# 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) ### MCscripts: Automated Server Management for Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mcscripts-minecraft-server-automation Published: 2026-04-22 Author: ice TapeWerm/MCscripts Minecraft Java and Bedrock Dedicated Server systemd units and scripts for backups, automatic updates, and posting logs to chat bots Running a Minecraft server means dealing with tedious maintenance tasks: backing up your world before it's lost to corruption, updating the server software without crashing everyone mid-game, and keeping your community informed through chat notifications. MCscripts tackles all of this by automating server management through systemd, a Linux process manager. If you've been manually babying your Minecraft server, this project might save you hours. What MCscripts Actually Does At its core, MCscripts is a collection of shell scripts and systemd unit files that turn server management into background automation. It works with both Java Edition and Bedrock Edition servers on Ubuntu, handling the operational overhead that most server admins usually ignore until something breaks. The project provides three main capabilities: Scheduled backups that run automatically and push snapshots to external storage Update checking and automated patching for Bedrock servers (Java Edition uses external jar management) Webhook integration to post server logs and events directly to Discord, Slack, or other chat platforms Everything runs through systemd, which means you get proper logging, service management, and the ability to run commands like sudo systemctl start mcbe-backup@MCBE instead of hunting for shell scripts in various directories. Why You'd Actually Want This Let me be honest: MCscripts is for people running servers that matter to them. If you're just goofing around on a local LAN world, skip this. But if you're hosting a community server, managing it for friends, or want peace of mind that your world won't vanish because you forgot to back it up last month, automation beats manual discipline every time. Consider the typical server owner's nightmare scenario. You're patching your Bedrock server and something goes wrong. The old world file gets corrupted, and you're staring at blank looks from your players. With MCscripts' automated backup system, you've got snapshots stored on external drives, ready to restore in minutes. One command restores your last backup: bashsudo systemctl stop mcbe@MCBE sudo /opt/MCscripts/bin/mcbe_restore.py ~mc/bedrock/MCBE BACKUP sudo systemctl start mcbe@MCBE That's it. Your world is back. The chatbot logging feature is surprisingly useful too. Instead of SSH-ing into your server to check logs, you get real-time notifications in Discord. Player joins, deaths, chat messages - all flowing into a dedicated channel. It keeps your community informed without turning logging into busywork. Installation and Setup Getting MCscripts running involves downloading the project and running the installer as root. It's straightforward, but there are a few things to know beforehand. First, you need Ubuntu. The project is explicitly built for Ubuntu systems (including WSL, though WSL has some caveats with systemctl). If you're on a different Linux distribution, you might need to adapt the install script. The basic install process looks like this: bashcurl -L https://github.com/TapeWerm/MCscripts/archive/refs/heads/master.zip -o /tmp/master.zip unzip /tmp/master.zip -d /tmp sudo /tmp/MCscripts-master/src/install.sh The installer sets up systemd units, creates the mc user for running the server process, and organizes everything in /opt/MCscripts. If you want backups stored on an external drive (which you should), the setup is a single symlink: bashsudo ln -snf /path/to/external/drive /opt/MCscripts/backup_dir For Java Edition, you'll also need a JRE. Ubuntu systems don't ship with Java by default, so you'd install it like this: bashsudo apt update && sudo apt install openjdk-25-jre-headless Then initialize the server: bashsudo systemd-run -PGqp User=mc - /opt/MCscripts/bin/mc_getjar.py This downloads the latest Java Edition server jar and sets up your world. Simple enough. Key Features in Action Automated Backups are the star feature. They run on a schedule (configurable through systemd overrides) and store compressed snapshots of your world. MCscripts is smart about storage too - it doesn't keep infinite copies, and for Bedrock it specifically preserves your worlds, packs, and configuration files while removing temporary junk that bloats backups. GitHub project card for TapeWerm/MCscripts Running Server Commands from the command line beats logging into the console every time. Need to add someone to the allowlist or run a save-all? Use the mc_cmd.py script: bashsudo /opt/MCscripts/bin/mc_cmd.py SERVICE COMMAND... Want to add multiple players at once? MCscripts documentation even shows you how to loop commands: bashallowlist=$(for x in steve alex herobrine; do echo "allowlist add $x"; done) sudo /opt/MCscripts/bin/mc_cmd.py SERVICE "$allowlist" Viewing Server Output through journalctl is cleaner than raw logs. The project includes a sed script that colors output for readability: bashjournalctl -u SERVICE | /opt/MCscripts/bin/mc_color.sed | less -r +G It's the kind of small touch that makes server administration less painful. Chatbot Integration is optional but genuinely cool. You can configure webhook URLs for Discord or Slack, and MCscripts pipes server events and logs directly to your chat platform. Now your community stays in the loop without needing SSH access. Things That Catch People Off Guard MCscripts assumes you're comfortable with Linux and systemd. If you're using Windows Subsystem for Linux, some functionality breaks. WSL doesn't support systemctl poweroff, and a few other systemd features behave unexpectedly. The README notes this upfront, so read it carefully before installing on WSL. You can still run the Python scripts directly without enabling systemd units, but you lose the automation benefits. Bedrock Edition has a quirk: the update script removes files it doesn't recognize. MCscripts only keeps worlds, packs, JSON files, and properties files. If you've installed mods or custom files in your Bedrock server directory, the update process will delete them. Painful if you don't know this is coming. One more thing to remember: console output is handled through journalctl, not a traditional log file. If you're used to tailing /var/log/minecraft.log, you'll need to adjust your habits. The learning curve is small, but it's a shift. Also, if you're managing multiple Bedrock servers, each one needs its own systemd instance. The naming scheme uses templated units like mcbe@MCBE, where MCBE is your server name. Nice design, but it means your configuration commands need to specify which server you're managing. Should You Use This Over Alternatives? If you want a lightweight, no-nonsense automation solution for Ubuntu servers, MCscripts is excellent. The project is actively maintained, has 162 stars on GitHub, and the codebase is readable Shell scripts - not some mystery black box. Docker is an alternative if you prefer containerized Minecraft servers. The MCscripts project even notes that its backup script works with Docker, so you're not locked out of that approach. Docker gives you more portability and isolation, but it's overkill for most small community servers. Some people use Pterodactyl Panel, a full-featured game server control panel with a web interface. That's a much heavier solution and adds complexity you might not need. Pterodactyl is great if you're hosting multiple types of game servers, but for pure Minecraft automation on a VPS, MCscripts is leaner. Your hosting provider might offer built-in backup and update tools. Check what they provide before reinventing the wheel. But if you're running your own hardware or have a bare-bones VPS, MCscripts fills that gap perfectly. Getting Started and Moving Forward The best part about MCscripts is that it stays out of your way. Once it's installed and configured, automation just happens. You don't need to babysit it or wonder if your backups are actually running. If you're building a Minecraft community, consider pairing your server automation with other tools. A good MOTD creator helps new players understand what your server is about when they see it in their server list. And if you're running a community where players share skins, linking to a skin browser like Minecraft skins keeps people engaged with the ecosystem you're building. Server management shouldn't feel like a chore. MCscripts automates the boring parts so you can focus on what actually matters: your community and the world you're building together. Ready to try MCscripts? 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 TapeWerm/MCscripts on GitHub ↗ --- ### Tenet: Running Mods and Plugins on One Minecraft Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/tenet-minecraft-hybrid-server Published: 2026-04-22 Author: ice "Minecraft Forge Hybrid server implementing the Spigot/Bukkit API, formerly known as Thermos/Cauldron/MCPC+" Teneted/Tenet · github.com ⭐ 1,512 stars.0 Most Minecraft server admins face a tough choice: you can run a Forge server loaded with mods, or a Spigot server loaded with plugins. But what if you wanted both? Tenet is a hybrid server implementation that bridges this gap, letting you use the mod ecosystem and plugin ecosystem on the same server. It's built on years of development (formerly Thermos, Cauldron, and MCPC+) and gives dedicated server owners flexibility they didn't have before. What This Project Does Tenet is a Minecraft server implementation that combines Minecraft Forge and the Spigot/Bukkit API into one executable. Instead of picking a lane, you get both. Forge handles your mods, Bukkit handles your plugins, and Tenet orchestrates them together on the same server, sharing the same world and player state. It's not the only hybrid server that exists. Mohist and Arclight do similar things. But Tenet carries a unique legacy - it evolved from the original MCPC+ (the grandfather of this whole category) through Thermos and Cauldron. If you've heard the term "hybrid server" before, you're probably thinking of Tenet's ancestors. How does it actually work? Tenet patches both the Forge codebase and the Bukkit/Spigot codebase to coexist. And it remaps classes so they don't conflict, intercepts events so both systems get notified when things happen, and keeps them in sync about world state. When you load a mods folder AND a plugins folder, Tenet makes sure they're both running against the same game instance. No sandboxing, no translation layer - they're genuinely integrated. Why You'd Actually Use This Server admins have different needs. Some want QoL plugins like EssentialsX for commands and warps, but also want worldgen mods for better terrain. Others run economy plugins but need tech mods for factory gameplay. A survival server might use plugins for protection but mods for dimensions. The plugin ecosystem excels at convenience and administration. And that mod ecosystem excels at gameplay variety. Before hybrid servers, you couldn't have both. You'd either run vanilla Forge (mods but no plugins), or you'd compromise and use Bukkit but try to find mod-equivalents in plugin form (which usually don't exist, or are much worse). Tenet cuts that Gordian knot. Some concrete scenarios where you'd pick Tenet: You run a survival server with custom terrain generation mods but want Essentials for player management Your tech modpack needs a proper economy, which the plugin ecosystem handles better than mods You're running Twilight Forest (mod) and want McMMO or other progression plugins alongside it Your players expect chat management, vanish, and standard admin tools, but you also want Create or Immersive Engineering The downside? Hybrid servers are heavier on RAM, trickier to maintain, and sometimes have compatibility issues when mods and plugins step on each other's toes. It's the flexibility tax. But if you're managing a server with specific gameplay goals, it might be worth paying. Getting Tenet Running Before you start, know your Minecraft version. Tenet supports specific versions (check their releases page for what's current). As of early 2026, recent versions are available, but always verify before downloading. GitHub project card for Teneted/Tenet The basic setup flow looks like this: Grab the Tenet JAR from their GitHub releases Create a server directory and place the JAR inside Run it once to generate server.properties and the world directory Drop your mods into a mods folder Drop your plugins into a plugins folder Start the server again Here's what that looks like in practice: bashmkdir minecraft-server cd minecraft-server wget https://github.com/Teneted/Tenet/releases/download/[version]/Tenet-[version].jar java -Xmx4G -Xms4G -jar Tenet-[version].jar nogui That first run will create your server structure. Shut it down, add your mods and plugins, then start again. The startup will take longer than vanilla because both Forge and Spigot are initializing, plus plugins are loading. Be patient. One practical tip: give your server at least 4GB of RAM, probably more if you're using heavy mods and many plugins. A hybrid server is doing the work of two systems at once. What Makes Tenet Different The big draw is compatibility. You can search for a Spigot plugin and a Forge mod independently, install both, and they'll almost always coexist peacefully. Compare that to trying to get a Forge-only server running alongside a plugin ecosystem (impossible) or trying to find plugin versions of mod functionality (usually limited). Event handling deserves a mention. Both Forge and Bukkit have event systems. Tenet makes sure both systems see the relevant events. A player placing a block triggers Forge block events AND Bukkit block events. A mob spawning triggers both frameworks. But this sounds simple but it's actually complex under the hood. Performance is mixed. On one hand, you're running less code duplication than two separate servers. On the other hand, you're running more code overall than a pure Forge or pure Spigot server. Most admins report acceptable performance with good hardware. Just don't expect it to match vanilla-speed servers. Updates are where things get tricky. When Mojang releases a new Minecraft version, the Forge team updates Forge. When Spigot releases for that version, you need a Tenet maintainer to patch both together. This means Tenet sometimes lags behind the latest MC version. That's a real constraint to factor in if you're running a bleeding-edge server. Common Gotchas Plugin and mod conflicts happen. If a mod changes how mob spawning works and a plugin also tries to change mob spawning, you might get unexpected behavior. It's rare, but it happens. Test your mod-plugin combo on a dev server before production. Minecraft BFI IMAX 360 Class shadowing is the most confusing issue. If a mod and a plugin both define or modify the same Minecraft class, weird things can occur depending on load order. Tenet's remapping system helps, but it's not perfect. Check GitHub issues for your specific mods and plugins to see if anyone's reported problems. Actually, that's worth emphasizing: before you install something, search the Tenet GitHub issues and community forums. If someone else ran your exact mod-plugin combo and hit a wall, you'll find the solution there. Server startup times are noticeably longer than vanilla. Expect 30-60 seconds for a modest setup, longer for heavy modpacks. This is just how it's - both Forge and Bukkit need initialization time. JAR size matters. A hybrid server JAR is huge compared to vanilla or Spigot. This affects download time and startup speed. It's not a dealbreaker, just something to plan for. Alternatives Worth Knowing About If hybrid servers feel like overkill, you have options. Paper is a high-performance Spigot fork that's perfectly fine for plugin-only servers and has become the community standard. If you only care about mods, Forge remains the dominant modding framework and you can run pure Forge servers without any hybrid complexity. Mohist is another hybrid server that works similarly to Tenet. It's more actively maintained in recent years and might have better 1.20+ support depending on the exact version you need. Arclight is also in this category. Your choice between them often comes down to which version of Minecraft you're targeting and which community has reported fewer issues with your specific mod-plugin combo. If you're just looking to set up a basic Minecraft server and wondered what this was about, minecraft.how's server list has plenty of other options to consider. And if you want to customize your server's MOTD, the MOTD creator tool works with any server type. Is Tenet Right for Your Server? Tenet shines if you've found yourself wanting specific mods and specific plugins that don't replicate each other's functionality. If you're running a hardcore modpack but also want Discord integration and economy plugins, hybrid servers are your answer. If you're running vanilla Spigot and just want better worldgen, installing a few worldgen mods might be enough to justify the hybrid overhead. But if you're running a simple survival server or a pure modpack server where the mod ecosystem already handles what you need, stick with what's simpler. Tenet is power for people who actually need it. The extra complexity and resource usage isn't worth it otherwise. The Tenet project has been around for years (and its predecessors for even longer). One community knows how to troubleshoot it. If you decide to go this route, you're not experimenting with something fragile - you're joining a well-established ecosystem.Teneted/Tenet - GPL-3.0, ★1512 Ready to try Tenet? 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 Teneted/Tenet on GitHub ↗ --- ### How ViaBackwards Keeps Your Minecraft Server Multi-Version URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/viabackwards-minecraft-server-guide Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice ViaVersion/ViaBackwards Allows older clients to connect to newer server versions for Minecraft servers. .0 You've updated your Minecraft server to the latest version. But now your friends on 1.20.5 can't join. Neither can those still playing on 1.19. A multi-version server used to be a fantasy - until someone built ViaBackwards. It's a plugin that lets old Minecraft clients connect to newer servers, and it quietly fixes all the version mismatch headaches that come with that. What ViaBackwards Actually Does ViaBackwards is a protocol translator. Minecraft's network protocol changes with almost every release. Block IDs shift, inventory mechanics change, even the way entities look over the wire. When you run a 1.21 server and a 1.19 client tries to join, they're speaking different languages. ViaBackwards sits in the middle and translates. It's a plugin - not a mod, not a proxy fork - which means it runs on your existing Paper or Spigot server. Technically it depends on ViaVersion, which handles forward compatibility (newer clients on older servers). ViaBackwards complements that by handling backward compatibility. Together, they let your server accept players from versions spanning years of Minecraft updates. The coolest part? You don't have to maintain separate server instances for different versions. One server. One world. Everyone plays together. Why You'd Actually Use This Server owners are the obvious audience. If you run a public server, ViaBackwards is genuinely useful. Player bases don't update in lockstep. Some folks stay on 1.20 because they prefer the build style. Others jump to 1.21 the day it drops. Without version support, you either fragment your community (multiple servers) or force updates (lose players). ViaBackwards sidesteps both. There's a second group: modded players. ViaFabric and ViaFabricPlus let you drop ViaBackwards into your mod folder, which means fabric players on older versions can join vanilla servers running 1.21. This matters more than it sounds, especially for players whose favorite mods haven't updated yet. And honestly? If you're experimenting with a public server but haven't settled on a version yet, ViaBackwards buys you flexibility. You can release on 1.20.5, update to 1.21 when you're ready, and not worry about isolating half your player base. The trade-off is real though. Older clients talking to newer servers introduces bugs the devs can't fully solve - more on that below. How to Install ViaBackwards Grab the jar from Hangar (if you're using Paper) or Modrinth (if you're using modded clients). Drop it in your plugins folder alongside ViaVersion, which you already need. bashcd /path/to/server/plugins wget https://hangar.papermc.io/api/v1/projects/ViaBackwards/versions/latest/download Restart the server. That's it. No configuration required out of the box. If you want to tinker, ViaBackwards generates a config file. The version in 5.9.0 added a notable option: pass-original-item-name-to-resource-packs. It's enabled by default and passes original item identifiers to resource packs (useful if you're using custom assets). You'd toggle this only if something breaks with your resource pack setup. For modded clients, the install is slightly different. ViaFabric users drop the mod in mods. ViaFabricPlus users drop it in config/viafabriclus/jars. Either way, one jar file and you're done. What Actually Works Between Versions ViaBackwards maintains translation mappings for blocks, items, and entities. A 1.19 client doesn't know what a Sniffer is (1.20 mob), so ViaBackwards translates it to something the old client can display. Same with new blocks. Missing items get swapped for closest equivalents. The recent 5.9.0 release fixed spectate mode interactions in 26.1 to 1.21.11. It also patched leather armor color rendering on 1.21.4. These are the kinds of edge cases the maintainers quietly squash - the stuff that would confuse players if left broken. Keep in mind, ViaBackwards releases a few days after a Minecraft update unless the protocol changes are trivial. If you want early access to new version support, the project offers GitHub Sponsors at a tier with pre-release builds. Helpful if you want to update servers on day one. Known Gotchas and Limits It's not perfect. Clients older than 1.17 can't see blocks below y=0 or above y=255 on 1.17+ servers that use expanded world height. This is a hard limit of the protocol - the old clients literally don't have the coordinate space for it. If your server uses a world with custom min_y or height values, older players just won't see those blocks. It's weird, but not a dealbreaker for most survival servers. Inventory desync happens sometimes on 1.17 clients joining 1.17+ servers (actually, this got partially fixed in 5.9.0 for 1.17 to 1.16.5 transitions). You might click something, and your inventory briefly looks wrong server-side even though it's fine on your screen. It usually corrects itself, but it's annoying. Some mods like AxSmithing patch specific issues like the 1.20+ smithing table not working for pre-1.19.4 clients. Sound mappings are incomplete. Newer blocks and mobs have sounds old clients don't know about, so some audio just won't play. Not game-breaking, but you'll notice. And actually, there's something people miss: keepalive packet handling. A 1.12 client on a 1.11 server can disconnect unexpectedly due to keepalive timeouts. The 5.9.0 release fixed this, so if you're running an old server, update ViaBackwards. Alternatives and Related Projects You've probably heard of ViaVersion (the forward-compatibility counterpart). There's also ViaProxy, which acts as a standalone proxy if you want to filter connections without touching your main server jar. And if you're specifically using Fabric, ViaFabricPlus has some extra features for client-side compatibility. If you need a simpler solution that doesn't require plugins - say, you want version support without the maintenance overhead - some hosts offer version-agnostic servers, but you'll lose customization options. Most serious server owners end up with ViaVersion + ViaBackwards because it works, it's open source, and the community maintains it actively. The reality is, ViaBackwards is the go-to. 589 GitHub stars and active development for good reason. Making It Work for Your Server If you decide to install ViaBackwards, test it with a few older clients before opening to your full player base. Join on 1.19, then 1.20, then whatever your server version is. Check that inventory actions work smoothly. Try fishing. Try combat. These are usually the first things that feel weird if version translation is off. Also consider your world. If you've explored high enough to fill up to y=320 or low enough to y=-64 (1.18+ features), document that for pre-1.17 players. Let them know they won't see blocks outside the old y=0 to y=255 range. It's a minor note in your server info, but it prevents confusion. And if you want to give players a smooth first impression when they join your server, you might generate a custom server MOTD with your version info and server version. Something like "1.10-Latest Welcome!" signals that you're thinking about multi-version support. One last thing: if you're running a server where players design skins, you might want to remind newer players about the Minecraft skin creator for quick design. Not directly related to ViaBackwards, but keeping your player base happy is what this is all about. Ready to try ViaBackwards? 