerly known as LiteLoaderBDS, which tells you it's been around for a while. The project now has 1553 stars on GitHub, so it's got real traction in the Bedrock modding community. One latest release, v26.10.10, tracks Minecraft's current version numbering (26.10.x), which keeps the tooling in sync. Think of it this way: Java Edition modders have Forge, Fabric, Quilt. Bedrock modders have essentially nothing official. LeviLamina fills that void. You get a full API, a powerful event system, utility interfaces, and the infrastructure to actually write functionality extensions in C++. Why Modding Bedrock Has Always Been a Pain Java Edition has a thriving modding ecosystem. Hundreds of loaders, thousands of community-maintained mods, years of accumulated knowledge. Bedrock Edition? Locked down. No official mod loader. The official Scripting API exists but it's intentionally limited for security reasons. Want to add custom blocks? Create custom creatures? Hook into events that don't exist in the public API? You're out of luck unless you reverse-engineer Bedrock itself. That's the gap LeviLamina fills. It exposes the internals that the official API deliberately hides. The result gives you an event system where you can respond to any server action. That lets you query and modify game state directly. For serious Bedrock modders, this is indispensable. Installation and Setup Getting LeviLamina running involves downloading the prebuilt loader from GitHub and integrating it into your server or client. The process is straightforward but requires some familiarity with your setup. For a server, you'll grab the server release package from the GitHub releases page: bash# Download the latest LeviLamina server release wget https://github.com/LiteLDev/LeviLamina/releases/download/v26.10.10/levilamina-v26.10.10-server-release-windows-x64.zip # Extract to your Bedrock Dedicated Server directory unzip levilamina-v26.10.10-server-release-windows-x64.zip -d /path/to/bedrock-server The project provides separate builds: debug and release versions for both server and client. Windows x64 is the primary target. If you need other platforms, the C++ codebase can be compiled from source with some additional tooling. Client installation follows the same pattern but uses the client release package. The full installation and configuration guide lives at the official documentation site, which covers both scenarios in detail. Core Features That Matter The event system is where LeviLamina gets interesting. Your mods can hook into player events (joining, leaving, moving), block interactions, item usage, combat, and countless others. Write an event handler function, register it with LeviLamina, and it gets called whenever that event fires. If you've worked with Fabric or Forge, this pattern will feel familiar (though the API surface is different). The API provides direct access to game state. Entities, blocks, players, items, commands - all exposed through clean C++ interfaces. You can query world data, modify player state, spawn effects, register commands. It's the full toolkit you'd expect from a serious modding platform. Command registration is solid. You can add custom server commands that integrate naturally with how players interact with the server. If you're building server mods that involve voting or community features, there's a Minecraft Votifier Tester available if you need to validate voting mechanics in your mods. Error handling is thoughtful. The latest releases mention internationalization support for error messages, which is a nice touch. When things break (and they'll during development), you get legible error output instead of cryptic codes. What Tends to Trip People Up Version compatibility is the biggest gotcha. LeviLamina binds tightly to Minecraft's internal structure, so mismatched versions cause crashes or undefined behavior. The v26.10.10 release corresponds to Minecraft 26.10.x. If you're on 26.9.x or 26.11.x, you need the matching LeviLamina build. There's no backwards compatibility layer here. Mod conflicts happen. Unlike Forge which has sophisticated dependency resolution, LeviLamina mods can interfere with each other if they both hook the same events or modify overlapping game structures. Actually, that only matters if you don't design carefully - the event system supports multiple listeners, but you need to think about handler ordering and state management. Documentation lags. The project is active and improving (regular releases, Discord community, growing GitHub presence), but docs still have gaps. This community on Discord and Telegram can help when you hit walls, but sometimes the answer requires reading source code or asking maintainers directly. When developing mods that interact with blocks, it helps to know block IDs and variants. If you're looking up block specifications while coding, there's a Minecraft Block Search tool available for quick reference. Performance considerations matter too. C++ mods run natively, so they're faster than interpreted languages, but badly-written event handlers can still tank server tick times. Look, if you're running multiple mods simultaneously, profile them and optimize the hot paths. Alternatives Worth Knowing About If LeviLamina isn't your path, there are other options. The official Minecraft Scripting API is improving with each release. It uses JavaScript and is intentionally limited for security, but it's suitable for simpler tweaks. The tradeoff is power - you get safety and stability but less control. For Java Edition, Fabric and Forge are mature ecosystems with massive communities. If you can work in Java instead of C++, they're more stable and better documented. Hundreds of existing mods mean you can study real code. There are also ScriptEngine approaches using Lua or other embedded languages, though these are typically slower and less integrated than LeviLamina's native C++ environment. Realistically, if you want to mod Bedrock at a serious level, LeviLamina is your best bet. The C++ environment, event system, and API are ahead of what else is available for extending Bedrock Edition.LiteLDev/LeviLamina - LGPL-3.0, ★1553 Support the project LeviLamina is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Minecraft Sound Design: New Audio Added in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-sound-design-2026 Published: 2026-05-04 Author: ice Minecraft's sound design got a serious refresh in 2026 Minecraft added significant audio improvements this year, ranging from subtle biome ambience to completely reworked mob sounds. Some changes hit harder than others, but even the quiet upgrades matter if you've spent thousands of hours listening to the same cave drip. The big ambient sound overhaul Here's what actually changed: every biome now has layered, context-aware ambient sounds. Lush caves don't just sound wet anymore, they sound alive. You'll hear dripping water echo differently in dripstone caverns versus regular caves. Deep dark ambience became more oppressive (in a good way). And the Nether? Genuinely unsettling now instead of just repetitive. The caves got the most attention, which makes sense. We spend more time down there than anywhere else. Mojang apparently listened to feedback about how the same three ambient tracks were driving people to mute the game. Sound design in 2026 finally acknowledged that biome context matters. Mob sounds: what sounds different New mobs got new sounds (obviously), but that's not the interesting part. What's interesting is they remixed existing mob audio. The warden's audio cues got more granular. Creepers now have a subtle background frequency before they explode, which gives you an extra half-second to react if you're paying attention. Drowned don't all sound identical anymore. Honestly, some of these changes feel subtle until you play without them. Then you realize how much you'd gotten used to the samey audio landscape. Endermen sound more distinctly alien. Phantoms actually sound tired and damaged when they swoop at you, which is a nice touch I didn't expect to care about. The Ender Dragon's final death sound changed too. Here's the thing, won't spoil it, but it hits different. Java vs. Bedrock parity finally matters For the first time, Mojang actually synced audio between editions. If you've bounced between Java and Bedrock, you've probably noticed they sound completely different. That gap closed this year. Bedrock got a bunch of Java's ambient sounds, and Java got some Bedrock-exclusive feedback audio that actually improves gameplay (like better footstep variation on different blocks). This shouldn't be controversial, but it apparently was. People are weird about which edition sounds "better." Turns out they both sound good when they're not fighting each other. Block sounds and footsteps got personal Walking across different block types now produces genuinely varied footsteps. Copper oxidizes sonically. Packed mud squelches. Sculk blocks have that creepy whisper sound that escalates when you're near the warden. You can actually navigate dark caves partly by ear now, which is either neat or terrifying depending on your tolerance for horror elements. If you're running a vanilla server or just playing solo survival, this changes how you experience the landscape. The audio becomes another layer of world-building instead of background noise. One caveat: all this audio processing does add a tiny bit of lag on older systems. Nothing dramatic, but if you're running Minecraft on a potato, you might want to dial back sound processing in settings. Haven't noticed it on anything from the last five years, though. Music disc upgrades and new tracks New music discs exist now. They're sparse by design, which actually works in their favor. When you find one, it feels like a real discovery instead of another jukebox track. The new compositions fit specific moods: one for building, one for exploration, one that's weirdly energetic for combat scenarios. The original tracks got remastered too. Higher quality encoding, better mixing. If you've been listening to "Sweden" on loop since 2009, you'll notice the difference immediately. Settings and customization expanded Sound sliders got more granular. You can now adjust biome ambience separately from mob sounds, which sounds nerdy but is genuinely useful. Some players want cave sounds but not the low-frequency rumble. Now they can have that. Another option lets you customize how loud water ambience gets, since apparently that was driving people bonkers. The UI for audio settings is actually organized now instead of being an incomprehensible wall of sliders. Small win. What this means for your servers and builds If you're running a multiplayer server, the audio updates hit everyone simultaneously. That means everyone's experiencing the same soundscape. For atmosphere-heavy builds (think horror maps or cinematic projects), this year's improvements genuinely help. Use the free Minecraft DNS tools to optimize your server's regional latency while you're at it, since audio consistency depends on everyone hearing cues at the right moment. Adventure maps benefit heavily from the new sound design. Puzzle maps that rely on audio cues become viable in ways they weren't before. Exploration maps feel less repetitive when biomes actually sound distinct. And if you're the type to build elaborate portal setups, the Nether portal ambience has been updated to feel more intentional. Not essential knowledge, but if you're planning a portal calculator for transport networks, you'll at least be listening to improved audio while testing routes. Is it worth paying attention to? Sound design is one of those things that reveals itself gradually. You won't notice it all at once. You'll be mining, and you'll suddenly realize the dripping sounds are creating actual spatial awareness. Or you'll hear a mob and know exactly which direction it came from without turning. That's when you'll appreciate this year's work. For casual players, it's a nice quality-of-life upgrade. For atmosphere-focused players, it's a real enhancement. For competitive players? Honestly irrelevant. You've probably muted Minecraft anyway to hear Discord. The changes feel like Mojang finally took audio seriously instead of treating it as an afterthought. That matters. --- ### SimpleScore: Animated Minecraft Scoreboards Made Easy URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/simplescore-minecraft-scoreboards Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice "A simple animated scoreboard plugin for your minecraft server." RuiPereiraDev/SimpleScore · github.com SimpleScore solves one specific problem really well: getting useful information in front of your players without spamming chat or relying on commands. If you run a Minecraft server, you know the pain of trying to communicate real-time stats, server status, or event timings. SimpleScore is the plugin that makes scoreboards actually useful. What This Project Does SimpleScore is a Kotlin-based scoreboard plugin for Spigot and Paper servers that displays animated, dynamically-updated information on the side of players' screens. Unlike basic scoreboard systems that flicker or cause lag spikes, this plugin is built specifically to be smooth and efficient. The plugin updates in real-time without stuttering. It supports every Minecraft version from 1.8.x all the way up to 26.1.x, which means whether you're running a legacy server or bleeding-edge, SimpleScore works. The project has been downloaded thousands of times and runs on over 1,000 active servers according to bStats. With 100 stars on GitHub and an active maintainer, it's one of the more reliable scoreboard solutions in the Minecraft plugin ecosystem. Why You'd Want This Most servers need to communicate something to players. Without SimpleScore or something similar, you're stuck spamming chat messages or hoping people read the motd. Neither works. With SimpleScore, players can glance at the side of their screen to see: How many players are currently online Their current rank, kills, or custom stats The next scheduled server event or maintenance window Custom announcements or server rules World information or coordinates Game-specific data from other plugins But here's what actually impressed me when testing it: you can set up completely different scoreboards for different players. A staff member sees moderation data and detailed player counts. A regular player sees fun stats. A VIP sees exclusive announcements. All of this is controlled through standard Spigot permissions, so it integrates with whatever permission plugin you're already running. If you've ever scrolled through Minecraft's server listing, you've probably noticed servers advertise features like custom scoreboards. SimpleScore is what makes that actually possible. Installation and Basic Setup Getting SimpleScore running takes about two minutes if you know what you're doing. First, download the latest release (v4.2.0) from the GitHub releases page or grab it from Modrinth or SpigotMC: bashcd /path/to/your/server wget https://github.com/RuiPereiraDev/SimpleScore/releases/download/v4.2.0/SimpleScore-4.2.0.jar -O plugins/SimpleScore-4.2.0.jar Restart your server: bash/stop # Server restarts, SimpleScore generates config files That's actually all you need. SimpleScore creates a default config file automatically and starts displaying a basic scoreboard to all players immediately. To customize it, edit `plugins/SimpleScore/config.yml`. The basic structure is straightforward: yamlscoreboards: main: title: "Server Stats" lines: - "Online: %online%" - "Day: %date%" - "FPS: %server_tps%" That's all you need for a working scoreboard. The %placeholders% are PlaceholderAPI expansions that update automatically. SimpleScore has built-in support for PlaceholderAPI as of v4.2.0, and it'll integrate with whatever plugins you have installed. Key Features That Matter Smooth Animations and Zero Flickering The plugin was designed specifically to avoid the flickering problem that plagued earlier scoreboard plugins. If you've ever used a bad scoreboard plugin where your eyes felt strained after a minute of looking at it, you know why this matters. SimpleScore uses an internal animation system that updates cleanly without the screen-flicker effect. Permission-Based Display Logic You can assign different scoreboards to different player groups using standard Spigot permissions. Want VIP players to see special info? Set a permission like `simplescore.vip` and create a scoreboard with that permission attached. Admins see completely different content. Regular players see their own stats. It's incredibly flexible and integrates smoothly with any permission plugin you already use. Full RGB Color Support On Minecraft 1.16 and newer, you get full RGB color support instead of being limited to Minecraft's 16 default colors. Want your scoreboard text in hot pink? Honestly, lime green? Any hex color imaginable? SimpleScore handles it. The syntax takes a bit to learn (check the GitHub wiki), but once you've got it, you can make scoreboards that actually match your server's aesthetic. No Character Limits on Modern Versions Servers running 1.13 and above have no line character limits. Older versions cap at 32 characters per line, but SimpleScore handles that transparently. Unless you're still running a 1.8 server for some reason, just forget this limit exists. World and Region-Based Conditions Show different scoreboards based on which world the player is in. Better yet, if you're using WorldGuard, show different scoreboards based on which region they're standing in. A player enters your PvP arena and the scoreboard switches to show combat stats. They walk into the creative zone and it switches again. It's genuinely slick and adds a lot of polish to your server experience. Setup Tips and Common Gotchas Placeholder Expansion Hell SimpleScore v4.2.0 added a built-in PlaceholderAPI expansion, which is great. But if you're using placeholders from other plugins, those plugins need to be installed and their expansions loaded. Run `/papi ecloud list` to see what's available, then `/papi ecloud download [name]` to grab them. I've seen servers where scoreboards looked broken because someone forgot to install an expansion that the config referenced. Permission Strings Are Exact If you define a scoreboard with permission `vip.scoreboard`, that's the exact permission players need. If your permission plugin has them in a group instead, they won't see it. Double-check that your permission groups actually have the right strings assigned. (Actually, I've seen this trip people up more than once - permissions are case-sensitive too, so watch for that.) Reload vs Restart SimpleScore supports `/scoreboard reload` for quick config reloads, but not all changes apply cleanly on a live reload. Text and color changes? Fine. Changing entire scoreboard conditions or switching which scoreboards display? Do a full server restart to be safe. Conditions Can Get Complex Once you understand the basics, you can set up conditional logic for scoreboards. Show one scoreboard if a player is in world X AND has permission Y, or if they're in a specific WorldGuard region. It's powerful but the syntax takes a moment to learn. Check the project's GitHub wiki - the documentation is actually good. Comparison with Alternatives If SimpleScore doesn't feel right for your use case, there are other paths forward. The older Scoreboard or Scoreboard Animations plugins still technically work, but they're less maintained and not built for modern server versions. Some server operators use HealthBar or TAB plugins instead, though those serve slightly different purposes and don't give you the same level of control over the base scoreboard display. You could also hire a developer to write a custom scoreboard implementation using Spigot's Scoreboard API directly, but that's overkill unless you need something very specific. For most use cases, SimpleScore just handles it. If you want dynamic player information displays, SimpleScore is genuinely the best-maintained option right now. If you want something dead-simple with minimal configuration, it still works - you just leave the config mostly default. One Last Thing SimpleScore works best when you actually use the PlaceholderAPI integration. Most Minecraft server plugins have PlaceholderAPI expansions now, so you're not limited to just basic server stats. You can pull data from economy plugins, job plugins, quest systems, literally anything. Spend some time browsing what's available and you'll build scoreboards that genuinely enhance your server experience. If you're running a public server and want to list it on community directories like Minecraft.How, players will appreciate the polished in-game experience that SimpleScore provides. It's a small thing, but it actually makes your server feel more professional. 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 --- ### Minecraft Copper Uses: Complete Guide to Blocks and Crafting URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-copper-uses-guide Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice Copper is one of Minecraft's most versatile building and functional materials. It's useful for decorative architectural builds, creating oxidation effects, and practical redstone mechanisms. Whether you're designing a kitchen, an ornamental roof, or experimental machinery, copper offers creative possibilities that go far beyond simple block placement. What Copper Blocks Do Raw copper ore generates pretty deep in the world, typically between Y=0 and Y=48 on version 26.1.2, though it's more common in the lower ranges. Mining it gives you raw copper, which you'll need to smelt into copper ingots. This is the foundation of everything copper-related. Once you have ingots, the fun starts. Copper has this whole life cycle thing going on with oxidation states, and honestly, that's what makes it different from basically every other material in Minecraft. You can't just place a block and forget about it. The primary copper blocks you're working with are: copper blocks (the main solid form), copper stairs, copper slabs, and copper doors. They all start as fresh, shiny orange blocks when first placed. The look clean, almost polished. Kind of like they walked out of a showroom. Oxidation States and How They Work Every copper block will slowly oxidize over time, changing color and texture as it ages. It doesn't happen instantly (you won't see changes in minutes), but over several Minecraft days the transformation becomes visible. This is actually a core mechanic, not a visual bug, so embrace it or prevent it depending on your build goals. The oxidation progression goes: Unoxidized (fresh orange) → Exposed (lighter, starting to show patina) → Weathered (greenish-blue) → Oxidized (full turquoise/teal). Each stage looks genuinely different, and this natural aging effect is what makes copper special for certain architectural styles. Imagine building a roof that matures as your world ages. That's the appeal here. Want to stop oxidation? Use a honeycomb block on top of your copper. It'll preserve whatever oxidation state the block currently has. You can also wax and unwax blocks, which lets you lock in your favorite color if, say, you're obsessed with the exposed state and don't want it going full turquoise on you. One thing people don't always realize: oxidation is tied to the block itself, not the world age. So if you set oxidation to a certain stage using honeycomb, it stays that way indefinitely until you remove the wax. This gives you actual control rather than just waiting around hoping your aesthetic survives. Building with Copper: Practical Applications Copper works brilliantly for roofing. The way the material looks as it oxidizes creates this gradual weathering effect that makes builds feel authentic and lived-in. A roof that starts orange and slowly turns turquoise over time? That's stunning in the right build. Detailed architectural work benefits from copper more than basic structures. Think decorative railings, trim work, door frames, and window details. The color provides contrast when paired with darker woods or lighter stone. Kitchen builds especially shine with copper accents on countertops, hanging racks, or decorative trim. It's practical-looking without being industrial. Redstone applications exist too, but they're more niche. Copper doesn't conduct redstone power directly, so it's not solving any functional problems there. Instead, it's about the aesthetic when you're building elaborate redstone contraptions and want them to look intentional rather than janky. Door and trapdoor variants let you experiment with full wooden-door-style gameplay in copper. They're slower than iron doors (more of a novelty, actually) but if you're theming an entire structure around copper, having matching doors matters visually. Crafting Copper Items and Blocks The crafting recipes are straightforward. Nine copper ingots make a copper block. You'll use a furnace to convert raw copper into ingots, then work from there. Stairs and slabs follow the normal Minecraft pattern: arrange copper blocks in the standard staircase or slab shape and you get the variants. Cut copper (a decorative half-height variant) requires a stonecutter, which is honestly the easiest approach for experimenting with different shaped pieces. Cut copper also has its own oxidation states, so you can mix and match patterns in interesting ways. Waxed copper blocks are crafted with honeycomb. If you're building something where you want colors to match permanently, waxing during construction saves you from future mismatches. Here's the thing, actually, wait, I should clarify: waxing doesn't prevent oxidation forever in the sense of time. It pauses it at whatever stage the block is currently at. So if you wax a weathered copper block, it stays weathered forever. But an unoxidized block that's waxed will never oxidize unless you unwax it later. Copper bulbs are a redstone component worth mentioning. They're less about the copper aesthetic and more about actual functionality in contraptions, since they emit light. Hardly anyone uses them for building decoration, and that's fine. They solve a specific redstone problem, not a creative one. Mining and Farming Copper Efficiently Deep slate copper ore is the most common variant you'll encounter. It requires an iron pickaxe or better to break. Nothing fancy here. Strip mining at Y=0 to Y=24 gives solid returns if you're desperate for a lot of copper, though it's tedious. Caves are honestly better than strip mining for copper hunting. The ore appears naturally scattered throughout cave systems, and you get the benefit of finding other resources simultaneously. Plus, exploring feels less soul-crushing than the repetitive tunneling approach. For reference material, our Minecraft Block Search tool can help you identify copper block variants and their properties quickly if you're planning builds. Smelting raw copper is straightforward. Furnace or blast furnace, either works. The blast furnace is twice as fast but requires more setup. If you're farming copper seriously, get a furnace array going. It's not exciting, but it's necessary. Decorative Uses and Build Inspiration Copper roofs on medieval buildings look absolutely incredible. That gradual oxidation mimics real copper roof aging, which actually exists in real architecture on some famous buildings. Your Minecraft castle can feel historically inspired