# minecraft.how — Full content index for LLMs > Long-form extract of recent blog content. For a structured route map, see /llms.txt. ## Recent blog posts (full text) ### Minecraft Horse Guide: How to Tame, Breed and Farm Them URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-horse-spawning-drops-farming Published: 2026-05-27 Author: ice Horses spawn in plains and savanna biomes, usually in small herds, and drop leather plus a little experience when they die. You tame one by climbing onto its back over and over until the hearts pop, then breed pairs using golden apples or golden carrots. That's the quick version. Getting a genuinely good horse is where the real game starts. Where Horses Spawn Open grassland is what you're after. Horses generate in Plains, Sunflower Plains, and the Savanna group (Savanna, Savanna Plateau, and Windswept Savanna). They appear in herds of two to six, and every animal in that herd has a 20% chance of spawning as a foal. So if you stumble onto a group with babies trotting around, congrats, that's free breeding stock for later. Coat color gets decided the moment they spawn. The Minecraft Wiki lists seven base colors (white, creamy, chestnut, brown, black, gray, and dark brown) layered with five marking patterns, which works out to 35 possible looks. None of it touches their stats. A pasty white horse can be a rocket; a gorgeous black You can be a slug. Looks lie. One thing worth flagging: a whole herd usually shares the same color. Mojang spawns them that way to mimic real herds, so chasing variety means wandering between biomes. Finding them fast comes down to terrain. Skip forests, jungles, and anything steep. If you land somewhere green and flat, sprint along the edges where plains meets savanna, since those borders tend to be horse-rich. On a server I played last month we turned up three separate herds within about 400 blocks of spawn just by following a river through flat grassland. How to Tame a Horse No items needed to start, which surprises people. Walk up to a wild horse with an empty hand (or at least nothing it can eat) and right-click to mount. It'll buck you off. Climb back on. Repeat. Each attempt raises the horse's hidden 'temper' value, and once temper crosses the threshold, hearts appear and the horse is yours. Alexwithcapeonahorse in Minecraft The Fastest Way to Tame Feeding speeds things up massively. Sugar, wheat, and apples each nudge temper upward, golden carrots push harder, and golden apples give the biggest single jump. If you've got gold to burn, a couple of golden apples can tame a stubborn horse in two or three tries instead of ten. Worth it when you've finally cornered a horse that looks promising. Then comes the saddle. You still can't craft one, after all these years, so you're digging through dungeon and stronghold chests, fishing, or trading with leatherworker villagers. Once it's equipped you steer fully. Horse armor is optional but smart if you ride near mobs: leather, iron, gold, and diamond versions exist, and only the leather one is craftable. What Horses Drop Kill a horse and you get 0 to 2 leather, plus 1 to 3 experience if a player lands the final blow. Looting raises the leather ceiling by one per level, so Looting III can pull up to 5 hides from a single horse. Foals drop nothing at all, which is both merciful and a little annoying if you were hoping for a quick payout. A tamed brown horse with a saddle standing in a Minecraft plains biome at sunset Tamed horses also drop whatever they're wearing. Saddle, horse armor, the lot. Lose your prized stallion to a creeper and you can at least scoop the saddle back off the ground, assuming the blast didn't fling it into a ravine. Breeding and Farming for Better Stats This is where horses get genuinely fun. A tamed brown horse with a saddle standing in a Minecraft plains biome at sunset Feed two tamed adults a golden apple or golden carrot each and they'll enter love mode and produce a foal. The catch (and honestly the whole point) is how that foal's stats get calculated. Every horse rolls three hidden stats: health, movement speed, and jump strength. When you breed two horses, the foal inherits an average of both parents for each stat, then mixes in a third completely random value. Breed two fast parents and you've got a strong shot at a faster baby. Keep breeding your two best, and you slowly climb toward the ceiling. What's the ceiling? Roughly 30 health (15 hearts), around 14.23 blocks per second of speed, and a jump high enough to clear about five blocks. Well, closer to five and a quarter if you want to be precise, but who's measuring. For comparison, normal walking is about 4.3 blocks a second, so a maxed horse is properly quick. Foals take 20 minutes to grow up on their own. You can shave that down by feeding them the same way you'd grow any baby animal: sugar, wheat, hay bales, and the gold foods all knock time off the clock. A hay bale is the cheapest big boost if you've got a wheat farm running. Spotting a good horse without mods is mostly feel. Speed you notice the second you ride. Jump strength you test against a two or three block wall. Health is the hard one to eyeball, so a lot of breeders just assume their fastest horse is also their toughest and move on. Not scientific, but it works. Now, leather farming. People ask about it, and honestly? Cows win. A cow farm gives more reliable leather with far less faffing about, and cows breed on plain wheat instead of gold. Horses are worth farming for the perfect mount, not for hides. If you want a leather machine, build a cow pen and walk away. Half the fun is showing the thing off, of course. I keep a small stable on my survival world purely for racing friends, and before anyone joins I'll tweak the server greeting with the Minecraft MOTD creator so the lobby actually looks the part. Petty? Sure. Worth it? Also yes. Donkeys, Mules, and the Spooky Variants Horses aren't the only rideable hooved mob. Donkeys spawn in Plains and Meadow biomes, move a touch slower, but carry a chest worth 15 slots of storage, which turns them into rolling backpacks. Breed a horse with a donkey and you get a mule, also chest-capable. Mules can't breed with each other, though, so every single one is a one-off. Then there's the creepy corner. Skeleton horses arrive through 'skeleton traps', those innocent-looking lone horses that spawn during thunderstorms and zap a squad of skeleton riders at you the moment you wander close. Survive the ambush, tame one, and you've got a mount that ignores fall damage and walks happily underwater. Zombie horses exist too, but they're unobtainable in survival without commands. And if you're decking out a screenshot of your new skeletal steed, grab a matching look from our Minecraft skins library. A skeleton horse deserves a rider that fits. Is a Stable Worth Building? For most players, one good tamed horse covers everything. Honestly, faster than walking, completely free, and you'll bond with it more than you'd admit. If you're the type who wants the absolute fastest mount on the server, though, a breeding stable pays off. Tame four or five, keep the two best, breed, drop the slow foals from the rotation, repeat. After a few generations you'll have something that crosses a savanna in seconds flat. As of 26.1.2 the stat math hasn't changed, so older breeding guides