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 ViaVersion/ViaBackwards on GitHub ↗ --- ### Why C2ME-Fabric Is the Chunk Optimization Mod to Know URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/c2me-fabric-chunk-optimization Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "A Fabric mod designed to improve the chunk performance of Minecraft." RelativityMC/C2ME-fabric · github.com C2ME-fabric is a performance mod that speeds up chunk generation and loading by distributing the work across multiple CPU cores. If your Minecraft server slows down during chunk generation or your client lags when loading new terrain, this mod tackles those specific bottlenecks. What This Project Actually Does C2ME stands for Concurrent Chunk Management Engine, and that name explains the whole concept. Minecraft normally handles chunk generation, loading, and saving on a single thread, which wastes the power of modern CPUs. This mod breaks that work into tasks that can run in parallel, letting your processor handle multiple chunks at once. The README explains that it doesn't change how chunks are generated - vanilla world generation stays exactly the same. That mod just makes the process faster by threading it properly. For anyone who's watched their frame rate tank while exploring new terrain, this is the practical payoff. It's also MIT licensed with 761 GitHub stars, which tells you it's both free and battle-tested by the community. Why You'd Actually Use This Chunk lag is annoying. You're flying around in creative mode, or you spawn a bunch of new players on your server, and suddenly everything stutters while Minecraft generates terrain. Most players don't realize it's not their graphics settings or RAM - it's the single thread doing all the world generation work. C2ME fixes this specific problem. On a machine with multiple cores (which is basically every computer made in the last decade), the mod spreads that load around. The result? Smoother exploration, faster server startup times when new chunks need to load, and less jank when you're pushing your world boundaries. One tutorial shows players testing it on large pre-generation jobs - what used to take hours can drop to a fraction of that. The maintainers recommend pairing it with Lithium and Starlight for even better results, which are other optimization mods that handle different performance bottlenecks. If you're running a server or want survival mode to feel less laggy during chunk generation, this is worth trying. Getting It Installed C2ME requires Fabric, which is a lightweight modding platform. If you're already using Fabric mods, you probably have Fabric Loader installed. If not, grab it from fabricmc.net first. Downloads are available on both Modrinth and CurseForge. For Minecraft 1.21.11 (the latest Java release as of April 2026), you'd grab the version labeled for that release. Installation is straightforward - drop the.jar file into your mods folder. If you're on a server, the same process applies - add it to the server's mods directory and restart. Unlike some mods, C2ME doesn't need config tweaking to work, though you can customize it if you want to fine-tune chunk delivery rates. One note: backup your worlds first, which is just good practice with any mod. C2ME is stable, but it's always smart to have backups before experimenting. Key Features That Actually Matter Parallel chunk generation. This is the core feature. Multiple chunks get processed at the same time instead of one-at-a-time. On a 4-core processor, you might see a 2-3x speedup in world gen performance. On 8-cores or higher, it gets even more dramatic. GitHub project card for RelativityMC/C2ME-fabric Smooth chunk sending rate. The latest release (0.3.6.0) added a feature called smoothChunkSendingRate, which meters out chunk delivery to the client more evenly. And this helps frametime stability - instead of a massive dump of chunks causing a frame spike, they trickle in smoothly. Vanilla parity. C2ME doesn't alter world generation. Seeds produce the same worlds as vanilla Minecraft. And this matters if you're sharing seeds with friends or running a server where people expect standard survival generation. The mod says it "doesn't sacrifice vanilla functionality," and that's the real value - you get speed without weird surprises. Server task handling during shutdown. The mod properly manages shutdown tasks, so your server cleanly shuts down without chunk corruption or hanging processes. Datapack compatibility. World generation datapacks that work in vanilla also work with C2ME. Custom mod-made world generators usually work too, though some edge cases exist if mod authors made assumptions about single-threaded behavior. Common Issues and How to Avoid Them C2ME is stable, but a few things trip people up. First, some custom world generators don't expect parallel chunk processing. If you're using a mod-made dimension generator and it acts weird, that's the culprit. The Discord community (linked on GitHub) can help debug these, and the maintainers actively work with mod authors to fix compatibility issues. Second, the mod has only tested support for the latest Minecraft release and the latest snapshot. Older versions get long-term support for critical bugs, but new features don't backport. If you're on something like 1.19 or 1.20, check the releases page to see if a build exists. Actually, version support is worth clarifying - the project only maintains recent builds. If you're stuck on an older version, you might not find a release for it. Check the releases section and use the Minecraft version in the filename. One more gotcha: if you're already running a heavily modded setup, C2ME plays well with Lithium and Starlight (which the README recommends), but test your specific mod combination before deploying to a server with real players. How It Compares to Alternatives Lithium is another performance mod that optimizes entity AI, block updates, and other systems - but not chunk generation. Running both together is actually common because they fix different things. Starlight fixes lighting performance. Think of them as a toolkit where C2ME handles one specific bottleneck. Some server operators use Bukkit or Spigot plugins to pre-generate chunks, which is a different approach - you generate everything upfront before players join. C2ME instead makes generation faster as it happens. Both strategies work; C2ME is better if you want on-demand generation without the time investment. On the Java side, there's no direct equivalent that's as lightweight and straightforward. Some performance mods attempt to optimize chunk stuff, but C2ME has nearly 800 stars for a reason - it does one thing well. Making Your Server Setup Better If you're running a survival server or a large creative project, C2ME pairs well with some other tools. You might also want to set up consistent server properties - there's a server properties generator that helps you dial in settings like view distance and chunk loading. And if you're managing DNS for your server domain, the free Minecraft DNS tool can save you from paying for separate DNS hosting. The actual performance gains depend on your hardware. A machine with plenty of CPU cores sees much bigger improvements than a laptop with 2 cores. But even modest multi-core systems benefit from parallel chunk work. 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 --- ### Using DiscordSRV to Bridge Discord and Minecraft Servers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/discordsrv-minecraft-discord-plugin Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "Discord bridging plugin for block game https://modrinth.com/plugin/discordsrv" DiscordSRV/DiscordSRV · github.com ⭐ 1,130 stars.0 If you're running a Minecraft server, you've probably wished your players could stay connected even when they log off. DiscordSRV does exactly that by linking your in-game chat to Discord, letting your community talk across both platforms simultaneously. No more scattered conversations or players missing server announcements. What DiscordSRV Actually Does DiscordSRV is a Java plugin that creates a two-way bridge between your Minecraft server and a Discord guild. Players chat in-game and the message appears in Discord. Someone types in a Discord channel and it shows in Minecraft chat. It's straightforward, but it fundamentally changes how your community communicates. The plugin's been around for years and has over 1130 stars on GitHub, with more than a million downloads. Version 1.30.4 is the latest release, and it runs on recent Minecraft versions without breaking a sweat. For a Java plugin that does something this useful, the codebase is clean and actively maintained. Why You'd Actually Want This Think about your typical server scenario. Someone gets stuck at a mob grinder and needs help, but nobody's online. With Discord integration, they can ask in the server's chat channel and get a response even if players are offline. Mods can warn about maintenance windows, announce events, or post coordinates to important structures. It's also great for transparency. New players see activity happening in Discord before they even join, so the server feels alive. Guilds and clans can use their own Discord servers with DiscordSRV to keep their Minecraft operations organized alongside voice chat and role assignments. Another angle: you're essentially getting a persistent chat log. Everything gets recorded in Discord, which is useful if you need to reference who said what or when something happened on the server. Getting DiscordSRV Running Installation's pretty standard for a Spigot-style plugin (Spigot, Paper, Purpur all work). Here's the actual process: Download the latest JAR from the GitHub releases page (currently v1.30.4) Drop it into your server's plugins folder Restart the server Edit the generated config.yml file in plugins/DiscordSRV/ Add your Discord bot token and channel IDs Restart again and you're done The config file is pretty readable, honestly. It's not like some plugins where you're deciphering YAML soup. But you do need to know what you're doing with Discord bots, which brings us to the next part. The Discord Bot Setup (Don't Skip This) You'll need to create a Discord bot and invite it to your guild. If you've never done this before, it takes maybe five minutes. Here's the short version: Go to the Discord Developer Portal Click "New Application" and give it a name (something like "MyServerBot") Go to the "Bot" tab and click "Add Bot" Copy the token (keep this secret, seriously) Under "OAuth2 > URL Generator", select "bot" scope and necessary permissions (Send Messages, Read Messages, etc.) Copy the generated URL and open it to invite the bot to your guild Then paste that token into DiscordSRV's config. The plugin will handle the rest. Key Features That Actually Matter Two-way chat synchronization is the core feature. Messages flow both directions with clear indicators of who's speaking and where they're from. You can customize the message format if you want something different than the default. Player status notifications are built in. When someone joins or leaves the server, Discord sees it. This keeps your community aware of activity, especially on smaller servers where every player counts. Command forwarding lets you configure certain Discord commands to execute on the server. Need to give someone OP or run a weather command remotely? You can set that up in the config. Just be careful with permissions so you don't accidentally let random Discord members mess with your world. Role synchronization is another one. You can link Minecraft teams to Discord roles, which is useful if you're trying to manage a structured community with verified members. It requires some config work but it's solid. Death messages and advancement notifications can sync to Discord too. It's not critical, but it does add to the atmosphere if you want your Discord channel to feel like the server's happening right there. What Actually Trips People Up The biggest gotcha is permissions. If your bot doesn't have Send Messages permission in the target channel, it'll silently fail and you'll spend an hour wondering why nothing's working. Check the bot's permissions first. Secondly, the plugin uses JDA (Java Discord API) under the hood. If you're running an older server version, compatibility can be sketchy. But if you're on anything reasonably recent (Minecraft 26.1.2 or so), you're fine. Actually, that only works on 1.20+ servers anyway. Rate limiting is a real thing. Discord has limits on how many messages you can send per minute. On massive servers with heavy chat, you might hit those limits. The plugin handles it gracefully by queuing messages, but there's a slight delay. One more thing: webhook mode vs bot mode. The plugin can work as a webhook for lighter message forwarding, or as a full bot with more features. Webhook mode is faster but bot mode gives you more flexibility. Read the config comments and pick what fits your server size. Practical Additions for Your Server If you're building out your server infrastructure, you'll probably also need basic tools like a Minecraft whitelist creator to manage who joins. And if you're setting up a SMP with nether portals, the Nether portal calculator saves time getting coordinates right. DiscordSRV works great alongside these. You can announce coordinates in Discord, whitelist players, and keep everything coordinated. Alternatives Worth Mentioning There's SyncDisc if you want something lighter weight, but it's less actively developed. Bridger does a similar job but focuses more on advanced role mapping. Honestly though, for the vast majority of servers, DiscordSRV just works. It's the established standard for a reason. The maintainers actually care about keeping it current (notice they fixed advancement issues with Minecraft 1.21.11 already), which matters. Bottom line: if your server has more than a handful of players, DiscordSRV pays for itself in community cohesion. Set it up once and forget about it. 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 --- ### FastLogin: Streamlined Premium Minecraft Authentication in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fastlogin-minecraft-auto-login Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "Checks if a Minecraft player has a valid paid account. If so, they can skip offline authentication automatically. (premium auto login)" TuxCoding/FastLogin · github.com If you run a Minecraft server, you know the friction: premium players spend time typing passwords into your auth plugin every session, even though their account is already verified by Mojang. FastLogin solves that by automatically detecting paid accounts and skipping the authentication step entirely. It's a small quality-of-life improvement that compounds across hundreds of players. What This Plugin Does FastLogin is a server-side plugin (with BungeeCord and Velocity support) that checks whether a connecting player owns a legitimate paid Minecraft account. If they do, it marks them as verified and bypasses your auth plugin's password requirement. They join directly. No credentials needed. The plugin does this by reaching out to Mojang's API, which is why it works reliably. It's not trying to guess or bruteforce anything. It's just saying: "This person's UUID exists in Mojang's premium database, so let them through." Written in Java and actively maintained, FastLogin has accumulated 627 stars on GitHub. The project supports the major server software options: Spigot, Paper, BungeeCord, Waterfall, and Velocity. It even bridges Bedrock players through FloodGate if you're running a cross-platform setup. Why Server Admins Actually Use It The obvious benefit is convenience. Your legitimate players join faster. But there's more beneath that. Auth plugins (AuthMe, LoginSecurity, AdvancedLogin, and others) are CPU-intensive during peak hours. They handle password verification, account creation, and database queries for every single login. If you have 200 concurrent players and, say, 60% are premium, FastLogin eliminates password-check overhead for those 120 players every time they rejoin. It's not a massive performance spike, but it adds up, especially on smaller hosting. There's also the security angle. Players who connect through FastLogin don't have to share their account password with your server at all. So it relies purely on Mojang's verification, which is cryptographically sound. Compromised auth databases hurt; Mojang's verified UUID system doesn't. And then there's retention. New players sometimes abandon servers because they find the login step annoying or they're unsure about sharing credentials. Removing that friction, even slightly, matters. (Though obviously, you still need auth for your cracked-mode players.) Installing FastLogin on Your Server Getting started depends on your server software. Here's the breakdown. For Spigot or Paper servers: Download the latest FastLoginBukkit.jar from the GitHub releases page. Drop it into your plugins folder and restart the server. bashwget https://github.com/TuxCoding/FastLogin/releases/download/1.12-kick-toggle/FastLoginBukkit.jar cp FastLoginBukkit.jar /path/to/server/plugins/ # Then restart your server You'll also need a compatible auth plugin if you don't have one already. The plugin officially supports AuthMe (5.X), LoginSecurity, AdvancedLogin, and a few others. After you've installed both, restart and check your console logs to confirm FastLogin loaded. For BungeeCord or Waterfall: Grab FastLoginBungee.jar and place it in your proxy's plugins folder. Restart the proxy. bashwget https://github.com/TuxCoding/FastLogin/releases/download/1.12-kick-toggle/FastLoginBungee.jar cp FastLoginBungee.jar /path/to/bungeecord/plugins/ In a proxy setup, FastLogin handles verification at the proxy level, so your backend servers see pre-verified players. You'll still want an auth plugin on your backend (especially for cracked mode), but FastLogin will have already cleared premium players. For Velocity: Same process: drop FastLoginVelocity.jar into plugins and restart. bashwget https://github.com/TuxCoding/FastLogin/releases/download/1.12-kick-toggle/FastLoginVelocity.jar cp FastLoginVelocity.jar /path/to/velocity/plugins/ After installation, there's minimal configuration needed. The plugin ships with sensible defaults. If you want to fine-tune behavior, check the config file that's generated on first run. Core Features That Matter Automatic Premium Detection is the headline. When a player joins, FastLogin queries Mojang to verify their UUID. If the account exists as a paid account, it's flagged and auth is skipped. No manual setup required. GitHub project card for TuxCoding/FastLogin Cracked-Mode Compatibility matters. If a player's account doesn't exist in Mojang's system (they're playing offline), FastLogin passes them through to your auth plugin. They still need to authenticate normally. This is why you can't run FastLogin alone - you still need an auth plugin for your non-premium players. Asynchronous Operations keep your server responsive. FastLogin doesn't block the login thread while waiting for Mojang's API. It checks in the background, so even if the API is slow, your players' logins don't stall. You'll notice this especially during login storms. Username Change Detection is a nice touch. If a premium player changes their in-game username, FastLogin automatically updates the database record linking their old name to their new one. Without this, you'd have orphaned records. Skin Forwarding keeps textures intact when players skip auth. This prevents the default Steve or Alex skin from showing while the real skin loads. PlaceholderAPI Support (on Spigot) lets you display a player's premium status in chat, scoreboards, or other plugins. Use %fastlogin_status% in your placeholders. Common Setup Issues and How to Avoid Them The biggest mistake is forgetting that FastLogin is a supplement, not a replacement. You still need an auth plugin. If you disable or remove your auth plugin thinking FastLogin handles everything, cracked players won't be able to join at all. Install both. Java version matters more than most people think. The plugin recommends Java 21+ to take advantage of modern multi-threading improvements. If you're running Java 8 or 11, it'll work, but performance benefits won't be as pronounced. Actually, let me correct that: Spigot servers need Java 8+, but BungeeCord and Velocity require Java 17+ at minimum. Check your host's Java version before installing. Plugin compatibility is worth verifying. FastLogin plays nicely with AuthMe, LoginSecurity, and others listed in the official docs. If you're running a niche auth plugin, test in a staging environment first. There's no guarantee FastLogin hooks into every authentication system. API rate-limiting can be a concern if you've a massive playerbase. Mojang's API isn't rate-limited for reasonable use, but if you're hitting it hundreds of times per second, you might see slowdowns. For most servers, this isn't an issue. One more thing: if you're running a Bedrock-Java hybrid server through FloodGate, FastLogin supports it natively. But you need to configure it explicitly in the config. By default, it won't touch Bedrock players. How It Compares to Other Auth Solutions There's no direct competitor that does exactly what FastLogin does, because most auth plugins focus on preventing unauthorized access. FastLogin assumes Mojang's verification is sufficient for premium players and just removes the redundant password step. If you're running pure premium-only mode (no cracked players), you don't need FastLogin at all. Your auth plugin can be configured to auto-register. But if you want both premium and offline players on the same server, FastLogin is elegant because it streamlines premium logins without affecting cracked-mode authentication. Some admins use FastLogin alongside more advanced systems like sign-in plugins or session managers. There's no conflict. FastLogin is lightweight and specific about what it does, so it stacks well with other tools. The project's MIT license means you can modify, fork, or integrate it into your own tools if needed. The codebase is clean and well-structured (it's active Java development), so if you need to contribute or debug, the barrier to entry is low. If you're designing your server's auth flow, FastLogin fits best as the first-pass check. Premium players get through fast. Everything else flows to your regular auth plugin. It's a layered approach that works well in practice. For more inspiration on building community features, check out our Minecraft Text Generator for custom server messages, or browse our collection of Minecraft skins to understand player identity on your server. 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 --- ### Crafting Eye-Catching Minecraft MOTDs with MiniMOTD URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-server-motd-colors Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice jpenilla/MiniMOTD Minecraft server/proxy plugin to set the server list MOTD using MiniMessage for formatting, supporting RGB colors. Your Minecraft server's MOTD is the first thing players see in the multiplayer menu. If it's just plain text, you're wasting an opportunity to stand out. MiniMOTD adds vibrant RGB colors, gradients, and formatted text to make your server impossible to miss. What MiniMOTD Is and Why It Matters Think about the multiplayer server list. You're scrolling through 100 servers, and most of them have generic MOTDs: "Welcome to MyServer" or "Survival PvP". A few servers jump out. Those are the ones with colorful, eye-catching messages. MiniMOTD is a Java plugin that gives you the tools to create those standout MOTDs. It's available for practically every major Minecraft server platform. The trick is that it uses MiniMessage, a text formatting system from the Paper project, to give you access to millions of RGB color combinations instead of Minecraft's standard 16 colors. Here's the real draw: if someone joins your server on a modern client (1.16 or later), they see the full RGB glory. On older clients? MiniMOTD automatically downsamples to colors they can see, so nobody's left with a broken message. Installing MiniMOTD for Your Setup MiniMOTD ships with separate downloads for each platform, which sounds complicated but is actually pretty clean. You're not jamming a one-size-fits-all JAR and hoping it works. For Paper-Based Servers Paper is what most mid-size servers run. Grab the appropriate JAR (the "-paper" version if you're on Minecraft 26.1.2 or newer, otherwise the "-bukkit" version for earlier releases), drop it into your plugins folder, and restart. bash# Copy the JAR into: server/plugins/ # Then restart the server # Or use: /reload if supported If You're Running Fabric Fabric isn't as common, but it's growing. First grab Fabric API from Modrinth, then download the MiniMOTD JAR. Throw both in your mods folder. bash# Download: Fabric API and MiniMOTD JAR # Place both into: server/mods/ # Restart the server Proxies (Velocity, Waterfall, Bungeecord) Running a proxy means multiple backend servers sharing one entry point. Install MiniMOTD on the proxy, and players see your custom MOTD before connecting to any backend server. Waterfall and Bungeecord use the same JAR, which makes things convenient. bash# Place JAR into: proxy/plugins/ # Restart the proxy Other Platforms: NeoForge and Sponge Both exist and are supported, but they're less common. Check the releases page for the right download. The GitHub wiki has platform-specific notes if you hit issues. Coloring Your MOTD with MiniMessage This is where MiniMOTD gets fun. Once it's installed, you're editing a config file and writing text using MiniMessage tags. It's basically HTML for Minecraft text. The simplest approach is using named colors: xmlWelcome! Join Now If you want specific RGB colors, use hex codes: xmlCustom Orange Gradients are where things look genuinely impressive: xmlFade between colors You can also do rainbow gradients: xmlRAINBOW TEXT LOOKS COOL The config file is YAML, which means indentation matters (use spaces, not tabs). I've seen people lose an hour to a misaligned tag or a missing quote. Double-check your syntax before reloading. MiniMessage tags need to be properly closed. An unclosed tag will break the parser and you'll see errors in the logs. It's not hard to get right - just keep your angle brackets in pairs. Testing and Refining Your MOTD After you've configured everything, you'll want to see what it looks like before players see it. The easiest way is to run a local test server and join it from the multiplayer menu. GitHub project card for jpenilla/MiniMOTD If you want a faster preview without spinning up a server, try the Minecraft MOTD Creator tool to see how your formatted text will render. It won't be 100% identical to how the game displays it, but it's close enough for previewing color choices and layout. Once you're happy, reload the plugin or restart the server. Players will immediately see the new MOTD. If you need to verify your server's MOTD is being broadcast correctly, the Minecraft Server Status Checker can pull your server info and show you what clients are seeing. Good for debugging if things look weird. Common Gotchas and Limitations RGB colors only work on modern clients. That means if someone's playing on Minecraft 1.15 or older, MiniMOTD will downgrade your colorful gradient to the nearest standard color. It still looks okay - the plugin's smart about it - but they won't see the full RGB range. Proxies and newer servers (1.16+) can send RGB colors to modern clients. Older servers can't, even with MiniMOTD installed, because the Minecraft protocol itself didn't support it. YAML syntax errors in the config will silently break things. The plugin logs an error, but if you're not checking logs, you'll wonder why your new MOTD didn't load. Check indentation and quotes first. One last thing worth mentioning: the performance impact is basically zero. The plugin renders your MOTD once at startup and caches it. There's no per-connection overhead or recurring processing, even with complex gradients and rainbow effects. It's completely safe to go wild with formatting. Other Options Worth Considering MiniMOTD isn't the only way to customize your MOTD, though it's probably the most flexible. Some admins just use basic Bukkit/Spigot MOTD plugins that don't require RGB support. They're simpler but limited to 16 colors. Others set the MOTD in the proxy config (for Bungeecord) and skip a plugin entirely. But again, you're capped at standard Minecraft colors. If you're already thinking about running Waterfall (Paper's proxy fork), it has better built-in formatting support than Bungeecord, which makes MiniMOTD less essential. But the plugin still works and gives you more control. MiniMOTD wins because it's actively maintained (the latest version supports Minecraft 26.1.2), widely compatible across platforms, and genuinely makes your server look better in the server browser. Support the project MiniMOTD 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. --- ### Arclight: Bukkit Plugins on Modded Minecraft Servers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/arclight-bukkit-modded-minecraft Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Arclight (IzzelAliz/Arclight) A Bukkit(1.20/1.21) server implementation in modding environment using Mixin. ⚡ Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 2,021 stars.0 If you've ever wanted to run a modded Minecraft server but missed the huge ecosystem of Bukkit plugins, Arclight solves that exact problem. It's a bridge between two server worlds that usually can't talk to each other: you get your mods and your plugins, all running in the same place. What Arclight Actually Does Arclight is a Bukkit server implementation built using Mixin to run on common mod loaders like Fabric, Forge, and NeoForge. Instead of choosing between a vanilla or modded server, you run one that supports both mods and Bukkit plugins simultaneously. The latest release targets Minecraft 1.21.1 and works with Fabric Loader 0.16.14, Forge 52.1.1, and NeoForge 21.1.192. Here's the thing: most server admins fall into one of two camps. Either you want the stability and massive plugin ecosystem of Bukkit (which is limited to vanilla gameplay), or you want mods but lose access to thousands of Bukkit plugins you'd normally rely on. Arclight erases that line. The project sits at over 2,000 stars on GitHub and is actively maintained. Recent updates have added support for custom world generation, entity damage events, inventory event handling, and compatibility with major modpacks like ATM10. Why You'd Actually Use This Think about a typical server admin scenario. You want Minecraft but with extra content from mods: more dimensions, new items, interesting mechanics. But you also rely on plugins for essentials like permissions management, economy systems, shops, and custom commands. Pick vanilla with Bukkit and you're stuck. Pick mods and you lose that plugin infrastructure. Arclight changes that tradeoff entirely. If you're running a community server with custom features built on Bukkit plugins, Arclight lets you layer mods on top. Want players to use custom skins? The community can browse your Minecraft skin library and apply them. Need to test your server's voting system? Arclight works with standard Bukkit infrastructure, so you can verify everything with a votifier testing tool. Your existing plugin stack just keeps working. It's also valuable if you're building something experimental. The recent releases show expansion into areas like plugin channel support and custom world generation, which means server creators can do more sophisticated things than traditional Bukkit allowed. Installing Arclight The installation process is straightforward. Download the appropriate JAR file for your mod loader from the project's download site at arclight.izzel.io. bashjava -jar arclight.jar nogui That's the basic command. The "nogui" argument disables the server control panel, which is what you want for headless servers. This project handles mod loader detection automatically, so you don't need to manually configure Fabric versus Forge. The first launch will set up your server directory structure. From there, you drop Bukkit plugins into the plugins folder like you would on any Bukkit server, and place mods in the mods folder. Both load together on the next restart. One caveat: the documentation lives on the project wiki, so if something goes wrong, check there before assuming it's broken. The wiki covers more advanced setup scenarios like reverse proxies and plugin channel configuration. Key Features and What Changed Recently The