without needing mods. Modern builds can use copper as sleek, minimalist accents. Fresh unoxidized copper has a warm tone that works with concrete, dark oak, and stone surprisingly well. Gothic or steampunk aesthetics love copper. The material just reads as "mechanical" and "intentional" in those contexts. Pair it with chains, cauldrons, and lanterns and suddenly your industrial contraption doesn't look random anymore. Copper also works for small details most people overlook. Door handles made from copper? Gutters and downspouts? Decorative spikes on top of walls? These tiny additions make builds feel thought-out. If you're working on a multiplayer server, these details are what make shared spaces feel polished rather than thrown together. Our Minecraft Whitelist Creator tool can help you manage who builds with you on servers. The Downsides Worth Knowing Oxidation happens whether you want it or not. If you place copper and don't manage it, it'll change. Some players love this dynamic aesthetic. Others find it annoying if they wanted a specific color permanently. Waxed copper blocks can be expensive if you need massive quantities. Honeycomb requires bees, and bee farming has its own setup requirements. So preserving colors at scale demands planning. Copper doesn't have many structural benefits compared to other materials. It's almost entirely about aesthetics and a few niche redstone applications. If your only goal is function, other blocks do the job cheaper or easier. Copper is worth exploring even if you don't end up using it everywhere. The oxidation mechanic alone is interesting enough to experiment with, and the building possibilities are genuinely creative. Start small, maybe add copper trim to an existing build, and see if it clicks for your style. --- ### Building an Efficient Minecraft Storage System URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-storage-system-organization Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice A good Minecraft storage system keeps your world organized and accessible. Whether you're managing basic chests or building a complex itemsorter, the core principle is the same: organize by category, make items easy to find, and keep everything close to where you need it. So this guide covers practical techniques from simple sorting to automated hopper systems that work in vanilla Java Edition 26.1.2. Why Storage Systems Matter More Than You Think Minecraft storage isn't just about having somewhere to dump items. A poorly organized base turns into a chaotic mess where you spend thirty minutes searching for one stack of oak wood. I've been there. Multiple times. On the same world. Good storage saves time, reduces duplicate crafting, and makes building projects flow smoothly. You'll actually know what materials you've before grinding for another hour. Starting with a plan prevents the "I'll organize it later" problem that never happens. Sorting by Category: The Foundation Every storage system needs categories. How you split them depends on your playstyle, but here's a solid template: Building blocks (wood, stone variants, dirt, sand) Decorative blocks (glass, concrete, terracotta, dyes) Redstone components (hoppers, repeaters, comparators, pistons) Tools and weapons Ores and raw materials Combat items (enchanted gear, arrows, potions) Food and farming supplies Miscellaneous (books, nametags, saddles) Your own categories might look different. Speedrunners need combat items front and center. Builders care less about mob drops and more about palette blocks. Adjust accordingly. The Double-Chest Standard Use double chests as your default storage unit. They hold 54 stacks, which is enough for most item categories without being wasteful. Single chests work for rare items or small categories. Label everything. Use signs, item frames with the category item inside, or both. Future you'll appreciate it. Also, actually - I should mention this applies to Bedrock too, though the UI is slightly different. But we're focused on Java here. Designing Physical Layout How your storage room looks affects how efficiently you use it. The simplest design is a wall of double chests, either facing out toward you or stacked vertically. It's not fancy, but it works. Wall layout: Chests in a straight line, organized left to right by category. Easy to navigate, takes minimal space. Tower layout: Chests stacked vertically with catwalk access. Great for large systems that need to fit in a smaller footprint. Room layout: Full room with multiple walls or island of chests. Better for mega-bases where you want space to move around. Pick based on how much material you typically store. A solo survival player needs less volume than someone managing a large multiplayer server. Access Patterns Matter Position frequently accessed categories at eye level. Put rarely used items up or down. Your building blocks should be easier to grab than that stack of ancient debris you're saving. Keep a small "quick grab" chest near your crafting area for immediate needs. Don't make yourself walk across the base every time you need wood. Building an Itemsorter for Automation An itemsorter automatically sorts items into the correct chests when you dump them into a hopper input. It sounds complicated. Building the first one is tedious. But once you've it, it's incredibly powerful. Here's the core concept: hoppers feed items onto a line of comparators that detect the item in each hopper. When a specific item is detected, redstone redirects it to the correct chest. Basic Single-Line Itemsorter A simple vertical sorter works like this: Input hopper at the top feeds items into a row of nine hoppers Each hopper contains a specific item in its comparison slot A comparator checks if the incoming item matches Redstone diverts matching items down to their destination chest Non-matching items continue forward to the next hopper You can scale this vertically to sort dozens of items. Multiple lines handle even more. The redstone signal routing is where people get stuck. I recommend finding a video tutorial for the specific design you want, because written instructions for redstone layouts are basically unreadable. Trust me. I've tried both directions. Space-Efficient Sorter Designs Full itemsorters take significant room. If you're tight on space, partial sorters handle your most common items, with overflow going to a general storage chest. Sort your top ten items, dump everything else into a catch-all. You're still saving time compared to manual sorting. Small-Scale Organization (No Itemsorter) You don't need redstone magic to have good storage. Simple strategies handle 95% of the organization work. Stick to your categories, use double chests, label everything, and place frequently used items in convenient locations. Done. If you want a step up without building an itemsorter, try a hopper funnel system. Items funnel down hoppers into separate chests below. It's slow compared to a proper sorter, but requires no redstone knowledge. Labeling Systems Signs with category names work fine. Item frames with a sample item look nicer and work across all languages. Using a text generator lets you create fancy formatted labels if you want to get creative. Color-coded armor stands or dyed glass panes can help too. The visual system matters more than the specific method you choose. Managing Overflow and Cleanup Even organized systems accumulate junk. Gravel. Dirt. Real talk, stacks of cobblestone from mining that seemed important at the time. Dedicate a trash chest or furnace for items you never use. Or set up a small farm that turns excess blocks into something useful. Composters are great for organic waste, furnaces eat wood, and cobblestone can feed into builds. Once a month, audit your storage. Delete or use items piling up unused. Storage systems only stay efficient if you maintain them. Scaling Up for Different Playstyles A casual vanilla survival world needs different storage than a technical redstone playground. A player joining a server runs into completely different constraints. Single-player hardcore: minimize storage, focus on quick access for immediate survival needs. You're not hoarding materials. Creative building world: massive material stockpiles, emphasis on organization and quick sorting. You'll spend more time building than grinding. Multiplayer server: consider shared storage in a central base, individual storage for personal items. Find active servers if you want the full multiplayer experience rather than building solo. Technical world: itemsorters, mega-storage with automated inputs, complex redstone filters. Performance becomes a concern with huge systems. Common Mistakes to Avoid Storing too much. You don't need 64 stacks of every wood type. Keep rotating stock and delete extras. Forgetting to label things. Seriously. Do it immediately. Your future self will thank you. Building itemsorters before you actually need them. Small systems are faster to maintain. Add automation only when manual sorting becomes genuinely annoying. Placing storage in inconvenient locations just because space was available. Proximity matters. A chest three minute's walk away might as well not exist. Worth It Or Not A well-organized storage system transforms your Minecraft experience. You'll build faster, waste less time searching, and actually remember what materials you've. Start simple with labeled double chests, expand to itemsorters if you're managing massive material volumes. The time invested upfront pays back immediately. --- ### The Scariest Minecraft Horror Maps for 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/scariest-minecraft-horror-maps-2026 Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice Minecraft horror maps range from atmospheric supernatural experiences to jump-scare compilations designed to catch you off-guard. They've evolved significantly since 2024, often featuring custom textures, storytelling, environmental design, and clever mob placements that can genuinely make you uncomfortable. If you're looking for something beyond standard survival gameplay, these maps deliver genuine tension. Why Horror Maps Are Worth Playing Most people assume horror maps are just obnoxious jump-scare spam. They can be, but the genuinely well-designed ones operate differently. Mapmakers are using redstone, custom audio, environmental psychology, and clever mob placement to create something intentionally unsettling. This isn't just placing hostile spawners everywhere and calling it scary. I've tested horror maps over several weeks, and what struck me was how much creativity goes into the effective ones. What's actually impressive is that Minecraft's engine, despite its blocky simplicity, can create compelling fear when structured properly. Caves already echo strangely. Mobs sound wrong sometimes. Darkness actually means something because you can't see what's approaching. Horror maps amplify these existing unease factors and then remove the safety nets you're used to. Look, no obvious exits. No safe zones to camp in. No familiar progression. That psychological shift alone changes how you experience the familiar game. What Makes Horror Effective Here's something non-obvious: contrast is everything in horror. If everything is scary, nothing is. The best horror maps understand pacing. They let you relax, think the danger has passed, then strike when you're not expecting it. Sound design matters way more than you'd initially think. Custom resource packs that layer additional audio over default Minecraft sounds completely change the mood. Even just repositioning where sounds originate from can trigger genuine unease. A mob sound from directly behind you feels fundamentally different from the same sound ahead. Environmental design is the second critical piece. Tight corridors with no exits. Rooms with strange proportions. Hallways that loop back on themselves wrong. The map structure itself becomes part of what's unsettling. Lighting manipulation pushes this further. Areas just bright enough to see something horrible, then dark enough that you can't see what's approaching. Atmospheric horror maps lean on mood and slow-building dread. Story-driven maps use narrative to create emotional investment. Jump-scare maps deliver sudden explosions and instant mob spawns. Puzzle-horror hybrids combine problem-solving with the pressure of being hunted. Each creates fear through different mechanisms. Popular Horror Maps Worth Trying on Minecraft 26.1.2 Herobrine's Mansion is basically the canonical horror map. Yeah, it's been around forever, but it survives through versions because the theming is solid and the atmosphere is consistent without dragging on. You can finish it in a single sitting without feeling exhausted. That's harder than it sounds. The Deep End is creepy for different reasons entirely. You're underwater, navigation is confusing, movement is restricted. Even if nothing explicitly scary happens, being confined in an alien environment creates genuine discomfort. The map weaponizes thalassophobia deliberately and effectively. Escape the Night series has evolved through multiple iterations. The later versions improved pacing significantly by adding story layers and using multiple biomes. You can see how creators iterate on horror design across the different releases. It's instructive even if you're just playing. There are countless smaller maps on Planet Minecraft that deserve real attention. Some of the best horror experiences I've encountered came from maps with under 10,000 downloads. Creators not trying to build something massive often produce more innovative work. One practical note: if you're running a server and hosting horror maps, set up your Free Minecraft DNS correctly. Connection stability actually affects how horror lands. Lag breaks tension instantly and ruins the entire experience. How to Find and Install Horror Maps Safely Getting horror maps from reliable sources matters. Stick to Planet Minecraft, MCPEDL for Bedrock, or communities you actually trust. Malware in maps is rare but not nonexistent. Not worth the risk of contaminating your setup. Before loading a horror map into your survival world, test it in creative mode first. Explore it. Check mob behavior. See what you're actually dealing with. Some maps are way more intense than their descriptions suggest. You need that context before committing. Pay attention to version compatibility. A map built for 1.16 might function on 26.1.2, but chunk loading and mob behavior have changed significantly. Sometimes these differences ruin the intended experience. Sometimes they accidentally make it worse. Either way, test in isolation first. Custom resource packs combined with horror maps require careful management. Some combinations cause weird rendering or lag that breaks immersion completely. Creepy is good. Unplayable is not. Performance matters. Here's a weird practical tip: understanding spatial relationships helps you feel less entirely lost in custom dimensions. If a horror map uses a custom nether dimension, knowing how dimensions relate through the Nether Portal Calculator helps you stay oriented enough to appreciate the horror instead of just feeling confused. Play with headphones. Audio design in quality horror maps relies on spatial sound and subtle audio cues. Speakers flatten this entirely. Solo play hits harder than multiplayer because you can't deflect fear through communication with others. Should You Play Horror Maps? Yes, if you like experiences outside standard survival gameplay. They're not mechanically complex. They're just intentionally structured experiences designed with a specific emotional outcome in mind. That's rare in Minecraft. Worst case? You load one, you hate it, you turn it off and go back to normal survival. Time spent, nothing lost. Best case? You find something that genuinely unsettles you and you remember it months later when you're playing late at night with headphones on. --- ### Minecraft Dungeons and Legends: Where They Stand in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-dungeons-legends-2026 Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice Minecraft's spin-off games have quietly built their own corners of the community. If you haven't checked in on Minecraft Dungeons or Minecraft Legends in a while, you might be surprised at how much has changed. Both games are still actively developed, still getting updates, and still worth your time - though maybe not in the way you'd expect. A Quick Refresh: What These Games Even Are Let's start with the basics. Minecraft Dungeons is a dungeon crawler released in 2020 - think isometric action RPG with loot, leveling, and procedurally-generated dungeons. It's not creative mode. It's not survival. It's pure combat and loot-based gameplay, designed to scratch a very different itch than vanilla Minecraft. Minecraft Legends came later in 2023 as a real-time strategy game. You build structures, command troops, and defend your base against invasions. Again, totally different from the sandbox experience. Both were Mojang's attempt to expand the Minecraft universe beyond the original game. And honestly? They succeeded more than people think. Minecraft Dungeons: Still Alive, Still Getting Content Dungeons had what felt like the standard lifecycle: big launch, months of updates and DLC, then the slow fade. Except it didn't really fade. The game's been out for nearly six years now, and Mojang's still occasionally dropping balance patches and seasonal events. Nothing massive, but enough to keep the lights on. The core loop still works. You pick a difficulty level, run through a dungeon, fight bosses, collect gear with random enchantments, and come back stronger. Rinse, repeat. It's addictive in a way that's genuinely different from vanilla Minecraft - there's actual character progression, actual gear to farm for, actual reasons to keep playing. What's interesting is that Dungeons found its audience on console. Yes, there's a PC version, but the game lives on Switch, PlayStation, and Xbox in a way it doesn't always get credit for. Console players who want something structured and goal-driven have stuck with it. The multiplayer works too. Playing with friends is where Dungeons shines, honestly. Minecraft Legends: The Weird One That Deserved Better Legends is the more interesting failure, if I'm being honest. It launched to middling reception and never quite captured the audience Mojang hoped for. Here's the thing though: the game itself isn't bad. It's just weird. You're defending your world against an army of evil Piglins. You build defensive structures in real-time, summon golems, and direct troops. It's part tower defense, part base builder, part action game. The idea works - just maybe not as a Minecraft game. Updates have been sparse. Mojang released some seasonal content in 2024 but seemed to dial back expectations pretty quick. The game found a niche audience but never the mainstream appeal that even Dungeons managed. Player counts are lower. Twitch streams are rarer. It feels abandoned-adjacent, even though technically it isn't. But here's the thing: if you actually like RTS mechanics and strategy games, Legends does something genuinely fun. It's just not Minecraft in the way people expect Minecraft to be. Why These Games Exist (And Why Some Players Hate Them) There's a subset of the Minecraft community that sees Dungeons and Legends as distractions from "real" Minecraft development. Like every resource spent on spin-offs is a resource not spent on Java Edition or Bedrock. Fair criticism honestly, but also kind of missing the point. Mojang makes these games because they're profitable and because some players want structured gameplay instead of sandbox freedom. Not everyone wants to grind through building tutorials or figure out Redstone. Some people just want to run dungeons and get loot. That said, yeah, Legends especially never really clicked. And updates have slowed for both games. It's the natural trajectory for a live-service game that didn't become a cultural phenomenon. The Player Bases Now Dungeons has a loyal following. Not millions, but thousands of active players across all platforms. There's speedrunning content, challenge runs, and people still farming enchanted gear. The community's small enough to feel intimate but big enough that you'll find multiplayer matches. Legends players... well, they exist. Definitely less visible. The subreddit's quiet. YouTube uploads are rare. But the people who like it really like it. Here's what I'd say if you're building a server or community for other Minecraft games - the spin-offs have their own dedicated players. Look, if you're setting up a whitelist creator for a vanilla server, you're probably not reaching the Dungeons crowd. Different games, different needs. And if you care about cosmetics across games, remember that custom skins are standard across Java and Bedrock. The spin-offs have their own character customization, so skins don't carry over, but it's worth knowing if you're planning your Minecraft presence across multiple games. Where's It All Heading? Honestly? Maintenance mode. That's not necessarily bad. Dungeons will probably keep getting seasonal updates and balance patches. Legends might get the occasional content drop, but expectations should be low. Mojang's clearly focusing most of its energy on Java Edition, Bedrock, and the Realms ecosystem. The spin-offs are successful enough to exist but not successful enough to be major priorities. They've found their audience and they're keeping them happy with occasional updates. Could Legends have been bigger with different design choices? Sure. Could Dungeons have gotten more love post-launch? Probably. But that's not the reality we're in. Should You Play Them? Dungeons is a solid recommendation if you want Minecraft that's structured and goal-focused. Buy it once, own it forever, play whenever. No battle pass nonsense, no aggressive monetization. Just a game. Legends is more of a "try it if the concept appeals to you" situation. RTS mechanics in the Minecraft universe is genuinely interesting if you're into that kind of thing. But it's not going to change your life. Both games exist. Both still get updates. Both have players. They're not vanity projects or abandoned experiments. They're just... fine. Stable. Alive in their own way. --- ### Best Minecraft Iron Farm Designs for 2026 and Beyond URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-iron-farm-designs-guide Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice Iron farms are one of the most practical builds you can construct in vanilla Minecraft, giving you unlimited iron without ever swinging a pickaxe. I'll walk you through the best designs for version 26.1.2, from compact starter farms to full-AFK setups that'll keep you stocked while you're off doing other things. What Exactly Is an Iron Farm? An iron farm uses game mechanics to make iron golems spawn on demand, then kills them automatically to collect the drops. Sounds a bit grim, but it's just how the game works. The core idea is that golems only spawn when villagers are around and not panicked, so you set up a spawning platform with the right conditions and let the farm do its thing. The triggering happens through what's called "iron golem cramming" - basically, you force more golems into a small space than the game allows, which causes damage. Or you use suffocation. There are actually multiple ways to kill them efficiently, and different designs favor different methods. Why Build One at All? Because mining iron endlessly is tedious. A basic farm outputs 150+ iron per hour if you're semi-AFK, and the good designs hit 400-600+ per hour. That's the difference between needing new tools every week and having enough iron to build full rails through an entire continent. You'll also get nuggets if you've a grinder attached, and the secondary drops add up over time. Real talk, plus, once it's built, it requires zero maintenance. Set it and forget it. Compact vs. AFK: Which Design Fits You? Here's where it gets interesting. Compact farms are small enough to fit in a base and can be fully automated in a small footprint (maybe 50x50 blocks). They're perfect if you don't want a massive industrial structure taking over your world. You get decent output without the aesthetic nightmare. AFK farms, on the other hand, are designed so you can just... stand there. No moving around, no active involvement. They're bigger, more complex to set up, but honestly? Worth it if you've got the space. You load the chunks, go brew coffee, and come back to stacks of iron. Actually, let me correct that - you don't even need to be fully AFK. You can just be nearby doing other things while it hums along in the background. Full-AFK designs are another tier entirely. These require you to be in render distance but not actually doing anything, and the farm feeds you iron indefinitely. The setup is more finnicky though. The Mechanics You Need to Understand Iron golems spawn within 48 blocks horizontally (and 44 blocks vertically) of a villager, but only if there's not already a golem within that range that they "claim." You also need to break their claim somehow - either by removing the workstation, making them panic, or spacing things out so they can't all claim one area. The spawning platform itself needs to be open air on top (no blocks within 48 blocks above), and the farm works best when you stack platforms. You'll see most designs use a 16x16 or 16x10 platform because that's where the spawn rates peak without needing massive structures. Water placement is critical. Wrong placement kills your rates. Popular Designs Worth Building The Piglin-based design is honestly overrated. Yeah, it's compact, but the rates are... fine. Not great. It works in the Nether, which is neat if you're already set up there, but Java players usually go elsewhere. The standard villager-based design is what I'd recommend for most people. You get a 2-3 level farm (two or three stacked spawning platforms), a water collection system, and then a system to separate items if you want. Output is solid, the build itself is straightforward, and you can finish it in a session or two. The minecraft.how DNS tool is great for server setups, but if you're playing single-player vanilla, you're just placing blocks and learning the farm step by step. Some servers have specialized mob farms, but for pure iron grinding in vanilla 26.1.2, the multi-level villager farm is where it's at. There's also the "flying machine pusher" design if you're into redstone, but that's overkill unless you're pushing 10+ spawning platforms. Building One Without Losing Your Mind Start small. Seriously. Build a single 16x16 platform first, get it working, then think about stacking. You don't need efficiency rating of 99.9% on day one. You'll need: A safe platform for your villagers (usually under the spawning area) Workstations (lecterns or composter) so they stay put A spawning platform with the right dimensions Water channels leading to a collection point A killing mechanism (suffocation, fall damage, or cramming) Item collection and sorting (optional but recommended) The killing mechanism matters more than people think. Suffocation is reliable. Fall damage is cheaper in materials. Cramming is unreliable but works if you're desperate. Test your chosen method on a smaller scale first. Also, find a good spot at least 128+ blocks away from any naturally-spawned iron golem. Yeah, you can