still hold up fine. Just bring a serious pile of golden carrots. --- ### How to Run ZMusic, the Minecraft Music Plugin, in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/zmusic-plugin-minecraft-music Published: 2026-05-27 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project zmusic-plugin (zmusic-dev/zmusic-plugin) 强大的 Minecraft 音乐系统,支持歌词/歌单/多平台 | Powerful Minecraft music system with lyrics, playlists, and multi-platform support Star on GitHub ↗ .0 Want music playing across your Minecraft server without telling everyone to alt-tab into a separate app? That's the gap ZMusic fills. It's a server plugin that lets players search for songs, queue them for the whole server, and read scrolling lyrics, all from inside the game. Personal playlists too, if you'd rather keep your taste to yourself. What ZMusic Does At its core, ZMusic turns your server into a jukebox anyone can feed. A player searches for a track by keyword, picks one from the results, and it plays. You can fire off a server-wide request so everyone hears it, or keep playback to just yourself. It pulls from more than one search source, so you're not locked into a single platform's catalog. The lyrics part surprised me. ZMusic shows synced lyrics while a track plays, and it can display a translated version right alongside the original. On a server with players scattered across different countries, that's a genuinely thoughtful feature. Playlists come in two flavors: personal and server-wide. Your lobby can loop a curated global playlist while individual players still build their own. Add volume control and BungeeCord support (so it works across a linked network, not just one box) and you've got a fairly complete setup. It's written in Kotlin and sits at 151 stars. The bStats counters show real servers running it, which is more than you can say for a lot of hobby plugins. Why You'd Bother Running It Picture a hub server. Players load in, and instead of dead silence there's a track playing that someone queued thirty seconds ago. That's the obvious use. But the request feature is where it gets fun. Roleplay servers spin up in-character radio stations. Build servers throw on background music during long sessions. I've seen the listening-party angle work surprisingly well too: someone queues an album, everyone hangs out on a plot, and it turns into a social thing rather than a feature nobody touches. A silent server feels like a tech demo. A server with a shared soundtrack feels alive. Would I run it on a hardcore survival server where immersion is the whole point? Probably not. Right tool, right server. Getting It Installed This is a standard Paper plugin install, so if you've ever dropped a jar into a plugins folder you already know the drill. Grab the release jar from GitHub: bashwget https://github.com/zmusic-dev/zmusic-plugin/releases/download/2.12.0/zmusic-plugin-2.12.0-all.jar Then move it into your server's plugins directory and restart: bashmv zmusic-plugin-2.12.0-all.jar /path/to/server/plugins/ # restart the server so the plugin loads There's a second download in the releases, the addon jar (zmusic-addon-2.5.0-all.jar). The 2.12.0 changelog notes the addon got bumped to 2.5.0 to round out high-version Paper support, and the same notes mention adapting to Paper 1.21.11, so on a newer Paper build you'll likely want both files rather than just the main plugin. Exact in-game commands and config options live in the project's docs (over at zmusic.zhenxin.me), and I'd point you there rather than guess at syntax, since the 2.12.0 release actually rebuilt the login system to support multiple login methods. The docs are the source of truth here. One practical aside: if you're spinning up a fresh server to test this, a clean memorable address beats handing friends a raw IP. minecraft.how has a free Minecraft DNS tool that sorts that out in a couple of minutes. Features Worth Knowing About A few things stand out once you're past setup. Multi-source keyword search You don't need a song's exact ID or URL. Type a keyword, get results from several sources, pick one. This matters more than it sounds, because no single platform has everything, and search sources go down or change their APIs constantly. Having a few to fall back on keeps requests from dead-ending. Lyrics, with translation Synced lyrics scroll as the track plays, and the translation display is the real treat: original and translated lines together. Great for international communities, or honestly just for figuring out what that one song is actually saying. Personal and server-wide playlists Two layers here. A global playlist the whole server shares (handy for a lobby on loop) and personal playlists each player curates. Volume control sits on top so nobody gets blasted out of their chair. Now-playing toasts The changelog's mention of fixing "Paper 1.21.11 Toast" points at the plugin using those little achievement-style popups for now-playing info. Small touch, but it means players see what's spinning without spamming chat. Bilibili full-video playback The latest release widened Bilibili support from music-only to full video audio, and patched the audio conversion headers plus a transcoding timeout that used to trip it up. If your community leans on that platform, recent versions handle it noticeably better. Where People Get Tripped Up First thing: ZMusic is built around Chinese music platforms and the deeper docs are primarily in Chinese. There are English and Japanese readme versions, but the detailed documentation assumes some comfort with the original. Not a dealbreaker, just set expectations. Second, it's GPL-3.0 licensed. Totally fine for running on your server, but if you fork it or build on top, you inherit GPL obligations (your derivative has to stay open under the same license). Worth knowing before you start hacking on it. Then there's version drift. Minecraft moves fast, and a plugin doing low-level audio work has to chase NMS changes constantly. The project clearly keeps up (the changelog shows Paper 1.21.11 fixes), but always match the plugin version to your server version rather than assuming the newest jar runs everywhere. Actually, that goes for the addon too, not just the main plugin. And the addon. People grab the main plugin, skip the addon jar, then wonder why newer Paper builds misbehave. If you're on a recent Paper, grab both. Alternatives Worth a Look ZMusic isn't the only way to get audio into Minecraft, though it's one of the more feature-packed plugins for actual song requests. OpenAudioMc takes a different route. It streams audio to a browser companion tab and shines at region-based ambient sound, like different music in different areas of your map. Honestly, less about letting players DJ, more about atmosphere. For the truly old-school, there are note-block song plugins that play tunes through Minecraft's own sound engine with no external audio at all. Limited, but they work on any client with zero setup. And if your real goal is voice plus a little music, a voice-chat mod scratches a completely different itch. Different tool, different job. My Take ZMusic is genuinely impressive for what it's: a polished, actively maintained music system that handles the whole loop from search to synced lyrics. The lyric translation alone puts it ahead of most options I've tried. The catch is the Chinese-platform and Chinese-docs orientation. If your community is comfortable with that, this is one of the better picks out there. If not, you'll spend some time in translation tools getting it dialed in. Either way, it's the kind of project that makes a server feel less like an empty world and more like a place people want to hang out. (And if you're polishing the vibe anyway, minecraft.how's skin creator is a fun rabbit hole for giving yourself a fresh look while the music plays.) 