latest release notes show what the team has prioritized. Plugin channel support is significant if you've built custom communication systems between plugins and clients. Custom world generation through plugins means you can use Bukkit plugins to control terrain generation instead of being locked to mod loaders' defaults. Entity damage events got expanded, which matters if you're running combat-focused plugins or PvP servers. Inventory event improvements landed in the same update, addressing a common pain point: plugins that manipulate player inventories now have more fine-grained control. If you've ever had inventory-related plugin bugs, these additions likely fix them. ATM10 compatibility is worth mentioning if you're interested in running total conversion modpacks. It shows the project doesn't exist in isolation, but actively integrates feedback from the broader modpack community. The build script refactor and gradle updates are less flashy but important. Better build tooling means faster iteration and fewer dependency conflicts down the line. Common Gotchas and Pitfalls Not every Bukkit plugin works perfectly on Arclight. Some plugins depend on very specific vanilla behavior that changes when mods are present, or they make assumptions about the server thread that don't hold when running under a mod loader. The project maintains compatibility notes, but you may need to test plugins before deploying to production. Plugin channel conflicts can happen if both plugins and mods try to use the same communication channels. Usually this is resolvable, but it's worth being aware of. Performance is worth monitoring. Adding mods to Bukkit increases memory overhead and tick time compared to either alone. If you're running a large server, you'll want to profile carefully and potentially increase JVM heap allocation. Also, if something breaks, you need to know whether it's a plugin issue, a mod issue, or an Arclight integration issue. The Discord community and GitHub issues are active, so help exists, but troubleshooting is slightly more complex than vanilla Bukkit. Alternatives and Why They're Different You could use Spigot or Paper and install mods via plugins like Mod Loaders, but that's not the same. Folks who try this get a limited subset of mod functionality packaged as plugins, not native mod support. Paper is excellent for vanilla-plus servers, but it doesn't solve the modded-plus-plugins problem. You could run a pure modded server without Bukkit at all, but you lose the plugin ecosystem. Some mod loaders have their own plugin systems (Fabric has Quilt, for example), but they're smaller ecosystems with less legacy compatibility. Arclight is unique because it's specifically designed to run both simultaneously, not as a hack or addon. The architectural choice to use Mixin means it integrates deeply with the mod loader rather than sitting on top of it. Getting Help and Contributing The project has a Discord server, GitHub discussions, and a QQ group for Chinese-speaking users. That wiki at wiki.izzel.io/s/arclight-docs has setup guides and API documentation. If something's broken, the GitHub issues board is the right place, and the maintainers respond reliably. And if you want to support the project directly, BisectHosting offers Arclight server hosting with a 25% discount using the code "arclight." Support the project Arclight 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. --- ### Spyglass: The Best Editor for Minecraft Data Pack Development URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/spyglass-minecraft-data-pack-tools Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "Development tools for vanilla Minecraft: Java Edition data pack developers." SpyglassMC/Spyglass · github.com Building a data pack in vanilla Minecraft is like writing code without an IDE - possible, but painful. You're editing raw JSON and command syntax with no real-time feedback, no auto-completion, and when something breaks, you get vague error messages at best. Spyglass changes that by bringing proper developer tools to data pack creation, giving you the kind of editor support most programmers take for granted. What's Spyglass, Really? Spyglass is a language server and VS Code extension for vanilla Minecraft data pack development. It understands Minecraft's data format - NBT, JSON, function syntax, and all the weird edge cases - and provides the kind of IntelliSense features you'd expect from a modern code editor: auto-completion, real-time error reporting, code navigation, semantic highlighting, and refactoring tools. If you've never used a language server before, think of it as your editor's way of understanding your code deeply. Instead of just syntax highlighting, Spyglass actually knows what things mean in the Minecraft context. When you're typing a command, it knows which arguments are valid. When you reference a scorekeeper, it knows if that objective exists. The project is written in TypeScript and licensed under MIT, with 444 stars on GitHub. It's maintained as an open-source project by the community. That means it's free to use and anyone can contribute improvements. Why Data Pack Developers Need This Data packs are powerful. They let you add entirely new mechanics to vanilla Minecraft without installing mods - new items, biomes, bosses, entire game systems. Want to build a custom boss fight? A roguelike dungeon? A PvP arena with custom rules? Data packs can do it all. The catch? Data packs are written in a mix of JSON, NBT, and function files. Most of it's valid code syntax, but if you're using a basic text editor, you're flying blind. Did you spell that NBT tag correctly? Is that JSON bracket in the right place? You won't know until you test it in-game and hope the error message is helpful. Spyglass catches these mistakes before you ever load the game. That's huge. It cuts your debug cycle in half. Getting Started with Spyglass Setting up Spyglass is straightforward if you already use VS Code. If you don't, you'll need to install it first - grab it from https://code.visualstudio.com. Once you've VS Code running, install the Spyglass extension directly from the marketplace. Search for "Spyglass" in the Extensions tab (the icon that looks like four squares), find the official extension, and click Install. The extension will automatically set up the language server in the background. Next, open your data pack folder as a workspace in VS Code. Your folder structure should look something like this: textmy-datapack/ pack.mcmeta data/ namespace/ functions/ my_function.mcfunction advancements/ loot_tables/ Once you open a data pack folder, Spyglass activates automatically. You'll start seeing error squiggles, completion suggestions, and hover tooltips right away. No config files needed. Key Features That Actually Matter Auto-Completion That Understands Minecraft Start typing a command like /give or /execute, and Spyglass shows you valid arguments in real time. When you're writing NBT tags, it suggests valid tag names for the item or entity you're targeting. This is a massive time-saver and error prevention tool combined. It's not just dumb text matching either. Spyglass knows that /execute requires specific subcommands, and it knows which ones are valid at which point in the chain. Real-Time Error Detection Syntax errors show up with red underlines as you type. JSON bracket mismatches, invalid command syntax, undefined scorekeeper references - Spyglass catches them immediately. Some errors won't show up until you actually test in-game with other tools, but Spyglass eliminates the low-hanging fruit. Code Navigation and Go-to-Definition Click on a function name or scorekeeper reference and press Ctrl+Click (or Cmd+Click on Mac) to jump directly to where it's defined. In larger data packs with dozens of files, this saves enormous amounts of time hunting through folders. You can also right-click and select "Go to Definition" if you prefer the menu approach. Refactoring Tools Need to rename a function across your entire data pack? Select it and use the rename refactor (usually F2 or right-click > Rename). Spyglass updates all the references automatically, so you don't have to manually hunt through 50 files. Small feature. Big impact on larger projects. Semantic Highlighting Keywords, built-in functions, variables, and constants are color-coded intelligently. This makes scanning code faster and catches certain mistakes immediately. If a word that should be a keyword isn't highlighted the right color, you know something's wrong. Tips, Tricks, and Things That Catch New Users Spyglass is powerful, but a few things trip people up when they're getting started. Pack version matters. Your pack.mcmeta file specifies which Minecraft version your data pack targets. Spyglass uses this to know which features are available. If you're targeting Minecraft 26.1.2 but your pack.mcmeta says an older version, Spyglass might allow syntax that won't actually work. Namespace naming is strict. Your namespace (the folder name under data/) must follow Minecraft's rules: lowercase letters, numbers, and underscores only. No dashes, no capital letters. Spyglass enforces this, which is good - it prevents you from building a pack that won't load. Sometimes you'll see error squiggles that don't seem right. Usually this means Spyglass doesn't have full context for your project. Try reloading the VS Code window (Ctrl+Shift+P, type "reload window"). NBT completion can be overwhelming. When you're inside an NBT block like /give ItemStack, Spyglass suggests every possible tag. That's technically correct, but you'll get a lot of suggestions you don't need. This is by design - it's trying to be helpful, not limiting you. You can filter by typing what you're looking for. If you're testing your data pack regularly (which you should), Spyglass often catches issues before you even need to load Minecraft. This is the real value - faster feedback loops mean faster development. Related Tools for Complete Data Pack Workflows Spyglass handles the editing side beautifully, but data pack development involves testing too. If you need to debug your setup while testing, tools like the Minecraft Server Status Checker help you verify your test environment is running properly. And if you're building content that uses Nether mechanics, the Nether Portal Calculator is indispensable for coordinating portal placements across the Overworld and Nether. How Spyglass Compares to Alternatives There are other tools in the data pack development space, but most are either specialized for one task (like MCFunction, which is just syntax highlighting) or less fully-featured than Spyglass. Some projects have language servers for specific languages - like some Datapack linters - but Spyglass aims to be full, covering NBT, JSON, function syntax, and more in one integrated package. The main alternatives are either simpler text editor plugins that only do syntax highlighting, or Discord bots that help with command validation but don't integrate into your workflow. Spyglass is the most complete solution if you want a real IDE-like experience for data pack work. Support the project Spyglass 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. --- ### Building Custom Bedrock Servers with PocketMine-MP URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/pocketmine-mp-custom-bedrock-servers Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "Custom server software for Minecraft: Bedrock, built from scratch in PHP, C and C++" pmmp/PocketMine-MP · github.com ⭐ 3,512 stars.0 If you've ever wanted to run a Minecraft Bedrock server without being locked into vanilla survival, PocketMine-MP is exactly what you're looking for. It's free, open-source server software built in PHP that lets you create fully customized gameplay experiences through a plugin system. Instead of managing multiple server nodes, you can run 100+ players on a single instance with complete control over the rules. What This Project Actually Does PocketMine-MP isn't a drop-in replacement for vanilla Bedrock. It's a blank slate. You start with a server engine and build out whatever you want through plugins. Want to run a creative-only server with instant teleportation? Done. Building a mini-games hub where players jump between game modes? PocketMine handles that. Need custom economy systems, permission hierarchies, or world management tools? The plugin ecosystem has you covered, and if something doesn't exist, you can write it yourself. The engine supports multiple worlds running simultaneously, so players stay on your server while experiencing completely different gameplay modes. Everything gets managed from a command-line interface, with live admin controls while the server's running. When You'd Actually Need This Here's the disclaimer upfront: this isn't for vanilla survival. If you want pure survival Minecraft with normal world generation and mob AI, use the official Bedrock server software instead. PocketMine strips out vanilla features like redstone mechanics, mob AI, and native world generation. But if you're running a creative server, building an RPG experience, hosting mini-games, or creating something the vanilla game was never designed for, this is your toolkit. People use it for adventure servers where players follow scripted storylines. Others build competitive PvP arenas. Some run role-playing communities with custom lore and progression systems. The flexibility is the entire point. You also get active development. New Minecraft Bedrock versions are typically supported within days of release, so you're never stuck on an old version waiting for compatibility updates. Getting Started with Installation Setting up PocketMine-MP is straightforward. The project provides pre-built PHP binaries so you don't have to compile anything yourself (though you can if you want). Start by downloading the latest recommended PHP binary from their releases page, then grab the PocketMine-MP PHAR file. On Linux, it looks like this: bashwget https://github.com/pmmp/PocketMine-MP/releases/download/5.42.1/PocketMine-MP.phar wget https://github.com/pmmp/PHP-Binaries/releases/download/pm5-php-8.2-latest/PHP-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz tar -xzf PHP-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz./bin/php7/bin/php PocketMine-MP.phar First startup takes a few minutes to generate config files and the default world. After that, you're in the server console where you can run commands, monitor players, and adjust settings on the fly. They also maintain a Docker image if you'd rather containerize it, which makes deployment cleaner on cloud infrastructure. Windows and macOS users get batch files and PowerShell scripts instead of shell scripts, so the setup process stays consistent across platforms. Core Features That Matter The plugin API is the real engine here. It's well-documented and mature after over a decade of development. Want to hook into player movement events? Listen for block breaks? Trigger custom commands? Register new items with behaviors? The API covers all of it. Many plugin developers publish their work on Poggit, the community plugin repository, so you can find pre-built solutions before writing your own. Multi-world support is genuinely useful. You can run a creative world, a survival world, and a mini-games arena all simultaneously on the same server instance. Players can teleport between them without disconnecting. That would normally require separate servers eating separate hardware, but here it's just different world folders. Permission systems work out of the box. Assign players to groups, grant specific permissions to those groups, and build a hierarchy that works for your server's needs. A private creative server has different requirements than a public RPG with moderators, and the system adapts to both. Performance is solid. The 3512-star repository reflects active maintenance, and real-world servers consistently run 100+ concurrent players depending on your hardware and what plugins you're running. That's not theoretical - it's what people actually report in production deployments. Things That'll Trip You Up First: don't expect vanilla features you didn't explicitly add. No redstone circuits. No mob spawning. No trees growing. Players fresh from vanilla Bedrock sometimes expect this to "just work," and it won't. That's not a bug - that's the design. Anything you want needs either a plugin or manual implementation. Plugin conflicts happen. Two plugins fighting over the same events can cause weird behavior. Your best defense is installing plugins one at a time, testing thoroughly between additions, and checking the plugin's requirements and known incompatibilities before adding it to a live server. Performance degrades nonlinearly with plugin count. Ten well-written plugins run smoothly. Thirty plugins written without performance in mind will tank your tick rate. If your server starts stuttering, the issue's almost always a poorly-optimized plugin, not PocketMine itself. Updates require restarts. Unlike some games, you can't hot-reload Minecraft servers. Plan maintenance windows or use a proxy in front of your server so players can reconnect to a backup while you update. What You Should Consider Instead If you specifically need vanilla Bedrock, Microsoft maintains official server software. It's less customizable but requires zero configuration and zero plugin management. For Java Edition, Spigot and Paper have larger ecosystems with more plugins and arguably easier setup for beginners. The Java server landscape is more mature simply because Java Minecraft has existed longer. But Java and Bedrock use completely different protocols, so this choice depends entirely on which version your players are using. Some people use proxies like Bungeecord in front of multiple PocketMine instances to load-balance players across servers. That's an architecture question, not a software choice, and it's way outside scope here. Just know it's possible if you end up needing that scale. Where to Dig Deeper The official documentation is solid. GitHub issues are actively monitored, and the Discord community responds quickly to setup questions. If you're considering running a custom Bedrock server, spend an afternoon reading through the docs and poking around the Poggit plugin repository. That'll tell you whether PocketMine's philosophy aligns with what you're building. Once you've got your server running, you can even create a custom MOTD to show in the server list, letting players know what kind of experience they're getting into. And when it comes time to build that perfect character for your adventure server, you might want to check out Minecraft skins to find something that fits your server's theme.pmmp/PocketMine-MP - LGPL-3.0, ★3512 Ready to try PocketMine-MP? 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 pmmp/PocketMine-MP on GitHub ↗ --- ### Adventure: Rich Text Messages for Minecraft Servers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-adventure-library-guide Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project adventure (PaperMC/adventure) A user-interface library for Minecraft: Java Edition Star on GitHub ↗ If you've ever tried to make a Minecraft server message look decent, you've probably wasted time hunting for color codes, squinting at formatting options, and hoping the chat client actually renders what you intended. Adventure is the library that fixes that. It's a Java library that lets you build rich, interactive messages with actual structure instead of hacking together strings and escape sequences. What Adventure Actually Does Adventure is a serverside UI library for Minecraft Java Edition. At its core, it handles text components - the building blocks of every message players see in your server. Instead of writing raw formatted text like you would in vanilla Minecraft commands, you build messages programmatically with a clean, chainable API. Think of it this way: vanilla Minecraft chat requires you to know specific JSON syntax and color codes. Adventure wraps that complexity into readable Java code. You define a message once, reuse it everywhere, and it works consistently across all clients. No guessing whether your hover text will actually display. No weird rendering bugs from malformed JSON. The library is maintained by the PaperMC team and is the industry standard for server developers working with Paper, Spigot, and compatible server implementations. It's got 869 stars on GitHub, solid documentation, and active maintenance. It's built in Java and requires JDK 21 minimum, though that's barely a constraint anymore. Why You'd Actually Use This Most server developers will never touch Adventure directly. They use plugins built on top of it. But if you're writing plugins, building a custom server implementation, or just tired of wrestling with JSON chat components, Adventure gives you control. Ml10kh182cf31 in Minecraft The practical reasons are straightforward: You can create messages with click events (run commands, open URLs) and hover text without remembering nested JSON structure. Colors, decorations, and special formatting become readable code instead of cryptic escape sequences. The library handles versioning differences between Minecraft versions automatically. You can serialize messages to different formats (JSON for chat, plain text for logs, etc.) from the same object. If you're running a server with custom plugins that show scoreboards, quest progress, warning messages, or anything player-facing, Adventure is probably already in the dependency chain. You just might not know it. How the Library Actually Works Adventure revolves around the concept of components. A component is a piece of text with optional styling and interactions. You build complex messages by combining simple components. Launcher 1.0.5 in Minecraft The basic pattern looks like this: you create a component, apply styling (colors, bold, italic), optionally add interactions (click to run a command, hover to see text), and send it to players. The library handles all the JSON serialization behind the scenes. Here's a simple example of what that looks like in code: javaComponent message = Component.text("Click me!").color(NamedTextColor.BLUE).decorate(TextDecoration.BOLD).clickEvent(ClickEvent.openUrl("https://minecraft.how/tools/text-generator")).hoverEvent(HoverEvent.showText(Component.text("Open the text generator"))); That creates a blue, bold "Click me!" text that opens a URL when clicked and shows a hover tooltip. Simple and readable. If you tried to build that JSON by hand, you'd have a headache within thirty seconds. The library also handles more complex scenarios: building dynamic messages with variables, translatable text components for different locales, and even NBT data structures for advanced use cases. If you're doing anything beyond basic chat messages, Adventure probably has a builder for it. Getting It Into Your Project Adventure is published to Maven Central, so if you're using Gradle or Maven, it's a dependency declaration away. The Lure - Bijou Planks 17/366 For Gradle (in your build.gradle.kts): gradledependencies { implementation("net.kyori:adventure-api:5.0.1") } For Maven (in your pom.xml): xml net.kyori adventure-api 5.0.1 The latest stable version is 5.0.1, though snapshot builds are available if you want bleeding-edge changes. Once it's in your classpath, you just import the classes and start building components. If you're writing a Paper plugin specifically, Paper already includes Adventure as a dependency, so you don't need to add it yourself. Just import and use. Key Features That Actually Matter Adventure has a lot going on under the hood. These are the features that actually change how you write server code: LEGO Minecraft Box Set Featuring The Creeper, Characters, and Scene Text Styling and Colors. Named colors (BLUE, RED, GOLD), RGB colors, and text decorations (bold, italic, underline) are first-class citizens. You're not decoding color codes or guessing hex values - you chain methods and get readable results. Want a gradient effect across text? Adventure handles that too, though it requires more setup. Click and Hover Events. Players can interact with your messages. Run commands, open URLs, suggest commands to the player (without running them), and show hover tooltips with nested components. This is how fancy server interfaces actually work. Translatable Components. Write your message once with a translation key, and the client renders it in the player's own language automatically. This is built into the Minecraft client, and Adventure makes it painless to use. If you're running a multilingual server, this saves enormous amounts of effort. Serialization. You can convert components to different formats: JSON for Minecraft chat, plain text for logging, legacy color codes if you're stuck on an older client. Same object, multiple outputs. Once you've a rich component, you can push it anywhere. Audience API. Adventure's Audience interface lets you send messages to players, broadcast to everyone, or write custom message handlers. It abstracts away the details of which Minecraft implementation you're running on. One codebase, multiple server types. Things That Trip People Up Nothing's perfect, and Adventure has some quirks worth knowing: If you're working with older Minecraft versions, double-check which Adventure release supports them. The library dropped support for older versions over time, so ancient servers might not be compatible. This latest releases target recent Minecraft versions. The JSON output can look insane if you inspect it directly. It's not meant for human reading - it's optimized for the client. Don't try to hand-edit the JSON output. Translatable components require the translation key to exist on the client side (it does for standard Minecraft strings, but custom strings won't work). This catches a lot of people trying to use custom translation keys. If your translation doesn't show up, you're probably using a key that doesn't exist in Minecraft's language files. And actually, one more thing: if you're building complex nested components with lots of styling, the code gets verbose fast. It's still readable, but it's not compact. That's the tradeoff for clarity. Related Tools and Libraries Adventure isn't the only way to handle Minecraft text. MiniMessage is a companion library from PaperMC that lets you write fancy text using a simpler string format instead of building components in code. If you want less boilerplate and don't mind string parsing, MiniMessage might fit better. The two libraries work together. The Minecraft server itself has chat component support built in (that's what Adventure wraps), but that requires you to work with raw JSON. Adventure's value is making that less painful. For your own server UI needs, the minecraft.how Minecraft Text Generator and Minecraft MOTD Creator tools let you craft formatted text visually without writing code at all, though they're separate from the Adventure library. If you're just styling a one-off message, those tools are faster. If you're building a plugin that generates hundreds of messages dynamically, Adventure is your answer. Why This Matters Adventures' existence means server developers spend less time battling Minecraft's chat format and more time building actual features. It's not flashy, but it's the kind of library that makes other things possible. Every plugin that displays quest progress, shop menus, or cosmetic effects probably uses Adventure somewhere. The fact that it's maintained by PaperMC and has been stable for years means it's not going away. It's the standard. If you're serious about server development, knowing how to work with components and builders saves time and prevents bugs. And if you're writing plugins, you'll encounter it eventually anyway. 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 --- ### MinecraftDev: The Plugin That Changed Minecraft Modding in IntelliJ URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraftdev-intellij-mod-plugin Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project MinecraftDev (minecraft-dev/MinecraftDev) Plugin for IntelliJ IDEA that gives special support for Minecraft modding projects. Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 1,735 stars.0 If you've ever wondered how the big Minecraft mods get built, you're probably thinking of Java developers in fancy IDEs writing code. And you're right. But making a Minecraft mod isn't just about knowing Java - it's about having the right tools. Enter MinecraftDev, an IntelliJ IDEA plugin that turns mod development from a confusing mess of setup into something that actually feels manageable. What This Plugin Actually Does MinecraftDev is a specialized plugin for IntelliJ IDEA that gives developers built-in support for creating Minecraft mods. Instead of starting from scratch and hunting down documentation every five minutes, you get templates, code generation, and IDE integration that understands Minecraft's architecture out of the box. Think of it like this: building a Minecraft mod without MinecraftDev is like trying to create a Minecraft server from the ground up without any reference materials. Technically possible. Deeply unpleasant. MinecraftDev takes all that friction out. The plugin automatically handles a bunch of the boilerplate setup that would otherwise waste hours. It knows about Minecraft's build systems, understands common modding frameworks, and can scaffold out projects so you're writing actual mod code instead of fighting configuration files. Who This Is Actually For Let's be real: this isn't for casual players. But this is for people who've looked at mod source code, felt that spark of "I could make something cool," and need an IDE that won't make them want to throw their computer out a window. You probably want this if you're a Java or Kotlin developer interested in modding, or if you've been dabbling with Minecraft development and realize you need better tooling. IntelliJ IDEA users get the most out of it, since that's where the plugin lives. But even if you're coming from another IDE, the setup guides walk you through getting your environment ready. Installation and Setup Getting MinecraftDev installed is straightforward. The plugin lives on the JetBrains plugin repository. That means you can grab it directly from IntelliJ. Open IntelliJ IDEA and go to File > Settings > Plugins, then search for "Minecraft" in the Browse Repositories section. You'll see MinecraftDev pop right up. Click install, restart IntelliJ, and you're done. No manual downloads, no wrestling with folders. One thing to know upfront: the project requires JDK 21 to build. If you don't have it yet, grab it from Adoptium - they've made it painless to install specific Java versions. Once that's in place, you're ready to start creating. For folks building the plugin itself (not just using it), you'll run basic Gradle commands. To test it: bash./gradlew runIde This fires up a test instance of IntelliJ with your changes loaded. To build the release: bash./gradlew build The output zips up into `build/distributions` ready to ship. What MinecraftDev Actually Gives You The real value shows up when you start a new project. MinecraftDev includes templates for common modding setups, so instead of staring at an empty project wondering where to begin, you pick your framework and the plugin scaffolds the whole structure. Code generation handles the repetitive parts - event listeners, block definitions, item registry entries. The kinds of things that exist in every mod but would take forever to type by hand. And the IDE integration actually understands your mod code. You get proper syntax highlighting, code completion, and error detection for Minecraft-specific APIs. Write something that won't compile? The IDE tells you before you even hit build. That saves an enormous amount of frustration. The plugin also handles Minecraft version compatibility. Because Minecraft updates frequently and different mods target different versions, MinecraftDev keeps track of what's available and helps you pick the right targets. It's not magic - you still write the code - but it keeps you from doing something incompatible and discovering it at build time. Why Developers Actually Use It Mod development for Minecraft has a reputation for being intimidating. The Minecraft codebase is large, modding frameworks have their quirks, and you're often working against the clock when a new version releases and suddenly your favorite mods are broken. MinecraftDev doesn't eliminate the learning curve - there's still real knowledge you need about how Minecraft works internally. But it cuts out the setup friction that makes newcomers bounce off. You're working on mod logic, not debugging Gradle configs or hunting for the right JAR files. The plugin's built on top of Kotlin, which is interesting mostly because it shows the maintainers care about modern Java development practices. And with over 1700 stars on GitHub, there's a solid community using it, which means better documentation, more examples, and more people to help when you hit weird edge cases. Common Gotchas and Tips One thing that trips people up: MinecraftDev works best with IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate or Community Edition. If you're using a different JetBrains IDE, mileage varies. Check compatibility before installing. The plugin's project structure assumes you understand basic Gradle and Java project layout. If you're brand new to those, MinecraftDev will make more sense once you've done a bit of foundational work. There are countless tutorials on Gradle basics - spend an hour on those first. Actually, here's something worth mentioning: you don't need MinecraftDev to make mods. Plenty of developers use vanilla IntelliJ or even VS Code with plugins. MinecraftDev is about speed and convenience, not necessity. If you're just casually exploring mod development, you might not need it yet. Also note that this is specifically for mod development - actual Minecraft server setup or gameplay tools are separate concerns. If you're trying to optimize a server you're running, you'll want our Server Properties Generator to handle configuration. And if you're working with portals or coordinates, the Nether Portal Calculator is an unrelated but genuinely useful companion tool. Alternatives Worth Knowing About VS Code has growing support for Minecraft development through various extensions, though nothing as integrated as MinecraftDev. Curseforge's documentation and community forums can substitute if you're comfortable without IDE-specific tooling. Some developers just use vanilla IntelliJ and set everything up manually - it's slower but totally workable. The real difference is that MinecraftDev tries to make the whole experience frictionless within IntelliJ. The alternatives require more manual setup but aren't necessarily worse - they're just more work. Ready to try MinecraftDev? 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 minecraft-dev/MinecraftDev on GitHub ↗ --- ### Fabric-loom: Building Minecraft Mods Without the Setup Headache URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fabric-loom-minecraft-mod-development Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice FabricMC/fabric-loom Gradle build system plugin used to automate the setup of a minecraft mod development environment. Building Minecraft mods used to mean hours of setup: deobfuscating code, mapping variables, wiring up your IDE. fabric-loom is a Gradle plugin that automates almost all of it, so you can actually start coding in minutes instead of days. What fabric-loom Actually Does fabric-loom is a Gradle plugin designed to turn your computer into a fully-functional Minecraft mod development environment. But that's the boring way to describe it. What it really does is handle all the tedious plumbing that sits between you and writing actual code. When you run Minecraft, the code is obfuscated (intentionally scrambled) so it's hard to read. Want to modify it? You need to de-obfuscate it first. Then you need mappings that translate those scrambled names into something a human can understand. Then you need to configure your IDE (IntelliJ, Eclipse, VS Code) to actually recognize everything. fabric-loom does all three in the background while you grab a coffee. It's built specifically for the Fabric ecosystem, which uses Yarn mappings (community-contributed, human-readable names for Minecraft's code). The plugin integrates those mappings automatically, sets up remapping, and generates proper run configurations so you can hit debug mode immediately. It supports modern Minecraft versions (1.14.4 and up), requires Java 16 or newer, and works with Gradle 7 and beyond. Why Modders Use It Over Manual Setup Before fabric-loom, getting a mod dev environment working was a multi-hour nightmare. You'd download Minecraft's server jar, decompile it with tools like Fernflower or CFR, manually patch in mappings, configure your IDE, set up run tasks, and hope nothing broke in the process. Half the time something would be misconfigured and you'd spend another hour debugging why your mod won't launch. fabric-loom eliminates that entirely. It's handled automatically and consistently. The other massive win: when Minecraft updates, you're not starting from scratch. This plugin handles the remapping and re-decompilation for new versions. Yarn (the mapping project) updates regularly, and fabric-loom pulls in those improvements without you manually editing anything. Plus, the IDE integration is genuinely useful. You get proper run configurations, debug breakpoints work out of the box, and IntelliJ actually understands the Minecraft code. If you've ever tried reading obfuscated Java, you know what a relief that's. Getting Started: Installation and Setup Actually, let me back up. The easiest way to get started with fabric-loom is to clone the official example mod, not build loom from scratch. One example mod already has everything wired up correctly. bashgit clone https://github.com/FabricMC/fabric-example-mod.git cd fabric-example-mod That's it for basic setup. The example mod's build.gradle already has fabric-loom configured. If you're adding loom to an existing project, you'll add it to your build.gradle: gradleplugins { id 'fabric-loom' version '1.16' } repositories { mavenCentral() maven { url 'https://maven.fabricmc.net' } } dependencies { minecraft 'com.mojang:minecraft:1.21.1' mappings loom.officialMojangMappings() modImplementation 'net.fabricmc:fabric-loader:0.19.0+' } Then run `gradle build` and loom handles the rest. It downloads Minecraft, deobfuscates it, applies the mappings, and sets up your IDE automatically. Key Features That Actually Save Hours Automatic decompilation and remapping. Seriously, this is the feature. Your source code goes from unreadable obfuscated names to actual English-like variable names because Yarn mappings are maintained by the community. When you see a method called `method_12847`, Yarn likely has it mapped to something meaningful like `canFly()`. fabric-loom applies those mappings transparently. GitHub project card for FabricMC/fabric-loom IDE run configurations. After gradle runs, your IDE knows how to launch Minecraft in development mode. You can hit the debug button and step through breakpoints in Minecraft code. But this is a big deal for understanding what's actually happening when your mod runs. Decompiler support. fabric-loom uses both Fernflower and CFR decompilers to generate actual source code with comments, not just bytecode. The readability difference is massive. You're reading code that looks like what a human wrote, not machine translation. Tiny mappings support. The plugin was built from the ground up to use Yarn mappings (tiny format). But this means you're getting community-maintained, human-readable names for everything in Minecraft. It's not perfect, but it's leagues ahead of working with obfuscated code. Multi-IDE support. Whether you're on IntelliJ IDEA, Eclipse, or VS Code, fabric-loom generates the right configuration files. You don't have to manually wire up source paths or output directories. Tips and Common Gotchas First: make sure you're on Java 16 or newer. I've seen people try to use older JDKs and get cryptic errors that have nothing to do with the actual problem. Second: gradle version matters. The plugin targets Gradle 7 or newer. If your build breaks mysteriously, check `gradle - version` first. Same with Gradle wrapper - sometimes the cached wrapper is outdated. The decompilation and remapping can take a few minutes on first build, especially on slower machines. Don't panic if gradle seems hung. Grab that coffee. On subsequent builds it's cached, so you'll only wait on actual compilation. One thing that trips people up: mixing Yarn mappings with other mapping sources. Pick one and stick with it. If you're using Yarn (which most Fabric projects do), just use `loom.officialMojangMappings()` and move on. For deployment, remember that your mod jar needs to include fabric-loader as a requirement. You're not packaging Minecraft itself - just your mod code plus the loader that hooks into Minecraft at runtime. Testing Your Mods and the Broader Ecosystem Once your mod actually compiles and runs, testing becomes important. If you're building mods that interact with server features (voting systems, commands, etc.), tools like the Minecraft Votifier Tester are handy for validating that part of the ecosystem works. Similarly, if your mod generates text or commands, the Minecraft Text Generator is useful for quickly prototyping command syntax or in-game messages you want to test. The larger point: fabric-loom gets you to a working dev environment fast, but you'll spend most of your time actually building features, not setting things up. That's the whole point. When You Might Want Alternatives fabric-loom is specifically built for Fabric mods. If you're building Forge mods, the Forge Gradle plugin is the standard and works differently enough that you'd want their docs instead. If you're working on pure server plugins (Spigot, Paper, Bukkit), you don't need loom at all. Those use different architectures and build setups. And if you're hacking on the Minecraft launcher or completely separate tooling, fabric-loom won't help. It's specifically for mod development within the Fabric ecosystem. But if you're building a Fabric mod? There's no real alternative that does what loom does. It's the standard for good reason. The project has 337 GitHub stars and active maintenance. But that latest release (1.16) added stricter plugin validation and better build cache support, showing the maintainers are still actively improving things. Support the project fabric-loom 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. --- ### Portablemc: A CLI Launcher for Minecraft That Actually Works URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/portablemc-minecraft-cli-launcher Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project portablemc (theorzr/portablemc) Cross platform command line utility for launching Minecraft quickly and reliably with included support for Mojang versions and popular mod loaders such as Fabric, Forge, NeoForge and derived. Star on GitHub ↗ pache-2.0 If you're tired of the official Minecraft launcher consuming RAM like a server farm, or you prefer terminal tools and tight control over your Java environment, portablemc solves that problem. It's a command-line utility written in Rust that installs and launches Minecraft, along with popular mod loaders like Fabric, Forge, and NeoForge, in a single command. No GUI, no bloat, no launcher settings menus to navigate. What's portablemc? portablemc is a cross-platform launcher that manages Minecraft versions and mod loaders from your terminal. Instead of opening a GUI, you type a command. The tool handles downloading game files, installing mod loaders, detecting your system's Java runtime, and launching the game automatically. With over 500 GitHub stars and built by the open-source community under Apache-2.0, the project follows a straightforward philosophy: minimize overhead and friction. It works on Linux, Windows, and macOS. The Rust implementation means it's genuinely fast and lightweight, not a web wrapper or JVM app pretending to be native. Why You'd Actually Use This Okay, so the vanilla launcher exists. Why switch? Multi-version management. If you're running a server on 1.20.1 while your friend group plays 1.21.1, or you're testing mods across versions, juggling different launcher instances gets old fast. portablemc lets you launch specific versions directly from a script or command without reopening the launcher. Mod loader automation. Installing Forge or Fabric through the GUI launcher works, eventually. But if you're cycling through different mod setups, it's tedious. portablemc installs Fabric, Forge, NeoForge, Quilt, and others automatically. Specify your loader and version, and it handles the rest. Linux native binaries. The official launcher on Linux isn't a native app; it's a Java wrapper. portablemc is a compiled binary that actually knows your system. It'll find compatible system Java installations or fall back to Mojang-provided runtimes. No wrapper nonsense. Automation and scripting. Got a test server? Need to spin up a temporary instance with Fabric and specific versions? Write a shell script and let portablemc handle it. This is genuinely useful if you're building dev environments, testing setups, or running headless servers. Offline mode without the launcher. If your internet is sketchy, you can launch offline mode without dealing with the official launcher's account system or GUI. Installation Binaries The easiest route: grab a pre-built binary from the releases page. The project provides builds for Linux (including ARM variants for Raspberry Pi), Windows, and macOS. bashtar -xzf portablemc-5.0.3-linux-x86_64-gnu.tar.gz./portablemc - version That's it. No installer, no dependency hell. The binary is static-linked where possible. Cargo If you've got Rust installed: bashcargo install portablemc-cli This compiles from source, which takes longer but gives you the absolute latest development version. Handy if you want unreleased features or are comfortable with Rust tooling. Linux Package Managers Arch Linux users can grab it from the AUR: bashyay -S portablemc Other distros may eventually package it, but the binary release or Cargo install are most reliable. Key Features That Actually Matter One-command install and launch. Seriously. Run: GitHub project card for theorzr/portablemc bashportablemc run - version 1.21.1 Minecraft launches. Downloads happen in the background, Java gets detected, everything orchestrates automatically. No clicking through wizards. Mod loader support. Specify Fabric and portablemc fetches the installer, configures it, done. Same with Forge, NeoForge, Quilt. The latest release (v5.0.3) even improved how versions sort - now in descending order because humans prefer seeing new versions first. (Seriously, that's the kind of detail that makes tools feel less janky.) Offline mode. Launch without a Microsoft account, no internet required after initial download. Essential for testing or when connectivity flakes. Fast parallel downloads. Game files download concurrently, not sequentially. Noticeably faster than the official launcher. Machine-readable output. Need to integrate with scripts or CI/CD pipelines? portablemc can output JSON or other structured formats. Build automation around it. What Can Go Wrong (And How to Handle It) portablemc is stable, but watch for these gotchas. Java version mismatches. Minecraft 1.17+ requires Java 16 or newer. Older versions want Java 8 or 11. If portablemc can't find a compatible Java on your system, it'll download one from Mojang, which adds time. Check java -version before troubleshooting. Actually, just run it once and let the tool sort it out - it's smarter than you'd expect. Mod loader version confusion. Fabric and Forge release multiple versions for the same Minecraft release. Make sure you're targeting the loader version your mods actually need. It's easy to grab the wrong one and wonder why nothing loads. Check mod sites for version requirements first. Offline mode limitations. Offline mode skips authentication, fine for singleplayer. But trying to join a server set to "online mode" gets rejected. That's Minecraft's design, not portablemc's fault. Instance isolation. By default portablemc stores game data in `~/.portablemc` (Linux) or your user folder (Windows). If you're migrating from the official launcher, your old worlds won't appear automatically. Move world folders manually or tell portablemc where they are. Alternatives MultiMC / PolyMC / Prism Launcher. These are GUI-based instance managers that do roughly the same thing - manage versions and mod loaders - but with a visual interface. Pick these if you dislike terminals or need something less technical. Official Minecraft Launcher. It works, it's officially supported, and it gets you into Minecraft. If you don't mind RAM usage and GUI overhead, there's no shame in sticking with it. And if you want something for customizing your server's appearance, the MOTD creator is useful for that. portablemc shines if you want speed, automation, and CLI-based control. For casual players who just want click-and-play, the official launcher is probably fine. Ready to try portablemc? 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 theorzr/portablemc on GitHub ↗ --- ### HMCL: The Cross-Platform Minecraft Launcher for Modding and Game Management URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/hmcl-minecraft-launcher-setup-guide Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project HMCL (HMCL-dev/HMCL) A Minecraft Launcher which is multi-functional, cross-platform and popular Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 9,120 stars.0 Managing multiple Minecraft versions, modpacks, and texture packs across different platforms is a pain. You install one mod loader, it breaks your vanilla saves, you want to switch to a different mod framework, and suddenly you're managing three separate installations. HMCL solves that by letting you keep isolated game instances, switch between loaders (Forge, Fabric, Quilt, and others), and run everything on Windows, Linux, macOS, or even FreeBSD from the same interface. What This Project Does HMCL is an open-source Minecraft launcher built for people who want control. Unlike the official launcher, which does one thing decently, HMCL handles mod management, modloader installation, modpack creation, and UI customization all from a single application. It's been around since 2015 and has over 120 contributors, which tells you something about how useful people find it. The launcher works on a lot of platforms. We're talking Windows, Linux, macOS, FreeBSD, and even architectures like ARM, RISC-V, and MIPS. If you've got hardware that can run Java, HMCL probably works on it. This cross-platform reach is genuinely impressive for a community project. At its core, HMCL manages game instances. Each instance is a separate installation with its own mods, settings, and save files. Switch between a vanilla survival world, a heavily modded magic pack, and a performance-focused instance without any friction. Why You'd Actually Use This Start with the obvious: you play modded Minecraft and want to avoid the chaos. Maybe you've tried the vanilla launcher with Curse Forge installed, or you've manually dragged JAR files into folders. And that works, but it's tedious. HMCL automates it. You download a modpack, HMCL handles dependencies, downloads the right modloader version, and fires it up. Mod compatibility matters. A mod works on Fabric but not Forge. Another mod wants you on 1.20.1 but you're running 1.21. Creating separate instances for each scenario isn't laziness - it's smart project management. HMCL makes this frictionless. There's also the performance angle. Some players run a lean 1.20 instance with just Sodium for FPS, and a different instance packed with 200 mods for creative building. Context switching is instant. No restarting the game, no launcher roulette. And if you're jumping between systems - work laptop running Linux, home desktop on Windows - you get the same experience everywhere. Your instance configurations sync across the jump. One more thing: UI customization. The launcher itself is themable. It sounds minor until you're staring at the interface for hours and realize you actually like the way it looks. Small stuff, but it matters when you're committing to a launcher. How to Install and Get Started Installation depends on your OS, but the principle is the same everywhere. Windows: Grab the.exe file from the GitHub releases page, run it, and you're done. It'll ask where to store game files (defaults to.minecraft) and launch. bashDownload HMCL-3.12.4.exe from GitHub releases Run the installer Launch HMCL and create your first instance Linux: The.sh script is your friend. Make it executable and run it. bashchmod +x HMCL-3.12.4.sh./HMCL-3.12.4.sh Cross-platform (any OS): If you've got Java installed, the.jar works everywhere. bashjava -jar HMCL-3.12.4.jar After launching HMCL, you'll see the instance manager. Create a new instance, pick your Minecraft version (it'll download the client automatically), choose your modloader if you want one (Forge, Fabric, Quilt, etc.), and let HMCL handle the downloads. No manual JAR swapping, no broken dependencies, no wondering if you grabbed the right version. If you're installing a modpack from somewhere like Modrinth or CurseForge, HMCL imports them directly. Point it at the modpack file, and it'll unpack everything into a fresh instance with all dependencies resolved. Takes two minutes max. Key Features That Actually Matter Multiple Modloader Support is the big one. Forge, NeoForge, Fabric, Legacy Fabric, Quilt, LiteLoader, OptiFine - HMCL handles them all. You're not locked into one ecosystem. Want to test if a mod works on Fabric before committing to Forge? Spin up a new instance, test, delete if it's incompatible. The friction is nearly zero. Isolated Game Instances mean you never have to worry about one broken mod affecting your other worlds. Your vanilla survival save is completely separate from your modded creative instance. This sounds basic until you've spent two hours debugging why creative mode suddenly won't load in a launcher that mixes everything together. Modpack Management is where HMCL really shines if you're the type who wants to create and share. Define your version, modloader, mods, and settings once, export it, and share it. Others import it and get an identical setup. Version mismatches vanish. Cross-Platform Consistency isn't flashy, but it matters. Playing on Linux at home, Windows at a friend's place? Your instances, settings, and saves follow you. No "this only works on Windows" friction. UI Customization lets you theme the launcher itself. It's built with Java, so you get a native feel on whatever OS you're running, but the customization hooks are there if you want them. Things That Trip People Up Java version mismatches happen. If you're running a newer Minecraft version (1.17+), you'll need Java 16 or higher. Older versions want Java 8. HMCL will warn you, but it's easy to ignore the warning and then wonder why your game crashes on startup. Check your Java version first. GitHub project card for HMCL-dev/HMCL Memory allocation is another gotcha. If you're loading 100 mods, the default 2GB heap isn't cutting it. HMCL lets you adjust the max memory per instance. Set it too low and you'll get stuttering. Too high and you'll tank your system's performance. For a modded instance with 50+ mods, 4-6GB is a reasonable starting point. Modpack format compatibility can bite you. HMCL supports Curse Forge and Modrinth formats natively, but custom modpacks from random forums might not import cleanly. Usually it's fine, but sometimes you'll hit one that needs manual tweaking. One thing people don't realize: the launcher uses your system's Java installation. If you don't have Java installed, HMCL can guide you, but it's an extra setup step. Not a dealbreaker, but worth knowing upfront. Alternatives Worth Knowing About Multimc is the classic launcher that inspired this space. It does a lot of what HMCL does, but development has been spottier over the years. HMCL feels like the more actively maintained choice right now. Curse Forge has a built-in launcher now. If you mostly download packs from their ecosystem, it's solid. But it's less about mod management and more about pack convenience. You lose the instance flexibility that makes HMCL powerful. The official Minecraft launcher works fine for vanilla play and has gotten better about modpack support, but if you're someone who rotates between five different mod setups, it'll feel limiting. You're essentially locked into the vanilla Minecraft experience with limited customization. Getting the Most Out of It Organize your instances by use case. Name them clearly: "Vanilla Survival", "Magic Pack 1.20", "Speedrun Prep". Future you'll thank present you when you're hunting for a specific setup at 2 AM. Keep your main game folder on an SSD if you've got room. Instance sizes balloon when you add mods, and load times matter. A 100-mod pack loading from HDD feels sluggish compared to the same pack on SSD. If you're building a modpack to share, test it on someone else's system before releasing it. What works on your high-end PC might tank someone's laptop. Test memory, test compatibility across Java versions, test on different operating systems. Backup your.minecraft folder periodically, especially if you've built custom worlds. Mods update, sometimes incompatibly. Having a backup means you can roll back without losing 200 hours of building. For texture packs and shader packs, HMCL handles them like mods. Separate instances can have completely different visual setups. Nice for performance testing or just switching between an ultra-performance build and a maximum-visual-fidelity build. Building and Sharing Your Own Worlds If you're thinking about creating a public modpack, HMCL has you covered. Define your instance, export it, and it becomes shareable. Others can import it and get your exact setup without any guesswork. This is huge for server admins who want players on matching versions and mods. Want to work with teams? HMCL plays nicely with shared instance configurations. Version control your modpack definition, collaborate on mod lists, and push updates when new versions drop. It's not GitHub integration out of the box, but the file format is straightforward enough to work with version control if you need it. And if you want to see how other people build their modpacks, the GitHub repository is public. You can learn from existing instances and understand how HMCL structures everything under the hood. One thing to keep in mind: if you're running a server with a modpack, make sure your players are using the same client mods. Server-side mods are handled separately, but client-side mods like Sodium or ShaderMod should match across the network. HMCL makes this simpler by packaging everything together, but it's still something to verify. Hungry for more Minecraft tools? Check out the Nether Portal Calculator if you're working on navigation across dimensions, or browse community Minecraft Skins to customize your character while you're at it. Ready to try HMCL? 