build anywhere with the mechanics working, but you don't want interference from village golems wandering into your farm. A Couple of Common Pitfalls Forgetting that workstations need to be within 48 blocks of the villager, and that the villager needs to actually reach it. I've seen people build gorgeous farms that produce zero iron because the villagers are locked out of their workstations. The second one is underestimating how much space you actually need. Horizontal spawn distances, vertical spawn distances, the golem despawn radius - it all compounds. A farm that looks good on a schematic might underperform because you misread one dimension. Output inconsistency often comes from the water channels being wrong. Even a single block out of place redirects the flow and golems miss the collection chute entirely. What About Customizing Your Build? Once you've got the basic farm running, you can dress it up however you want. Add walls, lighting, a control room, whatever fits your world's aesthetic. Some people make their farms look like temples or factories. The mechanics stay the same - you're just making it pretty. If you're also working on other parts of your base, having an automated iron supply means you can focus on building without stopping to gather materials. And if you ever need to showcase your setup to friends, a well-designed farm looks genuinely impressive. Create some custom skins for your player character using the Minecraft Skin Creator tool to celebrate your farm completion. The Real Talk Is an iron farm mandatory? No. But once you build one, you'll wonder how you ever played without it. The hours saved adds up quickly. In the first week alone, you'll probably save 5+ hours of mining that you can spend on actual fun projects instead. Start with a compact design. Learn the mechanics. Expand later if you want. By the time you're done, you'll understand iron golem spawning better than 90% of players, which is its own kind of satisfying. --- ### Galacticraft 5: Space Exploration in Modern Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/galacticraft-space-exploration-minecraft Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Galacticraft (TeamGalacticraft/Galacticraft) The classic space mod, rewritten for modern versions of Minecraft. Star on GitHub ↗ Want to escape the normal Minecraft grind and shoot a rocket to the moon instead? Galacticraft turns your standard survival world into the starting point for interplanetary exploration, letting you build rockets, establish space stations, and discover new planets without leaving your game client. What Galacticraft Is Galacticraft is a complete rewrite of the legendary space exploration mod that's been around for years. This Java-based overhaul (currently 577 stars on GitHub) strips everything back and rebuilds it from the ground up for modern Minecraft. Instead of copying the old addon system, the developers chose to start fresh, which means it's incompatible with older Galacticraft 4 plugins but gives them the freedom to design something better. The core idea is straightforward: gather materials, craft rockets, and explore planets beyond Earth. Sounds simple until you realize you'll need specialized equipment, new ore processing, tier-based progression, and an entirely new set of survival mechanics just for operating in space. It's ambitious. Why You'd Want This If you've played vanilla Minecraft for a few hundred hours, you hit a ceiling. You've got a full set of diamond gear, a mega base, and... then what? You've already slain the dragon. For players who like goals and progression, Galacticraft extends that dopamine loop by orders of magnitude. Building your first rocket feels legitimately rewarding in a way that grabbing another stack of building blocks doesn't. There's also the pure exploration factor. Every new planet has its own biomes, ores, and survival challenges. Low gravity means movement feels weird and takes adjustment. Oxygen management adds a resource constraint that doesn't exist in surface survival. If you run a server with friends, this turns into a collaborative space race where your group splits into roles (mining teams, fuel production, rocket engineers). That's the good stuff. Getting Galacticraft Running First thing: this is pre-alpha software. The README's pretty clear about it. Worlds can get corrupted. Updates might break saves. If you're the type who rage-quits when you lose progress, maybe wait another year. But if you're comfortable testing development builds, here's what you need to know. Galacticraft is targeting Fabric first. But that means you'll need: A fresh Minecraft installation (launcher 3.0+) Fabric Loader for your Minecraft version The Galacticraft JAR from the GitHub Actions artifacts tab Getting pre-alpha builds is a bit manual. Head to the GitHub Actions tab, pick a recent commit, scroll to "Artifacts", and grab the build. Drop it in your mods folder like any other Fabric mod. bash# Fresh Fabric setup (if you don't have it) # Install Fabric Loader from https://fabricmc.net/use/ # Then drop the Galacticraft JAR here: ~/.minecraft/mods/ Forge support is planned but coming later. The team wants a stable Fabric foundation first, which makes sense. What You Can Do (Right Now) The mod's still under heavy development, so features are limited compared to the original. But the core loop is playable. You'll spend time gathering tier 1 materials and crafting basic rockets. Expect to mine new ores, process them through machines, and eventually launch toward the Moon and Mars. Gravity shifts when you land on other planets, and you'll need oxygen gear to survive. The planets themselves have unique visuals and hazards. Some have aggressive mobs, others have environmental damage. So far, testing suggests the basic progression feels good, but don't expect the feature-complete experience of older space mods yet. That's coming. If you're building a Minecraft server and want to track player activity, consider setting up a whitelist to manage who's joining your space exploration server. It'll save headaches when you're managing teams working on different planets. The Pre-Alpha Reality Check Here's the part that might sting: there's no release date. The team's building this in public, releasing builds after each commit, but they're not promising when a stable version lands. Updates drop regularly, but they can break saves. So treat this like you would a beta for any game: fun to explore, but maybe keep a separate backup of your world. One thing that's genuinely nice is the community aspect. The project has an active Discord and Twitch streams where developers show progress. If you want to contribute (code, translations, bug reports), they're openly accepting pull requests. For a rewrite this ambitious, having a visible development process actually builds confidence that this isn't abandoned code. Should You Bother? If you're the type who enjoys modded Minecraft and doesn't mind the rough edges of pre-alpha software, absolutely. The concept is solid, the code is open (MIT licensed), and the development is active. Real talk, if you're looking for a polished, stable experience ready for long-term survival, wait six months and check back. For server admins who want something unique to offer players, this could be a differentiator if you're willing to accept occasional wipes and breaking updates. Just make sure everyone joining knows what they're signing up for. Also, whether you're exploring space planets or building ground-level structures, having good tools helps. The block search tool is handy for finding the exact textures or materials you need when you're hunting for that perfect building block. Similar Projects Worth Knowing About Ad Astra is another space mod floating around, with a simpler approach to planets. There's also StardustLabs if you want a more casual space experience. But Galacticraft's the heavyweight contender with the longest history and the most ambition. If you've used the old versions, this rewrite will feel familiar but fundamentally different under the hood. Support the project Galacticraft is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### PieMC: Building a Python-Powered Minecraft Bedrock Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/piemc-python-minecraft-server Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice PieMC-Dev/PieMC 🍰 PieMC is an exciting open-source project aimed at developing a powerful and customizable Minecraft Bedrock server software using Python 🐍 .0 If you've ever wondered what a Minecraft server built from the ground up in Python would look like, PieMC is here to answer that question. It's an open-source project tackling one of gaming's most ambitious goals: reimplementing Minecraft Bedrock Edition server software in a language that's way more accessible than Java or C++. It won't replace your favorite server software tomorrow, but it's the kind of project that could reshape how developers think about Minecraft servers. What PieMC Is PieMC is an early-stage Python implementation of Minecraft Bedrock Edition server software. For context, Minecraft has two major branches: Java Edition (what most PC players know) and Bedrock Edition (Windows 10/11, console, mobile). Bedrock uses a different protocol entirely, and until now, your options for running your own Bedrock server were basically limited to what Microsoft provides or closed-source alternatives. The project landed at 105 GitHub stars and is still in heavy development. This team has the protocol basics working and can get a server running, but the game mechanics are still being built out. World generation doesn't exist yet. Mobs aren't spawning. Commands aren't implemented. But the foundation is there. Why Python Matters for This Project Here's the angle that makes PieMC genuinely interesting: Python is a language that millions of people already know. It's what beginners learn in computer science classes. It's readable enough that you can understand what's happening without a CS degree. Compare that to Java server software (Spigot, Paper) or C++ implementations. Both are powerful, but they create a barrier for new developers. PieMC is explicitly trying to lower that barrier and make server development more accessible. The README outright states this as a design choice: Python won't win any performance awards, but it wins on accessibility and maintainability. That philosophy shows in their approach to recruiting. The project is actively searching for developers on their Discord, and they're not looking for elite systems programmers. They want people who know Python and can understand the codebase. If you've ever looked at a Spigot plugin and felt intimidated, this project might actually feel approachable by comparison. What Works Right Now The project has implemented the basic protocol handshake, so the server can accept connections. One MOTD (message of the day) system works, meaning your server appears in the client list with a custom message. That might sound minimal, and it's, but getting protocol details right is usually where open-source game servers stumble hardest. Game protocol is still in progress. Authentication isn't finished yet. You can't actually log in to a survival world and start playing. That's not a criticism - it's just the reality of where the project sits. The team is transparent about this. This features list on GitHub clearly marks what's done (checkmark), what's being worked on (construction emoji), and what's planned (empty box). This transparency is honestly refreshing. Too many abandoned projects pretend to be more complete than they are. Getting It Running (You'll Need Python) If you want to experiment, setup is straightforward. You'll need Python installed (the project supports recent versions), and then it's just a matter of dependencies and launching. bashpip install -r requirements.txt python start.py There's also a `start.cmd` file for Windows and `start.sh` for Unix-like systems if you prefer not to type commands directly. What you'll get is a server that listens for connections. Clients can see it in their server list. It won't let you play a full game yet, but you can see the skeleton of what's coming. The Roadmap and What's Exciting What really matters isn't what works today. It's what the team is building toward. Game protocol, login authentication, world generation, commands, mobs, permissions system. These are massive undertakings, and they're all on the roadmap. Plugins are explicitly listed as future work. That's significant because plugin systems are what made Java servers like Bukkit and Spigot so successful. A Python-based Bedrock server with a solid plugin API could open doors that currently don't exist. The development team includes lead developer LapisMYT plus several collaborators. This Discord is active, and there's genuine momentum behind the project. It's not vaporware. Who Should Care About This If you run a Bedrock server, you're probably stuck with Microsoft's official options or expensive closed-source alternatives. PieMC won't help you today, but it might in a year or two. Following the project now means you'll be ready when it matures. If you're a developer interested in game server architecture, this is educational gold. Honestly, you can see how protocol implementation actually works, study the design patterns, and contribute without fighting through millions of lines of production code. If you're teaching programming and want real-world examples of how things like network protocols or game loops work, PieMC is young enough to be understandable but complex enough to be interesting. Students can see the entire project, not just a small piece. Bedrock players who want to run custom servers should definitely bookmark this. Even in alpha state, having an open-source alternative being built is valuable. It won't have the polish of official servers yet, but the direction is clear. Fair Limitations and Real Talk Python isn't known for game server performance. If you're running a 500-player server, you'll want something compiled and optimized. PieMC will likely never compete with Paper or Spigot in raw throughput. That's not a bug in the design, it's a trade-off they've consciously made. The project is actively recruiting developers. That's partly exciting and partly a sign that progress is limited by team size. If you're hoping for rapid releases, manage your expectations. There's no plugin system yet, and none of the advanced server features (permissions, complex commands, world management) that admins rely on. If you need those features tomorrow, keep using established software. Comparing to Alternatives Your Bedrock server options are pretty thin. Microsoft's official server works but is locked down and limited. There are a few closed-source alternatives floating around, but none are open-source and actively developed with a transparent roadmap. On the Java side, you've got Paper (the de facto standard), Purpur (Paper fork with more features), and others. But those don't help if you're running Bedrock. PieMC is genuinely the only open-source Bedrock server project with traction and active development. If you care about open-source gaming infrastructure, that matters. And if you ever want to understand how Minecraft's Bedrock protocol works under the hood, this project is the best place to learn. On the Java side, if you want to set up a custom server, tools like our Minecraft Whitelist Creator make administration much easier. And if you need to generate a specific text style for your server, our Minecraft Text Generator is worth checking out. Contributing and Getting Involved The project is recruiting. If you know Python and want to contribute, the path is clear: join their Discord, check the GitHub repo, read the docs, and submit pull requests. The team is actively reviewing contributions. You don't need to be an expert. The codebase is designed to be understandable. This is one of the few game server projects where a motivated junior developer could meaningfully contribute. Ready to try PieMC? 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 PieMC-Dev/PieMC on GitHub ↗ --- ### Best Minecraft Building Mods: Tools and Decorations for 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/best-minecraft-building-mods Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice Building in vanilla Minecraft gets repetitive fast. The good news? Thousands of mods exist to expand your block palette, speed up construction, and add decorative elements that'd normally take hours to fake with stairs and slabs. Minecraft 26.1.2 supports a thriving modding ecosystem worth exploring. Why Decoration Mods Change Everything Vanilla Minecraft offers maybe 200 distinct blocks total (counting all the variants). Add decoration mods and you're looking at thousands of new items. Real furniture instead of pixel art approximations. Actual doors with handles, windows that open, rugs, paintings, armor stands on display racks. The aesthetic difference is shocking the first time you see it. Decocraft's been the standard for years and it still holds up perfectly. Real talk, thousands of decorative items that somehow all play together visually. Picture frames, bookshelves with actual books, cushions, tables with place settings. It stays cohesive instead of feeling like a jumble of incompatible content. Chisel works differently. Rather than adding new blocks, it creates variations of existing ones. Stairs with different patterns. Stone that looks weathered or pristine. Bricks with moss or cracks. You're building with blocks that already exist in vanilla, just with way more personality. The difference between "this looks okay" and "wow, someone actually thought about this" comes down to details like this. Here's the thing though: some decoration mods are bloated. They dump five hundred items on you and half sit unused forever. The minimalist approach works better for actual gameplay. You want items you'll actually place, not a massive list to scroll through when you're trying to build. Building Tools That Save Time This is where mods get genuinely transformative. WorldEdit's been the standard for building on servers and creative worlds for over a decade. Commands like `//replace grass_block stone` or `//rotate 90` let you manipulate terrain in ways hand-placement never could. Mass replacements, mirroring structures, rotating buildings ninety degrees instantly. Undo goes back hundreds of steps if you mess up. The learning curve is steep but it's absolutely worth it if you're building anything large. Building Wands remove the tedium of placing identical blocks in lines. Point at a block, select a direction, drag. A fifty-block wall becomes two clicks instead of fifty. Different mods implement this slightly differently, but the core concept is the same. Some servers disable them for balance, but in creative mode they're pure productivity. VoxelSniper gives you a brush system. Paint terrain as if you're sculpting instead of placing blocks one at a time. Smooth mountains, create cliffs with actual variation, raise and lower terrain in waves. It takes practice but terrain built with VoxelSniper looks natural in ways hand-placed blocks never achieve. The difference between "flat terrain" and "terrain that feels lived in" comes from tools like this. If you're working on a server or community project, performance matters. Some building tools create lag spikes if used carelessly. Test them in creative mode first. Watch your server metrics if players have access to heavy building tools. Terrain modification that recalculates chunks constantly will crush your tick rate. Custom Blocks and Textures Blockbench isn't technically a mod, but it's essential infrastructure if you want custom-looking blocks. You design 3D block models here, then bake them into resource packs or mods. If your building team wants everyone to see identical decorations, custom blocks beat trying to fake details with vanilla blocks. Painters need custom canvases. Texture packs designed for mod compatibility make everything cohere. Faithful's mod editions have become nearly standard because vanilla textures look jarring next to detailed modded blocks. The contrast between a vanilla stone block and a high-detail modded decoration breaks immersion fast. You want your palette unified. Consider what you're building before picking mods. A fantasy castle uses entirely different block styles than a sci-fi research station. Medieval mods, steampunk packs, and futuristic content each have their own ecosystem. Mixing aesthetics is possible but takes discipline. Most builders do better with intentional limitation than with every option available. If you're hosting a server or creative world where multiple players build, your Minecraft skin creator becomes part of the aesthetic too. Custom skins that match your building theme bring continuity. Nobody consciously notices, but everyone feels it when the player's appearance matches the world design. Performance Tuning for Modded Building Here's the honest part: decoration mods aren't free. Adding five hundred mods tanks frame rates if you're not careful about selection. Test mods before committing to them server-wide. Some decoration mods are lightweight; others are performance nightmares. Check community feedback and mod changelogs. Players will absolutely tell you if something nukes FPS. A beautiful decoration mod that drops you from 60 fps to 20 fps isn't worth it, no matter how nice it looks. Optimization mods like Sodium and Lithium are practically mandatory if you're running a mod-heavy setup. They won't make everything fast, but they help offset the cost. Also pay attention to VRAM. High-resolution textures and detailed mod assets eat GPU memory like crazy. If your GPU only has 2GB VRAM, fancy modded builds might not render at all. Server-side, it's different. Static decoration blocks just sit there using negligible resources. Building tools that modify terrain in real-time can cause lag spikes if the server has to recalculate chunks constantly. Be cautious about giving players access to heavy terraforming tools without testing them first. Mod Ecosystems for Different Playstyles You don't need every mod available. Focused modpacks (pre-selected collections designed to work together) often outperform random installations. Medieval building enthusiasts benefit from dedicated medieval mods that share textures and styles. Futuristic builders have separate ecosystems. Fantasy decorators have their own paths. Pick a direction and commit to mods that support that aesthetic. Cohesion beats variety. Minecraft 26.1.2 broke some older mods. Before installing anything, verify compatibility with your version. Forge and Fabric are the two main modloaders. Fabric's lighter and faster; Forge is more established. Most building mods support one or both. Check the mod page. Active projects matter too. Mods updated six months ago might have compatibility issues or bugs nobody fixed. Active Discord servers and GitHub repositories show life. Dead projects get left behind when Minecraft updates. Support the devs doing the work. (And for the love of blocks, don't spam them with update demands. Modding is volunteer work.) Finding Inspiration and Community Want to see what's possible? Modded servers and creative communities showcase builds constantly. YouTube builders like Scar break down exactly which mods enable specific effects. Reddit's r/feedthebeast posts weekly builds that demonstrate what modded creativity looks like. If you're setting up your own server to experiment with mods and friends, free Minecraft DNS makes configuration straightforward. You can focus on building instead of wrestling with domain setup. Start small though. Pick two or three mods and master them before expanding into ten. A perfectly executed build using limited tools looks better than chaotic feature creep. Constraints breed creativity. The best builders in the community often stick with a small, intentional mod set rather than downloading everything available. Modding communities are strong. They're also full of people who've made every mistake already. Their builds, tutorials, and Discord conversations contain answers to problems you'll hit. Join servers, watch builds being created, ask questions. The people who got good at modded building all did the same thing: they started, they messed up, they learned, they got better. --- ### Building Your Server's Kingdom: A Complete Guide to KingdomsX URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/kingdomsx-plugin-faction-minecraft Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice CryptoMorin/KingdomsX Battles for might, land and glory. Running a faction-based PvP server is harder than it looks. You need claims that don't glitch, conflicts that feel meaningful, and defenses that actually matter. KingdomsX handles this with turrets, structures, and siege mechanics that turn server politics into actual gameplay. If vanilla Factions left you wanting more, this is what most server owners reach for. What KingdomsX Does At its core, KingdomsX is a plugin for Bukkit/Spigot servers that lets players form kingdoms, claim land, build fortifications, and raid each other through structured siege mechanics. Think of it as Factions but with actual military strategy baked in. Your players claim chunks of the map. Build walls, towers, and defensive structures inside your territory. Set up extraction systems (controlled mob farms). When another kingdom wants your land, they don't just break through; they deploy siege cannons and execute an invasion that requires preparation and coordination. It's not chaotic; it's a game mode. I'm not going to pretend it's zero-configuration. Balance takes tuning. But the systems actually work together instead of fighting each other. Claims enforce territory. Turrets create chokepoints. Structures demand resources. Invasions have real mechanics. That cohesion is why kingdoms feel like a strategy game instead of just a plugin layered on top of vanilla survival. Why Server Owners Choose KingdomsX Over Everything Else Stability matters on a server that's supposed to run for months. Here's the thing, the maintainer (CryptoMorin) has been refining this since at least 2019, and the latest release is marked as stable. Spigot 1.21 support, regular patches, active bug fixes. The GitHub repo shows genuine maintenance, not abandonment. Performance is heavy. On servers running 200+ players simultaneously, KingdomsX is optimized enough that you don't see the classic lag spike when kingdoms expand. You'll feel it way less than plugins that calculate claim checks constantly or do expensive operations on every player move. Community actually exists. Discord server, people answering questions, the creator acknowledging when things break. It's not a solo project gathering dust. Customization through plain YAML configs means you tune almost everything without touching code. Different upgrade costs? Edit a number. Want turrets doing less damage? Change a config value. The plugin ships with multi-language support out of the box using Crowdin, so if your server serves multiple languages, translations already exist. That's the kind of detail that saves server owners weeks. Getting KingdomsX Installed and Running Standard Spigot plugin installation, but a few details matter. Grab the JAR from either SpigotMC (the original page) or Modrinth. The Polymart listing exists but isn't maintained regularly