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 --- ### Wurst7: The Fabric Minecraft Client Mod Explained URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/wurst7-minecraft-client-guide Published: 2026-05-27 Author: ice GitHub · Minecraft community project Wurst7 (Wurst-Imperium/Wurst7) Minecraft Wurst Hacked Client v7 Star on GitHub ↗ ⭐ 1,303 stars.0 If you've ever spent ten minutes strip mining when you could've been anywhere else, Wurst7 is the Fabric mod that answers that frustration. One install, hundreds of toggleable tools, all accessible from a single in-game interface without extra setup. What Wurst7 Is (and Isn't) Let's be upfront about what this project actually is. Wurst7 calls itself a "cheat client" - that's the phrase the maintainer uses, and it's accurate. It includes features that most multiplayer servers explicitly prohibit. If you're thinking about running it on a public server, check the rules first. Most servers with active anti-cheat will detect it and ban the account. That said, there are completely legitimate reasons to have a client like this. Singleplayer worlds where you want to explore without normal constraints. Your own private server. Servers that explicitly allow client mods. Understanding how Minecraft's systems work from an unusual angle. All valid, and Wurst7 handles all of them well. The project is built on Fabric, which means installation works like any other Fabric mod. It's open source under a GPL-3.0 license, and the GitHub repository sits at over 1,300 stars. The primary language is Java. That means the source is readable and auditable if you want to understand exactly what it does before running it. How to Install Wurst7 Three things need to be in place before anything works: the Fabric loader for your Minecraft version, the Fabric API, and the Wurst7.jar file itself. All three go in the mods folder for your Minecraft install. bash# Windows mods folder: %AppData%\.minecraft\mods # macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/minecraft/mods # Linux: ~/.minecraft/mods The version matching is strict and catches a lot of new users off guard. Wurst7 releases target specific Minecraft versions, and each build expects a particular Fabric API version to go with it. Getting this wrong produces errors that look alarming but are really just a mismatch. Check the filename of the Wurst7 download, confirm it matches your exact game version, and grab the correct Fabric API version from the Modrinth or CurseForge listing. If you're setting up a private test server to try out features in a controlled environment, the server properties generator on minecraft.how is a convenient way to configure your server.properties file. There are a lot of options in that file and the defaults aren't always what you want for a test environment. One thing I'll clarify that the install guide doesn't always make obvious: Fabric API is required, not optional. If Wurst7 silently fails to load or you're getting a missing dependency error on startup, that's almost certainly the cause. Features Worth Your Time The feature list clears two hundred entries. That's too many to actually care about at once, so here's what gets used regularly in practice: XRay makes most blocks visually transparent so ore deposits show through the terrain. For finding diamonds or ancient debris in a singleplayer survival run, it removes the most tedious part of the resource loop entirely. This is also one of the first features anti-cheat systems look for, so the server use caveat applies here more than anywhere else in the mod. AutoMine handles continuous digging without holding the mouse button. Pair it with XRay and resource collection becomes fast enough that you can focus on the parts of the game that are actually interesting. Freecam detaches your camera from your player body. You can fly the viewpoint freely around the world while your character stays put. It's genuinely brilliant for scouting terrain, checking the layout of a cave system before walking into it, or getting a clean overhead view of a build project. I used it to map a dungeon from outside before committing to clearing it, which probably saved a lot of items. Is that cheating? Technically, yes. Did the dungeon deserve it? Also yes. AutoFarm handles crop maintenance automatically. If you've built a large food farm in singleplayer and don't want to babysit it, this does what you'd expect. Navigator is more of a quality-of-life feature than a gameplay feature. It's a searchable list of all the client's commands and toggles. Once you know what you want from Wurst7, Navigator is much faster than clicking through category tabs to find it. The ClickGUI The main interface organizes features into category tabs: Combat, Movement, Render, World, and others. Each feature shows its current state with a settings gear for anything configurable. It takes a session or two to learn where things live, and the first time you open it the sheer number of options is slightly overwhelming. After you've ignored the hundred things you don't want and bookmarked the ones you do, it settles into something genuinely usable. There's also a scripting system for users who want to automate more complex sequences. That side is more involved to set up, but the Wurst wiki covers it in reasonable detail. What Trips People Up Version mismatches cause more confusion than anything else. Every Wurst7 download targets a specific Minecraft version, and each of those targets a specific Fabric API version. Wrong combination, broken install. Check all three version numbers before assuming something else is wrong. Some features conflict with vanilla rendering behavior. If the game looks wrong after enabling something, toggling that feature off immediately fixes it. And certain visual features are GPU-intensive on older hardware. A sharp framerate drop after enabling Wurst7 features is almost always traceable to something specific you just turned on. Running Wurst7 alongside other Fabric mods can produce conflicts, especially with anything that touches movement or rendering systems. When something behaves unexpectedly in a multi-mod setup, disable Wurst7 features one at a time before blaming the other mod. And the server point one more time, because it genuinely matters: most public multiplayer servers run anti-cheat systems. Even servers that don't explicitly state a no-cheating policy are usually running something in the background. Using Wurst7 on these servers will likely result in a ban. Keep it to singleplayer or your own server unless the server you're joining has explicitly said client mods are allowed. What You're Probably Not Thinking About The Wurst7 source code is publicly available and has been around long enough that the community has had plenty of time to review it. Being open source doesn't make something automatically trustworthy, but it does make