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 HMCL-dev/HMCL on GitHub ↗ --- ### Monocraft: How to Use the Minecraft Font for Coding URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/monocraft-minecraft-font Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Monocraft (IdreesInc/Monocraft) A monospaced programming font inspired by the Minecraft typeface Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 10,032 stars.1 Ever opened your code editor and thought, "This looks nothing like Minecraft"? Monocraft fixes that exact problem. It's a free monospaced font that brings Minecraft's iconic blocky aesthetic straight into your development environment, complete with programming ligatures and even support for the Standard Galactic Alphabet used in Minecraft's enchantment tables. Whether you're learning to code or just want your IDE to feel more fun, this fan project delivers in ways you wouldn't expect. What's Monocraft? Monocraft is a monospaced programming font inspired by Minecraft's UI typeface. The creator redesigned every single glyph - over 1500 of them - to work properly in a monospaced environment while keeping that distinctive blocky, pixelated look you recognize from the game itself. It's not affiliated with Mojang or Minecraft (the project makes that clear up front), but it captures the aesthetic perfectly enough that looking at your code feels like you're staring at a GUI from the game. The font includes far more than just standard letters and numbers. You get programming ligatures that render operators as actual arrows and symbols, support for the Standard Galactic Alphabet used in enchantment tables, and careful spacing work so thin characters like "i" and "l" don't look absurd in a monospaced layout. It's the kind of project that started as a fun weekend idea and somehow accumulated over 10,000 stars on GitHub. What makes it stand out isn't just the Minecraft theme. The creator genuinely cared about readability. Why You'd Actually Use This Okay, so it looks cool. But should you actually install it on your main development machine? If you're someone who switches between Minecraft and your IDE regularly, there's something genuinely satisfying about the visual continuity. You're in the game one minute, modifying a Minecraft plugin the next, and suddenly your code editor's font language matches the universe you're working in. It sounds silly until you try it, and then it just... works. Psychologically. Beyond aesthetics, there are real practical reasons to consider it. The programming ligatures aren't just pretty - they're actually useful. When you're scanning code quickly, seeing `=>` render as an actual arrow or `==` as a proper comparison operator makes the code easier to parse at a glance. It's the same reason other developers use fonts with ligatures. The Minecraft theming is the fun part, but the ligatures are the substance. If you're building Minecraft-themed websites or running a community server, you could embed Monocraft in your CSS. The project provides a CDN link, so you don't need to host the font file yourself. Suddenly your documentation, code examples, and terminal blocks have visual consistency with the Minecraft aesthetic. That's a small touch that community members actually notice and appreciate. And honestly? If your job involves spending eight hours a day staring at code, making your editor look like something you enjoy seems like a reasonable use of five minutes to install a font. Installing Monocraft on Your System Windows Download the most recent `.ttc` file from the GitHub releases page. Right-click it and select "Install". You might need admin access - that's standard for Windows font installation. Once it's done, you'll see "Monocraft" (note the space - the name matters) in your font dropdown in VS Code, Sublime Text, or whatever editor you're using. Mac If you use Homebrew, installation is a single command: bashbrew install - cask font-monocraft Otherwise, grab the `.ttc` file from the releases page, double-click it, and select "Install Font" when the dialog appears. Either way, you're done in seconds. Linux Create the fonts directory if it doesn't exist, copy the file, then refresh your font cache: bashmkdir -p ~/.local/share/fonts cp Monocraft.ttc ~/.local/share/fonts/ fc-cache -fv If your terminal or editor doesn't pick it up immediately, try logging out and back in. Sometimes the font daemon needs a clean restart. On Your Website Want Monocraft on your own site or blog? Add this to your CSS: css@font-face { font-family: 'Monocraft'; src: url('https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/IdreesInc/Monocraft@main/dist/Monocraft-ttf/Monocraft.ttf') format('truetype'); font-weight: normal; font-style: normal; } Then use `font-family: 'Monocraft'` on whatever elements need the styling. This is perfect for Minecraft community sites, blogs, server listings, or portfolio projects. The jsDelivr CDN handles distribution, so you don't need to host anything yourself. Features That Actually Matter The programming ligatures are the first thing people notice and honestly? They work. Arrows, comparison operators, common programming patterns - they're all redesigned to look crisp and meaningful instead of like random keyboard mashing. When you're debugging and scanning through code quickly, every bit of visual clarity helps. It's subtle but effective. GitHub project card for IdreesInc/Monocraft The enchantment language support is niche, sure. Not everyone needs to type Standard Galactic Alphabet characters. But it's there if you want to add Minecraft flavor to documentation, code comments, or Discord messages with your friends. It's the kind of feature that makes the project feel complete rather than half-baked. Font hinting is new in recent releases. On Windows and Linux - especially at smaller sizes like terminal text - the characters render sharper and cleaner. If you tried Monocraft before and thought it looked fuzzy on Windows, that's been addressed. Actually, there was a specific issue with PANOSE metadata values that made Microsoft software like VS Code render it incorrectly. That's fixed now. The latest releases also bundle the complete NerdFonts icon set, so terminal users get more icons than before. Things That Catch New Users The font family name has a space in it. That matters more than you'd think. When specifying it in CSS or terminal config files, it's "Monocraft", not "monocraft" or "moncraft". Getting that wrong is the most common issue. It seems small until you're troubleshooting why your font-family declaration isn't working. If you install it on Linux and your terminal doesn't immediately see it, the font daemon might need time to refresh. Logging out and back in solves this. Some terminals don't handle custom TTF files well - if you're using an ancient terminal emulator, that could be the issue. There are also multiple download options, which can be confusing. The standard `.ttc` file (TrueType Collection) works everywhere and includes multiple weights in one file - that's what most people should grab. There's also a NerdFonts patched version for extra icon support, a no-ligatures version (why you'd want this is unclear), and separate TTF and OTF files if you're particular about format. For 99% of users, just download `Monocraft.ttc` and move on. Similar Projects and Alternatives If Monocraft doesn't feel like your thing, there are alternatives. Miracode is a vectorized version of the same font concept if you want something that scales better or feels slightly more polished. Some developers prefer traditional fonts like Cascadia Code or JetBrains Mono, which have excellent ligatures and monospacing but without any Minecraft theming. For pure aesthetic matching with Minecraft's visual language, though, nothing else captures that pixelated blocky vibe quite like Monocraft. If you're building Minecraft community tools, integrating Monocraft with other project elements makes sense. Something like pairing it with a Minecraft Server Status Checker creates visual coherence. Or if you're showcasing community content alongside a Minecraft Skin Creator, the typeface reinforces that everything on your site belongs to the same ecosystem. The Monocraft Discord community is active if you run into issues or want to suggest features. A maintainer takes feedback seriously and new releases come out regularly with improvements and bug fixes. It's a straightforward project, but the development is clearly ongoing. Support the project Monocraft is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Terra: Custom Minecraft World Generation That Actually Works URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/terra-minecraft-world-generation Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Terra (PolyhedralDev/Terra) Voxel world generation modding platform Star on GitHub ↗ Ever wanted to build a Minecraft world where the terrain generation doesn't feel like it rolled dice in a back room? Terra lets you completely reshape how worlds generate, from the ground up (literally). If you're running a server, want specific biome layouts, or just think vanilla generation is boring, this Java-based modding platform gives you the tools to make it happen. What Terra Actually Does Terra is a world generation modding platform for Minecraft. Instead of accepting whatever the game throws at you, it lets server admins and mod developers write custom configurations that control everything about how terrain spawns, what biomes appear where, and how mountains, oceans, and caves form. The project consists of a few moving parts working together. At its core is an API for voxel-based world generation with heavy emphasis on configuration. On top of that sit platform implementations (the bridges between Terra and your actual Minecraft server). There's also an addon system that lets you extend behavior without rebuilding the whole thing. Think of it as Minecraft's world generation with all the creative control unlocked. Terra supports two major platforms: Fabric (if you're running a modded client) and the Bukkit API family (Paper, Purpur, Tuinity, and others for servers). Both paths are actively maintained. Why You'd Actually Want This Vanilla world generation is... fine. It does its job. But the moment you want something specific, you're stuck. So Now There's A Mountain In My House Maybe you run a creative server and want to recreate real-world geography. Or you're building a survival world for a specific theme. Or you just think the default terrain is bland. Vanilla doesn't give you these options without plugins that feel hacky. Terra changes that equation. Some concrete use cases: A server admin building a city survival realm can generate accurate terrain based on real maps. A modpack creator can define exactly what biomes spawn in what regions. A creative builder can generate terrain that matches their vision instead of hoping Minecraft's RNG cooperates. You also get granular control. It's not "make everything flatter" or "make mountains bigger." You're writing actual rules for how the world builds itself. And because it's open source (MIT licensed), you're not locked into someone else's vision of what world generation should be. Getting Terra Running Installation differs depending on your platform, but both are straightforward. Minecraft Yellow Flower 3 For Fabric Clients or Servers Head to Modrinth or CurseForge and download the latest Terra build. Drop the JAR file into your mods folder. That's most of it, but Terra needs configuration files to actually do anything, so you'll also grab core addon packs (basically the config "starter kit"). They're available on the same download pages. Restart your client or server, and Terra starts shaping worlds on next generation. For Bukkit-Based Servers (Paper, Purpur, etc.) Paper-based servers use SpigotMC for distribution. Download from there, move the JAR to your plugins folder, and restart. One thing to know: Terra replaces your world generator entirely. Existing worlds won't suddenly change (they keep their old generation), but new worlds use Terra's rules from day one. If you're building from source, the README has gradle commands. For most people, the prebuilt JARs work fine. Key Features Worth Knowing About Terra has five standout capabilities that actually matter. Minecraft Yellow Flower Configuration-First Design. You define worlds through config files, not code. And this means server admins without Java experience can still customize terrain. Change a number in a file, restart, done. Addon System. The core addons provide default configurations, but you can build your own. This keeps the base plugin lean while letting power users go wild. It's the difference between a tool and a toolbox. Platform Abstraction. Terra works across Fabric and Bukkit without requiring platform-specific versions of your configs. Write once, use everywhere (within reason). Biome Control. You can define exactly which biomes spawn in which regions, at what elevations, and with what frequency. No more hoping a jungle spawns within 5,000 blocks of spawn. Extensible API. If you need to build something Terra doesn't ship with, the API is designed for it. The codebase is Java-based and well-structured, so developers aren't fighting the architecture. Gotchas and Things That Trip People Up Terra is solid, but there are edges worth knowing about. Minecraft Yellow Flower 2 First thing: World generation is computationally expensive. If you're generating massive regions on weak hardware, performance tanks. And this isn't Terra's fault specifically (custom generation always costs more than vanilla), but it's real. Test on your target hardware before going live on a public server. Second: Configuration has a learning curve. You're not clicking toggles in a GUI. You're writing YAML or JSON. If you've never touched config files before, expect to spend time learning. The upside is that once you understand the structure, you have complete control. Third (and this one catches people): Addon compatibility matters. Not every addon plays nicely with every other addon. If you're combining addons to build your perfect world, test them together on a local server first. You might get weird biome boundaries or generation gaps otherwise. And actually, world borders. If you set a world border, make sure it aligns with your generation boundaries. Misaligned borders create jarring terrain seams. Alternatives Worth Considering Terra isn't the only custom generation option out there. TerraNova4 Chunky exists and is great if you want to pre-generate terrain for performance reasons. It's simpler but less flexible. If you need every ounce of control, Chunky might disappoint you. Skyblock-style generators (like SkyblockAddons) work for specific world types but don't offer the generalization Terra does. They're purpose-built, not configurable. And then there's just accepting vanilla and building creative systems around it. Sometimes that's the right call. If you're running a small survival server and don't care about exact biome placement, vanilla is lighter and faster. But if you want to actually customize generation, Terra beats the alternatives by letting you define rules, not pick from presets. Getting Started in 2026 If you're considering Terra now, the ecosystem is mature. The project has 811 GitHub stars and active maintenance. Documentation exists. The Discord community answers questions. Start small: Set up a local test world with the default addons. Get comfortable with the config format. Tweak something minor (like biome frequency) and regenerate to see the effect. Then scale to what you actually want to build. For servers, that's the play. For modpack creators, dive into the addon system and see what you can extend. For experimental builders, go wild. If you're building something on top of this and need to pick tools, remember that Terra is MIT licensed. Your code can go proprietary while Terra itself stays free. That matters for projects with commercial intent. The platform is there. This tools are sharp. Whether you use them is up to you. If vanilla generation frustrates you, or you've got a specific vision that the default game won't deliver, Terra actually delivers on the promise of custom worlds without the usual compromises. You can browse active community creations on the Minecraft Server List to see what people are building, or explore other Minecraft tools like the Minecraft Text Generator for related utilities. Support the project Terra is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### PlotSquared: Building Worlds on Your Minecraft Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/plotsquared-minecraft-plugin-guide Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice IntellectualSites/PlotSquared PlotSquared - Reinventing the plotworld .0 Running a public Minecraft server means solving a core problem: how do you let dozens (or hundreds) of players build without destroying each other's work? PlotSquared solves this by dividing your world into individual plots where players can claim land, customize settings, and build freely while everyone else's creations stay protected. What PlotSquared Actually Does PlotSquared is a server plugin that manages land ownership and world generation on Bukkit-based Minecraft servers (Spigot, Paper, Purpur). Instead of relying on greifing rules and moderation, it creates a structured environment where each plot is isolated. You can run a dedicated plot world with thousands of individual claims, or scatter plot clusters throughout your existing survival world. The plugin handles the boring stuff automatically: when a player claims a plot, they own it. Nobody else can break blocks there. Nobody else can place blocks. They can invite friends to build together, set weather and time to whatever they want, toggle PvP, adjust game modes per-plot, and merge neighboring plots to create bigger canvases. It's configurable down to absurd detail, which sounds overwhelming but mostly just means defaults work fine. Why You'd Actually Run This There are a few serious reasons plot servers exist: Creative communities. Players who want to show off architectural skills without worrying about survival mechanics. Think elaborate castles, fictional cities, or pixel art that takes weeks to complete. Survival servers at scale. When your server hits 50+ concurrent players, traditional grief prevention becomes a nightmare. Plots let everyone have their own protected corner. Server performance. Plots isolate lag. One player's massive farm won't slow everyone else down if you configure it right. The plugin itself is built around being lightweight. Low moderation overhead. You don't need staff constantly responding to "player X destroyed my house." The system prevents it by design. And honestly? Some players just like the structure. Clear ownership. Clear rules. Clear consequences. It works. How to Set It Up PlotSquared is a server-side only plugin, so your players don't need to install anything. Download the JAR from SpigotMC or the official releases page, drop it in your plugins folder, and restart the server. bashcd /path/to/server/plugins wget https://www.spigotmc.org/resources/77506/download java -jar plotsquared.jar On first startup, PlotSquared creates a config folder with a setup wizard. You choose your plot world name, world type (grid-based or scattered), plot size, and basic features. Most setups take 10 minutes if you're familiar with server administration. If you're running a small server and want to add plots to an existing world, you can use plot clusters instead of a dedicated world. This gives you flexibility - not everyone needs an entire dimension devoted to building. The tricky part isn't installation. It's the configuration file. PlotSquared's config.yml is thorough (bordering on overwhelming), but the community wiki and in-game help are solid. Most admins copy someone else's working config and tweak it, which is perfectly fine. Features That Actually Matter Plot merging and roads. By default, plots are separated by one-block-wide roads. Players can merge neighboring plots if they own them all, creating larger building spaces. This is intuitive and rarely causes issues. The roads also serve a practical purpose: navigation and server borders are visually clear. Per-plot flags. Here's where customization gets wild. Each plot can have independent settings: weather on or off, time locked to day or night, specific game modes, PvP enabled or disabled, mob spawning rules, potion effects. A player could've a pvp arena on one plot and a peaceful creative zone next door. Most players never touch these. Some obsess over them. Plot components and world generation. The plugin includes several built-in world generators that create grids of plots automatically. You don't generate a Minecraft world first and then divide it - PlotSquared generates plots by design. And this is way faster than traditional land claiming, and the roads are perfectly spaced. Custom generators add variations like staggered grids, underground components, and aesthetic roads. Trusted players and friend systems. You can invite specific players to build on your plot, or trust an entire group. This is simpler than maintaining a separate permission system. API for developers. If you're running a larger network, PlotSquared exposes an API for custom integrations. The project notes API documentation and event handling for developers who want to build on top of it. Things That Trip People Up First: PlotSquared requires a Bukkit-compatible server (Spigot, Paper, Purpur). And it won't work on vanilla servers or Fabric. If you're committed to those, you'll need something else entirely. Second: the claim command takes practice. `/plot claim` is straightforward, but merging plots, unclaiming, and managing multiple accounts has quirks. New players benefit from a written guide or a helpful mod. Third: world generation is permanent. If you set up plots in a grid but later decide you want scattered clusters, you can't switch without regenerating the world. Plan ahead. And if you're using it alongside a free Minecraft DNS tool (like the one at minecraft.how's Free Minecraft DNS service), make sure DNS records point to your server's actual IP. Plot servers are usually meant for a specific server, and DNS misconfiguration will lock out players. Configuration Tips Worth Knowing Auto-plot claiming speeds up initial setup. Some admins enable it so new players get assigned a plot on first join instead of manually running `/plot claim`. Saves hassle. Set reasonable plot sizes. 100x100 is massive. 32x32 is cramped. 48x48 or 64x64 hits a sweet spot for most communities. It's locked in after world generation, so get it right. Protect your roads. You don't want players building on the edges and breaking the grid aesthetic. There are config options for this. If you're running resource-heavy plugins alongside PlotSquared, watch your server performance. While PlotSquared itself is lightweight, it doesn't magically fix server lag caused by other plugins or poorly configured spawning. Comparing Other Options WorldGuard and Residence handle protection differently. They're more flexible for irregular shapes and mixed ownership models, but they require constant manual region creation and management. WorldGuard is better if you want ad-hoc protection. PlotSquared is better if you want structure. GriefPrevention uses a simpler claim system where players drag-claim rectangles. It's easier to learn but less powerful. If your server is small and casual, GriefPrevention might be overkill in a different direction. For pure creative building, you might prefer a dedicated creative mode server without plots at all (everyone has their own world, or you use a plugin like Multiverse). But if you need one world where 100 players build simultaneously without griefing each other, plots are your answer. One thing worth noting: PlotSquared is in active development. The latest releases mention bug fixes and improvements across events, databases, and placeholder support. If you're running an older version, it's worth checking the changelog for relevant fixes. The Minecraft community also mentions a Minecraft Block Search tool for finding and identifying blocks - useful when you're documenting building rules or helping players troubleshoot what blocks they can place on your plot server. Running a plot server requires more upfront configuration than a vanilla creative world, but it pays for itself when your community scales beyond a handful of players. PlotSquared handles the complexity so you don't have to. Support the project PlotSquared is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Building Enterprise Minecraft Plugins with Legacy-Lands-Library URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/legacy-lands-library-minecraft-plugins Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project legacy-lands-library (LegacyLands/legacy-lands-library) Enterprise-grade modular framework for Minecraft server development with multi-tier caching, Redis Streams, resilient data processing, and modern Java concurrency. Built on Fairy Framework for production-scale plugin development. Star on GitHub ↗ If you've been building Minecraft server plugins and hit walls with performance, data management, or complex caching logic, Legacy-Lands-Library exists to solve exactly that. It's a Java framework that gives you enterprise-grade tools (Redis integration, multi-tier caching, AOP, distributed data handling) without the boilerplate pain. What This Project Really Does Legacy-Lands-Library is a modular toolkit built on Fairy Framework, designed specifically for developers who need production-grade infrastructure in their Minecraft plugins. Instead of cobbling together separate libraries for configuration, caching, data persistence, and aspect-oriented programming, this framework bundles them into coherent modules that work together. It runs as a plugin itself. This matters because it handles compatibility across Spigot, Paper, and Folia automatically, rather than forcing you to figure out which API calls work on which server software. You write your plugin logic once, and the framework manages the platform-specific details underneath. The core modules cover the infrastructure layer that most plugin developers eventually need: a caching system with Redis support, configuration file handling, MongoDB integration for data storage, annotation processing for dependency injection, and aspect-oriented programming for cross-cutting concerns like logging and monitoring. When You'd Actually Use This Not every plugin needs this. If you're building a simple commands plugin or a small utility mod, you're probably overengineering the problem. But the moment you're working on something with real requirements - thousands of concurrent players, persistent data, performance-critical code paths - this framework starts paying dividends. Consider a real example: a player progression system that needs to load thousands of character profiles from a database, cache them intelligently to avoid database thrashing, handle concurrent writes from multiple game servers, and trigger side effects (XP updates, inventory syncs) across distributed instances. Legacy-Lands-Library's player data management module handles exactly this scenario. It's built for "smoothly handling thousands of inter-entity relationship networks," according to the project docs, which means your code doesn't have to. Or imagine building an anti-cheat system that requires JavaScript-based detection logic (yes, really). The framework includes a script execution module supporting Rhino, Nashorn, and V8 engines, so you can drop dynamic detection rules into a script file and reload them without restarting the server. Performance optimization is another angle. The AOP (Aspect-Oriented Programming) module lets you add monitoring, thread safety, and exception handling to methods without cluttering your business logic code - useful