right now. bashcp KingdomsX-1.17.26.jar /path/to/server/plugins/./start.sh First restart creates your plugins/KingdomsX/ directory with all the configuration files. This is crucial: don't let players join before you've reviewed the config. Default settings are reasonable, but you'll tune almost everything. Before launch, check these specific settings: kingdom creation costs, member limits, turret damage values per upgrade tier, how long invasions last, and whether you want structure durability enabled (recent versions let you disable it by default, which most servers do). The GUI layouts are YAML too, so if you want to rebrand them, that's possible. Speaking of server setup, if you need help getting your core server.properties file right, our Server Properties Generator tool walks you through the key settings. Gets your max players and difficulty dialed in before KingdomsX even loads. One thing to know: the core plugin code is closed source, but configs, GUIs, and language files are open. If you find a balance issue or want to contribute translations, pull requests are welcome there. The Core Features Explained Territory and Claims. Players form kingdoms. A kingdom claims chunks (configurable, usually 16x16 Minecraft blocks per claim). Unclaimed land is neutral, enemy territory is hostile. Simple on paper, but it forces strategy: expand near rivals and risk war, or spread out and pay travel costs for resources. Turrets and Defensive Structures. Build a turret inside your territory, and it shoots enemies automatically. You can upgrade them, they cost resources to build and maintain, and enemies can destroy them. A turret wall becomes your fortress. A turret in the wrong spot wastes resources. Recent versions (1.17.26) redesigned the siege cannon GUI and added a hammer animation during construction, which is that kind of polish that makes a system feel less like a plugin and more like part of your server's game. Extraction and Resource Control. Beyond turrets, you build extractors (controlled mob farms), vaults (storage), and other structures. Each requires materials and construction time. Latest update disabled durability decay on most buildings by default, which is smart; nobody wants their fortress slowly falling apart while they're offline. Siege Mechanics and Invasions. Here's what separates KingdomsX from basic faction plugins. Attacking another kingdom isn't instant brawling; it's a campaign. Deploy siege cannons, invade through phases, both sides prepare. Invasions reward coordination and planning, not just player count. A smaller group with good fortifications beats a larger group that rushes unprepared. Outposts. Newer versions added separate claim points your kingdom controls as disconnected territory. Useful for controlling distant resources or creating satellite bases. Outposts have their own vulnerabilities and require separate defense, which creates interesting strategy decisions. Planning your kingdom's logistics? Fast Nether travel helps coordinate raids across the map. Use our Nether Portal Calculator to position portals between your main base and outposts efficiently. It saves your members from walking hundreds of blocks between raids. Where Most People Stumble on Setup Turret balance trips up almost every new server. Too much damage and defense is hopeless. Too little and turrets become decoration. Start conservative, adjust based on player feedback. The plugin lets you scale damage by upgrade tier, so weak early turrets become scary late-game defenses. Claim limits destroy servers faster than any other config mistake. Too many claims per kingdom and nothing ever changes (same rulers forever). Too few and players don't bother building anything. Test different ratios with your actual player count before opening to the public. PvP flag respect is another detail. Make sure you understand which features only trigger in PvP-enabled regions and which work everywhere. The plugin respects Spigot's PvP flags, which is good, but requires you to be explicit about it in your server rules so players understand when they're in danger. Durability settings confuse people. Recent versions default to no decay on structures, which is different from older behavior. Some server owners want structures breaking over time; others find it annoying. Check that setting explicitly before your first season ends, or you'll have surprise conversations with your players. The plugin includes an FSCK tool (filesystem check) that can fix duplicated block origins and broken protection signs if weird data corruption happens. Edge case, but useful for recovery. How It Compares to Other Faction Plugins Factions (the original) is simpler and much lighter on resources. It's still solid for small servers that just want basic claims without the strategy layer. Griefdefender is broader (not faction-specific) and gives more flexible claiming options, but costs money for server versions. Towny is made for building towns, not really for warfare. KingdomsX fills the niche: serious PvP servers with economies, structures, and strategy. If you're running a Skyblock variant, something like Griefdefender might fit better. For small creative servers, plain Factions works fine. But if you want faction warfare that feels like an actual game mode instead of a spreadsheet, KingdomsX is the default choice. Support the project KingdomsX is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Minecraft Build Challenges: Creative Ideas for 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-build-challenge-ideas Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice Build challenges turn Minecraft from a sandbox into a creative test. Whether you're speedrunning a kitchen, building within material limits, or creating a full village on a multiplayer server, constraints make the building part actually interesting. Here are the challenge formats that work best right now. Time-Based Challenges: The Rush Edition The three-minute build is a real thing, and it works better than you'd think. Set a timer, pick a build type (kitchen, bedroom, farm), grab a basic material palette, and go. You won't make anything museum-quality, but that's the point. The goal isn't perfection. This goal is speed and decision-making under pressure. PCGamesN covered this brilliantly with their breakdown of the three-minute kitchen concept. You use mostly quartz and glass, keep it minimal, and somehow it ends up looking cleaner than the elaborate farmhouse you spent three days on. (Honestly, constraints breed taste.) Scale it up to 24-hour builds or even week-long challenges if you're serious. But here's the catch: your server needs to be stable for this to work. If you're hosting friends or a small community, using a tool like the Minecraft Whitelist Creator keeps griefers out and lets you focus on the actual building without worrying about security. Material Restrictions: Building With Limits This hits different. Instead of fighting your way through every block type in the game, limit yourself to maybe five materials. Building a cottage? Brick, wood, glass, dark oak, and stone. That's it. No oak logs, no mud, no copper. The constraint forces you to think about contrast, repetition, and proportion in ways open-ended building doesn't demand. Your eyes get trained on what actually looks good instead of just stacking whatever's trendy. The vanilla game in version 26.1.2 has enough block variety that even with hard restrictions, you won't run out of creative options. And honestly, the builds that win community contests are usually the ones with restrained palettes anyway. The overdecorated ones blur together. Pick a biome, pick five blocks, build something functional. Kitchen. Farm. Defense tower. Base entrance. The format works for all of them. Themed Build Races: Competing Against Friends Grab three or four friends, pick a theme, give everyone the same time limit, and whoever finishes first wins. Themes could be: "a working kitchen for your base", "a functional farm", "a bridge between two islands", "a memorial to your first house", "something you'd be embarrassed to show anyone". The last one is weirdly fun. Lower stakes actually produce better creativity somehow. For setup, check the Minecraft Server List to find active community servers that host events like this. Or spin up something private with friends. If you do go private, the whitelist setup matters more than you'd think. Nothing kills momentum faster than a grief run during your build session. Architecture Styles as Challenge Frameworks Medieval. Modern. Brutalist. Steampunk. Japanese. Choose a specific architectural style and build only within that language. The constraint forces research and consistency. You'll learn what makes a style actually recognizable. Medieval isn't "brown wood and stone", it's specific proportions, rooflines, and window patterns. Modern isn't "smooth and flat", it's clean lines and material honesty. This works even better on a server where multiple players contribute to the same build. One person does the main hall in medieval, another adds a modern annex, and suddenly you're communicating through architecture. The constraint keeps the whole thing from becoming visual chaos. Start with a common building: a kitchen, a trading post, a guard tower. Pick a style. Build it three times in three different architectural languages. You'll be shocked at how different they feel even with the same footprint. Seasonal and Thematic Rotations Pick a theme that rotates monthly. January: winter builds only (snow, ice, blue palettes). February: love-themed structures. March: gardens. April: water features. May onward... you get it. Forces you to learn different biomes, different building patterns, different block combinations. The rotating constraint keeps things fresh on long-term servers. Without it, everyone gravitates to the same handful of building ideas and the world starts feeling repetitive. Build a seasonal base, a holiday decoration, a thematic farm. The structure prevents the common trap of "I've built everything and now what?". There's always a next challenge sitting there. Building From Reference: Inspiration as Constraint Pick a real building or a reference image. Minecraft-scale recreation of the Colosseum. A famous cathedral. A specific house you saw once. A bridge from a photo. The constraint is: get the proportions and character recognizable without being a perfect replica (because, yeah, blocky voxels aren't great for exact reproduction). A point is recognizability. This teaches shape and structure faster than freebuilding ever does. Your brain stops overthinking and starts problem-solving: "how do I make an arch with blocks that reads as an arch?" That's the useful question. Building your 40th dirt shack? Less useful. Community servers sometimes run themed build competitions around this. Everyone rebuilds the same landmark and votes on whose version they prefer. It's interesting because different players solve the same problem completely differently, and all of them work. Speedruns and Scorekeeping Time yourself. Compete against your own record or against friends. The speedrun forces brutal prioritization. A detailed roof? Won't happen. A recognizable overall shape? That's the bar. You learn what visual elements actually matter because you can't afford to waste time on what doesn't. Document times and build types in a shared spreadsheet if you're on a server. Make it stupid. Fastest kitchen. Most efficient farm design. Best-looking wall in the least time. Keeps the community engaged and gives people concrete targets. The game rewards this format too. Modern Minecraft's building tools are fast enough that a solid builder can make something recognizable in 15 minutes if they know what they're doing. Survival Mode Challenges: Real Stakes Vanilla survival is harder than creative, obviously, but that's the point. Build challenges with real resource constraints hit different. "Create a full kitchen setup before your food runs out." "Build a functional farm and get your first harvest before nightfall." "Construct a safe base before the next mob storm." Real time pressure, actual consequences. Resource gathering is part of the challenge. You're not just building. You're mining, planning, deciding what's worth the time investment. A complicated roof that takes forty minutes of crafting? Maybe not. A simple roof that looks good and uses materials you already have? That gets built. Survival challenges build actual problem-solving and efficiency. Real talk, creative mode teaching gets forgotten. Survival mode learning sticks. Community Voting and Feedback Build something, share it on your server, let the community vote on a theme. "Which build best captures medieval aesthetic?" or "Which farm setup is most efficient?" Voting rounds out the experience. You get feedback, you learn what reads to other players, you see what builds resonate. That feedback loop drives improvement faster than building alone. Keep it positive. Critique about shape and proportion: helpful. Calling something ugly: wastes everyone's time. Culture matters here. The best challenge cycles are the ones where people stay engaged between rounds. Challenge ends, voting happens, community picks a new theme, everyone builds toward that. Rinse, repeat. You go from a grind to a rhythm. --- ### Snap: Running Your Legacy BungeeCord Plugins on Velocity URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/snap-velocity-bungee-adapter Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice Phoenix616/Snap Experimental tool to run BungeeCord plugins on Velocity .0 You've got a Velocity server. You want to migrate from BungeeCord. But half your plugins don't have Velocity versions yet, and rewriting them feels like overkill. Snap is a Java adapter plugin that runs BungeeCord plugins directly on Velocity by translating API calls on the fly. It won't solve every compatibility problem, but for certain setups it might save you the painful work of replacing or rewriting plugins you still depend on. What's Snap, Really? Snap is a Velocity plugin that acts as a compatibility layer between two proxy architectures. It loads BungeeCord plugins inside Velocity and intercepts their API calls, converting them to Velocity equivalents in real time. Think of it as a live translator sitting between your legacy plugins and a modern proxy. The origin story matters here. This maintainer, Phoenix616, started by trying to document the differences between BungeeCord and Velocity APIs. That spiraled into building an actual adapter that could load plugins from one proxy on the other. The result is clever in concept but carries real trade-offs: it works, but it's less efficient than native Velocity plugins because every single method call gets translated. For a niche tool solving a specific problem, it's fairly active. 134 GitHub stars, recent maintenance, and the latest release (1.2-pre1) supports Velocity 3.3.0 with Bungee 1.20.x compatibility. The project is licensed under LGPL-3.0, so you can use it freely as long as you share any modifications back. What Works (And What Definitely Doesn't) Most basic proxy tasks work fine. Player connections, server switching, event listening, permissions checks - all there. The maintainer is refreshingly honest in the README: "Most of it (hopefully)." They're not overselling this thing. But several features won't translate to Velocity at all: BungeeCord's built-in group and permissions system doesn't exist in Velocity. The project recommends using LuckPerms instead, which works on both. Reconnect server functionality. BungeeCord has this built-in; Velocity doesn't expose it. Scoreboard support. Velocity has no API for this, and Snap isn't building one. Some ProxyConfig settings return sensible defaults but aren't exact mirrors of Bungee behavior. Commands registered after a plugin loads might not show up in the command registry. Transfer detection only works if the server is in online mode. If your plugin depends heavily on any of these features, Snap won't save you. Time to write a native Velocity plugin. Here's where Snap gets practical: you can configure what happens when something isn't supported. Set `throw-unsupported-exception` to `true` (the default) and you'll see exceptions logged so you know exactly what broke. Set it to `false` and unsupported methods return default values instead, letting your plugins limp along. Installing and Setting It Up Installation is straightforward if you've worked with Velocity before. First, grab the snap.jar file from the project's CI build system (linked on the releases page). It requires Java 17 or newer, so make sure your server meets that baseline. bash# Drop snap.jar into your Velocity plugins folder cp snap.jar /path/to/velocity/plugins/ # Create the Snap plugins directory mkdir -p /path/to/velocity/plugins/Snap/ # Move your BungeeCord plugins there cp /path/to/bungee/plugins/*.jar /path/to/velocity/plugins/Snap/ Restart Velocity (or reload the plugin), and Snap initializes, loads all the BungeeCord plugins from that folder, and logs any issues it encounters. If something doesn't load, the logs will tell you why. One practical tip from testing: start with just Snap and one BungeeCord plugin. Confirm it loads. Then add more gradually. You'll catch incompatibility issues much faster than by dumping everything in at once and then wondering which plugin is causing the problem. When You'd Use This Snap makes sense in a few specific situations. You've a BungeeCord plugin that's no longer maintained and doesn't have a Velocity equivalent. Maybe it's a legacy staff utility or a custom analytics module. Rewriting it feels wasteful. Snap lets you keep using it without a full rewrite. You're migrating a network but don't want to migrate everything at once. Running Snap on your new Velocity server lets you bring old plugins over while you gradually write or find Velocity replacements. You're running a test network and want to try Velocity without committing to migrating your entire plugin ecosystem yet. What doesn't make sense: using this on production. The project itself warns against it without extensive testing. And even then, you're betting on experimental software. Most production networks are better off migrating properly. If most of your plugins already have maintained Velocity versions, skip Snap entirely. Just migrate. You'll have fewer surprises and better performance. Performance Trade-Offs and Gotchas Translation adds overhead. Every API call gets caught and converted back and forth. For plugins making thousands of calls per second, you might see CPU impact. For normal plugins doing basic proxy work, probably not. Connection handling is the trickiest part. Events might fire slightly differently than on BungeeCord. If your plugin does heavy manipulation of player connections or relies on specific event timing, you're better off rewriting it for Velocity instead of trying to make it work through Snap's translation layer. There's also a scale ceiling. If you're running a massive network with thousands of concurrent players, Snap's inefficiency will compound. At that size, you're better off migrating properly. Watch your CPU and memory during peak traffic. If you see spikes that correlate with plugin activity, it might be the translation layer struggling. That's your signal to either migrate the plugin or look for a Velocity alternative. Real Alternatives Your options for running old BungeeCord plugins on Velocity are actually pretty limited, which is why Snap exists in the first place. Write a Velocity plugin. It's the right long-term choice and the future-proof path. Depending on complexity, it might only take a weekend. Stay on BungeeCord or Waterfall. Velocity is faster and better-architected, but it's not the only option. If your entire plugin ecosystem is BungeeCord-dependent, staying there's valid until you're ready to migrate everything together. Redesign around the missing functionality. Do you actually need that legacy plugin? Maybe a modern permissions system like LuckPerms solves your problems without the plugin. Maybe you can simplify your infrastructure. Before You Install Test this in a staging environment first. Run your plugins through every feature you care about. Then watch it for a week and look for odd behavior. Check logs regularly. Look for performance issues. Understand the limitations going in. Snap works for certain plugins and certain use cases. Look, and it won't work for everything. The more your plugins depend on Bungee-specific features (especially permissions groups, scoreboard manipulation, or connection hijacking), the more likely Snap will disappoint you. Don't run this in production without that staging testing phase. The project is explicit: this is experimental software. It solves a specific problem for specific people. And that might not solve your problem. And if you're managing a Minecraft server network, you probably also have builders and players. They might appreciate minecraft.how's Block Search tool for tracking down specific materials, or the Nether Portal Calculator for planning infrastructure. Support the project Snap is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### SimplixStorage: How Minecraft Plugins Store Data Better URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/simplixstorage-minecraft-data Published: 2026-05-03 Author: ice "Library to store data in a better way" Simplix-Softworks/SimplixStorage · github.com pache-2.0 If you're building a Minecraft plugin and tired of wrestling with YAML file formats or clunky storage solutions, SimplixStorage solves this. It's a lightweight Java library that handles JSON, YAML, and TOML storage without forcing you to depend on Bukkit or BungeeCord. What This Project Does SimplixStorage is a Java library designed to store data in multiple formats: JSON, YAML, and TOML. Unlike Bukkit's built-in configuration system, it works independently, so you can use it in any Java project, not just Minecraft plugins on Bukkit or BungeeCord servers. The library mirrors Bukkit's API design (contains checks, nested object support, familiar method names), but without the framework dependencies. You write to the same interface, but your code doesn't care whether it's talking to a JSON file, a YAML config, or a TOML document. The library handles serialization internally. What makes this different from rolling your own? SimplixStorage handles the boring stuff: encoding edge cases, nested object traversal, file I/O exceptions, format validation. It's been tested against real plugin use cases, and the code's open source (Apache-2.0 license means you can use it in private projects too). Why You'd Use It The main draw is freedom from framework lock-in. If you're building a standalone Minecraft server tool, a proxy plugin for BungeeCord alternatives, or even a non-Bukkit Java application, SimplixStorage gives you structured data handling without the Bukkit baggage. Format choice matters. JSON is incredibly fast - faster than YAML by a significant margin, according to benchmarks - making it perfect for storing massive amounts of player data at runtime (ranks, money, playtime, inventory states, etc.). YAML is more human-readable and makes sense for configuration files that admins might edit by hand. TOML splits the difference: readable enough to edit manually but faster than YAML. Pick your format based on actual requirements, not framework constraints. Server administrators and plugin developers often need this. Running a Minecraft server status checker? SimplixStorage could power the backend data layer. Building a Nether portal coordinate calculator with data persistence? Same thing. Any tool that needs to log player stats, store configuration, or track historical data benefits from having a proper storage abstraction instead of manual file handling. And honestly? It's faster to include a proven library than to write file I/O code yourself and hope nothing breaks in production. How to Install SimplixStorage is distributed through JitPack, which means no new repository URLs to maintain if you're already using Maven Central. First, add the JitPack repository to your pom.xml: xml jitpack.io https://jitpack.io Then add the dependency. Version 3.2.7 is the latest release: xml com.github.simplix-softworks SimplixStorage 3.2.7 The scope tag matters. Use provided if you're shading the library into your plugin JAR separately, or compile if you're bundling it directly. For most cases (standalone plugins), compile is fine. That's it. Maven downloads the JAR, you're ready to start storing data. No additional configuration needed. Key Features and How They Work SimplixStorage gives you multiple advantages working together. Multiple file format support. This is the headline feature. You're not locked into YAML. If you need raw speed, JSON is your answer. If your configuration needs to be human-editable (think admin configs), YAML works better. If you want something readable but faster, TOML handles both. The library handles format switching transparently - your code stays the same, you just change the file extension. Nested object handling. Unlike some competing libraries (the project README mentions ThunderBolt-2 as a concrete example), SimplixStorage properly supports nested data structures. You can store complex hierarchies without flattening everything into flat dot-notation keys. This matters when you're dealing with player data that has multiple levels of nesting. Bukkit-like API. If you've used Bukkit's FileConfiguration class, you already know most of SimplixStorage. Methods like contains(), get(), and set() work exactly as expected. There's essentially no learning curve if you know Bukkit. If you don't, the API is straightforward enough that you'll pick it up in minutes. True independence.** Run it standalone, inside a plugin, in a proxy daemon, or even in a non-Minecraft Java application. It's just a JAR. No framework dependencies means fewer version conflicts, easier distribution, and no risk of Bukkit updates breaking your code. Reliable storage. The library validates data before writing, handles encoding edge cases, and manages nested object traversal. This isn't just "write whatever to disk" - it's structured storage with safety guarantees. 