it much harder to hide anything problematic. For a project at this visibility level, that matters. Wurst7 won't make Minecraft run better. And it has nothing to do with performance, framerates, or shader support. If smoother gameplay is your goal, Sodium, Lithium, and Iris are the Fabric mods you want for that. These are completely separate projects with a completely separate purpose. Also worth knowing: Wurst7 has Baritone integration built in. Baritone is a pathfinding automation system that can handle tasks like mining a target ore or navigating to coordinates. I initially treated these as competing options, but you don't have to pick one - Wurst7 exposes Baritone's functionality directly from its interface. While you're spending time in those singleplayer worlds, your character's appearance is worth thinking about. If you want a fresh look for your sessions, browsing Minecraft skins on minecraft.how is the quickest way to find something that fits. Alternatives Worth Knowing Meteor Client covers similar ground. Also a Fabric cheat client, also open source, and it has an active addon ecosystem that extends the base feature set significantly. Some users prefer its interface layout. Real talk, if Wurst7 doesn't fit, Meteor is the natural second option to try. If you specifically want task automation rather than a full feature set, standalone Baritone is worth looking at directly. But it goes deeper on pathfinding and automation than Wurst7's integration does, and it has detailed documentation for complex use cases like automated mining routes. Different tool for a different kind of player. My Take For singleplayer players who want to move faster, find resources without the grind, or just explore Minecraft's systems without the normal restrictions, Wurst7 does what it says. The project has been actively maintained for years, the wiki is thorough, and the community forum has real answers to specific questions. This 1,300+ GitHub stars reflect a project people keep coming back to. Just don't take it onto servers where it isn't allowed. That's not a moral lecture, it's practical advice: you'll get banned, and no feature list is worth losing an account you use regularly on multiplayer servers. Ready to try Wurst7? 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 Wurst-Imperium/Wurst7 on GitHub ↗ --- ### Minecraft 26.2-pre-1: Everything New in the Snapshot URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-pre-1-snapshot-1 Published: 2026-05-27 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2-pre-1 is the first pre-release for the 26.2 update, which means the feature work is basically wrapped and Mojang has switched into final bug-squashing mode. It builds straight on 26.1.2, leaning on stability fixes, technical cleanup, and last-minute polish instead of flashy new toys. Here's what's in it, and whether it's worth grabbing.What 'Pre-1' Tells YouThe label matters more than people give it credit for. A pre-release ('pre' for short) is a different animal from the weekly experimental snapshots that show up earlier in a development cycle, the ones stuffed with half-finished features and 'this might change' warnings.By the time Mojang ships a pre-1, they're telling you 26.2 is feature-complete. No new mobs land at this stage. No surprise blocks. The job now is hunting down bugs that slipped past earlier testing, tidying the technical plumbing, and making sure launch day doesn't turn into a fire drill. Load this expecting a pile of fresh content and you'll probably walk away a little flat.And that's fine. Pre-releases are where an update earns its trust.Quick bit of context: 26.1.2 was the last proper Java release, out on April 9, 2026, sitting on top of the bigger 26.1 update as a small maintenance patch. That's the version most people are actually playing right now. 26.2-pre-1 is the bridge to whatever 26.2 turns out to be, and most players and servers will happily stay put on 26.1.2 until the new one goes fully stable. Which is exactly how it should be.If the numbering looks unusual, that's just Mojang's calendar-style versioning doing its thing: the year-based major number, then the update within it. 26.2 is simply the second named update of this cycle, and pre-1 is the first checkpoint on its way out the door.The Fixes Doing the Heavy LiftingPre-releases live and die by their bug fixes, and that's where pre-1 spends most of its energy.A Minecraft pre-1 typically cleans up the stuff earlier snapshots introduced or exposed: crash reports tied to specific block interactions, rendering glitches, mob pathfinding doing something deeply silly near doorways (it's always doorways), and the odd world-generation hiccup. Expect a good chunk of the changelog to read like a long list of fixed issue numbers rather than headline features. Not glamorous. Very necessary.Beyond the crash list, pre-releases often smooth out the small annoyances that don't make headlines but absolutely affect how the game feels: a sound that plays at the wrong moment, a tooltip showing the wrong number, an advancement that flat-out refuses to trigger. None of it is exciting on paper. All of it adds up to an update that feels finished rather than rushed.Performance usually gets a pass too. Even modest framerate and memory tweaks in a pre-release tend to carry through to the full launch, which matters a lot if you're running on older hardware or hauling around a massive survival world that's been going for years.One honest caveat: pre-1 is the first pre-release, not the last. If you hit a weird bug, there's a real chance pre-2 or pre-3 already has it logged. Reporting it through the official bug tracker still helps, though, so don't assume someone else got there first.Technical Changes Server Owners Should WatchThis is the part most casual players scroll right past and most server admins read twice.Pre-releases are when data pack and command changes get locked in, so if you run a custom server, this snapshot is basically your early-warning system. Datapack format bumps, command tweaks, loot table adjustments, and predicate changes all tend to surface at this stage. Test your packs against the snapshot now and you sidestep a nasty surprise when 26.2 drops and half your custom mechanics quietly stop working.Trying to decide when to move your community across? Watch how the bigger public networks handle it. Browsing the Minecraft server list is a decent gut check: once the popular servers start advertising 26.2 support, the wider ecosystem (plugins, mods, the lot) is usually ready for everyone else too.World generation normally stays consistent between a release and its immediate pre-release, so your favorite 26.1 seed should still load and look the way you remember, with the biome layout mostly intact. Actually, that's worth a small correction: that holds for Java release-to-pre transitions, but Bedrock seeds don't always match Java ones, so don't assume a seed behaves identically across editions. And tools that don't depend on the game build at all, like a Nether portal calculator, keep working exactly the same across every update, which is one less thing to relearn.How to Try the Snapshot SafelyWant to poke at it without risking your real save? The launcher makes this painless. Here's the short version:Open the official Minecraft Launcher and head to the Installations tab.Click