when you're tracking performance bottlenecks across a complex plugin. Setting Up Your First Plugin Installation assumes you're already familiar with Maven, Gradle, and the Bukkit API. You'll add the legacy-lands library as a dependency in your build file, then annotate your plugin class to enable the framework's initialization. The foundation module provides testing infrastructure and base abstractions. Configuration gets handled through the configuration module, which builds on SimplixStorage (a YAML-based config library). Here's the rough flow: java// Your plugin class, using the framework @Plugin public class MyServerPlugin extends JavaPlugin { // Framework handles initialization, dependency injection, and lifecycle } That's simplified, but the point is you're using framework annotations rather than implementing Bukkit interfaces manually for every component. Documentation exists, but it's scattered across individual module READMEs on GitHub rather than consolidated in one tutorial. That's the trade-off with a modular design - you gain flexibility but lose guided onboarding. If you're comfortable reading GitHub documentation and inferring how to integrate modules, this isn't a problem. If you prefer hand-holding, expect a steeper learning curve. The Features That Actually Matter Multi-Tier Caching. The cache module integrates Caffeine (an in-memory cache) with Redis for distributed setups. You define caching layers and let the framework handle synchronization between them. This solves the nightmare scenario where you can't figure out why data is stale in one server instance but fresh in another. Distributed Data Management. The player module builds entity-relationship data layers designed for handling interconnected data at scale. Instead of writing code to manage complex object graphs and synchronization, you define your data model and let the framework handle consistency and distributed writes. Annotation Processing. Dependency injection through annotations reduces boilerplate. Rather than manually instantiating services and passing them around, you mark methods or fields with framework annotations and let it wire things up. The annotation processor even supports flexible scanning options, so you control which classes get processed. Aspect-Oriented Programming deserves its own note. Performance monitoring, thread safety, and exception handling are cross-cutting concerns - they appear in multiple places throughout your code. Instead of repeating the same try-catch or synchronized blocks everywhere, you define an aspect once and apply it declaratively. The framework uses ClassLoader isolation to prevent conflicts with other plugins' bytecode manipulation. Virtual thread scheduling (available in the commons module) lets you take advantage of Java 21's virtual threads for lightweight concurrency, useful when you're spawning thousands of short-lived async tasks. What'll Trip You Up Java 21 is the baseline, which is recent enough that some hosting providers might not have upgraded their servers yet. Check your hosting provider's Java version before assuming you can use this. The modular design means you're responsible for assembling the right modules and understanding how they interact. There's no all-in-one "legacy-lands" configuration. You pick foundation, then add annotation processing, then caching, then MongoDB - each module adds complexity. The flexibility is genuinely useful once you understand the architecture, but it creates a mental overhead during initial setup. Debugging aspect-oriented programs is harder than conventional code. When an AOP aspect is running, the actual method might be wrapped or intercepted in ways that aren't immediately obvious from reading source. Stack traces get noisier. This is a general AOP limitation, not specific to this library, but worth knowing. The experimental modules (third-party schedulers for distributed task processing) are explicitly unstable. Don't bet your production plugin on them unless you're willing to contribute back fixes. Other Frameworks You Might Consider Fairy Framework itself is the foundation this library builds on. If you want even lower-level control or a lighter-weight dependency, you could use Fairy directly, but you'd be reimplementing all the Minecraft-specific modules (player data, script execution) yourself. For simpler plugins, conventional approaches using Spring Boot or Guice for dependency injection work fine. They're more familiar to most Java developers and have larger communities. The tradeoff is you're not getting Minecraft-specific optimizations like the distributed player data layer or virtual thread scheduling integration. CloudNet and Waterfall are more about network infrastructure and cloud deployment, not plugin development frameworks. Different problem domain entirely. The Real Picture Legacy-Lands-Library (860 stars, MIT license) succeeds at what it sets out to do: provide modular, production-grade infrastructure for complex Minecraft server plugins. It's not beginner-friendly, but it's also not meant to be. You don't reach for this for a simple fun plugin. Anyone reach for it when you're running a server where performance matters, data consistency is critical, and you need infrastructure that scales. If you're managing a large community server, building premium plugin features, or experimenting with distributed plugin architectures, this framework deserves a serious look. Just go in expecting to invest time reading module documentation and understanding Java 21 features like virtual threads and VarHandles. For plugin ideas and architecture patterns, check out the Minecraft Server List to see what kinds of server ecosystems exist in the wild. And when you're designing your server's configuration, the Server Properties Generator can help with the boilerplate setup.LegacyLands/legacy-lands-library - MIT, ★860 Ready to try legacy-lands-library? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit LegacyLands/legacy-lands-library on GitHub ↗ --- ### Minecraft Holy Client: Load Test Your Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-holy-client-stress-testing Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "A high-performance platform for running Minecraft stress-test bots written in C#." Titlehhhh/Minecraft-Holy-Client · github.com pache-2.0 Ever wonder if your Minecraft server can actually handle a hundred players joining at once? Most server admins build infrastructure based on guesses, not data. Minecraft Holy Client solves that problem by letting you run hundreds of realistic bot players against your server to see where it breaks. It's written in C# for raw performance, and it'll run on weak hardware without choking. What This Project Actually Does Minecraft Holy Client is a stress-testing framework, not a gameplay mod or client. You point it at your server, fire up hundreds of bots, and watch how your infrastructure responds under load. The bots connect, move around, place and break blocks, interact with NPCs, and generally behave like real players would. The framework is open source (Apache-2.0) and has been downloaded and tested by over 174 people on GitHub who cared enough to star it. It's written in C#, which means it compiles to native code and runs lean on system resources. Think of it as the difference between hoping your server stays up during a sale event versus knowing it'll. Why You'd Actually Use This Server admins face a real problem: you don't know your breaking point until you hit it. You could spend money on servers you don't need, or skimp and cause downtime when players show up. Holy Client lets you find the truth. Running 100 bots simultaneously isn't something you can test with manual play. You need tools designed for it. This framework handles the concurrency, the bot AI, and the network traffic all at once. It'll run on a single machine with modest specs, which is part of why the performance focus matters. A few concrete scenarios where this matters: Before launching a new server, run bots to verify your host's hardware actually performs as advertised. After adding plugins or mods, stress test to make sure the server can still handle peak loads. When scaling up, test at your target player count first instead of finding out during actual gameplay. Monitoring plugins or performance optimizations need baseline measurements. This gives you that. How to Get Started Installation is straightforward. The project is portable and cross-platform (Windows, Linux, macOS), so you don't need to install anything to the system. Head to the releases page and download the latest version. For Windows, extract the archive and run HolyClient.Desktop.exe. Linux users extract and follow platform-specific instructions in the README. That's it. Configuration happens in the application itself, not through config files scattered around. Point it at your server address, set the number of bots you want to spawn, and run the test. The UI gives you real-time feedback on what the bots are doing and how your server responds. If you're running a public server, you might also want to set up a free DNS for your Minecraft server or configure a nice MOTD message so players see what you're working on. Key Features That Actually Matter Real bot behavior. The bots don't just sit idle or spam chat. They move, interact with the world, and generate realistic server load. This matters because a thousand idle connections won't tell you much, but a thousand bots actually playing will. GitHub project card for Titlehhhh/Minecraft-Holy-Client Performance first. The codebase was built to minimize CPU and memory overhead so the bots can run on modest hardware. You're not spinning up a cloud instance just to stress test. Run it on your development machine or a basic VPS. Extensibility through plugins. If the default bot behavior doesn't match your needs (maybe you need bots to only interact with specific plugins), you can write custom bot logic. The framework is designed around this. One README mentions support for custom plugins, so you're not locked into the default behavior. Multiple platform support. Windows, Linux, macOS. Run it on whatever machine you have available. Actually being portable (no system installation required) matters more than it sounds when you're jumping between test environments. What Actually Trips People Up The project is no longer actively maintained, which the maintainer clearly states on the GitHub page. It was a foundation for experiments, not a permanent product. Before you build a workflow around it, understand that you're using a historical project. Updates and bug fixes probably won't come. That said, for stress testing, you often don't need constant updates. If it works against your server version, it works. Just be aware of the limitation. Another gotcha: stress testing requires planning. You can't just spawn 500 bots and expect useful results without thinking about what you're measuring. Set a baseline with a small number of bots first. Increase gradually. Watch where performance degrades. Random testing just wastes time. Also, respect other people's servers. Only stress test servers you own or have explicit permission to test. This should be obvious, but it's worth stating clearly. Other Tools for the Job If you need something different, a few alternatives exist. Some server host control panels include built-in load testing tools, though they're usually limited. Custom bot frameworks written in Java can run Minecraft bot clients directly, but they tend to be heavier on resources. Some admins use Docker to spin up many client instances, which works but requires more infrastructure setup. Holy Client sits in a sweet spot: it's open source, cross-platform, lightweight, and designed specifically for this job. The alternatives either cost money, require more setup, or are less efficient. Support the project Minecraft-Holy-Client is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### JG RTX: Bringing Photorealistic Textures to Your Minecraft World URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/jg-rtx-minecraft-resource-pack-guide Published: 2026-04-21 Author: ice "Minecraft v1.21 HD PBR resource pack. Works with Java and Bedrock shaders." jasonjgardner/jg-rtx · github.com .0 Want to make your Minecraft world look professional without installing fifty mods or juggling complex settings? JG RTX is a free, open-source resource pack that brings physically-based textures to vanilla Minecraft on Java and Bedrock editions. It works immediately with common shaders to create genuinely impressive visuals. What Exactly Is a PBR Resource Pack? If you've never heard "PBR" before, don't worry - it's simpler than it sounds. PBR stands for "physically-based rendering," which is just a fancy way of saying the textures behave like real materials in real light. A stone block doesn't just look gray; it has actual roughness, metallic properties, and reflectivity baked into special texture files. When a shader reads these properties, it can render light bouncing off surfaces the way it actually does in nature. Standard Minecraft textures are flat - literally just colors painted on blocks. JG RTX replaces those with textures that contain extra information about how surfaces should catch light and reflect it. Your stone walls look three-dimensional. Water actually looks wet. Metal glints. It's the difference between a watercolor painting and a photograph. The project supports both Java and Bedrock editions, though the setup differs slightly between them. It's also completely free and released under CC-BY-SA-4.0, so you're not paying anyone to make your world prettier. Why Your Builds Deserve Better Textures Here's the thing about vanilla Minecraft textures: they're iconic, sure, but they're also ancient. They were designed for computers that could barely handle 16x resolution. If you've spent months building a massive castle or recreating a real-world city from reference images, vanilla textures don't do your work justice. A good resource pack changes the entire vibe of your world. Suddenly that dirt path looks weathered and realistic. Your wooden buildings have actual wood grain. Glass blocks let light through convincingly instead of looking like solid ice. It's not just prettier - it makes building more rewarding because you can actually see the detail you're putting in. JG RTX goes further than most resource packs by including PBR data, which means it only looks good with shaders enabled. But that's also exactly why it looks so good. Installing JG RTX Step by Step For Bedrock Edition Download the latest.mcpack file from the releases page. Bedrock handles these natively on Windows - just double-click it and Minecraft will register it automatically. On console, the process varies, but the core idea is the same: the file integrates directly into your packs folder. One thing to watch: make sure you actually enable the pack in your world settings. It's easy to forget and then wonder why your textures look normal. Go to your world, edit settings, and add JG RTX to the active resources. For Java Edition Java is slightly more involved. Download the.mcpack file (which is actually just a renamed ZIP), then extract it into your resourcepacks folder. On Windows, that's typically: bashC:\Users\[YourUsername]\AppData\Roaming\.minecraft\resourcepacks\ On Mac, it's in ~/Library/Application Support/minecraft/resourcepacks/, and on Linux, it's ~/.minecraft/resourcepacks/. Paste the extracted folder there, launch the game, go to Settings > Resource Packs, and activate JG RTX. It'll show in your active list immediately. A quick tip: if you're ever running into issues with textures not loading, delete the shadercache folder in your.minecraft directory and reload. That solves most texture problems on Java. Resolution Sizes: Which One's Right for You? JG RTX comes in multiple resolutions: 32x, 64x, 128x, and 256x. Here's what matters: higher resolution means more detail but also more VRAM usage and potential stuttering on lower-end systems. If you're running a gaming PC built in the last 3-4 years, 128x is the sweet spot. It looks gorgeous and won't tank your frame rate. If you've got a beast system with a good GPU, 256x textures are stunning and worth the extra resources. Playing on a laptop or older desktop? Start with 64x - it still looks dramatically better than vanilla, but won't overwhelm your hardware. The 32x option exists mainly for servers or systems where every bit of performance matters. It's still a noticeable upgrade over vanilla, but you're trading some detail for speed. There's also a Subpacks version if you want modular control over which textures apply to which blocks. Most players can ignore this unless you're doing something very specific. The Real Magic: Shader Compatibility This is where JG RTX actually shines. The resource pack is designed to work with PBR-compatible shaders - programs that understand those special texture properties we talked about earlier. Popular shaders like BetterRTX, BSL, Kappa, and SEUS all work beautifully with JG RTX. The combination is what produces those jaw-dropping screenshots you see on Reddit. A shader handles the lighting calculations, and JG RTX provides the material data, and together they create something that legitimately looks like 3D art. If you haven't installed shaders before, the process is similar to resource packs. For Java, you need a shader mod like Iris or Optifine. Drop the shader file into your shaderpacks folder, load Minecraft, and select it in your settings. Different shaders have different settings you can tweak - brightness, shadow distance, reflection quality - so there's room to find what works for your system. For Bedrock, BetterRTX has official presets designed specifically for JG RTX, which makes setup even easier. The project's GitHub also links to related tools like the JG Mod and JG Modpack for Java, if you want curated additions, plus a Glass Variety pack and Extra Stone Bricks add-on for more customization. These are totally optional, but worth checking out if you want to extend the look further. Troubleshooting Common Setup Problems The most common issue is textures not loading in Java. Usually it's because the pack isn't activated or the file wasn't extracted properly. Check that the folder structure is correct - the resourcepack folder should contain subfolders like assets/minecraft/textures, not be one level too nested. Another gotcha: shaders and resource packs are different things. You need both. JG RTX handles textures, but a shader handles lighting. Running one without the other means you'll either see flat textures or no custom textures at all. Make sure you've installed both and activated both. If your FPS drops dramatically after installing this, try dropping the resolution (64x instead of 128x) or tweaking your shader settings. Shadow distance and reflection quality are the biggest VRAM hogs. Sometimes it's simpler to just lower your render distance slightly while using fancy textures. For Bedrock players, double-check that you're using a compatible device. Older tablets and phones won't run shaders well, so expectations should match your hardware. Similar Projects Worth Knowing About JG RTX isn't the only PBR resource pack out there, though it's genuinely one of the best maintained. PBR JG (available on Modrinth and Planet Minecraft) is related but slightly different. There's also a thriving community of shader developers and texture pack creators - Modrinth is genuinely the best place to discover new packs and shaders once you've got the basics down. If you're actually recreating real places and want reference material, our block search tool helps you find exactly the block you need without scrolling through hundreds. It's surprisingly useful when you're trying to match materials. We've also got a whitelist creator tool for managing server access, which is handy if you're sharing your beautiful builds with friends. Support the project jg-rtx is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### FishingBot: Automating Minecraft AFK Fishing Across Versions URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fishingbot-minecraft-afk-setup Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project FishingBot (MrKinau/FishingBot) 1.8 - 26.1.2 Fishing bot for Minecraft Star on GitHub ↗ .0 Ever find yourself sitting AFK at a fishing spot waiting for the loot to pile up, knowing you're missing the actual gameplay? FishingBot solves that by automating the entire fishing process so you can accumulate valuable items and experience without babysitting your character. It's a Java-based bot that supports every Minecraft version from 1.8 straight through 26.1.2, runs on Windows/Linux/Mac, and handles both offline and online mode servers. What This Project Does FishingBot is an AFK (away from keyboard) fishing automation tool written in Java. Instead of manually casting and clicking hundreds of times to catch fish, treasure, and junk items, you run the bot and it handles the repetitive work. The project is open-source (GPL-3.0 license) with 384 GitHub stars, actively maintained, and includes a user-friendly GUI so you don't need to mess with config files if you don't want to. The bot connects to a Minecraft server just like a real player would. It reads the fishing rod state, detects when something bites, performs the catch action at the right moment, and collects your loot. All while you grab a coffee or work on something else. When (And When Not) To Use FishingBot If you're running a private server with friends or playing single-player, FishingBot is genuinely useful. Fishing is monotonous, and automating it means more time for building, exploring, or PvP. You'll accumulate valuable enchanted books, name tags, and rare fishing treasures without the grinding. On public multiplayer servers? Check the rules first. Many servers explicitly prohibit bots, and running one could get you banned. FishingBot doesn't hide itself - it appears as a legitimate player in chat and shows up in /list. Server admins see it immediately. Only use this on servers where the owner has given you permission or on servers you control yourself. Single-player is hassle-free territory. Use it to stock up before a big project, or to auto-fish while you handle other things. Installation and Basic Setup You'll need Java 11 or higher installed on your machine. Grab the latest release (v2.13.12 at the time of writing) from the GitHub releases page - it's a.jar file you can download directly. GitHub project card for MrKinau/FishingBot bashjava -jar FishingBot-2.13.12.jar Run that command and the GUI window opens. From there you can configure your server address, account credentials (username for offline mode, or email/password for online), and which Minecraft version to use. The bot auto-detects supported versions from 1.8 through 26.1.2, so you don't have to guess. If you prefer command-line configuration, the project supports arguments. The wiki has a full list, but basics include - server, - username, - password, and - version. Useful if you're running this on a headless Linux server. There's also a Docker image if you want to containerize it, which simplifies deployment on a VPS or always-on machine. Key Features That Actually Work Auto-fishing that doesn't miss. The bot reliably detects fish bites and reels them in with proper timing. Compared to manual fishing, it's accurate and tireless. Run it for an hour and you'll have more fish and treasure than you'd catch manually in three. Loot announcements are another strength. Every time the bot catches something, it can announce it to Discord via webhook, or just log it locally. Imagine checking Discord and seeing "Caught enchanted book: Mending" pop up while you're doing something else. That's motivating. The bot can report its own level (experience) on demand with a command, useful if you're farming XP for enchanting. It also auto-empties its inventory when full, either by dropping items or dumping them in a chest if you configure hopper setups nearby. Multi-version support is one of the standout features. You don't need different bots for different servers. One jar handles them all - 1.8 servers, modern 1.20+ servers, even experimental snapshots. The protocol changes are handled internally. Command support lets you control the bot from the console or by typing commands in chat as another player. Type "bot_name, stop" to pause fishing, "bot_name, empty" to clear inventory, or "bot_name, help" for a full list. It's like having a remote control. Setup Gotchas and Tips The single biggest gotcha is account security. FishingBot needs your Minecraft credentials to log in. Use a separate account for botting if possible - don't use your main account. If you must use your main, enable two-factor authentication and use app passwords where available. The source code is open and reviewed by the community, so it's not a backdoor, but better safe than sorry. 