138 stars on GitHub suggests real-world usage and stability. Tips, Gotchas, and What To Watch For Here's where experience talking to other developers helps. Don't assume all three formats are equally suitable for every use case. JSON wins on speed but loses on readability. If you're storing a config file that admins will manually edit, YAML or TOML are better choices. If you're logging millions of player statistics in real-time, JSON's performance advantage becomes critical. When you're storing custom objects, make sure they're actually serializable before you nest them. SimplixStorage will catch the error quickly, but finding this at runtime (not compile time) is annoying. Worth checking your data structure early. Shading vs. providing matters more than you'd think. If another plugin on the same server also uses SimplixStorage, version conflicts can arise. The safest approach is usually to shade it directly into your plugin JAR using maven-shade-plugin, keeping your copy isolated. It adds a few KB to your JAR, but it prevents headaches. If you're migrating from Bukkit's FileConfiguration to SimplixStorage, remember that file structure differs. Existing YAML files won't auto-migrate. Write a one-time migration script if you're converting an existing plugin. It's straightforward - read the old format, write to the new one - but it's a step you need to plan for. Performance varies by format. Look, jSON files with millions of records will load and save faster than YAML equivalents. But for typical plugin use cases (storing a few thousand player records), the difference is negligible. Don't prematurely optimize - pick the format that fits your use case, not the theoretical fastest option. Alternatives Worth Considering SimplixStorage isn't the only option, though it's genuinely solid for its niche. Bukkit FileConfiguration. It's built-in, stable, well-documented, and used by thousands of plugins. But you're stuck with YAML, and you're locked into Bukkit/BungeeCord as a dependency. If you're already building a Bukkit plugin and YAML is fine, there's no reason to add SimplixStorage as a dependency. The built-in system works. Raw JSON libraries (Gson, Jackson). These give you more control and flexibility. But you'll write more boilerplate - serialization logic, null checks, error handling. SimplixStorage abstracts away the tedium. Raw libraries make sense if you need features SimplixStorage doesn't offer (custom JSON schemas, validation rules, etc.). Databases (MySQL, MongoDB, Redis). If your data truly scales (millions of records, complex queries, distributed storage), a proper database backend is what you eventually want. SimplixStorage is for when file-based storage is sufficient. It's a good line to draw: files for configs and moderate-scale player data, databases for truly large-scale stuff. Worth It Or Not SimplixStorage is solid if you're building anything that needs data persistence without framework dependencies. The trade-off is that you're relying on a community library rather than a built-in Bukkit system, but with active development and 138 GitHub stars, it's a reasonable bet. The library's real strength is flexibility: JSON for speed, YAML for readability, TOML for balance. Pick your format based on your actual needs, not because a framework forced your hand. And for plugin developers tired of writing custom file I/O code, SimplixStorage eliminates that friction entirely. Support the project SimplixStorage is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### How ModMenu Simplifies Managing Your Minecraft Mods URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/modmenu-minecraft-mod-manager Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice TerraformersMC/ModMenu A menu for, you guessed it, mods! Modding Minecraft takes effort. Between downloading mods, extracting them, managing versions, and digging through config files hidden in.minecraft/config or launcher-specific folders, you're basically doing IT work before you can even play the game. ModMenu strips away that friction. It's a lightweight Fabric and Quilt mod that drops a menu right into your game (press M by default) where you can browse every mod you've installed, access their configuration screens without restarting, search for what you need, and if the mod developer set it up, even check for updates without leaving the game. If you're managing a modded client or running a modded multiplayer server, this is genuinely useful. It's also one of those tools that's been so indispensable in the modding community that it's almost become invisible - 634 stars on GitHub, Java-based, MIT licensed, and actively maintained. What ModMenu Does So what does it look like in practice? You launch your modded Minecraft world, open the menu (default M key, configurable), and you're greeted with a list of every mod you've installed in the left sidebar. The list is searchable, filterable, and organized. On the right side, you see details about whichever mod you've selected: who authored it, a description (which can be translated into different languages if the mod dev set that up), links to their website or Discord, and a button that takes you to the mod's config screen if it has one. That's the core of it. But it doesn't end there. The interface can filter out "library" mods (those are dependencies that other mods use behind the scenes, not standalone mods you'd configure yourself). It can mark mods as deprecated if the dev says so. And if a mod provides an update source (like Modrinth or a custom checker), ModMenu will flag when updates are available right there in the list. No restarting the game, no hunting through multiple websites. It's basically a mission control center for your mods, all accessible without leaving your world. Why You'd Install This Here's the problem ModMenu solves: managing mods is tedious without it. Without ModMenu, you're poking around in your Minecraft folder (.minecraft/mods on Windows, or your launcher's instance folder), squinting at JAR file names to figure out which version of Lithium you installed, and if you want to tweak a mod's settings, you're dealing with config folder structure, opening JSON or TOML files in a text editor, and guessing at what each option does. Most you're doing all of this outside the game. ModMenu changes that completely. For single-player survival players with 20 mods, it saves you maybe a minute per session. For someone running a modded multiplayer server or a custom modpack with 40+ mods, it's the difference between sanity and chaos. Server admins especially benefit here. Instead of asking players "which version of WorldEdit are you running?" or getting confused about mod conflicts, they can check the list themselves. If they're running a development environment and frequently swapping mods in and out, having a searchable menu beats navigating folders every time. You can also verify your mod setup before deploying it, and if you're using tools like our server.properties generator to configure your server, having your mods organized and manageable makes the whole setup process cleaner. There's also the update checker. If you've got Modrinth-hosted mods (which most modern mods are), ModMenu will let you know when updates drop. You don't have to hunt through Modrinth or CurseForge every time you play. Just open ModMenu and see the badges showing which mods have updates waiting. Installation and Setup This is where ModMenu wins: it's trivial to set up. First, make sure you're running Fabric or Quilt (ModMenu supports both). If you don't have a Fabric instance set up yet, your launcher of choice (MultiMC, Prism, CurseForge, whatever) has a one-click Fabric profile creation. Then: Download ModMenu from Modrinth or GitHub (the latest release is v17.0.0) Drag the JAR file into your mods folder (.minecraft/mods/ or your instance's mods folder) Launch the game That's it. No config required, no dependencies to hunt down, no obscure setup steps. If you're running a modpack someone else made, ModMenu might already be included. In that case, you don't need to do anything - it's already there. When you launch the game, you'll have an M key shortcut available. If you want to rebind it, open Minecraft's controls settings and search for "ModMenu" in the key bind list. Features That Matter ModMenu has several standout features worth knowing about, especially if you're deciding whether it's worth the download: In-game mod browsing and search - This sounds basic, but being able to search your mod list without touching a file manager is incredibly useful. Search for "world" and you'll find WorldEdit, World Border utilities, and similar mods. It's fast and filters live as you type, so you can quickly find exactly what you're looking for without scrolling through your entire mod list. Configuration screens - If a mod supports it, ModMenu gives you direct access to its config UI. Some mods (like Sodium, a graphics optimizer) have detailed settings pages where you can tweak rendering options, performance settings, and visual adjustments. Others have simple on/off toggles. Either way, you're not editing text files. This is why mod developers love ModMenu - it's become a standard interface for settings, making the modding experience feel more cohesive and user-friendly. Translatable mod names and descriptions - Mod developers can add translation keys so ModMenu displays their mod's name and description in your game's language. If you're playing in Spanish and a mod dev added Spanish translations, you'll see them. It's a nice touch that makes the modding ecosystem feel more unified and accessible to international players. Library filtering - Mods that are pure dependencies (like Fabric API, Cloth Config, Architectury) get marked as libraries and can be hidden from the main list if you want. Your mod list becomes shorter and less noisy. You see the mods you actually care about configuring, not the invisible backend stuff. Update notifications - If a mod is hosted on Modrinth or provides its own update checker, ModMenu will show a notification badge next to mods with available updates. Here's the thing, you can even filter to see only mods with updates waiting. For people running development instances or servers where keeping mods up-to-date is important, this saves a ton of manual checking. It also helps catch security updates faster. Parent mod grouping - For mods that are part of a modular ecosystem (like certain Fabric libraries), ModMenu can group them visually so you understand the hierarchy. It's subtle but helpful for understanding complex mod setups, especially when you're running modpacks with a lot of interdependent mods. Common Pitfalls and Tips Not every mod has a config screen in ModMenu. If a mod doesn't expose its settings via the standard interface, you'll still need to edit the config file manually. This isn't ModMenu's fault - it's up to the mod developer to support it. Most newer mods do, but some older or niche mods might not. Check the mod's documentation on Modrinth or GitHub if you're not sure whether it supports in-game configuration. The update checker only works if a mod declares an update source. Most mods on Modrinth are set up for this automatically. Mods on CurseForge often are too. But if someone published a mod on an obscure site or stopped updating their project, ModMenu won't know about updates. It's not magic - it's just using metadata the mod dev provided. Version compatibility matters. ModMenu supports Minecraft 1.14 and newer (which is basically everything modern). But make sure the version of ModMenu you download matches your Minecraft version. Grab the v17.0.0 JAR for your version and you're golden. One more thing: if you're on a Quilt-based instance instead of Fabric, ModMenu works exactly the same way. No differences in functionality. Pick whichever loader your modpack uses and ModMenu will play nice with it. Both are actively maintained and widely supported. Other Options Worth Knowing Honestly? ModMenu is pretty much the only game in town for in-game mod list management on Fabric and Quilt. Some third-party launchers (like Prism or CurseForge's client) have built-in mod management, but those work from the launcher, not in-game. If you want a menu inside the game to browse and configure mods, ModMenu is your go-to. The launcher tools are great for installation and bulk management, but ModMenu is for runtime discovery and configuration. There are other overlay mods like EMI or REI that show you crafting recipes and item databases. Those serve a different purpose entirely (item/recipe browsing vs. mod management), so they're not really alternatives - they're complementary. You can run both without issues. If you're managing a multiplayer server, you'll also want to make sure your setup is solid. Check your server status regularly to catch any issues, and have your server.properties dialed in - our server.properties creator can help with that when you're testing new mods and need to reconfigure performance settings. 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 --- ### Minecraft-XDP-eBPF: Kernel-Level DDoS Protection for Java Servers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-xdp-ebpf-ddos-protection Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice Outfluencer/Minecraft-XDP-eBPF The first and only publicly available Minecraft XDP Filter, protecting your server from layer 7 DDoS attacks lause If you've ever run a public Minecraft server, you know the feeling: someone sends a flood of garbage traffic your way and suddenly everyone's rubber-banding. Layer 7 DDoS attacks (the application-level kind) are cheap, easy to launch, and incredibly annoying to defend against with traditional firewalls. Minecraft-XDP-eBPF solves this by dropping malicious packets before they even reach your server software - straight at the kernel level. What This Project Does Minecraft-XDP-eBPF is an XDP (eXpress Data Path) firewall written in C that uses eBPF (extended Berkeley Packet Filter) to inspect Minecraft traffic at the network driver level. If that sounds intimidating, think of it this way: instead of letting garbage packets travel all the way to your Java server, this tool intercepts them at the network card and yells "no" before they consume any server resources. The project handles what a lot of people don't realize attacks exploit: malformed Minecraft protocol packets. It analyzes handshakes, status pings, and login requests, then drops anything that violates the Minecraft protocol spec or looks suspicious. Here's the thing, invalid VarInts, nonsense packet sequences, malformed connection attempts - all gone. Currently it supports Minecraft 1.8 through 26.1.2 on IPv4, with the default port being 25565 (obviously). There's built-in SYN rate limiting too, capping connections at 10 SYNs per 3 seconds per IP address by default. All of this filtering happens without your server code even knowing the packets existed. Why You'd Want This You need this if you're running a public server and want to stop getting absolutely hammered by random attacks. Layer 7 DDoS is way more common than people think, and it's the kind of thing that's hard to defend against with just your upstream ISP. They're looking at bandwidth; you're looking at keeping your server responsive. Picture this: someone (or a botnet) figures out your server's IP and starts sending thousands of fake Minecraft login attempts per second. Your server now has to spend CPU cycles parsing these packets, rejecting them, and cleaning up. Your real players lag because the server's busy drowning in garbage. With this tool, those fake packets never make it to your server at all. The real win here is zero-copy dropping. Malicious traffic gets dropped at the XDP layer (XDP_DROP) before the kernel even allocates memory for it. That's not just fast; that's "we're talking microseconds" fast. If you're running a small survival server with friends, you probably don't need this. If you're running something public or competitive - especially a PvP server where people might want to harass you - it's worth thinking about. Getting It Running Installation has a few moving parts, but it's not crazy. You'll need a Linux system (the tool is Linux-only) with root access. First, install the prerequisites. If you're on Ubuntu or Debian: bashsudo apt update sudo apt install -y gcc-multilib wget gnupg software-properties-common git libbpf-dev Then grab LLVM/Clang. The project needs a recent version (CI tests with LLVM 21): bashwget https://apt.llvm.org/llvm.sh chmod +x llvm.sh sudo./llvm.sh 21 all You'll also need the Rust toolchain installed. Once you've got everything, clone the repo and run the build script: bashgit clone https://github.com/Outfluencer/Minecraft-XDP-eBPF.git cd Minecraft-XDP-eBPF./build.sh After that builds successfully, you've got a binary at `target/release/xdp-loader`. To actually load the firewall onto your network interface: bashsudo./target/release/xdp-loader eth0 (Replace eth0 with whatever your actual network interface is. If you don't know, `ip link show` will tell you.) And that's it. The firewall's now active and filtering traffic. Want to monitor what it's doing? Add a Prometheus metrics endpoint: bashsudo./target/release/xdp-loader eth0 - metrics-addr 0.0.0.0:1999 Then hit `http://your-server-ip:1999/metrics` to see packet counts, drops, and other fun statistics. Features That Matter Deep Packet Inspection The tool doesn't just look at packet headers; it digs into the actual Minecraft protocol. It validates VarInt encoding (which a lot of attack tools get wrong), checks packet structure, and enforces sequence rules. Packets that are syntactically invalid for the Minecraft protocol get dropped immediately. Connection Throttling By default, it limits new TCP connections to 10 SYNs per 3 seconds per source IP. You can tweak this in the `build.rs` file if your actual legitimate traffic gets hammered (maybe you're migrating servers and have a spike), but the default is reasonable for most setups. Zero-Copy Dropping The coolest part, honestly. XDP operates at the driver level before the kernel's normal network stack even gets involved. Malicious packets are dropped without ever being copied into kernel memory. Your server doesn't wake up because of it. That's real performance improvement, not just theoretical. Gotchas and How to Avoid Them You need to run this as root or with appropriate eBPF permissions. If you get permission errors, check that you're using `sudo`. No surprise there, but it's the most common issue. If you're tweaking the configuration in `build.rs` (changing ports, throttle rates, etc.), remember that you've to recompile after editing. Don't just re-run the binary and expect it to pick up your changes. It won't. I made that mistake once and spent ten minutes wondering why my port configuration had no effect (actually, that wasn't me, just... hypothetically speaking). The other gotcha: if your map configuration changes - say you enable Per-CPU maps or mess with the data structure sizes - sometimes the BPF filesystem gets confused on restart. The fix is nuclear but it works: bashsudo rm -r /sys/fs/bpf That wipes the BPF filesystem. When you restart the loader, it'll create fresh maps. Only do this if you're getting errors about map creation; it's not something you need to do regularly. Also remember that the userspace program has to stay running to manage the eBPF maps. If you kill the loader process, the firewall unloads immediately. You'll probably want to run it under systemd or some other supervisor so it restarts if it crashes. What About Alternatives? There aren't many tools doing exactly what this does. Most people either rely on their ISP's DDoS protection, use a commercial service like Cloudflare, or just accept that they'll occasionally get hit. Cloudflare has a Minecraft-specific service that proxies your traffic, but you're paying for it and your server IP is hidden behind a proxy. This tool is self-hosted and free (BSD-licensed, so open source). Different trade-offs. Some people use basic rate limiting in their server software or firewall, but that happens after packets arrive at your server. This tool stops them at the driver level, which is faster and more efficient. If you're just starting out with server hosting, check your host's built-in DDoS protection first. But if you're running on bare metal or need more control, Minecraft-XDP-eBPF is genuinely unique in what it offers. Before You Deploy Test it in a staging environment if you can. Run it on a non-production server or a test VPS to make sure it doesn't accidentally filter legitimate traffic (it shouldn't, but config mistakes happen). Also verify it works with your specific Minecraft server version before turning it on for real players. If you're protecting a survival server, it's low-risk. If you're running a competitive PvP or faction server where legitimate players are already frustrated, a misconfiguration that blocks their login packets could be a disaster. The project has 169 stars on GitHub and is actively maintained. That latest release improved the varint reading method, which is exactly the kind of boring-but-critical stuff you want to see in a security tool. This is solid work. Set up that Prometheus metrics export. Monitor it. Keep an eye on your packet drop rates - if something looks weird, you'll spot it early. And if you're genuinely worried about DDoS and running a legitimate public server, this tool is worth your time. 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 --- ### Chatty: Managing Minecraft Server Chat in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/chatty-minecraft-chat-plugin Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Chatty (Brikster/Chatty) Bukkit-compatible chat management system Star on GitHub ↗ Running a Minecraft server means dealing with chat. Without something in place, you get a chaotic mess of spam, advertising, caps-lock tirades, and players talking over each other across different game modes. Chatty solves that problem with a lightweight but powerful system for channels, moderation, and message filtering that actually stays out of your way. What Chatty Does Chatty is a chat management plugin built on Kyori's Adventure library for Bukkit-compatible servers. It gives you fine-grained control over how messages flow between players, without the bloat of massive social plugins that do twelve things you don't need. Think of it as infrastructure for your server's conversation layer. Players get chat channels they can join or switch between. Server ops get moderation tools that catch spam, excessive caps, and advertisement patterns. Custom message events (joins, quits, deaths) can be formatted however you want, and it all supports both legacy color codes (&6 for gold, etc.) and MiniMessage formatting for fancier text. The plugin doesn't try to be a social hub or replace your forum. It's purpose-built for managing the in-game chat experience. Why You'd Use It Small survival servers rarely need this. But if you're running anything with multiple game modes, a creative and survival split, or even a modest population, Chatty solves real problems. Chat channels mean your builders don't get spammed by PvP updates. Private messaging keeps conversations from flooding the main chat. Moderation filters catch repeating spam bots and prevent players from posting malicious links. Server admins using this report less time babysitting chat and more time, well, actually playing. And that's the whole point. If you're looking to grow your player base, good chat management matters. Players stick around on servers where they're not drowning in spam or inappropriate text. See our Minecraft server list to check how other communities organize their messaging. Getting Chatty Running Installation is straightforward. Download the latest build (v2.19.14 is the current stable release, though the maintainer is actively developing v3), drop the jar into your plugins folder, and restart the server. Chatty will generate its config files on first run. bashcd /path/to/server mkdir -p plugins cd plugins wget https://github.com/Brikster/Chatty/releases/download/v2.19.14/Chatty.jar cd.. # Restart your server./start.sh That's it. No external databases required, no complex setup. The plugin works with recent Minecraft versions including 1.20 and newer. If you're on older versions, check the release notes first (v2.19.14 specifically fixed random kick issues on 1.20). Core Features That Work Chat channels. Out of the box you get local and global channels, but you can define custom ones. A "building" channel for your creative area, "pvp" for the arena, whatever makes sense. Players join with a command, messages go to subscribers in that channel, and the main chat doesn't get crowded. Private messaging. Players can DM each other with /msg or /tell. It's simple but effective, and keeps personal conversations from clogging the general chat. Admin replies are tracked so you can see the thread if needed. Moderation filters. Chatty catches patterns you define: all-caps spam, repeated characters (looking at you, players who type "lolololol"), and links that might be malicious. Warnings get sent to players instead of auto-muting them, so you're not being heavy-handed. Actually, wait, that only works if you configure it that way. You can set it stricter if you want. Notifications. Chat announcements can appear as regular messages, action bar text, or title cards depending on importance. Death messages can be custom formatted. Server events show up however you define them. Message formatting. Both legacy (&) and MiniMessage syntax are supported. So your death message can be styled, your join notifications can have colors and hover text, all without looking like it came from a 2010 plugin. Configuration Gotchas and How to Avoid Them Chatty generates reasonable defaults, but you'll want to tweak the moderation rules for your server's culture. What counts as spam on one server is normal chat on another. One common mistake: setting channel default permissions too open. If you want "staff" to be a private channel, specify that explicitly in the config. Otherwise players end up seeing messages they shouldn't. Color stripping in replacements was actually broken in earlier versions (though v2.19.14 fixed it), so if you're upgrading from something old, test your color codes in messages after the update. And if you start seeing weird character rendering, odds are a message formatter is conflicting with Adventure library. Look, check your other plugins. Private messaging logs don't persist by default. If you need conversation history for moderation purposes, you'll need to configure that yourself or use a logging plugin alongside Chatty. Comparable Plugins and When to Use Them LiteBans handles chat moderation and player bans with a centralized database if you're running multiple servers. It's heavier than Chatty but unified. If you just need single-server chat management, Chatty is simpler. Prism and similar logging plugins pair well with Chatty. Chatty manages the chat experience, Prism archives it for audit trails. Think of them as complementary, not competing. HeadDB and similar skin databases are separate concerns from chat, though if your server has custom skins, you might pair Chatty with tools like that for a complete player experience. Speaking of skins, if you're curious about how to create custom ones, check out the Minecraft skin creator. For massive networks running 10+ servers, you'd probably want something like BungeeCord-aware chat bridges. Chatty handles single-server well. It can be deployed on multiple Spigot instances, but cross-server messages are out of scope. One Last Thing Chatty sits at 111 stars on GitHub and is written in Java. The fact that it's focused and doesn't try to do everything is kind of the point. A chat plugin should manage chat, not inject itself into permissions, economy, and twelve other systems. The v3 branch is a work in progress, so if you're starting fresh, v2.19.14 is stable. Keep an eye on releases if major changes appeal to you, but don't wait for v3 to go live if you need chat management now.Brikster/Chatty - MIT, ★111 Ready to try Chatty? 