New Installation and enable snapshots in the version dropdown.Pick 26.2-pre-1, give the profile an obvious name, and save it.Copy your world folder somewhere safe before you load anything. Always.Launch the snapshot profile separately and test on a throwaway world, not your main base.That's it. Real talk, five minutes, and your real survival world never goes anywhere near an unfinished build.Java Only, And What That Means for ConsolePre-releases are a Java Edition thing. Bedrock players test upcoming content through separate beta and preview builds on their platform, not through these.That split is worth keeping in mind given how much the console side has shifted lately. Mojang spent the last couple of years pushing native versions of the game onto current-gen hardware, including the long-awaited native PS5 build that finally moved players off the older PS4 setup. The upshot is that 'what's new' can look pretty different depending on where you play, and a Java pre-release like this one doesn't map neatly onto the Bedrock or console experience.So if you're on PS5, Switch, or Xbox and wondering where your 26.2-pre-1 download button is: there isn't one, and you're not missing out. Your update comes through Bedrock's own pipeline on its own schedule.Should You Install 26.2-pre-1?My take? Put it on a separate installation, not your main world.Pre-releases are genuinely useful if you're a server owner stress-testing data packs, a mapmaker checking command behavior, or just curious enough to file a bug report or two. Spin up a fresh profile, point it at the snapshot, and keep your real survival save parked safely on 26.1.2 where it belongs.There's a bigger reason to bother, too. Every bug caught in a pre-release is one that doesn't ship to millions of players on launch day. The folks testing snapshots now are quietly doing the whole community a favor, and Mojang reads the reports. So if you do install it and something breaks, that's not wasted time. That's the entire point of the phase.For a regular player with a base they care about, there's no rush at all. Pre-1 won't hand you new content to mess with, and dragging an important world into an unfinished build is exactly how people end up with corrupted saves and a ruined afternoon. Wait for stable 26.2. It's coming, and it'll be better tested for the wait.Back up your world either way. Always back up. That advice has never once been wrong. --- ### Minecraft 26.2-pre-1: What's New in the First Pre-Release URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-26-2-pre-1-snapshot Published: 2026-05-27 Author: ice Minecraft 26.2-pre-1 is the first pre-release for the upcoming 26.2 update, landing after April's 26.1.2 release. A pre-release sits right before launch: the features are locked in, and the focus shifts to bug fixes and stability. It's Java Edition only, and it's a test build, not the finished version. What's New in 26.2-pre-1 (and What Isn't) Quick refresher on how Mojang builds an update. Snapshots come first, the experimental builds where new blocks, mobs, and mechanics show up rough and half-finished. After weeks of those, the version moves into pre-release territory. That's the "we're almost done, stop adding things, start fixing things" phase. 26.2-pre-1 is the very first of those steadier builds for 26.2. The "pre-1" tag tells you two things: the feature set is now frozen, and there will probably be a pre-2, a pre-3, and maybe a release candidate before the full version goes live. It comes straight after 26.1.2, which dropped on April 9, so think of it as the bridge between the current stable release and whatever 26.2 turns out to be. Here's where I'll be straight with you. A first pre-release is rarely the place for jaw-dropping new content. The big features land in the earlier snapshots, weeks before this point. Pre-1 is about polish: bug fixes, balance nudges, and quiet technical changes that tend to matter most to server admins and data-pack creators. For the exact, line-by-line list of what changed, Mojang's official changelog (it shows up right in the launcher when you pick the build) and the Minecraft Wiki's version page are the sources to trust. Those update the moment the build ships, and they're more reliable than any roundup, this one included. I'd rather send you there than pretend I've memorized every fixed bug number. What to keep an eye on When you load the build, the spots most likely to show changes in a pre-release are: Crash and stability fixes that quietly clean up problems from the earlier 26.2 snapshots. Command and data-pack tweaks, which can break custom maps if you're not paying attention. Visual and audio glitches getting patched, the small stuff that's easy to miss. Multiplayer and server-side fixes that matter if you host for friends. None of that's guaranteed in any single pre-release, but it's the pattern that repeats almost every cycle. Why pre-releases matter even if you never install one Even if you skip test builds entirely, they shape the version you'll eventually play. Look, bugs caught now are bugs you won't trip over on release day. And mod and plugin authors use this window to update their projects against the near-final code, which shortens that painful gap between "26.2 is out" and "okay, my favorite mods finally work on 26.2." That's the real value of a pre-release. Less about playing it, more about what it does for the version everyone gets later. How to Install 26.2-pre-1 Without Wrecking Your World Getting in is simple. Open the official Minecraft Launcher, find the version dropdown next to the Play button, switch on snapshots in your Java Edition installation settings, then pick 26.2-pre-1 from the list. Hit play and you're running it. One rule first: back up your worlds. Seriously. Pre-releases can change how saves load, and opening a survival world you actually care about inside a test build is exactly how people end up with corrupted chunks and a pit of regret. Copy your saves folder somewhere safe before you launch anything. I keep a throwaway "snapshot testing" world that I don't mind breaking, and I'd suggest you make one too. Costs nothing, saves a lot of heartbreak. Want to drop back to 26.1.2 afterwards? Pick it from the same dropdown. Your installs don't overwrite each other, though a world you've opened in the newer build might not reopen cleanly in the older one, which is the other reason that backup matters. Testing the Snapshot With Friends Snapshots are more fun when a few people are poking at the same build and comparing notes on what broke. If you spin up a quick server to test 26.2-pre-1 together, lock it down so only your group can get in. Our Minecraft Whitelist Creator builds the whitelist.json file for you, which beats typing usernames one at a time and fat-fingering one halfway down the list. Worth flagging, though: test-build servers and normal servers don't mix. Everyone has to be on the exact same version, right down to the pre-release number, and almost no public server runs a test build. If you'd rather just find a stable community to play on, the Minecraft server list is the place to look instead. Java Only: Console and Bedrock Players Sit This Out This trips people up every single cycle, so let's clear it up. Snapshots and pre-releases are a Java Edition feature, full stop. Bedrock runs its own separate beta and