13w36a banner in Minecraft Online mode authentication works fine, but some people opt for offline mode on private servers to avoid the auth step entirely. Just confirm your server allows offline mode before relying on it. Chunk loading can trip you up. The bot only fishes in loaded chunks. If your server has a small render distance or aggressive unloading, the bot might disconnect when chunks unload. Set up a chunk loader or keep a player nearby to maintain the area, or the bot will sit idle. The bot doesn't handle inventory full scenarios gracefully if you misconfigure the empty action. Set it correctly (drop items or link a chest) or the bot will get stuck. Double-check your settings before you leave it running overnight. Performance-wise, the bot is lightweight. It's not going to tank your server or laptop. But if you're running other resource-heavy tools, give them priority and monitor CPU/memory usage. Similar Tools and Alternatives If you want a lightweight client-side solution, you could explore Minecraft mods like AutoFish mods available on CurseForge, though they're version-specific and require installing mods on your client. For more complex server automation, frameworks like PyMine (Python) let you build custom bots from scratch. That's overkill for simple fishing, but it's an option if you need more flexibility later. If you're not comfortable running a bot but still want passive income of fish and treasure, consider setting up mob grinders or item sorters with hopper systems. Not automated in the same way, but mechanical and reliable. Resources and Community The FishingBot wiki on GitHub covers detailed setup for every use case. And this Discord server (linked from the repo) is active with users sharing tips and the maintainer responding to bugs quickly. Feature requests are welcome on GitHub issues. If you're designing a server where fishing is important - say, a fishing competition or economy server - this bot is worth considering as a testing tool to verify your fishing mechanics and loot tables work as intended. Want to check other tools on your server? Our MOTD Creator helps you craft eye-catching server messages, and if you're testing multi-server infrastructure, our Nether Portal Calculator is handy for coordination. Support the project FishingBot is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### How SkinsRestorer Brings Custom Skins to Minecraft Servers URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/skinsrestorer-custom-skins-minecraft-servers Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice SkinsRestorer/SkinsRestorer 🎨 The most popular skin plugin for Minecraft .0 Custom Minecraft skins are one of the best ways players express themselves in-game. But here's the frustration: that skin you designed looks perfect in single-player, then vanishes the moment you join most multiplayer servers. SkinsRestorer fixes that gap by letting servers support any Minecraft skin, from any source, without complicated workarounds. What SkinsRestorer Actually Does So here's the technical reality. When you log into an online-mode Minecraft server (one with proper Mojang authentication), the server checks the official Minecraft database for your skin. If it's not there, you show up as Steve or Alex. Period. SkinsRestorer intercepts that check. Instead of only looking at Mojang's official database, it can pull skins from multiple sources and serve them to all players on your server. Your custom skin suddenly works, your friends see it, and the whole experience feels native. The clever part: it works at both the server level (Spigot, Paper, Purpur) and the proxy level (BungeeCord, Velocity, Waterfall). Want skins consistent across a network of five servers? Throw SkinsRestorer on your proxy and you're done. One configuration, one source of truth for all player skins. There are also Fabric and NeoForge mods if you're running modded servers and need client-side support. Why This Actually Matters for Servers Creative servers, survival communities, and anything where players care about looking unique need this. Forcing players to choose between their favorite skin and joining your server is a losing proposition. Players just won't show up, or they'll disconnect and play somewhere else. Networks with multiple servers get even more benefit. A player loads their skin once and sees it everywhere. That consistency across game worlds sounds minor until you realize how much it improves the sense of a cohesive community. There's also the modded server angle. If you're mixing vanilla players with Fabric or NeoForge users, everyone needs to see the same skins. SkinsRestorer bridges that gap without requiring every player to install mods. And here's something server admins don't always think about: player retention. Small touches like custom skin support make players feel like they matter. It's the difference between a server that feels abandoned and one that feels like home. Getting It Installed Installation depends on your server setup. For Spigot, Paper, or Purpur, it's straightforward. First, grab the latest release from GitHub or one of the distribution platforms. Drop the JAR file into your plugins folder. bashjava -jar server.jar nogui Once it's running, you can manage skins in-game using the built-in commands. The exact command format depends on your version, so check their documentation site for the current syntax. For BungeeCord or Velocity networks, install the plugin on your proxy instead of individual servers. This gives you centralized skin management across your entire network without per-server configuration. If you're running a modded setup with Fabric or NeoForge, download the appropriate mod version and place it in your mods folder. The setup's even simpler since you don't need to configure anything server-side. One thing worth doing: if you're using a whitelist, make sure your whitelist is properly synced with your SkinsRestorer configuration. You don't want players able to connect but unable to see skins due to configuration mismatches. The Features That Actually Shine Start with platform breadth. Whether you're on Paper, Velocity, Bungeecord, Fabric, or NeoForge, there's a version that works. That's genuinely rare. Most plugins pick a platform and stay there. SkinsRestorer covers the entire ecosystem. The multi-source support is solid too. It doesn't just pull from Mojang's official skin database. You can configure it to check custom sources, texture packs, or even historical skin data. This flexibility means you can support skins that wouldn't normally work on standard servers. Community strength matters more than people realize. With 694 GitHub stars and an active Discord community, when you hit a problem, someone's probably solved it. The project has international translations too, which helps administrators in non-English communities. The API deserves mention if you're a developer or running custom plugins. SkinsRestorer exposes a proper API for skin functionality, so you can build features on top of it instead of reinventing everything from scratch. Performance is invisible on normal servers. You run it, skins work, nobody notices it's even there. Gotchas That Trip People Up The most common issue isn't SkinsRestorer's fault: it's people assuming it works without reading the configuration. Different skin sources have different setup requirements. Mojang's official source is straightforward, but if you're pulling from custom sources, you need to configure those explicitly or skins won't load. Command syntax confusion happens. Players (or admins) forget the right syntax for changing skins and assume the plugin's broken. It's always user error with the command format. One thing worth watching: if you're running a massive network and constantly requesting skins, you might hit rate limits on certain sources. For normal servers this never happens. For huge networks with thousands of players hammering the API simultaneously, it's worth being aware. If you're upgrading from an old version, double-check your configuration. Plugin settings can change between major releases. Test in a dev environment before pushing to production. Other Ways to Handle Skins Some servers use authentication plugins like Authme that bundle basic skin support. It works, but it's never as full-featured as a dedicated tool. Offline-mode servers support any skin natively. You get perfect customization, but you lose security. Griefers can impersonate other players. SkinsRestorer gives you online-mode's protection with custom skin support. If you want to keep an eye on server health while testing skin changes, the server status checker tool helps you verify everything's still running properly. And if you're looking for inspiration, check out the minecraft.how skins collection to see what the community has created. Support the project SkinsRestorer is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### Floodgate: Bridging Bedrock and Java Servers in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/floodgate-bedrock-java-minecraft Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GeyserMC/Floodgate Hybrid mode plugin to allow for connections from Geyser to join online mode servers. Running a Minecraft server that welcomes both Java and Bedrock players has always been a technical puzzle. Floodgate is the missing piece that makes it possible, letting your Bedrock friends (on mobile, console, or Windows 11 Edition) join the same server as Java players without breaking authentication or creating admin headaches. What Floodgate Does Floodgate is a plugin that solves one specific problem: letting Bedrock players authenticate on online-mode Java servers. Here's the issue it addresses. Normally, online-mode servers only accept Java Edition players with valid Mojang accounts that have logged in through the official launcher. Bedrock Edition players (whether they're on mobile, Switch, PlayStation, or Windows 11) don't have Mojang accounts and aren't in that authentication system. They can't log in at all. That's where Geyser comes in. Geyser translates Bedrock's protocol into Java's protocol so Bedrock players can technically connect to Java servers. But Geyser alone doesn't solve the authentication problem. You can run Geyser on offline-mode servers (where anyone joins with any name), but that leaves you vulnerable to griefing, impersonation, and players nuking your server. If you want a real, secure server with actual player progression and consequences, you need online-mode. Floodgate bridges that gap. But it provides the encryption and token system that proves to your Java server: "This Bedrock player is legitimate and verified by Geyser." No fake accounts. No impersonation. Just cryptographically signed handshakes. It sounds simple on the surface, but behind the scenes it's doing encryption, token validation, account verification, and session management to make the whole thing work smoothly. Why Run a Cross-Platform Server Before you set this up, ask yourself honestly: do you actually need it? Cross-platform servers are genuinely useful if you're in one of a few situations. You're trying to build a larger community and Bedrock players vastly outnumber Java players overall. You want to support friends on different platforms without running two separate servers. You're building a persistent economy or shared world and want everyone in one place experiencing it together. Not every server needs this. If you're running a small vanilla realm with three close friends, offline-mode Geyser is fine. You don't need the security overhead. But if you want a thriving public server with progression that matters, shared economies, guilds, or quest systems? This is worth the effort. How to Install and Configure You'll need three things. A Java Edition server running Paper, Spigot, or another compatible server software. Geyser installed (usually as a plugin in the same server instance). Floodgate itself, which you download from the official GeyserMC website and drop into your plugins folder. GitHub project card for GeyserMC/Floodgate On first startup, Floodgate generates a keypair automatically. This is an RSA keypair: a public key and a private key. The private key signs the authentication tokens that prove Bedrock players are real. That public key lets your server verify those signatures. Keep your private key secure. If someone steals it, they can forge authentication tokens and fake Bedrock connections. Your Geyser config file needs to be aware that Floodgate exists. In Geyser's config, set the auth-type option appropriately and point it to your Java server's address. If Geyser and Floodgate are running in the same Paper instance (which is the simplest setup), this communication happens automatically over internal IPC. One gotcha that trips people up: if Geyser and Floodgate are on different machines (say, Geyser on a proxy server and your Java server elsewhere), you need network connectivity between them. Make sure your firewall allows connections from Geyser to your Java server on the configured port. Most people run them together in one Paper instance, so this isn't usually a problem. How Authentication Works Here's the flow. A Bedrock player launches Minecraft on their device. Geyser intercepts the connection. The Bedrock player's device sends their Xbox Live authentication token to Geyser (or passes it locally if Geyser is on the same device). Geyser validates with Microsoft's servers that the Xbox Live token is real. Once validated, Geyser creates a Floodgate token that includes the Bedrock player's UUID and username. Geyser signs this token with Floodgate's private key and sends it to the Java server. The Java server receives the signed token and verifies the signature using the public key. If the signature is valid, the server trusts that the connection is legitimate and the player logs in. From the Java server's perspective, this looks like any other legitimate player connection. Java players and Bedrock players play together in the exact same world, share the exact same inventory system, and experience the exact same economy and progression. You literally can't tell the difference from gameplay unless you check the player's UUID (Bedrock players get a deterministically derived UUID based on their original Bedrock UUID, so it stays consistent across sessions). If you're running plugins, you can detect whether a player came through Floodgate and apply special logic if you want (like restricting certain features to Java-only or vice versa). But the default behavior is complete unification. Actually, here's something I found surprising: if you're using tools like the Nether Portal Calculator to help players navigate the Nether across platforms, or our Text Generator for custom signage and chat messages, those work identically for Bedrock and Java players once Floodgate is handling authentication. The player experience is truly unified. Common Issues, Troubleshooting, and Alternatives Version mismatches between Floodgate and Geyser cause the vast majority of authentication failures. Floodgate 2.x is compatible with Geyser 2.x. Floodgate 1.x works with Geyser 1.x. If you update one without updating the other, you'll get token validation errors. Update them together, not separately. Your server must be running in online-mode. If it's in offline-mode, Floodgate won't work properly. Yes, online-mode does have a small performance cost (Microsoft authenticates every player at login), but the security is worth it. Bedrock players behind restrictive corporate firewalls or certain VPNs sometimes struggle to establish the connection through Geyser. This is a network infrastructure issue, not a Floodgate issue. If you're running a global server and noticing connectivity problems from certain regions, consider running a Geyser proxy closer to your target players. When auth fails, check Floodgate's logs first. They're usually explicit about what went wrong: bad token signature, version mismatch, network timeout, or firewall blocking. Reading the error messages saves hours of debugging time. Now, you might not need Floodgate at all. That's worth acknowledging. ViaVersion plugins handle supporting multiple Java versions on the same server, but they don't solve cross-platform play the way Floodgate does. Running two entirely separate servers (one for Java, one for Bedrock) and syncing them via a shared database is architecturally viable if you want total isolation. Some third-party hosting platforms bundle Geyser and Floodgate automatically, which is the easiest path if you don't want to configure it yourself. But if you're running your own Java server and want to open it to Bedrock players while maintaining online-mode security? Floodgate is the standard tool. It's mature, battle-tested on servers with thousands of concurrent players, and the GeyserMC community support is solid. The project has 666 stars on GitHub and is written in Java, which makes it a natural fit for the Minecraft server ecosystem. Support the project Floodgate is maintained by the open-source community. If it saved you time or powered something cool, leave a ⭐ on the repo, report bugs, or contribute back. Small actions keep tools like this alive. --- ### How VulkanMod Modernizes Minecraft Java Rendering URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/vulkanmod-minecraft-rendering Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "Vulkan renderer mod for Minecraft." xCollateral/VulkanMod · github.com ⭐ 2,278 stars.0 If your CPU's pegged at 100% while Minecraft crawls, VulkanMod might be the fix. This fabric mod swaps out the aging OpenGL renderer for Vulkan, a modern graphics API that dramatically cuts CPU overhead and lets your GPU do more of the work. What VulkanMod Actually Does Here's the thing: VulkanMod isn't just slapping Vulkan on top of Minecraft's existing code. It's a complete rewrite of the renderer, built ground-up to take advantage of what Vulkan offers. Minecraft's been running OpenGL 3.2 for years, and that shows in the CPU load. The project started experimental but has matured into something you can actually use daily. Version 0.6.0, the latest release, improved terrain rendering performance and fixed memory leaks during extended play. It sits at 2,278 GitHub stars with an active community maintaining it. What makes this different from other performance mods? It's architectural. Instead of squeezing the OpenGL pipeline, VulkanMod replaces it entirely. Why You'd Actually Want This CPU bottlenecks kill Minecraft performance. You could have a top-tier GPU, but if your processor's maxed out, you're stuck at whatever framerate your CPU can push. Vulkan cuts the amount of CPU work between frames significantly. But it sounds technical, but in practice? Smoother gameplay, fewer framedrops, and the ability to crank your render distance or graphics settings higher without melting. Real numbers vary by hardware. Someone with a 2024 GPU and fast CPU might see 20% improvement. Older setups sometimes see more. Don't expect a guaranteed 2x FPS jump, but the smoothness boost is noticeable immediately. Server-side this gets interesting. Administrators report fewer lag spikes even with more players online. The reduced CPU overhead means you can handle bigger render distances or more complex terrain without the tick-rate tanking. If you're running a community server, that's huge. And there's the future-proofing angle. Modern GPUs have capabilities that OpenGL never exposed well. Vulkan lets developers use them. It's future-proofing your Minecraft in a way the vanilla renderer just doesn't. Installation: Step by Step Setup is straightforward, but order matters. First thing: you need Fabric. If you don't have it, grab the installer from fabricmc.net, run it, point it at your game directory, and let it install the loader. Standard stuff. Once Fabric is installed, download the VulkanMod jar from CurseForge or Modrinth, then drop it into your mods folder: bashcp Vulkanmod.jar ~/.minecraft/mods/ # Windows users: paste into %APPDATA%\.minecraft\mods\ instead Launch Minecraft with the Fabric profile, wait for mods to load, and you're running Vulkan. Done. One critical check first: GPU compatibility. Most modern cards work (NVIDIA 600-series and newer, AMD GCN and up, Intel Iris and newer), but ancient integrated graphics might not. The mod errors out clearly if your GPU doesn't support Vulkan, so you'll know immediately what's wrong. What about Minecraft versions? VulkanMod follows Fabric releases, so it supports 26.1.2 and recent snapshots. Check the mod page for exact version matches - sometimes there's a release lag. Features Worth Knowing About Chunk culling is the headline feature. The mod figures out which chunks you literally can't see from your position and skips rendering them entirely. Multiple culling algorithms let you pick which one suits your hardware best. That single feature cuts geometry processing dramatically. GitHub project card for xCollateral/VulkanMod GPU selection matters if you've multiple graphics cards. Instead of the system guessing which one to use, you pick. Useful for dual-GPU setups or laptops with integrated + discrete graphics. The resizable render frame queue smooths out framepacing, especially helpful on older or less powerful machines. Basically, it buffers frames smarter. Native Wayland support is nice if you're on Linux with a modern display server. Most people don't care, but if you're, it works properly now. Windowed fullscreen mode helps too - great for multi-monitor setups or when you want to alt-tab without performance penalties. And they redesigned the graphics settings menu. Finding rendering options in vanilla Minecraft is like treasure hunting, so having them organized in one place is genuinely helpful. What'll Break Your Setup Shaders don't work yet. So this is the biggest caveat. Complementary, BSL, Continuum - none of them. The roadmap mentions shader support eventually, but it's not there. If shaders are essential to you, VulkanMod isn't ready. Performance gains aren't guaranteed to be huge. Hardware matters a lot. Some people see dramatic improvements; others see modest gains. Don't expect consistent 2x FPS boosts - it's more nuanced than that, actually that only works if your CPU was the bottleneck to begin with. The mod's actively developed, which means occasional bugs slip through releases. This 0.6.0 update fixed texture alpha cutout issues on 1.21.11 and closed a memory leak. Reporting problems on GitHub helps the maintainer fix things faster. Not every update is smooth. Compatibility is generally solid - texture packs work fine, most mods are okay - but mixing VulkanMod with 50 other rendering mods is uncharted territory. Keep your modlist reasonable until you know what works together. How It Stacks Against Other Options Sodium and Iris are the other heavy hitters in performance modding. Sodium optimizes the OpenGL pipeline cleverly. Iris layers shaders on top. They're compatible with each other and (mostly) with VulkanMod too - you can run all three. The scope differs, though. Sodium works within OpenGL. VulkanMod replaces the entire renderer. If shaders are your priority, Iris is the answer. If you want maximum performance and don't care about shaders, VulkanMod pulls ahead. For a low-end machine, Sodium alone might be enough. For a server wanting to reduce player lag, VulkanMod makes more sense. So it's not "better" - it's different. Pick based on what you actually need. Server Setup and Optimization Running a server with VulkanMod on clients? Good pairing with solid server configs. Use the Server Properties Generator to dial in server.properties - view distance, max-tick-time, entity settings all affect performance. Client-side rendering improvements mean nothing if the server's struggling. The Minecraft Text Generator helps if you want to craft server messages letting players know what they're running. Not that they'll notice Vulkan directly, but good context. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### Testing Minecraft Servers with mc-bots: A Complete Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mc-bots-minecraft-stress-testing Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project mc-bots (crpmax/mc-bots) A simple app for stress testing Minecraft servers with bots Star on GitHub ↗ Ever wonder if your Minecraft server will actually hold up when players show up? mc-bots lets you find out before you're scrambling. This Java tool simulates fake players connecting to your server so you can see how it performs under load, test plugins, or just mess around with your own infrastructure. What This Project Does mc-bots is straightforward: it's a bot client that connects to Minecraft servers. Lots of them. You can spin up anywhere from a handful of bots to hundreds (or more, depending on your hardware and patience) and have them all sit on your server simultaneously. Think of it like a stress test in a box. Instead of waiting for a server event to naturally draw a crowd, you can artificially fill your server, watch metrics, and see what breaks. The bots can move around, send messages, run commands, and generally behave like real players. They won't actually play the game with you, but they'll be there taking up slots and consuming resources. It's written in Java and works with recent Minecraft versions (currently supporting 1.21.7 and compatible with 1.21.8). If you need older version support, the project maintains releases going back several MC versions. Why You'd Actually Use This Server testing is the obvious use case. Maybe you're running a small multiplayer realm and want to know the ceiling before inviting friends. Maybe you're building a plugin and need to make sure it doesn't melt when ten people use it simultaneously. Maybe you run a larger server and genuinely want to understand capacity before peak hours hit. But there are other angles. Developers use this to test network code, observe server behavior, and debug performance issues in their plugins. You could watch your TPS drop in real-time while adding bots, pinpoint exactly when things degrade. Educational value, too: if you're learning about Minecraft networking or server administration, having a tool that lets you experiment without consequences is pretty useful. It's also just handy for filling empty slots temporarily. Need to test something that requires multiple players but don't have friends online? Spin up some bots. Getting It Set Up You'll need Java 17 or higher. Grab the latest JAR from the releases page (currently 1.2.17) and run it from the command line. Minimal syntax: bashjava -jar mc-bots-1.2.17.jar -s 192.168.0.189:25565 This connects one bot to your server at that address. Add options to scale up. Here's a more realistic example that might actually be useful: bashjava -jar mc-bots-1.2.17.jar -s 192.168.0.189:25565 -c 30 -d 4000 5000 -p BOT_ -r That connects 30 bots with a connection delay between 4-5 seconds each (so they don't all slam the server at once), gives them realistic-looking nicknames prefixed with "BOT_", and lets them join naturally. Spreading out connections is important - you want to test how your server handles a gradual increase in players, not just a DDoS of instant connections. The Feature Set (And What Matters) The tool gives you fine-grained control over how your bots behave. Here are the ones that actually make a difference: Proxy support - You can have bots connect through SOCKS4 or SOCKS5 proxies from a file or URL. So this lets you simulate traffic from different IP addresses if your server does IP-based load balancing or geo-routing. Useful for larger scale tests. Join messages - Bots can execute commands or send chat messages when they connect using the `-j` flag. Want to test how your plugin handles a thousand players running `/spawn` simultaneously? Now you can. This is genuinely powerful for stress-testing command handlers. Nickname control - Generate random names, use real-looking ones with `-r`, or load a custom list from a file. Superficial but useful for seeing how your chat system or player list renders with varying name lengths and characters. Minimal mode - The `-m` and `-x` flags disable various client features to reduce overhead. When you're pushing hundreds of bots, the tool itself becomes the bottleneck. Minimal mode trades interactivity for raw bot count. You lose colored chat output and control, but the bots still connect and exist on the server. Online accounts - Connect with actual Microsoft accounts instead of offline mode using `-o`. Useful if your server authenticates through proper Mojang login or your plugin checks premium accounts. Tips That Actually Matter Connection delay is your friend. Don't connect all your bots at once. Stagger them with `-d` to simulate realistic join patterns. This gives your server time to breathe and lets you see how it ramps up gradually instead of spiking instantly. Watch your TPS. The whole point is observing metrics. Have a separate terminal window open showing your server logs or a monitoring tool. You're looking for the moment performance degrades - that's your ceiling. Start small and scale up. Connect ten bots, see what happens. Then twenty. Then fifty. Don't jump to three hundred immediately. You'll learn more from a gradual ramp than from chaos. The auto-respawn feature (enabled by default) respawns dead bots automatically after a set delay. Disable it with `-ar -1` if you're testing something where bot death matters. Otherwise bots sitting in the void will just respawn endlessly, which can skew your test if you're trying to measure specific player states. One gotcha: this tool works best with offline-mode servers or servers you control. Don't point it at someone else's server (you'll want to respect their infrastructure). The README includes a disclaimer about this - it's meant for educational and testing purposes on your own hardware. Also worth noting: the newer versions support Minecraft 1.21.7 and forward. If you're on 1.20, you'll need to grab an older release from the project's release history. Check which version supports your MC edition before downloading. Reasonable Alternatives Vanilla Minecraft has some built-in testing tools. You can use spawn commands and mods to generate players locally for smaller tests, but it's clunky and caps out quickly. mc-bots is purpose-built for this, so it's more flexible and scales better. If you're load testing a server infrastructure more broadly (not just Minecraft), tools like Apache JMeter or custom load testing scripts exist. But those are overkill if you're just checking if your Minecraft server survives a reasonable player count. For plugin testing specifically, some plugin development frameworks include testing utilities, but again, there's no replacement for actually connecting bots and watching real server behavior in real time. If you run a public server, services like server listing sites and plugin repositories can show you if your uptime is solid, but that's reactive. mc-bots is proactive - you get to fail gracefully in private before inviting people. The Bottom Line mc-bots solves a real problem for server administrators and plugin developers who want visibility into how their setup behaves under load. It's lightweight, surprisingly flexible, and gives you actual data instead of guesses. If you're running anything beyond a single-player world that others join, knowing your server's limits is just smart. For styling up your server beyond just infrastructure, you might want a nice MOTD. Check out the Minecraft MOTD Creator to craft something eye-catching. And if you're recruiting players, don't forget to browse the Minecraft Skins library to stand out in the community. Ready to try mc-bots? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit crpmax/mc-bots on GitHub ↗ --- ### Misode.github.io: Building Custom Minecraft Content Without Writing JSON URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/misode-data-pack-generator Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "Data Pack Generators and Tools for Minecraft 1.15, 1.16, 1.17, 1.18, 1.19, 1.20, 1.21" misode/misode.github.io · github.com Misode.github.io is a free, web-based data pack generator for Minecraft Java Edition spanning versions 1.15 to 1.21. Instead of manually writing JSON files for custom content, you build data packs visually. It handles everything from commands to loot tables, and lets you download ready-to-use packs. No coding required. What Misode Actually Is Think of Misode as a visual builder for Minecraft data packs. You probably know data packs let you add custom content without modding - custom dimensions, items, recipes, mobs, all that stuff. But writing them means hand-coding JSON files that are easy to mess up. Misode skips that. It's a collection of web-based generators (844 stars on GitHub, built with TypeScript and Vite). Pick a generator, fill in some fields, hit download, and you've got a working data pack. No JSON nightmares. No syntax errors from typos. The catch? It's best for structured content - things with clear templates. Custom command sequences, loot tables, predicates, advancements - all the bread-and-butter stuff that takes forever to write by hand. Less useful if you want to tweak specific JSON fields or do something completely unconventional. But for standard stuff, it's legitimately impressive. Why You'd Actually Use This Let's say you're setting up a custom survival world for friends. You want special loot in the nether fortress, a custom crafting recipe for a rare item, and maybe a custom advancement system. Doing that manually means three separate JSON files, careful nesting, and praying you didn't forget a comma somewhere. With Misode? Open the loot table generator, click some dropdowns, add your enchantments and items, and download. Same with recipes. Same with advancements. It cuts the time from "why is this breaking" to "actually finished" in half. Or you're working on a creative world and want custom mobs with specific equipment and AI. Command builders are tedious to write by hand. Misode's predicate generator and NBT tools let you assemble them visually without wrestling with text. The project also supports modded generators if you're working with popular mods - there's a contribution system for adding custom generators beyond vanilla, though that requires understanding the Mcdoc format (the project's custom JSON schema language). Server admins especially benefit. Setting up custom loot distribution across your server? Job done in ten minutes instead of an hour of debugging. Same goes for custom recipes or progression trees. Getting Started With Misode Here's the thing - you might not need to "run" anything at all. The hosted site at misode.github.io works right now in your browser. Just visit it, pick a generator from the menu, and build your pack. Download the ZIP, drop it in your world's datapacks folder (or server's datapacks folder), reload, and you're done. If you want to fork the project for custom generators or modify it locally, the setup is straightforward: bashgit clone https://github.com/misode/misode.github.io.git cd misode.github.io npm install npm run dev Visit localhost:3000 and it'll hot-reload as you edit. The project uses Preact (a lighter React alternative) and Vite, so development is fast. Build times are quick. But honestly - unless you're contributing new generators - the hosted version is all you need. What You Can Actually Build With Misode The project includes generators for dozens of things. Here are the ones that save you the most time: GitHub project card for misode/misode.github.io Loot Tables customize what blocks and mobs drop. Want diamonds three times more common in your world? Done. Want custom items only in specific chest loot? Set it up visually, no JSON wrestling. Commands - there's a generator for complex command chains. Conditional executes, teleports with specific rotations, data modification stacks. Instead of typing `/execute if entity @s[scores=...] run teleport @s 100 64 200`, you build it step by step with dropdowns. Predicates are the logic gates of data packs. "Give this loot only if the player is in biome X and has enchantment Y and is sneaking." Misode's predicate builder honestly beats writing these by hand. The nesting gets complex fast, and the visual interface prevents mistakes. Advancements let you set up custom progression. A whole achievement tree - "Defeat 10 custom mobs, then unlock this boss fight, then unlock a special reward." The generator handles branching and triggers. It's the kind of thing that takes 20 minutes to write JSON for, and two minutes in Misode. Recipes handle custom crafting to smelting recipes. Shaped, shapeless, special recipes. Straightforward but saves time versus hand-JSON. If you're building a server or world with custom player progression, you'd pair Misode for the mechanics side with tools like our Minecraft Skin Creator for custom appearances. And when you're fine-tuning loot, our Minecraft Block Search helps you find the exact blocks and items you need for your tables. For modded content, there's support for generators beyond vanilla - custom biomes, modded items, that sort of thing - though you'll need to check what's available in the current instance. Common Mistakes and Things That Trip People Up Scope creep is real with Misode. It makes creating so easy that you end up building ten custom items when you meant to build one. Set a specific goal before you start. Version compatibility matters more than people realize. If you're building for a 1.20 server but generate for 1.21, small differences in NBT or command syntax can silently break things. Always check the version dropdown before you start - there's no warning if you get it wrong. Not every edge case has a UI. If your idea is 90% standard (custom loot with standard drops) but 10% weird (some custom NBT field that Misode doesn't expose), you'll end up hand-editing the JSON afterward anyway. That's totally fine, but understand the generator isn't a complete solution for everything. It's a 90% tool. Open one of the downloaded JSON files and actually read what Misode generated. Understanding the output makes debugging way easier when something doesn't work. You'll see the structure, the command syntax, the NBT paths - and next time you'll know what to modify by hand. The project supports multiple languages via Weblate (SPGoding's community translation platform). If your language isn't perfect, you can help improve it. The localization is pretty active, so contributing is appreciated. How This Stacks Up Against Alternatives Writing JSON by hand is technically an option. It's also technically how you'd fix an engine by hand instead of replacing it - possible, but why suffer? DataPackHub exists, but it's more of a sharing/discovery site than a builder. Some people use external JSON editors with validation, which works but defeats the purpose of a visual interface and makes you learn JSON syntax. Spyglass MC is excellent for power users who want an IDE-like experience with syntax highlighting and debugging, but it's overkill if you just want to create a few packs. Misode's real advantage is that it's zero-friction. No installation, no syntax to learn, no validation errors. Just dropdowns and download. For most people - hobbyists, server admins, creators building custom worlds - Misode is the right tool. It's fast, it's free, it requires no setup, and it outputs standard data packs that work anywhere. Ready to try misode.github.io? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit misode/misode.github.io on GitHub ↗ --- ### Geyser: Playing Java Servers from Bedrock Edition URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/geyser-bedrock-java-servers Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "A bridge/proxy allowing you to connect to Minecraft: Java Edition servers with Minecraft: Bedrock Edition." GeyserMC/Geyser · github.com ⭐ 5,521 stars Ever wanted to hop on a Java Edition server but only own Bedrock? Geyser is a translation layer that lets Bedrock players join Java servers, converting the protocol differences on the fly. It's not pixel-perfect, but for cross-edition play, it's the closest thing to magic the community's built. What This Project Actually Does Geyser sits between your Bedrock client and a Java server, translating packets in real time. Bedrock sends its protocol version, Geyser converts it to what Java servers understand, and then converts the server's responses back for Bedrock. It sounds simple, but the two editions are architecturally different enough that this is genuinely impressive engineering work. The MIT-licensed project has over 5500 stars on GitHub, which tells you it's not some fringe experiment. It's actively maintained and works well enough that thousands of players use it daily. Why You'd Actually Want This Your friends on Bedrock can't play your Java server. That's been the frustrating reality for years. Geyser closes that gap without making anyone buy different hardware or switch editions. You've got a few real use cases here: Running a server where Bedrock and Java players mix together Testing servers on a device that only supports Bedrock Accessing Java servers from PlayStation, Nintendo Switch, or mobile without needing a PC Developing and testing network changes that affect both editions If you're running a public server, this is genuinely valuable. You're not locked to one edition. Getting Geyser Running Installation depends on what you're doing. Most people run Geyser as a standalone proxy that sits in front of their Java server. Clone the repo and build it: bashgit clone https://github.com/GeyserMC/Geyser.git cd Geyser git submodule update - init - recursive./gradlew build The built JAR ends up in the bootstrap/build folder. Then you configure it to point to your Java server, start the proxy, and tell Bedrock players to connect to your proxy's IP and port 19132 (Bedrock's default). Your Java server keeps running on its normal Java port (25565). Geyser just sits in front and translates. Simple setup, honestly. There's a test server at test.geysermc.org if you want to see it working without building anything: Java players connect to port 25565, Bedrock players connect to port 19132. What Actually Works Core gameplay translates really well. Block placement, mining, movement, inventory, crafting. You won't notice anything wrong for basic survival play. Chat works. Your Bedrock friends see Java player messages, and vice versa. Commands are mostly supported. Enchanting works. Brewing stands work. The project supports Bedrock versions 1.21.130 through 1.21.132, and Java 1.21.11. Those aren't the absolute latest snapshots, but they're current enough for real servers. One genuinely neat feature: Geyser translates skins. Bedrock players see Java skins on the server (converted to Bedrock format), and Java players see Bedrock skins. Not perfectly, but well enough that you're not staring at Steve clones. Where It Gets Messy Here's the caveat: Geyser isn't a perfect translation. Some things just don't work the same way between editions. Movement detection is the big one. Java has more stringent anticheat checks, and Bedrock movement is slightly different by design. Large servers with strict anticheat might flag Bedrock players as suspicious. Geyser can't fix this - it's a fundamental difference in how the clients move in-game. Some entity animations don't translate perfectly. Bedrock and Java have slightly different interpretations of how mobs and players move. On your screen it might look fine, but the translation layer can introduce weird movement artifacts if you're watching closely. Certain features just won't work. Bedrock doesn't have the same redstone system as Java, so complex redstone contraptions might not behave identically. Mods and plugins that expect Java-specific mechanics won't translate. Some rare blocks or items have no Bedrock equivalent. The project documentation is honest about this: don't expect everything to work perfectly. But for survival play, creative mode, and most vanilla features, you'll be fine. Tips and Common Gotchas Most issues come down to configuration. Your proxy port needs to be accessible from the internet if you're doing this across networks. Make sure your firewall allows both 25565 (Java) and 19132 (Bedrock). Bedrock players often get confused about "realm" versus "server" terminology. Make sure they understand they're connecting to a proxy, not a realm. The address might look weird to them (IP:port instead of a realm code). Performance can degrade if you're translating for too many players at once. The proxy needs CPU power to handle the packet translation for dozens of simultaneous connections. On a beefy box it's fine, but on shared hosting it might struggle. Test with just one Bedrock player first. Get them to run basic commands, mine a few blocks, place something, chat. If all that works, add more. Jumping straight to "bring 30 Bedrock friends" is how you debug mysteriously broken servers. Other Ways to Cross-Play If Geyser isn't your thing, there are alternatives, though they're more limited. Some server hosting providers offer "Bedrock Plus" features that let console players on Java servers, but this is usually vendor-specific and not portable. You're locked into their infrastructure. Building a custom plugin layer is theoretically possible, but you'd be reimplementing a lot of what Geyser already does. Not worth the effort for most servers. For smaller communities, just running separate Bedrock and Java servers and coordinating manually is sometimes simpler than managing a proxy. But if you want true cross-edition play, Geyser is genuinely your best option. If you're running a Minecraft server yourself, you might also want to check out our Minecraft Votifier Tester to validate voting plugins. And if you're working with skins across editions, browsing what's available at minecraft.how skins can give you an idea of what translates well between the two formats.GeyserMC/Geyser - MIT, ★5521 Ready to try Geyser? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit GeyserMC/Geyser on GitHub ↗ --- ### How LuckPerms Simplifies Minecraft Server Permissions URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/luckperms-minecraft-permissions Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice "A permissions plugin for Minecraft servers." LuckPerms/LuckPerms · github.com ⭐ 2,253 stars If you've ever tried to manage a Minecraft server with players constantly asking \"why can't I break blocks?\" or \"when do I get mod status?\", you know that permission systems are the backbone of any decent server. LuckPerms handles this for you, turning permission chaos into something actually manageable.What This Project DoesMinecraft servers aren't like single-player worlds where you control everything. The moment you have other people playing, you need to decide who can build, who can use admin commands, who can sell items in shops, and a hundred other things. That's where permissions come in.LuckPerms is a plugin that sits between your players and the commands they try to run. Instead of manually editing endless permission files or using clunky UI tools, you define groups (like \"Moderator\", \"VIP\", \"Builder\"), assign permissions to those groups, and then put players into the right groups. Done.It sounds simple, but the execution matters. LuckPerms does this fast enough that it doesn't cause lag, reliably enough that hundreds of thousands of players trust it, and flexibly enough to support everything from tiny survival servers to massive networks with thousands of concurrent players. The project's been around for years and has 2253 stars on GitHub because it actually solves the problem well.Actually, let me back up. If you're running a small white-listed server with friends, you probably don't need this. But if you're building something real with ranks, moderators, and different rule sets for different player types, this is exactly what you reach for. Why You'd Use ItThere are a few reasons people end up installing LuckPerms.First: you're growing. You started with five friends, but now you've got 30 players. Suddenly you need mods who can help you, builders who can place blocks but not destroy them, and VIPs who paid for cosmetic perks. Managing all that by hand is painful.Second: you're running a network. Maybe you've got a survival server, a creative server, and a PvP arena all on different machines, but you want players to keep their rank across all three. LuckPerms handles that through shared databases, so one config system controls your entire network.Third: you want something you don't have to fight. Some permission plugins are notoriously buggy or slow. I've seen servers lag out just from checking permissions during peak hours. LuckPerms was built to avoid that.The plugin also lets you use a web editor instead of editing config files in a text editor. Seriously, if you've ever messed up a YAML indentation and locked yourself out of your own server, you'll appreciate not having to do that every time you promote someone. Installation and Basic SetupGetting LuckPerms running depends on what kind of server you're using. The project supports Bukkit, Spigot, Paper, Velocity, BungeeCord, Fabric, and a few others. For the most common setup (Paper server), here's what you do:Download the plugin JAR from the official siteDrop it into your plugins folderRestart your serverRun the initial setup commandscode/lp create default /lp group default permission set essentials.home /lp group default permission set essentials.sethomeThat creates a basic \"default\" group that all players join automatically, and gives them permission to use home commands from Essentials.If you're on a BungeeCord network with multiple servers, you'll want to set up a shared database (MySQL or PostgreSQL both work) so permissions sync across your proxy and all connected servers. The documentation walks through the database setup pretty clearly.One thing to keep in mind after installation: make sure your server's other settings are configured correctly. The MOTD creator can help you set up an appealing server message, and the server properties generator saves you from manually tweaking every single setting. Core Features ExplainedPermission nodes are the foundation. A node is just a text string like essentials.home or minecraft.command.say. You assign these to groups and they cascade down to players. Simple concept, but there's real power in how flexibly you can organize them.Groups are where the actual work happens. You create \"Moderator\", \"VIP\", \"Builder\", whatever structure makes sense for your server. Then you assign permissions to those groups. A VIP might get shop.discount but not admin.ban. A moderator gets admin.ban but not admin.restart. Each group can inherit from other groups, which prevents you from duplicating the same permissions across five different rank configs.The web editor (usually at localhost:8080 while you're setting up) lets you create groups, add permissions, and see what each rank can actually do without diving into config files or running dozens of commands. For me, this was way more intuitive than the command line, especially when first learning the system.Storage options are flexible. You can store permissions in a YAML file (simple for small servers), a SQLite database, MySQL, or even MongoDB. For anything bigger than a single server, using a database makes syncing permissions across multiple servers way easier.Permission inheritance deserves its own mention because it's clever. If your \"Helper\" group inherits from \"Member\", then Helper gets everything Member has plus whatever extras you define. This is powerful for large servers with complex rank hierarchies.Wildcards are another feature that saves time. Instead of listing essentials.home, essentials.sethome, essentials.teleport individually, you can just assign essentials.* to give access to all Essentials commands. Most plugins support this, though you should check the docs for your specific plugins. Common PitfallsPermission nodes are case-sensitive. I've watched admins spend an hour wondering why permissions weren't working, only to discover they typed Essentials.home instead of essentials.home. It's annoying, but it's also consistent.Inheritance order can surprise you too. If you've overlapping permissions (one group allows something, another denies it), the order matters. Generally, deny takes precedence, but you've to think about your group hierarchy carefully.Testing permissions before letting players loose is easy to skip. Use /lp user [playername] permission check [node] to verify someone actually has a permission before they complain it's broken. It saves debugging time later.Server type compatibility matters. A Bukkit plugin is different from a Velocity proxy plugin. Both use LuckPerms, but they've slightly different features and command sets. Make sure you're downloading the right version for your setup.Caching can cause weird behavior if you're not careful. If you edit permissions directly in the config files instead of using commands, you sometimes need to run /lp sync to reload everything. Using the web editor or commands avoids this issue entirely. AlternativesPermissionsEx was the old standard before LuckPerms took over. So it works, but it's slower and doesn't get as much maintenance love. If you're already using it, migrating to LuckPerms is doable.GroupManager is another option, especially if you're running an older Bukkit server. It's simpler, which is good for tiny servers, but it doesn't scale as well as LuckPerms for larger networks.There are also some third-party web-based management tools that hook into LuckPerms, but honestly, once you learn the commands or the built-in web editor, you don't really need a separate tool. Where to go from here Read the source on GitHub (docs, examples, and the issue tracker) Browse open issues to see what the community is working on Check recent releases for the latest build or changelog --- ### AuthMeReloaded: The Authentication Plugin Every Server Needs URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/authme-reloaded-minecraft-security Published: 2026-04-20 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project AuthMeReloaded (AuthMe/AuthMeReloaded) The best authentication plugin for the Bukkit/Spigot API! Star on GitHub ↗ .0 If you're running a Minecraft server, account security isn't optional. AuthMeReloaded solves a problem that shouldn't exist in the first place: players getting their accounts stolen right under your nose. It locks down authentication so only the real player can log in, blocking imposters before they even load into the world. What This Plugin Does in Plain English AuthMeReloaded is a Bukkit/Spigot authentication plugin that forces players to log in before they can do anything on your server. No moving. No typing commands. No accessing inventory. Nothing until they've proven they're who they claim to be. The core idea is straightforward. A player joins, gets prompted to create or enter a password, and only then can they interact with your world. It's especially important if you run your server in offline mode, where Minecraft's account verification doesn't exist. But it's equally useful for online-mode servers as an extra security layer against compromised accounts and opportunistic griefers. Version 5.7.0 brought serious improvements to stability and reliability, with fixes to reconnect handling, mail delivery, and concurrent access issues that plagued earlier builds. Why You'd Actually Want This Picture this: you build an incredible town with your friends. Someone logs in as another player and starts tearing it apart. By the time you notice, half your work is gone. And this happens on servers without authentication every single day. AuthMeReloaded prevents that scenario entirely. Here's what actually gets protected: Offline-mode servers - where anyone can claim any username. Authentication becomes your only defense. Alt accounts and stolen credentials - even if someone knows a player's password, they're locked out if they can't reach the server to brute-force it. Account takeover during reconnects - the 5.7.0 release fixed a nasty edge case where a player's entities and mounted vehicles weren't restored reliably after disconnect. Now they're. Spam and bot attacks - the built-in AntiBot system kicks players with suspiciously short or long usernames before they flood your server with garbage. And yes, there's session support. Log in once, stay logged in across reconnects so you're not typing your password constantly. It's a quality-of-life feature that survives actual use, not something that breaks on edge cases. Setting It Up Installation is standard Bukkit plugin stuff. First, download the latest build. The current release (5.7.0) requires Java 17 or higher, which most modern servers already run. If you're still on Java 11, you'll need to update before upgrading from an older AuthMe version. bashcd /path/to/server/plugins wget https://github.com/AuthMe/AuthMeReloaded/releases/download/5.7.0/AuthMe-5.7.0.jar Drop the JAR in your plugins folder and restart the server. AuthMeReloaded generates a config file automatically on first load. bashplugins/AuthMe/config.yml That config file is where everything lives. Register settings, login delays, email recovery rules, database backend, allowed countries, and hundreds of other options. You don't need to touch most of them. The defaults work fine for a standard server. Database setup is optional but recommended for larger communities. SQLite ships as the default (no setup required), but you can point it at MySQL if you want accounts synced across multiple servers. The project handles both cleanly without weird workarounds. Key Features Worth Knowing About Email recovery that actually works - forget your password? Players can use `/forgot_password` to reset via email. The 5.7.0 release fixed SMTP reliability by moving mail delivery off the main server thread, so emails send asynchronously and don't freeze your game. Previous versions would lock up your server while waiting for SMTP. Not anymore. Two-factor authentication - enable 2FA and players add an extra security layer. It's not forced on everyone (which would be annoying), but it's available for players who want it. Country-based access control - whitelist or blacklist entire countries using MaxMind GeoIP data. Someone logging in from a VPN in a blocked country? Kicked. And this is less about security and more about compliance or regional restrictions if your server has those needs. ForceLogin for admins - admins can force-login as another player via console if they need to investigate something or help someone stuck. It's a backdoor designed for legitimate use, not account hijacking. Limbo protection - when a player joins, they're stuck in a safe zone (limbo) until authenticated. They can't move out of spawn, can't see other players, can't cause trouble. The 5.7.0 release fixed stale disk limbo data that would accumulate if players quit during the authentication flow. That was eating storage for no reason on some servers. Tips and Gotchas Authentication feels smooth if configured right, but there are a few things that catch new admins. First: test your email settings before going live. The plugin can send recovery emails, but if your SMTP configuration is wrong, frustrated players won't get their password reset links. Set up a test account, try `/forgot_password`, and verify the email arrives. This takes ten minutes and saves hours of player complaints. Second: the y = 0 teleport bug was real in older versions. Players who got teleported to authenticate sometimes ended up at y = 0 and took fall damage in the void. Version 5.7.0 fixed this, but if you're running an older build, update. Third: spawning unregistered players in the wrong place. If you allow players to join without registering (which you probably don't), but they're not forced to register either, they can end up spawning somewhere weird. Actually, scratch that, just enable forced registration. It's simpler. One more thing: concurrent access on SQLite. If your server is small, you probably won't notice. But SQLite can only handle one write at a time. If fifty players try to log in simultaneously (like during a restart), SQLite gets bottlenecked. The 5.7.0 release improved concurrent handling, but if you're planning a bigger community, migrate to MySQL early. It scales properly. And one tiny note, actually, that only works on 1.20.4+. The newer versions of ProtocolLib that AuthMe uses dropped support for older Minecraft versions. Check your server version if you're running something ancient. What You Can Customize Nearly every message is translatable. Player sees "Please register" but you want it in Spanish or Russian? Translations exist for a ton of languages already. If your language isn't supported, create a translation file and submit it to the project. The maintainers have always been responsive about adding community translations (which is genuinely cool). Commands are translatable too, as of 5.7.0. This is a nice quality-of-life improvement for international servers where players aren't all using English. If you're building a server with custom branding, you can swap the authentication messages entirely. Instead of "Please log in with /login password", make it say whatever fits your server's vibe. It's all in config. Alternatives Worth Considering AuthMeReloaded dominates the space, but alternatives exist. LoginSecurity is simpler if you want a lightweight option (though it's less maintained). MultiLogin handles multi-server authentication if you're running a network and want one account across servers. But for single-server setups and communities that want feature-rich authentication with email recovery and 2FA built in, AuthMeReloaded is the default for a reason: it works, it's stable, and the developers actually maintain it. If you're building a server and want to add custom skins to your world, check out the Minecraft Skin Creator. Or if you want to customize your MOTD, the Minecraft MOTD Creator can help you generate a compelling server description that shows up in the server list. Ready to try AuthMeReloaded? Grab the source, read the full documentation, or open an issue on GitHub. Star the repo if you find it useful. It helps the maintainers and surfaces the project for other Minecraft players. Visit AuthMe/AuthMeReloaded on GitHub ↗ ---