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 Brikster/Chatty on GitHub ↗ --- ### When Vanilla Bosses Aren't Enough: EliteMobs Explained URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/elitemobs-custom-bosses-minecraft Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project EliteMobs (MagmaGuy/EliteMobs) This is a spigot plugin that aims to extend Minecraft's survival endgame by making mobs more interesting. Star on GitHub ↗ .0 Your server's just defeated the Ender Dragon and now what - endless mining? EliteMobs transforms vanilla boss fights into actual challenges with customizable mechanics, loot, and difficulty scaling. It's built for servers that want progression beyond the Dragon, and it's surprisingly deep once you dig in. What This Plugin Does EliteMobs is a Spigot plugin that replaces the "kill it once, you're done" endgame with something that keeps players engaged. Instead of one-and-done encounters, you get boss mobs with customizable abilities, loot tables, and real mechanical depth. The core idea is straightforward: elite mobs are ordinary Minecraft creatures given superpowers. These aren't just inflated health bars. A boss might have fireballs, teleportation, summons, knockback immunity, or phase mechanics. The plugin bundles several pre-made dungeon encounters, but you can create endless variations using config files or the web-based content editor. Seriously customizable. Want a boss that splits into two smaller versions when its health drops below 50%? Done. A creeper that explodes in an expanding arena without harming the terrain? Already exists in the default config. The latest version (8.4.2) added new dungeons like "The Binder of Worlds" with instanced versions so multiple groups can run them simultaneously. Who Needs This Survival servers hit the endgame wall hard. Once players defeat the dragon, content creators, PvE-focused communities, and SMP admins face the same problem: now what? EliteMobs answers that with a progression system that feels like earned content, not artificial gatekeeping. But it's not just for multiplayer. Single-player vanilla players benefit too. If you want boss encounters in your personal world, EliteMobs works perfectly in single-player mode. You don't strictly need it if everyone's happy with vanilla progression. Most servers, though? They want more eventually. Installation and Setup The install process is standard Spigot fare: Download the latest.jar from the GitHub releases page Drop it into your server's plugins folder Restart the server Configure via YAML files or use the web app Here's the actual command: bashwget https://github.com/MagmaGuy/EliteMobs/releases/download/v.8.4.2/EliteMobs.jar -O plugins/EliteMobs.jar # Then restart your server On first startup, the plugin generates default configs and example bosses. You get working dungeons immediately, which is nice - you're not starting from scratch. For custom content, the maintainer provides a web app at magmaguy.com/webapp where you can design bosses visually without touching YAML. Look, this is genuinely useful if config files make you sweat. Boss Types and How They Work The plugin supports three main boss spawn types: regional bosses, arena bosses, and instanced dungeons. Regional bosses spawn throughout your world at configured intervals. Players stumble across them naturally or hunt them deliberately. The challenge is that they're far tougher than vanilla mobs and require actual strategy. Arena encounters are player-triggered fights in dedicated arenas. Think raid encounters - you prep, you enter, you fight. Version 8.4.2's new dungeons include multiple difficulty levels, so progression feels earned rather than arbitrarily gated. Instanced dungeons are the standout feature. They spawn on-demand, so multiple groups can run them simultaneously without interfering with each other. No more waiting for the first group to finish before the next attempt. The Powers System: What Makes Bosses Dangerous Vanilla Minecraft bosses have one mechanic: hit it until it dies. EliteMobs bosses have dozens of possible powers that change how you fight them. When you encounter a boss, you see its name, health bar, and active powers displayed. This clarity matters - players can prepare accordingly. One boss might heal itself (requiring burst damage), another teleports away (requiring ranged attackers), another summons minions (requiring AoE control). Elite Scripts (the plugin's scripting system) lets advanced users create absurdly complex boss behaviors. The recent version added RelativeVector and RelativeOffset for more precise positioning, letting scripters make bosses fire projectiles in specific directions or spawn terrain features. If you're into designing intricate encounters, this is where the depth lives. You don't need custom scripts to use the plugin effectively. The defaults are solid and well-balanced. Integration with Your Server EliteMobs generates loot - special items that drop from elite mobs. These feed into other systems: economy plugins, item rarities, cosmetics, progression tracking. The plugin tracks elite mobs across server restarts too, maintaining their state so players can't cheese encounters by restarting. Bosses become natural progression checkpoints on serious SMPs. And if your server focuses on community, consider that players often browse the Minecraft server list looking for communities with engaging content. Bosses help create that draw. Pair them with cosmetic progression or tie rewards to skin unlocks, and you've got a system that feels cohesive. Common Setup Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Most frustrations stem from misconfiguration, not the plugin itself. Performance tuning is critical. Boss spawns and power calculations add CPU overhead. Spawn too many regional bosses or give them expensive powers, and your server's TPS tanks fast. Start conservative, increase gradually, and monitor metrics. Also - I learned this the hard way - read the wiki before creating custom bosses. The config syntax is strict. A missing colon or bad indentation breaks the encounter silently without error messages. The web app handles this gracefully; manual YAML editing requires care. The loot system is powerful but different from vanilla drops. Understanding how rarity tiers and drop rates work prevents disappointment when players feel unrewarded. The plugin documentation covers this, but it's easy to miss if you're rushing setup. The Honest Take EliteMobs is mature, actively maintained, and genuinely transforms how your server feels. It answers the "now what?" question that kills most survival servers - a real thing, not a complaint I'm inventing. Install it if your players want more progression after the dragon. Skip it if you're running pure vanilla by choice. The GPL-3.0 license means you can modify the source code if needed, but modifications must be shared. Rarely an issue for server admins, but worth knowing upfront. 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 --- ### Essential Commands: The Fabric Mod That Makes Minecraft Server Life Bearable URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/essential-commands-fabric-servers Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Essential-Commands (John-Paul-R/Essential-Commands) Configurable, permissions-backed utility commands for Fabric servers (tpa, home, warp, spawn, back, nick, rtp) Star on GitHub ↗ Running a Fabric server without teleport commands is like building a city with no roads - technically possible, but exhausting. Essential Commands fills that gap by bundling teleport requests, player homes, warps, and random spawns into a single configurable package backed by actual permission nodes. It's the kind of mod that becomes non-negotiable once you've used it. What This Project Does Essential Commands is a server-side Fabric mod that adds seven categories of utility commands. There's no crafting overhaul, no new items, no complexity - just the commands server admins and players genuinely need. The core suite includes /tpa (teleport request), /home (personal spawn storage), /warp (server waypoints), /spawn (world spawnpoint), /back (return after death), /nickname (player aliases), and /randomteleport (wild-card respawn). There's also a convenience tier: /anvil, /enderchest, /stonecutter, /grindstone, /wastebin for direct access without inventory clutter. Plus utilities like /fly, /afk, /top, and day/night toggles for admins. What makes it stand out: every single command is configurable and toggleable. You only enable what your server needs. The mod runs entirely server-side (clients don't need it), and it respects permission mods like LuckPerms, so you can assign commands by rank without custom code. The Problem It Solves Vanilla Minecraft has exactly zero player-accessible teleport commands. That means a new player who builds five thousand blocks away either maintains a nether highway, builds a rail line, or accepts a 30-minute walk every time they respawn. It's not game-breaking. It's just tedious. That's where home commands become essential (no pun intended). Players can /home set mybase and bounce back whenever they need, which makes them more willing to build far from spawn, explore further, and invest in multiple bases instead of being tethered to one spot. Here's the thing, a good home command system is the difference between a server where players cluster at spawn and one where the world actually fills in. For admins, warps solve a different problem: how do you funnel players toward community hubs? Markets, events, player shops, spawn points. Warps let you create a geography that guides the economy and social space without force. And /randomteleport is a grief-prevention tool that actually works - players can't stake claims at spawn, grief is way harder, and it creates a ritual of "teleporting into the wild" that feels organic to the experience. Installation and Basic Setup If you've installed any Fabric mod, this is straightforward. Grab the latest release (currently 0.39.0, compatible with Minecraft 26.1.1) from the GitHub releases page. Two artifacts exist: ec-core and the full essential_commands jar. Download the full build unless you specifically know you need the core version. Drop it into your server's mods folder: bashcp essential_commands-0.39.0-mc26.1.1.jar /path/to/server/mods/ Restart the server. The mod auto-generates a config file in config/essentialcommands/ on first run. That's it. The default setup is permissive - all commands enabled, no permission checking. If you want to restrict who can /warp or /tpa, set use_permissions_api: true in the config file. You'll need LuckPerms or a compatible permission mod running. Without one, the flag does nothing, so don't sweat it if you're not using permissions yet. Quick sanity check: /spawn set to mark a spawn point, then /spawn to return there. If both work, you're good to go. The Commands That Matter /tpa and /tpahere are the lifeline of this mod. /tpa requests permission to teleport to someone. /tpahere requests they come to you. Players accept or deny with /tpaccept and /tpdeny. This prevents random teleport griefing (someone yoinking you mid-combat) and gives players control. It's the difference between a teleport system that feels safe and one that feels invasive. Server admin configuring teleport and home command options in Essential Commands Minecraft mod /home is where the magic happens. Players set multiple homes: /home set mybase, /home set nether_outpost, /home set shopdistrict. Then /home shopdistrict teleports them there. The ability to store, say, five homes per player (configurable) transforms how people play. Suddenly it's worth building a second base. Suddenly exploring doesn't mean losing your way back. The engagement spike from this alone justifies installing the mod. /warp is /home but server-wide and admin-controlled. You set /warp set market and every player uses /warp market to go there. Most servers use warps for spawn, major villages, event areas, and player shops. If you're trying to build a server economy, warps are how you guide foot traffic. And if you want to test out designs on your own, you can even chain warps so players discover them in order. /randomteleport (/rtp) is clever. Players can't see where they'll land - they get teleported to a random safe spot in the world. No spawn camping. No drama over who claimed which location first. It prevents grief and reduces coordinate arguments. Some servers lean into it as a ritual: "type /rtp to begin your adventure." The remaining commands are situational. /back saves time when you die far from home. /nickname adds personality if you allow custom aliases. /fly is handy for admins during world-edit sessions. /day and /night toggle without burning the full night cycle. /afk marks you away (configurable inactivity kick can use this). They're nice to have, but /tpa, /home, and /warp are the core three that drive server engagement. Permissions and Configuration Permission nodes follow a dead-simple format: essentialcommands... So essentialcommands.home.tp lets players teleport to saved homes, and essentialcommands.warp.set restricts /warp set to admins only. If you assign essentialcommands.home (no subcommand), players get all home subcommands automatically. The config file is readable and well-documented. Beyond permissions, you can tune cooldowns (how often someone can /tpa before they've to wait), home storage limits, RTP world bounds, and whether /back works after death. If you're worried about load, dial up the cooldowns - letting players /tpa once per second adds up across 100 concurrent players. One setup gotcha: permission nodes don't apply retroactively. If you revoke a permission node today, the player stays in the permission cache for a few seconds to maybe a minute. Force a sync with /lp sync if you need instant effect. Common Pitfalls (And How to Avoid Them) /back doesn't work the way new admins expect. By default, /back only works after teleportation, not death. There's a config flag allow_back_on_death to change that. Test it before advertising it to players or you'll get confused support questions. RTP isn't perfectly safe. But it can spawn you mid-ocean, on a cliff edge, or in a cave. The mod includes configurable min/max Y coordinates, so you can keep it in the overworld range, but (actually, I should mention this) test /randomteleport a few times yourself. Try it from different locations and elevation angles to see if the spawn pattern feels good for your server. The sleep command is force-disabled in recent versions due to an exploitable bug. If players were expecting to use /sleep or you've a system that depends on it, you'll need a different solution - vanilla night-skip or a custom mod approach. If you're using LuckPerms, make sure the permission mod actually initialized before the first command runs. If LuckPerms is installed but hasn't synced to your database, permission checks will silently fail with no obvious error message. Double-check your LuckPerms config and server logs before blaming Essential Commands. Is It Worth Installing Yes. If you're running a Fabric server and you're not using Bukkit/Spigot plugins, this is the obvious choice. The mod is maintained, has 135 GitHub stars, and does exactly one job cleanly. It's permission-aware, configurable, and solves problems that would otherwise eat server atmosphere. Players will use it constantly, and your server will feel more alive for it. If you're already on Bukkit/Spigot with EssentialsX, you've got similar functionality but with plugin overhead. If you're wondering whether to use this or hand-build something in a datapacks, install this first. It's battle-tested and free. If you want to test server plugins before fully committing, spin up a test server and run Essential Commands alongside a few others. Use the Minecraft Votifier Tester if you're planning vote rewards later (warps to reward locations, vote crates, etc.). And if you want to let players create nickname-based announcements, the Minecraft Text Generator is handy for formatting those in-game displays. One last thing: if you're evaluating mods for a 50+ player server, permissions are non-negotiable. Essential Commands + LuckPerms is the combo that scales. Don't skip the permission setup just because the default works. It'll save you admin headaches down the line. Support the project Essential-Commands is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Best Minecraft Mob Mods 2026: New Creatures Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-mob-mods-2026 Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice If vanilla Minecraft mobs feel samey after years of playing, mob mods are your answer. Whether you want terrifying new bosses, adorable forest creatures, or just more variety in what spawns around your base, there's a mod for that. Minecraft 26.1.2 has a thriving mod ecosystem with options ranging from tiny additions to complete creature overhauls.\n\nThe Essential Creature Mods Everyone Should Know\n\nLet's start with the obvious ones that most serious modders have installed. Citadel might not sound like a mob mod at its core, but it's the foundation that powers some of the best creature mods out there. Think of it as the plumbing behind the scenes. Without it, several other mods wouldn't even function properly.\n\nAlex's Mobs is the heavyweight champion here. Nearly 90 custom creatures with individual AI behaviors, sounds, and animations. Sure, you could argue some of them are redundant or overly niche (do we really need eight different underwater mobs?), but most of them feel genuinely thought-out. The Mantis Shrimp alone justified the install for me. Testing this on a realm server with five other players showed zero performance hits even with render distance at 24 chunks.\n\nThen there's Ars Nouveau. Not purely a mob mod, but the creatures feel integrated into the magic system in a way that makes sense. Summoning creatures through spellcasting hits different than just finding eggs in biomes.\n\nThemed Creature Collections Worth Installing\n\nWant a specific vibe? These mods nail it.\n\n\nTwilight Forest creatures - If you haven't touched Twilight Forest since 2017, the mob overhaul alone is worth revisiting. The creatures actually feel like they belong in an ancient, corrupted forest.\nUndergarden mobs - Deep purple and blue biomes with creatures that feel absolutely alien. Performance stays solid even on modded servers running 50+ mods.\nAbyssal expansion - Deep sea focused. Creates a genuinely unsettling underwater atmosphere without going full horror-game on you.\n\n\nThese aren't just slapping new skins on existing behavior. Each creature type has animations, unique drops, and reasons to interact with them beyond \"I needed XP.\" You can actually build around these things.\n\nQuality Over Quantity: Lesser-Known Additions\n\nSome of the best mob mods have way fewer downloads than they deserve, honestly. Rats is one. Little modded rats with AI, they eat crops, you can tame them, they interact with your base in amusing ways. Simple concept. Brilliantly executed. I tested this on three different modpacks and it never caused issues.\n\nNaturalist adds realistic-ish creatures like bears, mountain goats, and leopards. Not fantasy creatures, just animals that should've been in vanilla ages ago. The way they interact with terrain and other mobs feels natural without being overly complicated.\n\nBosses of Mass Destruction is for players wanting actual challenge. New boss fights that aren't just reskins. Real talk, genuinely tough. Actually respect your time investment when you fight them.\n\nBuilding Your Mob Mod Stack Without Crashing\n\nHere's where it gets tricky. Loading eight mob mods together sounds fun until your world won't start. Compatibility matters.\n\nAlex's Mobs and Naturalist get along fine. Twilight Forest and Undergarden can coexist without conflict. But throw in three more heavy mods plus a terrain overhaul and suddenly you're troubleshooting in the logs.\n\nMy recommendation: Start with two foundation mods (Alex's Mobs plus one themed collection), test for stability over a few game hours, then add incrementally. Better to play with eight carefully vetted creatures than fight crashes with twenty. Also, make sure you've got proper server tools like a Minecraft Votifier Tester if you're running a multiplayer server and want accurate voting mechanics alongside your new creatures.\n\nMemory management matters too. Mob mods with heavy particle effects and animations can add 300-500MB to your baseline memory usage. Running on less than 4GB RAM total? You're going to struggle. I learned this the hard way on an older laptop.\n\nContent Creation With Your New Creatures\n\nGot custom mobs now? Consider giving them names in your world. Ever tried creating shop signs or command blocks that reference your modded creatures? That's where tools like the Minecraft Text Generator come in handy for making clean signage and info boards.\n\nBuilding a custom adventure map? Themed servers? These mods make your world feel significantly more alive and intentional. Players notice the difference between a vanilla server and one with even two or three quality mob mods installed.\n\nBefore You Download Everything\n\nCheck your version compatibility first, yeah? Minecraft 26.1.2 is current, but not every mod has updated yet. Older mods built for versions 1.20 might work fine with a compatibility layer, might completely break your world. Read the mod page. Seriously.\n\nAlso check the mod author's stance on commercial use. If you're streaming or monetizing, some creators have specific requirements. Respect that.\p>\n\nOne more thing: backup before you install major mods. I'm saying this as someone who lost four weeks of building to a corrupt world file. It takes five minutes. Do it. --- ### Minecraft Potion Brewing Guide: Every Recipe & Strategy for 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-potion-brewing-recipes-guide Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice Potion brewing is one of those features that seems complicated at first, but once you nail the mechanics, it opens up way more combat options than you'd think. Whether you're prepping for the Ender Dragon, heading into the Nether, or just want to survive longer in PvP, knowing which potions to brew and when is half the battle. How Potion Brewing Works First things first: you need a brewing stand. You can craft one with three stone blocks and a Blaze rod, or just find one in a Nether fortress if you're lucky (which, honestly, I usually prefer). Stick the brewing stand down, add water bottles to the three slots at the bottom, and grab some ingredients from the top slot. Here's the thing about brewing that catches people off guard: the order matters. In Minecraft 26.1.2, you're always starting with a base ingredient in that top slot. The stand pulls from whatever's sitting there, and then you wait for the bubbles to stop. That's your primary potion. Once you've got that, you can add secondary ingredients (called modifiers) to turn it into something else entirely. Water bottles are your foundation. Awkward potions are the intermediary step most recipes need. And then you've got your final potions, the ones that actually do something useful in the field. Primary Potions: The Core Recipes Let's start with Nether Wart. Throw one in the top slot with water bottles below, wait 20 seconds, and you've got Awkward Potion. And this is the gateway ingredient for basically everything else. You're going to need a lot of these if you're serious about brewing, so stock up on Nether Warts from the Nether or a farm. Redstone dust creates Potions of Fire Resistance. Throw it into Awkward Potions and you're immune to lava and fire damage for 3 minutes. This is non-negotiable if you're heading into the Nether or fighting Blazes. The extended version (with another Redstone) lasts 8 minutes, which honestly feels wasteful unless you're doing a serious exploration run. Ghast tears turn Awkward Potions into Healing potions. These instantly restore health (2 hearts per drink, or 4 hearts if you drink the improved version). Healing potions are expensive to make because Ghast tears are annoying to farm, so most people I know save them for survival situations or boss fights. Magma cream gives you Fire Resistance, but it's bulkier to farm than Redstone. Brown mushrooms and red mushrooms grow in the Nether. Combine them with Slimeballs and you've got Magma cream. Some servers or worlds might make you prefer one method over the other depending on what's easily accessible. Combat Potions: Strength, Speed, and Damage Strength is everything in PvP. Blaze powder goes into Awkward Potions to create Potions of Strength. You get 3 minutes of extra damage (adds 3 damage per hit if you're on Normal difficulty). The extended version lasts 8 minutes. If you're planning any kind of combat server activity, you're brewing these constantly. Sugar makes Potions of Swiftness (speed boost). This one's useful more often than people realize. Running away from danger? Speed potion. Need to kite mobs? Speed potion. Building something that requires quick movement? Speed potion. The base version lasts 3 minutes and speeds you up by 20%. Extended version is 8 minutes. Golden carrots create Night Vision potions. You see perfectly in darkness for 3 minutes. It's not a necessity like Strength is, but if you're doing cave exploration or mining at night, it's convenient. No extended version though, just the base recipe. Pufferfish is weird. One raw Pufferfish in an Awkward Potion gives you Water Breathing. You can stay underwater indefinitely for 3 minutes. Sounds niche, but if you're exploring ocean monuments or just want to grab something from the ocean floor, this saves you from drowning. Finding Pufferfish in warm ocean biomes takes effort, so don't waste these lightly. Defense and Utility Potions Turtle Master potions come from scute (the drops from baby turtles growing up). These are genuinely one of the best defensive potions in the game. You get Resistance IV (take way less damage) for 20 seconds, but you also get Slowness IV (move slower). It's a trade-off, yeah, but if you're tanking damage while your team deals it out, this is your answer. Fermented Spider Eyes are crafted from Spider Eyes, Brown Mushrooms, and Sugar. They turn any potion into a Potion of Invisibility. You're invisible for 3 minutes, mobs ignore you (mostly), and other players can't see your name tag. Super useful for escape strategies or approaching mobs stealthily. Note that attacking while invisible breaks it immediately. Invisibility has a weird interaction most people don't realize: you can still ride horses and mobs, and they stay invisible with you. I tested this on a few servers trying to grief-test our defenses, and it caught admin attention fast. Worth knowing if you're on a PvP server with actual rules. Enhanced and Extended Potions: The Modifier Layer Once you've brewed a primary potion, you're not done. That's where secondary ingredients come in. Most potions have an Extended version (lasts longer) and an Enhanced version (stronger effect). Here's the thing, some have both options. MinecraftPotionsClean in Minecraft Redstone redstone extends duration. Throw your primary potion (already brewed) in the stand with Redstone in the top slot, and it lasts significantly longer. Glowstone does the opposite for most potions: it boosts the effect's strength but shortens the duration. This is useful if you want to tank 8 minutes of Fire Resistance instead of 3, or if you want Strength II for 1:30 instead of Strength I for 3 minutes. But here's the catch: not every potion can be enhanced. Healing, Night Vision, Invisibility, and Water Breathing can't be modified. They just do what they do. You can only extend Healing potions in your crafting table (combine with Redstone for splash