preview program on a different schedule, and console players (including everyone on the native PS5 version that The Loadout reported on when it first went into testing) don't get snapshots at all. So if you're on PlayStation, Switch, Xbox, or Bedrock on mobile and you've been hunting for a 26.2-pre-1 download, that's why you're coming up empty. It isn't a hidden setting. The build just doesn't exist for your platform, and it won't. Is It Worth Testing Your Seeds in 26.2? Maybe. World generation usually holds steady across a point update like this, so the seeds you loved in 26.1 should look broadly the same once 26.2 lands. PCGamesN's big seed roundup makes the same point about using seeds across versions: biome layouts tend to carry over, but structures can move around. A desert village that sat near spawn in one version might generate a few hundred blocks off in the next, or shift its layout a little. Actually, scratch that as a blanket rule: big terrain reworks can change generation a lot, but a point release like 26.2 usually won't. If you collect seeds, a pre-release is a fine excuse to re-roll a few favorites in a disposable world and see what moved. Just don't expect a wildly different planet. Most of the time the changes are subtle, and sometimes there's no visible difference at all. My Take Should you install 26.2-pre-1? If you're a modder, a server admin, or the kind of player who genuinely enjoys hunting down glitches, yes. Jump in, mess around, and report anything strange through Mojang's official bug tracker. That feedback loop is the entire reason pre-releases exist, and it's how 26.2 ends up stable when it finally launches for everyone. For everyone else, I'd wait it out. First pre-releases rarely pack enough new content to justify risking your main world, and the full 26.2 release usually isn't far behind a "pre-1." Back things up, poke around in a test world if you're curious, and lean on Mojang's official notes for the precise change list. That's the honest answer, and it beats chasing a feature list that mostly won't land until release day. --- ### Continuity Mod for Minecraft: Why It's Trending in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/continuity-minecraft-connected-textures-mod Published: 2026-05-27 Author: ice Continuity is a lightweight Fabric mod that adds connected textures to Minecraft, the trick that makes glass, bookshelves, and sandstone fuse into one continuous surface instead of a grid of repeating tiles. It's trending in 2026 because it pairs cleanly with Sodium and gives former OptiFine users the look they'd been missing. Here's the honest rundown. What Connected Textures Do Quick primer, because the name confuses people. Connected textures means a block checks its neighbors and swaps its face texture so matching blocks blend together. Stack sixteen glass blocks into a wall and, instead of sixteen obvious panes with thick dark borders, you get one clean sheet of glass with the frame only around the outside edge. That's the whole idea. No new blocks. No gameplay changes. Purely how things look. Vanilla Minecraft has never supported this. OptiFine did it for years through a feature called CTM (connected textures method), and hundreds of resource packs were built around that format. When OptiFine started lagging behind on version updates, all those packs were left stranded. Continuity reads the exact same CTM format, so those packs spring back to life on modern Fabric setups. Why Everyone's Talking About Continuity in 2026 So why is this old idea suddenly trending? Two things lined up. The Fabric and Sodium side of the modding world basically won the performance argument. Most players chasing smooth frame rates on current Minecraft (that's 26.1.2 as I write this) run Sodium, and Sodium ships with zero connected-texture support. Continuity drops into that exact gap and barely touches your FPS, which was the entire reason people abandoned OptiFine to begin with. Then the builders got loud. Scroll any building-focused Discord or the Minecraft subreddit and you'll spot screenshots of connected-glass greenhouses and floor-to-ceiling bookshelf walls, nearly always with Continuity sitting in the mod list. It jumped from "niche texture tweak" to standard recommendation in a matter of months. I tested it on a small SMP I help run, honestly just to settle an argument about whether connected glass was worth the hassle. It was. The greenhouse roof alone talked three of my friends into installing it the same night. More Than Connected Glass Most people install Continuity for glass and never look further, but it does a bit more than that. It also handles emissive textures, the overlay layer that makes parts of a texture glow in the dark regardless of light level. Packs use it for things like glowing ore speckles or lit machine panels. And it supports custom block render layers, which is a technical way of saying pack authors can tell certain blocks to render with transparency or cutout effects they couldn't otherwise. Is any of that essential? No. But it means a single mod covers most of the visual features people used to keep OptiFine around for. That's the appeal: one small jar instead of a giant compatibility headache. Getting Continuity Installed The mod is a single download from Modrinth or CurseForge. Drop the jar into your mods folder and you're most of the way there. The trouble spots are the dependencies, which is where nearly every "it isn't working" post comes from. What you need Fabric Loader and Fabric API. Standard requirements for almost any Fabric mod. A resource pack with CTM data. Continuity is just the engine. On its own it does nothing visible. You need a pack that actually ships connected-texture information. Indium, if you run Sodium. Continuity leans on the Fabric Rendering API, which older Sodium builds don't fully implement, so Indium acts as the bridge between them. Actually, let me walk back that last point a little, because it confuses a lot of folks. Newer Sodium releases improved their rendering support, so depending on which version you're on, you may not need Indium at all. The safe rule: if connected textures look broken while Sodium is installed, add Indium and the issue almost always disappears. No harm in having it. The Resource Pack Part Nobody Mentions Here's what the install guides skip over. Continuity is only ever as good as the pack feeding it. Some packs connect nearly everything: glass, sandstone, bookshelves, log pillars, quartz, even iron blocks. Others only bother with glass. So if you install the mod and discover that only your glass connects while everything else stays tiled, your pack probably just doesn't include CTM data for those other blocks. Nothing is broken. The mod renders exactly what the pack describes, no more. Where to start? If you only want the effect without overhauling your art style, grab a "connected glass only" pack and call it a day. Want the full treatment? Vanilla-faithful packs with built-in CTM are all over Modrinth these days, and most pack pages state plainly whether connected textures are supported before you download. Honestly, read that line first and save yourself the confusion. Once the world looks the part, it's a tiny step to make your character fit in too. A fresh skin costs nothing and pulls the whole look together. You can browse Minecraft