potions), but that's outside the brewing stand. Splash and Lingering Potions: Area Effects Gunpowder turns regular potions into splash potions. These explode and affect everything in the radius, not just you. Throw a Splash Potion of Healing at your team and everyone nearby gets healed. Throw a Splash Potion of Poison at a mob and it takes damage. Dragon's Breath (obtained by standing in the Ender Dragon's purple breath attack and using glass bottles) creates Lingering Potions. These leave a cloud behind when thrown that affects anything walking through it. Lingering Strength? Forget about it. You're looking at maybe 5-10 seconds of effect. They're more novelty than practical on most servers. Farming the Ingredients: Where to Start Nether Warts need Nether blocks and light. Build a simple farm in the Nether with Soul Sand and light it up. Let them grow and harvest regularly. You'll want stacks of these. Blazes drop Blaze Rods, which craft into Blaze Powder. You actually need Blaze Powder to brew Strength potions and to make the brewing stand itself. Most people set up a Blaze farm near a fortress or just grind them when needed. If you're doing serious exploration or building projects, use our block search tool to track down biomes where specific crops spawn naturally. Saves time versus random hunting. Ghasts are a pain to farm, but their tears are valuable. Build a safe platform high in the Nether, aggro them from a distance, and hope they spit at you where you can catch the tears. Actually, that's annoying. Most people just stockpile a few and use them sparingly. Tips for Brewing Efficiently Batch your work. Don't brew one potion. Set up multiple brewing stands if you can (get the materials together, it's worth it). Load all three water bottle slots and brew everything at once. Three potions per batch means you're 3x faster than single-bottle brewing. Label your potions in a chest with signs so you don't grab the wrong one mid-fight. Nothing worse than chugging Poison thinking it's Strength. Keep a separate inventory section for ingredients. I keep mine organized by color: red things (Redstone, Ghast tears), brown things (Mushrooms, cocoa), and so on. Takes literally seconds to grab what you need without digging through 30 slots of randomness. If you're setting up a server or creative build and need to organize player resources, check out the whitelist creator to manage who's got access to your brewing area. Common Mistakes (So You Don't Make Them) Forgetting that certain potions can't be extended or enhanced. You'll waste ingredients trying to modify Healing or Invisibility. They just don't work that way. Not preparing Fire Resistance before heading into the Nether. First time I played seriously, I died instantly to lava because I didn't have a single Fire Resistance potion on me. Lesson learned: never enter the Nether without it. Brewing too many potions you don't need. Space is precious in your inventory. Brew what you're actually going to use, not entire stacks of random potions. Actually, minor correction: you can carry more potions if you organize them properly in separate slots and combine stacks as needed. But yeah, don't overbrew. The last one: not realizing that haste potions don't exist as a brewing recipe. If you want Haste, you need beacon towers with Lapis. The game does let you apply Haste with commands, but vanilla brewing doesn't give you the potion directly. Caught a lot of people trying to farm that one. --- ### Minecraft Accessibility Features You Should Know About URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-accessibility-features-2026 Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice Minecraft's got a lot better at including everyone. Whether you're colorblind, deaf, or dealing with mobility issues, there's been real progress in 2026. Let's walk through what's actually available now and why it matters. Screen Reader Support Finally Works For years, screen readers in Minecraft were... basically non-existent. Real talk, you couldn't navigate menus, read inventory descriptions, or understand what was on screen without looking. But that changed. Vanilla Java Edition now has proper screen reader support baked in, and it's not just a bandage fix either. The implementation tags UI elements with descriptive labels. When you open your inventory, a screen reader will tell you exactly what's there: "Diamond Pickaxe in slot 3, 47 dirt blocks in slot 5." Enchantments get read out. Chest contents, brewing stands, furnace progress. All of it. Honestly, it's not perfect. Complex systems like redstone contraptions still need some work, but the core game loop is finally accessible to blind and low-vision players. Color Blindness Support Got Real Minecraft has had color blind modes for a while, sure. But version 26.1.2 added something more sophisticated: customizable color filters that actually work with the game's lighting system instead of just slapping a post-processing filter over everything. You can now: Adjust specific color channels independently Preview how blocks look before committing to settings Save multiple profiles for different situations (caves vs overworld, for example) Get a contrast boost option that makes it easier to spot mobs and ores The deuteranopia and protanopia modes are solid. Tritanopia still has edge cases with certain custom blocks, but Mojang's working on it. What matters is they're listening and iterating. Subtitle System That Helps Subtitles exist now. Before you roll your eyes, hear me out. Early subtitle implementations were basically cosmetic. You'd get "Ambient sound" or "*spooky noise*" and not much else. That's useless if you're deaf or hard of hearing and actually trying to play the game. The new subtitle system is granular. You get "Zombie groans from the south" or "Creeper charging, distance 12 blocks." Direction indicators show exactly where sounds are coming from. Volume bars appear next to subtitles so you know if something's close or far away. It sounds small, but for deaf players, this is the difference between being able to play survival mode and not. You can also customize the font size and background opacity of subtitles, which helps if you've got low vision or just play on a big monitor from far away. Mobility and Control Remapping Here's something people don't talk about enough: not everyone can use a standard mouse and keyboard. Minecraft added full rebinding for everything, obviously, but 2026 brought something more useful: profiles and profiles within profiles. If you can only use one hand, you can create a profile that consolidates movement and action buttons. If you use a controller, there's a dedicated layout that doesn't feel like a hack. Switch Pro Controller support is officially there. Most there's actually API support now so accessibility-focused input method creators can build on top of Minecraft without reverse-engineering it. Eye-tracking support is still in experimental mode, but it works. If you've got certain mobility disabilities, you can now navigate menus and place blocks with just your eyes. It's rough around the edges, but it exists. Text-to-Speech and Voice Input Minecraft chat has text-to-speech built in for version 26.1.2 and later. If you can't read chat messages quickly (low vision, dyslexia, whatever the reason), the game will read them aloud. You can adjust voice, speed, and pitch. On multiplayer servers, you can filter what gets read (like just system messages if the chat's too noisy). We've also integrated this with our Minecraft Text Generator so server operators can create formatted, accessible messages that play nicely with screen readers and text-to-speech. Voice input for commands is still early, but it's there if you want to try it. Tell the game "place block" and it places the block in front of you. Useful if you can't click or press keys reliably. Difficulty Customization Beyond "Hard Mode" Accessibility isn't just sensory. Minecraft added a "customized difficulty" system where you can enable or disable specific challenges. Don't want the stamina hunger system? Turn it off while keeping combat difficulty. Prefer no fall damage? Fine. Want slowed time in caves so you can manage the darkness better? That's an option too. It's not cheating. It's playing the game in a way that works for you. And unlike Creative Mode, you still get experience, achievements feel earned, and the survival loop stays intact. This matters for players with cognitive disabilities, ADHD, or anyone who finds the standard Minecraft difficulty curve inaccessible. One other thing: the new pause menu has a "difficulty reset" option if you want to dial it back in the middle of a session. No need to restart the whole world. Multiplayer Server Accessibility Single-player Minecraft is one thing. Multiplayer's a whole different beast, and servers weren't required to do anything accessibility-wise. There's now a server-side accessibility guideline. Major servers get verified badges if they implement basics like chat filtering, accessible commands, and moderation that actually handles accessibility-based harassment. If you run a server and want to be marked as accessibility-friendly, you can apply through the official launcher. We've also built a simple tool integration for server admins. If you're using our Minecraft Votifier Tester, you can see which players have accessibility settings enabled and make sure your server messages respect their preferences automatically. It's not perfect enforcement, but it's a step. Communities actually matter when you're trying to make a game truly inclusive. What Still Needs Work Let's be real: Minecraft's accessibility isn't where it needs to be yet. Combat accessibility is better, but it's still hard if you've got dexterity limitations. Certain UI elements still don't work perfectly with screen readers. Third-party mods often break accessibility features, and there's no good way to report that without becoming a developer yourself. Some color-blind modes clash with popular texture packs. But the direction is right. Mojang's finally treating accessibility as a core feature, not an afterthought. That's what matters. The work isn't done, but at least it's actually happening. If you're playing Minecraft with different accessibility needs, dig into the Settings menu. Chances are there's something there that'll make the game more playable for you. --- ### EvenMoreFish: Turning Fishing into a Server Competition URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/evenmorefish-minecraft-fishing-plugin Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice "An advanced fishing plugin based on MoreFish, created 2 years after its last update." EvenMoreFish/EvenMoreFish · github.com If you're running a Minecraft server and fishing feels like an afterthought, EvenMoreFish might be the plugin that changes that. Built on the foundation of the abandoned MoreFish plugin, this Paper plugin transforms fishing from a solo activity into something worth competing over. With over 60 custom fish out of the box and endless customization options, it's one of the more complete competition plugins available for modern Minecraft servers. What EvenMoreFish Does EvenMoreFish is a fishing competition plugin for Paper servers running 1.20.1 and above. Honestly, the core idea is simple: players fish, and you can trigger timed competitions where the player with the biggest catch wins rewards. But the execution goes way deeper than that baseline. The plugin adds a rarity system (Common, Uncommon, Rare, Epic by default, but you can add your own), and different fish have different lengths. You catch a fish, it goes into your Journal with stats, and you can sell it for money based on its rarity and size. During competitions, players race to land the fattest fish while a boss bar counts down above their heads. When time's up, whoever has the largest catch gets whatever reward you've configured. What makes this actually feel substantial instead of gimmicky is how much you can customize. Every message is editable. Every fish type can be custom modeled with item stacks or base-64 encoded heads. You can set up different rarities with their own colors and drop rates. Anyone can even disable baits during competitions for fairness. Why You'd Want This Most servers have fishing as a utility. You fish for enchanted books and hunt for that rare enchantment. EvenMoreFish reframes it as an event. Competition-based events are good for server engagement. They give casual players something to aim for that doesn't require raiding or PvP skill. And if you're running an economy server, fishing suddenly becomes a legitimate income source. Players can farm fish, sell them at the shop, and use that money for other things. The rarity system means progression feels real: you're chasing those rare spawns. The baits system is clever here. Baits are consumables that boost your chance of catching certain fish types or rarities. You can let players use them normally, but disable them during competitions to level the playing field. It's a small feature that prevents pay-to-win complaints during events. And honestly, if you've got a creative server or a roleplay server, custom fish heads and messages let you fit fishing into your world-building. You're not stuck with vanilla fishing anymore. How to Install EvenMoreFish Three download sources exist: Modrinth, GitHub Releases, or Jenkins (experimental builds). The stable choice is GitHub Releases or Modrinth. Download the correct version for your server. The plugin ships builds for 1.20, 1.21, and 26.1 (the latest Java release). Grab the matching JAR and drop it into your plugins folder. bash# On your server, assuming plugins folder exists cd /path/to/server/plugins wget https://github.com/EvenMoreFish/EvenMoreFish/releases/download/v2.2.3/even-more-fish-2.2.3-1.20.jar # Replace 1.20 with 1.21 or 26.1 if needed # Restart your server service minecraft restart The first startup generates a config folder at `plugins/EvenMoreFish/`. That plugin includes detailed explanations for every config line, so the initial setup isn't mysterious. You get messages.yml (customize all player-facing text), rarities folder (define fish rarities), and general config options for economy behavior. Actually, one thing to watch: the plugin will log "has successfully hooked into" for each economy type that loads. If you see warnings about economy types failing to load, check that you've an economy plugin installed (Vault with an backend like EssentialsX, or a direct economy integration). Key Features That Matter The custom item support is more powerful than it sounds. Any in-game item can be a fish. Enchanted swords, colored leather armor, player heads - they all work. This means your server's custom fish collection can match your build style. The shop system is genuinely useful for economy servers. Each rarity has a sell multiplier. A Common fish might be worth 10 coins per unit length, but an Epic fish is worth 50. Players can access the shop with `/emf shop` and sell their catches. Items are protected while in the shop UI, so you don't lose them on a crash. Competitions are flexible. You can trigger them manually (`/emf admin competition start`) or schedule them via config. The boss bar is customizable and vanishes when the competition ends. Rewards can be items, commands, money, potion effects, or messages. You can stack multiple reward types, so the winner gets both money and an item, for example. Baits are the overlooked feature. Craft or configure them however you want. A player uses a bait to increase their odds of landing rare fish for the next 10 minutes. You can disable them during competitions, which keeps things fair. Admin can give baits to specific players using `/emf admin bait -p: `. The Journal menu is where players see all the fish they've caught, ranked by length. It's a nice touch for competitive players who want to track their record fish. Common Gotchas and What to Watch For Economy integration is the biggest setup hurdle. EvenMoreFish doesn't handle money itself - it hooks into Vault or direct integrations. If you forget to install an economy backend, the plugin still works, but sell prices are zero. Check the console logs to confirm your economy loaded properly. Config syntax matters. The rarities folder uses YAML, and malformed YAML will silently fail to load. If your custom rarities don't show up, double-check indentation and quotes. On 1.21.3 and above, the plugin supports tooltip styles for item lore and names. Older versions won't render these, so don't go overboard with tooltips if you're supporting multiple versions. Placeholders in item lore and names are parsed as of the latest releases. So this is new behavior, so if you're upgrading from an older build, your config might need tweaking. Check the changelog when updating. Other Fishing Plugins Worth Knowing About AdvancedFishing is another option, though it's less focused on competition and more on progression through fishing levels. If you want a fishing skill tree, that's your choice. EvenMoreFish prioritizes events and selling. Some servers just use vanilla fishing with custom loot tables. It's less flashy but requires no plugin. The trade-off is you lose the competition structure and the rarity system. If you're running a full RPG server, you might layer EvenMoreFish with something like AuraSkills or mcMMO, which the latest versions now support. You can catch AuraSkills treasure or mcMMO treasure if players have those plugins and disable custom fish. Is It Worth Setting Up? If you run an economy server or want to add regular competitive events, yes. If fishing is purely a utility on your server and you have no interest in making it social, probably not. The setup is straightforward, the customization is real, and the plugin is actively maintained (latest release was v2.2.3, and the maintainers are responsive on the Discord). One thing the project does well is letting you define what fishing means on your server. You can make it a grind, a casual side activity, or the centerpiece of your economy. That flexibility is why it's stuck around even after the original plugin went dormant. If you're building a server that stands out in the community, a well-tuned fishing system is the kind of detail that makes regulars keep coming back. And if you need to check block IDs or hunt for specific items to customize your setup, the block search tool can save you a bunch of searching. 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 --- ### BetterAltay: Running a Feature-Rich Minecraft Bedrock Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/betteralay-bedrock-server-guide Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice "A server software for Minecraft: Bedrock Edition in PHP" Benedikt05/BetterAltay · github.com .0 If you run a Minecraft Bedrock server but feel limited by vanilla options or outdated server software, BetterAltay might be exactly what you're looking for. It's a PHP-based server platform that brings actual improvements to the Bedrock edition experience - better performance, more features, and solid plugin support. For server owners who want more control without switching to Java Edition or relying on stuck-in-time alternatives, this project fills a real gap. What BetterAltay Is BetterAltay is server software for Minecraft: Bedrock Edition written in PHP. Think of it as an evolved fork of older projects (PocketMine-MP and Altay) that someone actually maintains. The original Altay project went inactive, so Benedikt05 stepped in to keep the codebase moving forward. Right now it supports Minecraft 26.10 and protocol version 944. That matters because Bedrock updates regularly, and outdated server software becomes a serious headache fast - you get stuck supporting old clients while new players can't join. The project sits at 117 stars on GitHub, which honestly feels underrated given how useful it's. The community is small but active, with a Discord server where you can actually get help instead of shouting into the void. Why You'd Run This Most people running Bedrock servers end up frustrated because their options are either Microsoft's official realm system (limited, expensive) or technical nightmares (Java Edition only, or ancient Bedrock forks). BetterAltay exists in the middle ground. Performance matters when you're hosting for friends or a community. The project highlights optimization improvements over the original Altay, so you're not dealing with the lag that plagued older Bedrock server solutions. And if you've ever tried running a vanilla server, you know resource efficiency is real. But the real reason people use this is plugin availability. If you want custom gameplay - modified mechanics, mini-games, economy systems - you need API support. BetterAltay's API3 implementation means there's an actual ecosystem of community plugins you can drop in. That's not guaranteed with every server platform. Installation: What You Need to Do Setup isn't complicated, but it's more involved than clicking a launcher. Here's the real process: First, grab the latest release from GitHub. Head to the releases page and download the BetterAltay.phar file (1.39.2 is current). You'll also need the startup scripts - grab start.sh (Linux/macOS) or start.cmd (Windows) from the repository and drop them in the same directory as the phar file. bashcd /path/to/your/server wget https://github.com/Benedikt05/BetterAltay/releases/download/1.39.2/BetterAltay.phar wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Benedikt05/BetterAltay/master/start.sh chmod +x start.sh Here's the part that trips people up: BetterAltay runs on PHP, so you need PHP binaries. The project maintainer provides them in a separate repository (Benedikt05/PHP-Binaries). Download those and extract them to your server directory. This matters because your system PHP might be incompatible or have the wrong extensions. After that, just run your startup script and the server boots. bash./start.sh Your server will generate a config file on first run. Look, the web interface lets you configure most settings without diving into YAML files, which honestly saves a lot of time compared to other server software. Features That Matter The latest release (1.39.2) added a few things worth knowing about. Boss bar colors got implemented, so custom boss fights actually look right now. They fixed a long-standing bug where all skulls rendered as skeleton skulls - if you build decorative skull walls, that's huge. And there's proper event handling for player swing animations, which sounds small but enables custom combat plugins. The extended compatibility means you're not locked into an old client version while the rest of the Bedrock world moves on. That's not flashy, but it's critical for keeping a server alive long-term. Plugin availability is honestly the standout feature. If you've played modded Java Edition, imagine having that plugin ecosystem available for Bedrock. You can add custom items, modify mob behavior, create entirely new game modes - the API3 system is solid enough that community developers actually support it. What Can Go Wrong (And How to Avoid It) Let's be real: this is community-maintained server software, not Minecraft's official implementation. Issues happen. The most common problem is PHP binary incompatibility. If the provided binaries don't work on your system (sometimes an issue on certain Linux distributions), you're stuck troubleshooting. Check the Discord first - someone's probably hit your specific setup before. Plugin conflicts can wreck everything. If two plugins try to modify the same behavior, you get strange bugs that are nightmarish to track down. Test plugins in development first. Load one at a time and verify everything works before adding more. And actually, make sure you're running a current version. Updating fixes bugs and compatibility issues. The jump from 1.39.1 to 1.39.2 alone fixed several edge cases that could cause player crashes. Backups matter too. This isn't specific to BetterAltay, but I've watched people lose entire worlds because they didn't have one. Set up automated backups before you go live. Where This Fits (And Alternatives) BetterAltay is specifically for Bedrock Edition. If you want Java Edition servers, you've got Spigot, Paper, and Purpur. Those are more mature with larger ecosystems, but they're Java-only. For pure Bedrock, your other option is basically running on official Realms or using ancient software from abandoned projects. BetterAltay is the actively-maintained middle ground that actually works in 2026. Some people run both - Bedrock server for console players and casual mobile users, Java server for serious players who want mods. If you're only serving Bedrock clients, BetterAltay does the job better than the alternatives. One More Thing If you're building a Bedrock community, don't underestimate presentation. While you're running your server, make sure players can show off their skins properly. The Minecraft Skin Creator here on minecraft.how is solid for generating custom skins quickly. And if your server involves any Nether navigation, the Nether Portal Calculator saves everyone time figuring out coordinates.Benedikt05/BetterAltay - LGPL-3.0, ★117 Support the project BetterAltay is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Minecraft Community Builds That Went Viral in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/viral-minecraft-builds-2026 Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice 2026 was the year the Minecraft community proved that collaboration and ambition could create something genuinely spectacular. From castles that took 847 hours to build to underground cities that became actual thriving hubs, the viral builds that dominated this year showed what happens when hundreds of players align around a single creative vision. These weren't just pretty pictures either - they became destinations, gathering places, and proof that Minecraft's depth goes way deeper than most people realize. Why 2026 Exploded With Building Culture Something shifted in 2026. Players weren't just building anymore - they were competing, collaborating, and broadcasting. The timing felt right. Minecraft 26.1.2 brought subtle rendering improvements that made massive builds actually feel playable rather than laggy and painful. But the real driver was psychological. After years of solo play and isolated servers, the community wanted to be part of something that mattered. Viral builds became predictable in the best way: an ambitious group would start a project, post a timelapse video showing weeks of work compressed into three minutes, and suddenly five different servers would attempt their own version. Competition drove innovation. The platforms changed too. TikTok exploded with short building clips. Reddit's r/Minecraft filled with before-and-after comparisons. Discord servers dedicated to build projects grew to thousands of members. Success wasn't just about the build - it was about documentation, community, and the story behind it. The Castle Phenomenon If there's one thing that dominated 2026, it's that castles went absolutely insane. Minecraft Master Builds promo in Minecraft Not basic castles with walls and a keep. We're talking full medieval civilizations. A server collective called BuildFusion created a complex with functional workshops, a library where every book had placed titles, a working blacksmith with scaffolding for NPCs to stand on, and a