skins if yours is overdue for a change. (Mine was. Embarrassingly so.) Worth It Or Not My take: yes for most players, with one fair caveat. Build anything with glass and you'll want Continuity immediately. Greenhouses, modern builds, aquariums, sky bases, anything with big transparent walls. The visual jump is huge and it costs you almost nothing in frame rate. But that combination is rare enough to take seriously. Play mostly survival, deep in caves, never touching glass or decorative blocks? Then you might install it, nod at a nicely blended sandstone wall for ten seconds, and forget it's running. That's a perfectly valid outcome. Not every mod needs to reshape how you play. A useful note for multiplayer: connected textures render entirely client-side, so the whole server doesn't need to run the mod. Each player adds Continuity and a pack on their own machine. And if you're spinning up a server to show those glass builds off to friends, a free Minecraft DNS address is far easier to share than a raw IP that nobody can remember. Continuity won't headline any patch notes. It quietly fixes something vanilla Minecraft has gotten wrong for more than a decade, and it does it without the baggage that made OptiFine such a pain on modern versions. In 2026, with Sodium as the default and OptiFine fading into history, it's the obvious choice. Load up a glass build with it running, then try going back. Good luck. --- ### AppleSkin Mod in 2026: The Food Stats Minecraft Hides URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/appleskin-mod-food-stats Published: 2026-05-27 Author: ice AppleSkin is a free Minecraft mod that shows the hidden food numbers the game keeps to itself: saturation, exact hunger restored, and how soon you'll start healing. It changes nothing about gameplay. What you get just hands you the math vanilla hides. And in 2026 it's quietly become one of the most installed mods around.What AppleSkin DoesOpen your inventory in vanilla Minecraft, hover over a steak, and the tooltip tells you... nothing about how it actually fills you up. AppleSkin fixes that. Hover over any food and it shows the hunger points restored (those little drumstick icons) plus the saturation it grants, drawn right on the hunger bar as a faint overlay.It also previews the change before you eat. The shanks you'd gain show up as a ghostly outline on your hunger meter, so you know whether that apple is worth the click or whether you should save it.A quick rundown of what it surfaces:Saturation value of every food item, in the tooltip and on the barHunger restored as a preview overlay before you eatHealth regeneration hints, so you can see when you're about to healExhaustion tracking (the hidden counter that drains saturation when you sprint, jump, and mine)It's not new, exactly. AppleSkin has been around for years, racking up tens of millions of downloads across CurseForge and Modrinth. What pushed it back into the spotlight in 2026 is the modpack scene: nearly every popular survival pack now ships with it by default, which means a fresh wave of players are discovering it without ever choosing to install it themselves.None of this changes the game. No new items, no recipes, no balance tweaks. It's a window into numbers Mojang already tracks but never shows you.Why Saturation Is The Stat You've Been IgnoringHere's the thing most players never learn: your hunger bar isn't the number that matters. Saturation is.Saturation is a hidden buffer that sits on top of hunger. As long as it's above zero, your hunger bar doesn't drop and you keep regenerating health. Different foods give wildly different saturation even when they restore the same hunger. Golden carrots and cooked steak are saturation kings. Melon slices and cookies? Practically worthless for keeping you full, even though they look like they're doing something.Without AppleSkin, you're guessing. With it, you can see at a glance that a single golden carrot keeps you running far longer than a fistful of bread. That one insight alone changed how I pack for long mining trips. I used to haul stacks of bread. Now it's golden carrots and steak, every time.Ever wondered why you got hungry five minutes after a big meal once, but stayed full for ages another time? Saturation. AppleSkin makes the invisible visible, and once you see it you can't unsee it.Installing AppleSkin in 2026Good news: it's one of the easiest installs out there. AppleSkin supports Fabric, Forge, NeoForge, and Quilt, and the maintainer (squeek502) keeps it current. As of this writing it runs on the latest Minecraft 26.1.2, and updates usually land within days of a new version.The basic steps:Install your mod loader of choice (Fabric is the lightest if you're starting fresh)Grab AppleSkin from Modrinth or CurseForge, matching it to your Minecraft and loader versionDrop the.jar into your mods folderLaunch the game and hover over some food to confirm it's workingIt's purely client-side, mostly. Actually, that's not the whole story: on servers that tweak food values with other mods, running AppleSkin server-side too keeps the displayed numbers honest. Honestly, for vanilla-food servers you don't need to touch the server at all.One small heads-up: if the overlay doesn't appear after launching, double check that your AppleSkin build matches both your Minecraft version and your loader. Mixing a Fabric jar with a Forge setup is the single most common reason it silently fails to load. The mod itself almost never breaks. A version mismatch is what gets people.Roughly 100 MB of RAM overhead? Nope. It's featherweight. You'll never notice it in your frame times.Who Needs This ModSurvival players. That's the short answer.If you spend your time in long survival worlds, hardcore runs, or any setting where a sudden health drop means death, AppleSkin earns its slot immediately. Knowing exactly when regen kicks in is genuinely useful when a creeper's breathing down your neck.Speedrunners love it too, for what it's worth. Optimal food management shaves real seconds off a run, and the saturation overlay turns guesswork into a plan.On the survival server I play on, half the regulars run it now, and the other half keep asking why everyone suddenly knows the perfect moment to eat. It spreads by word of mouth.Creative-mode builders, though? Skip it. You don't have a hunger bar to manage when you're flying around placing blocks, so the mod just sits there doing nothing. No harm, no point. I'd honestly call it overrated for anyone who isn't actively managing hunger, and that's fine. Not every mod has to be for everybody.Rounding Out Your Survival SetupAppleSkin pairs well with the other survival utilities I keep bookmarked. The Nether Portal Calculator saves you the coordinate math when you're linking portals, and if you're hosting friends, the free Minecraft DNS tool gives your server a clean address instead of making everyone memorize a raw IP.Cosmetics don't affect saturation, obviously. But a survival run feels a little better when your character looks the part. The Lockdown Life modern survival skin nails the grizzled-explorer vibe. And if you want something with a wink, there's a whole run of mod-themed skins floating around: elmodag, Teemodolol, Modstack, and the bluntly named Mod. Or just browse the full skin library and pick your own.Want more options? You can always browse