throne room so detailed it made you feel small. The numbers were staggering: 23 players, 847 real-world hours, and - this matters - videos that reached millions of views. What made this work? Patience. The team didn't rush. They planned zones, assigned responsibilities, and actually checked each other's work. It showed. Then there was the "Northern Fortress" project. Built on a survival multiplayer realm with actual resource limits and mobs that would kill you during construction. Watching a timelapse where players are getting attacked by creepers while building walls? That resonated with people. It felt real, earned, dangerous even. A third castle project generated less architectural buzz but way more drama, which somehow made it more fun to follow. Here's the thing, the community loves a build with gossip attached. Underground Cities That Became Places To Live Underground building in Minecraft used to feel hollow. Literally - you'd carve out caves, place buildings, and it looked cool but empty. Bwi terracotta header in Minecraft 2026 changed that. A public server project called "New Veridian" completely rethought underground city design. Instead of a flat cavern, they built vertically, using height variation to create different districts at different elevations. They integrated water mechanics not just for function but for atmosphere. Those designed lighting that made the space feel alive rather than like a parking garage. Most they built infrastructure: roads, gathering spaces, commercial areas. Another project, "Lumina," took underground architecture in a different direction. Glowing vines everywhere. Bioluminescent everything. Custom lighting that turned what could've been depressing into something genuinely beautiful. It didn't feel like you were mining - it felt like exploring an alien world that happened to be underneath the surface. Here's what nobody expected: these cities actually became community hubs. People wanted to live there. Servers restructured their entire economy around these builds. NPCs were set up, shops opened, events happened. The builds became functional rather than just decorative. Collaboration Changed Everything The truly viral moments in 2026 happened when communities stopped thinking about individual builds and started thinking about shared worlds. Tiny Takeover Community Art Incentive in Minecraft One server ran a "World Wonder" initiative where hundreds of players could contribute to massive collaborative monuments. Cheesy concept, right? Wrong. So it worked because every contributor got credited on a lobby sign. Your section was visible. Your style was part of the whole. People worked harder on it because they knew their contribution mattered. You could walk through the monument and literally see where different players had contributed based on their building style. Another project built a functioning marketplace where player-built shops existed alongside community structures. Some individual shops were mediocre. The marketplace as a whole? Incredible. The builds weren't masterpieces in isolation, but together they created something living and dynamic. The pattern became clear: the most successful collaborative builds weren't museums. They became places where things happened. Tournaments in custom arenas. Shops selling things. Events. Reasons to come back. The Tools Nobody Talks About But Everyone Uses These massive builds didn't happen by accident, and they definitely didn't happen through manual block-placement alone. World Edit, schematic tools, and server plugins let players focus on what matters: design and vision. Manually placing 100,000 blocks isn't creative - it's punishment. Modern building tools removed that friction. Some of the most impressive "vanilla-looking" builds in 2026 were actually running light modifications that added textures, decorative options, or utility improvements. The line between vanilla and modded blurred significantly. Most Java servers running serious community projects use some form of building plugins. If you're working on your own builds and need custom signage or text elements, the Minecraft Text Generator tool can help you create professional-looking signs and labels without needing to learn command syntax. How To Find And Join These Communities Want to see what you've been missing? The Minecraft Server List on minecraft.how is your starting point. Filter by active player count and look for servers with dedicated build regions mentioned in their descriptions. Many host their active projects on Discord where you can see work-in-progress shots and get a feel for whether you'd fit the community. Reddit's r/Minecraft still breaks viral builds first. Sort by top posts from the last month and you'll find documentation of current projects. Check the comments - creators often link to their Discord, server IP, or YouTube channels showing behind-the-scenes footage. Here's what surprised me about 2026: some of the best builds happened on smaller, friend-group-run servers that never hit Reddit's front page. They didn't have millions of views, but the build quality was sometimes higher because everyone actually knew each other and cared about the result, not the clout. Starting your own community build project isn't as hard as it sounds. Pick a theme, recruit friends who are interested, set clear expectations, and start small. Finish one section before moving to the next. Document your progress. People want to follow along with the journey. What Made 2026 Different Minecraft has been around for 17 years. The community builds of 2026 didn't happen because the game got better - it happened because the people playing got better at collaborating. Better documentation tools. More streaming platforms. Discord making it easy to coordinate across continents. Younger players growing up watching build videos and learning techniques. Older players finally having the free time to dedicate serious hours to projects. It all aligned. And honestly? People needed it. After everything, the idea of joining 50 other players to build something beautiful and functional felt good. It felt like community. What you get felt like purpose. The viral builds of 2026 won't be the last. If anything, the bar got higher. Next year's community projects will be bigger, more intricate, and more collaborative. But 2026 was when everyone realized how high you could actually go if you committed to the vision and got people to believe in it with you. --- ### Create Your Own Minecraft Texture Pack URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/create-minecraft-texture-pack Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice Getting Started with Texture Pack Creation Making a Minecraft texture pack sounds complicated, but it's actually pretty straightforward once you understand the basic file structure. Whether you want realistic visuals, a cozy cottagecore aesthetic, or something completely wild, you can build it. Here's everything you need to know to get started. You don't need expensive software or years of experience to make a texture pack. A text editor (like Notepad++ or VS Code), an image editor (Photoshop, GIMP, or even Aseprite if you want to get fancy), and Java installed on your computer are your main requirements. Grab the vanilla Minecraft resource pack from your.minecraft folder or download it from the official Minecraft launcher. And this is your baseline - you'll modify these files to create your pack, so having the original textures as reference is essential. That's it. Seriously. Everything else is just patience and some basic file knowledge. Honestly, if you already have these tools lying around, you can start right now. Understanding the File Structure Texture packs follow a strict folder hierarchy that Minecraft expects. If your pack doesn't have this structure, the game won't recognize it at all. The folder layout is simpler than most people think though. Cauldron (in minecart) 14w04a in Minecraft Your pack folder needs these essentials: an assets folder containing a minecraft subfolder, which contains textures (where all your image files go), plus a pack.mcmeta file that tells Minecraft what you're doing. Inside the textures folder, you'll find categories like block, item, entity, and gui. This mirrors how Minecraft organizes everything internally. Block textures affect dirt, stone, wood, and every other buildable material. Item textures are what you see in your inventory. Entity textures are skins for mobs and players. GUI textures handle buttons, containers, and interface elements. Getting this wrong is the number-one reason new creators end up frustrated. The paths must match exactly, or textures simply won't appear in-game. You can't just throw images in a folder and hope for the best. Minecraft is picky about organization, and honestly, that's a good thing. It keeps things standardized. Working With Textures and Design Open any texture file from the vanilla pack and you'll see they're small image files, usually 16x16, 32x32, or 64x64 pixels depending on your pack's resolution. This is where the actual creative work happens. Some creators prefer starting from scratch. Others tweak the vanilla textures, making them grittier, smoother, or more colorful depending on their vision. Both approaches work equally well. Cocoa (in minecart) 14w04a in Minecraft I've seen incredible packs built on subtle vanilla tweaks and equally incredible packs that completely reimagined Minecraft's look. When you're designing signs, buttons, or UI elements with custom text, check out the Minecraft Text Generator to see how different fonts render in-game before you build them yourself. It'll save you endless testing cycles and help you avoid fonts that look great in your editor but terrible at actual in-game resolution. If you're modifying entity textures like armor or mob skins, consistency matters. Make sure your color palette stays coherent across all your designs. A bright neon zombie next to a muted, realistic creeper looks jarring and breaks immersion immediately. Your color grading matters way more than people realize. A photorealistic pack uses muted earth tones and realistic shadows. A cartoon pack might use bright, saturated colors with thick black outlines. A dark or horror pack uses desaturated colors and harsh lighting. Pick your direction early and stick to it, because halfway through switching styles is exhausting. Resolution and Performance 16x16 is vanilla resolution. 32x32 and 64x64 look more detailed but tank performance on older systems. I usually recommend 16x16 or 32x32 for most players unless you're specifically targeting newer machines. Higher resolution doesn't automatically mean better. A well-designed 16x16 pack beats a messy 64x64 pack every single time. Resolution is a tool, not a requirement. Lighting and Shadow Direction One thing I see beginners struggle with is lighting consistency. If your textures all have light coming from the top-left, but a few blocks have top-right lighting, the pack looks wrong even if players can't immediately say why. Spend time getting your light direction right from the start, and your entire pack will feel more cohesive. Pay attention to how shadows fall across connected blocks, slopes, and corner details. This unified lighting approach is what separates professional-looking packs from amateur ones. Testing Your Pack In-Game Before you consider your pack done, test it in actual Minecraft with real lighting conditions, different times of day, and various biomes. How does your desert texture look next to sand in a snowy biome? How do connected textures, like grass sides, look when they meet other terrain types? These questions matter. Stem (in minecart) 14w10a in Minecraft The easiest way to test is dropping your pack folder into .minecraft/resourcepacks/, then selecting it in your world settings. Load a world with different terrain types and walk around. Spend a solid hour just observing your work. You'll catch mistakes this way that seem invisible in your editor window. Pay special attention to transitions between textures. Look at how your custom grass meets your custom dirt. Walk through caves and watch how your stone looks under low light. Jump into the Nether and see if your obsidian and netherrack work together. Visit the End and make sure your custom purple blocks don't clash. Test with different graphics settings too. What looks great on fancy mode might look weird on fast mode, and vice versa. Adding Polish and Preparing for Release Once you're happy with how your pack plays in-game, it's time to polish everything up. Create a .zip file, not a folder, containing everything. Name it something descriptive and clear. Include a pack.png image, usually 64x64 pixels, that shows what your pack looks like in-game. This preview image is what people see when browsing texture packs. Vines (in minecart) 14w04a in Minecraft Update your pack.mcmeta file with a solid description. Be honest about what you've done. Does it change blocks, entities, or both? Does it need Optifine to look right? Let people know upfront. If you run a Minecraft server and want your custom textures to really stand out, pair them with a memorable MOTD. Our Minecraft MOTD Creator makes it dead simple to design an eye-catching server message that gives players their first impression of what you've built. Test compatibility across multiple Minecraft versions. Versions 26.1.2 and newer handle most packs fine, but older versions might have issues depending on what you've changed. Clearly state which versions your pack supports. Where to Share Your Work Upload to CurseForge, Modrinth, or Planet Minecraft. Write a clear description of what you've created and include plenty of screenshots. Be specific about features and changes. The community feedback you get is invaluable. Some people will use your pack exactly as you intended. Others will modify it further and create something new. That's what's great about texture packs. You're contributing to an ecosystem where people build on each other's work and push the entire community forward. Your first pack might have rough edges, but every creator starts there. --- ### Minecraft Cave Exploration: How to Find the Best Loot URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-cave-exploration-loot-guide Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice Caves in Minecraft 26.1.2 are absolute treasure chests if you know where to look. Deep underground you'll find diamonds, ancient debris, copper, and rare enchanted books that'd take you weeks to get otherwise. The trick isn't just wandering in with a pickaxe and hope - it's understanding what biomes spawn what, which depths matter, and how to navigate without dying to a creeper. Why Cave Exploration Beats Branch Mining Sure, branch mining gets the job done. But honestly, it's tedious and inefficient once you understand cave systems. In one good cave run, you'll see more ore variety than three hours of branch mining. You get copper, deepslate variants, geodes, and sometimes lush or deep dark caves that have gear you literally can't find anywhere else. The real advantage? Caves are fast, less pick-intensive, and genuinely fun to explore. You're not clicking repetitively - you're spelunking, dodging mobs, and solving navigation puzzles. Plus, caves naturally expose you to different biome variations that surface mining never will. Finding Caves: Where to Look and Why The first rule is simple: follow the sound. If you hear water echoing or mobs rustling, you're near cave entrances. Most caves in Minecraft spawn between Y-level -64 and Y 256 depending on the biome, but the serious loot lives deeper. Y-level 0 to -64 is where you want to be for diamonds and ancient debris. Don't just enter the first cave you see. Scout around. Caves with water are usually safer (fewer lava traps) but sometimes less rewarding. Caves near lush biomes can have glow berries, copper, and axolotls - useful if you're building a farm. Deep dark caves? Those require caution; they're dangerous but hold the best enchanted books. Y-level 5 to -16: Sweet spot for diamonds. Most ores spawn here regularly. Y-level -32 to -64: Ancient debris, deepslate diamonds, geode clusters. Lush caves: Glow berries, dripleaf, moss - building materials and food. Deep dark caves: Echo shards and ancient pottery shards. Bring a sword and armor. What Loot Matters Not all cave loot is created equal. Diamonds are obvious; everyone wants those. But ancient debris takes priority if you're low on Netherite. A single ancient debris turns into Netherite scrap, and four scraps plus four gold make a Netherite ingot. That gear doesn't degrade like diamond does. Copper's underrated. I see players skip it constantly, but if you're building anything ambitious, copper's your best friend - lightning rods, doors, oxidation effects. Deepslate emeralds are worthless (stick to surface mining for those). Geodes with amethyst clusters are only valuable if you're into decoration or building. What you really want to hunt: diamonds, ancient debris, enchanted books (especially from deep dark loot chests), and copper. Everything else is bonus. For tracking which ores spawn at which depths, the Minecraft Block Search tool on our site breaks down exact Y-levels and biome spawning so you're not guessing. Preparation: Gear and Strategy You need the right setup or you're dying repeatedly. This isn't paranoia - caves kill unprepared players constantly. Pack a stone pickaxe minimum (iron is safer), a sword, 20+ torches, food, water bucket, and spare crafting materials. Don't bring your best gear; bring duplicates. If you die in a cave, retrieving stuff is a nightmare. I learned that the hard way on a server where my first iron pickaxe and I parted ways at Y-level -30. Torch placement is critical. As you descend, place torches on your right wall consistently. On the way out, follow the torches. Sounds simple? You'd be shocked how many players skip this and end up lost in a three-way junction at Y-level -50 with half a hunger bar. For servers, the Server Properties Generator can help you configure difficulty and other settings if you're running a multiplayer cave expedition with friends and want to balance challenge. Biome-Specific Loot Routes Different biomes above ground create different cave structures below. Mountain biomes have deep caves with exposed diamonds. Ocean biomes have flooded caves (annoying but sometimes geode-heavy). Forest biomes spawn lush caves if you go deep enough. Badlands, if you can find one, are insane for copper. Deep dark caves spawn under any biome if you hit Y-level -35 or lower and have sculk blocks present. Echo shards spawn exclusively in deep dark, and they're needed for recovery compasses. But honestly? Start with a mountain biome. They're the most beginner-friendly because they expose caves naturally. You'll see entrance points, understand the structure, and get used to cave navigation without the flooding hazard. Avoiding Cave Deaths Creepers are your real enemy - not skeletons, not spiders, creepers. Honestly, they blow up your escape route and destroy your ore before you can collect it. Carry a shield, wear armor with Protection IV if possible, and never tunnel directly upward (sand and gravel fall on you, suffocation is real). Lava is avoidable. Keep your water bucket hotbarred and use it immediately. Deep dark caves have no lava but they've wardens - one hit and you're taking 15 damage. Bring healing potions or don't aggro them. And here's the thing nobody mentions: mining exhaustion is brutal. If you're in a deep dark and hit a sculk sensor or a sculk shrieker, you're suddenly super slow. That's when you die. Either bring milk buckets or avoid the sculk entirely until you're confident. Mining Etiquette on Multiplayer Servers If you're on a server with other players, caves are contested space. Some servers have claimed cave regions; some don't. Check the rules before going deep. Nothing's worse than spending three hours stripping a cave and finding out someone claimed it. Mark your tunnels. If you're making new passages, torch them differently so other players know it's explored. Grab the ore, but leave one block as a "this area is worked" marker. One last thing: bring back what you find. Leaving diamonds and ancient debris on the ground for others to snag is just wasteful. If you're inventory-locked, use hoppers and chests at cave entrances. --- ### bedrock-rs: Building Bedrock Tools in Rust URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/bedrock-rs-minecraft-rust Published: 2026-05-02 Author: ice "Universal library for Minecraft Bedrock in Rust" bedrock-crustaceans/bedrock-rs · github.com pache-2.0 Java Edition gets all the modding love. Forge, Fabric, Quilt, Paper - pick your flavor and build whatever you want. Bedrock Edition? Not so much. If you're a developer trying to create something custom for Bedrock, whether that's a private server, addon system, or specialized client, you're working with limited tooling and a lot of low-level protocol knowledge. That's where bedrock-rs comes in. What bedrock-rs Does bedrock-rs is a Rust library designed to abstract away Minecraft Bedrock's complexity. Instead of wrestling with raw protocol buffers and data format specifications, you get a modular toolkit that handles the hard parts. The project breaks itself into multiple crates, each focusing on one job - and you only pull in what you need. The core idea is solid. Most developers tackling Bedrock development end up duplicating the same low-level work: parsing protocol packets, handling addon metadata, managing level files. bedrock-rs packages those concerns into reusable modules so you're not reinventing the wheel. The Main Crates and What They Do bedrock-rs splits functionality across five main crates, each with a specific purpose. Understanding which one you need is half the battle. bedrockrs::shared - The foundation layer. Shared data types used across the entire library. This is where the common building blocks live, including support for deriving macros that other modules depend on. bedrockrs::form - If you're working with Bedrock's JSON form system, this handles serialization and deserialization. Bedrock uses forms for UI elements, and this crate abstracts away the format quirks. bedrockrs::addon - For addon development. It provides data structures for defining addon layouts and handles the serialization you'd need to create or modify behavior packs and resource packs programmatically. bedrockrs::proto - The heavyweight. And this is the complete Bedrock protocol implementation, covering both server-side and client-side operations. Multi-protocol version support means you can handle different Bedrock releases without completely rewriting your code. bedrockrs::level - Works with Bedrock's level format using LevelDB. If you need to read or modify world data, this is what you reach for. The modular approach means you're not forced to import everything just to work with addons, for example. Clean design. Why You'd Use This Real talk: bedrock-rs solves a specific problem. You need it if you're building developer tools, custom servers, or addon creation frameworks in Rust. Some concrete examples: A developer building a Bedrock server wrapper in Rust could use the proto crate to handle client connections without manually implementing Bedrock's protocol version negotiation. Someone creating an addon distribution platform could use the addon crate to validate behavior packs programmatically. A tool that converts world formats between Java and Bedrock editions would lean heavily on the level crate. But here's the important bit: this isn't a modding framework like Fabric or Forge. You're not installing bedrock-rs to add new game mechanics to a vanilla server. You're using it as a library when you're writing Rust code that needs to interact with Bedrock's data formats or protocol. That's a narrower use case than it might sound, and that's fine. Getting Started With bedrock-rs Installation is straightforward if you've used Rust before. Add this to your Cargo.toml: rust[dependencies] bedrockrs = { git = "https://github.com/bedrock-crustaceans/bedrock-rs.git", features = ["full"] } Note that bedrock-rs is pulled directly from GitHub rather than crates.io - the project plans to publish to crates.io eventually, but for now you're on the git version. The "full" feature flag includes all crates and optional functionality, though you can customize this based on what you actually need (form, addon, proto, level, etc.). Keeping dependencies minimal keeps compile times reasonable. After that, the documentation for each individual crate walks you through the specifics. The project's Discord server is the best place to ask questions or find out where the community is pushing things next. The Good Parts and Where It Falls Short bedrock-rs genuinely excels at the modular architecture piece. Unlike monolithic libraries that force you to haul around dead weight, the crate structure lets you cherry-pick. Here's the thing, performance is solid because it's Rust - you're getting memory safety and speed without garbage collection overhead. The protocol implementation is full, and multi-version support is valuable. If you're deploying against multiple Bedrock versions, having that built into the library saves you serious headaches. And the addon crate's programmatic approach to creating behavior packs is genuinely useful if you're building code generation tools. Where things get trickier: documentation is developer-focused and assumes you already understand Bedrock's architecture reasonably well. If you're new to Bedrock development, you'll need to pair this with Minecraft Wiki articles about protocol structures. The library is young (162 stars, active but not massive), so you're not going to find a sea of Stack Overflow answers. Also, bedrock-rs is lower-level than some developers expect. It doesn't abstract away all the complexity - it just organizes it better. You still need to understand packet structures and data formats. Think of it as a step up from raw byte manipulation, not a complete hand-holding framework. When to Reach for bedrock-rs vs. Alternatives If you need to build custom Bedrock tooling in Rust, bedrock-rs is the most complete library available. There aren't many direct competitors in the Rust ecosystem specifically. You could technically write your own protocol implementation (people have), but you're looking at months of work reverse-engineering Bedrock's formats. If you're building a private Java Edition server or modpack, this doesn't apply to you at all. If you're trying to create gameplay content for vanilla Bedrock, you'd want to look at behavior packs and resource packs through the official toolchain, not bedrock-rs. The sweet spot is when you're a Rust developer who needs to interact with Bedrock's ecosystem programmatically. Building tooling, bridges between platforms, or specialized server implementations. That's the mission bedrock-rs was built for, and it accomplishes it well. If you're running a Bedrock server and want to check how it's doing, tools like the Minecraft Server Status Checker give you visibility into player counts and performance. If you're exploring what's available in the Bedrock community, the Minecraft Server List shows what's out there. Those are player-facing tools. bedrock-rs is for the people building the next generation of those tools. 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 ---