Minecraft skins by category to match whatever world you're building.Worth It Or NotFor survival? Install it today. It costs nothing, weighs nothing, and teaches you something about a system you've probably been playing wrong for years.It won't make you better at PvP or build you a castle. What it does is small and specific and quietly excellent: it tells you the truth about your food. In a game that's gotten denser over the years (PCGamesN's seed guides alone now run to dozens of entries per version), a mod that just makes one hidden system readable is a rare kind of useful.So yeah. If you play survival and you've never tried it, this is the one to add before your next world. --- ### How to Build a Greenhouse in Minecraft Step by Step URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/build-greenhouse-minecraft Published: 2026-05-26 Author: ice Building a greenhouse in Minecraft comes down to three things: a glass roof and walls, a light source so crops grow at night, and water or farmland inside. Frame it with any block you like, fill the walls with glass panes, light it up, and plant away. That's the whole idea. What You'll Need to Build a Minecraft Greenhouse The shopping list is short, which is honestly half the appeal. You don't need diamonds or rare loot for this, just glass and a handful of blocks for the frame. Here's what I keep ready before I start digging: Glass blocks or glass panes (panes use less sand per wall, so smelt with that in mind) A frame block you like the look of: stripped logs, deepslate brick, or quartz all work Light sources: glowstone, lanterns, or sea lanterns Farmland and a water bucket or two for the growing beds Seeds, saplings, or whatever you actually want to grow Bone meal if you're impatient (guilty) Sand is the real bottleneck. Look, one block of glass costs one sand, and a full greenhouse chews through it faster than you'd expect. Grab a couple extra stacks before you commit, because nothing kills the momentum like running back to a beach mid-build. Panes versus full blocks is a genuine choice, not just looks. Panes are cheaper and give you that thin, framed-window feel. Solid blocks read as cleaner glass walls. I lean panes for the classic greenhouse look, but it's your call. Picking the Right Spot Flat ground near your base is the easy answer. But a greenhouse looks fantastic built against a hillside, perched over water, or even half-sunk into a snowy slope, so don't feel stuck with a boring plains square. Sunlight is the thing to think about. Glass lets daylight pass straight through, so open sky above your roof means free light through most of the day. Build it underground or under a big overhang and you're leaning entirely on lamps to keep crops alive. Biome matters for the vibe, too. A glass build glows beautifully in a cherry grove, pops against dark spruce taiga, and looks almost magical sitting on the edge of a lush cave opening. Playing with other people? If you're hopping onto a friend's world, drop the address into our Minecraft Server Status Checker before you haul all that glass over, just to confirm it's actually online. And if the server's yours, locking it down with our Minecraft Whitelist Creator stops random visitors from trampling your beds while you're logged off. Nothing stings quite like loading back in to a greenhouse full of snapped stems. Raising the Glass Walls and Roof This is where the build takes shape. I'll walk through a simple rectangular design, and you can bend it however you want once you've got the idea. Lay the floor. Mark out your footprint, say 9x7 blocks, using your frame material. This doubles as the foundation and the border for your beds. Raise corner pillars. Three or four blocks high at each corner. Three feels cozy; four gives headroom for taller plants like bamboo or a small tree. Fill in the glass. Connect the pillars and pack everything between them with glass panes. Leave a one-block gap for a door. Cap it with a roof. A flat glass ceiling works fine. A pitched roof built from stairs and glass looks far better, though, and ditches that generic box look. One mistake I made early on: I roofed the whole thing in solid glass blocks and it felt heavy and dark somehow. Swapping to a frame of trapdoors and stairs with glass panes between them reads way more like a real greenhouse. Small change, big difference. Add your frame block as trim along the base, the corners, and the roofline. That contrast between solid trim and clear glass is what separates a greenhouse from a plain glass cube. For the entrance, a simple wooden or iron door works, but a pair of fence gates or a trapdoor airlock looks tidier and keeps mobs from wandering in. If your greenhouse sits away from your base lighting, drop a lantern by the door so nothing spawns on the path at night. Keeping Your Crops Growing A greenhouse that can't grow anything is just a pricey glass box. Light and water do the heavy lifting here, so get those two right and you're basically done. Crops need a light level of 9 or higher to grow; the Minecraft Wiki lists this for wheat, carrots, potatoes, and the rest. Daylight through the glass covers you until sunset, but growth stalls in the dark. Tuck glowstone under the floor blocks, hang lanterns from the roof beams, or line the walls with sea lanterns so nothing pauses overnight. Water and Farmland Farmland only stays hydrated with water within four blocks. I usually run one water channel down the center and surround it with tilled soil. A single source block hydrates a surprisingly wide bed, so you rarely need more than a couple. Cover open water with a trapdoor or carpet if you don't want to keep falling in. Learned that one the hard way. Speeding Things Up Bone meal is your friend. Feed bones or spare crops to a composter, or craft bone meal straight from skeleton drops, and you can rush most plants to full size in seconds. Trees and mushrooms react too, but tall growth needs clearance, so plan your roof height around whatever you're growing. As for what to plant: wheat, carrots, potatoes, and beetroot are the reliable staples. Pumpkins and melons need a free dirt block beside the stem to grow their fruit, so leave them room. Sugar cane wants water right next to it, and nether wart needs soul sand instead of farmland, so it's more of a side project than a true greenhouse crop. Going Automatic Want it hands-off? A villager farmer parked inside will replant and harvest crops for you, dropping the surplus into a hopper if you set one up. It's not the fastest farm in the game, but for a decorative greenhouse that quietly feeds you on the side, it's perfect. I run one on my survival world and barely think about food anymore. Greenhouse Ideas Worth Stealing Vanilla Minecraft, as of version 26.1.2, has way more decorative plants than most people use, and a greenhouse is the perfect excuse to show them off. Glow berries trailing from the ceiling double as soft, free lighting Azalea and flowering azalea bushes for pops of green and pink Big dripleaf and small dripleaf for that layered, tropical look Flower pots lined along windowsills with whatever blooms you've gathered Bamboo or a single sapling grown into a leafy centerpiece Mix your textures. A greenhouse that's wall-to-wall wheat just looks like a farm with windows. One with hanging vines, potted flowers, a little pond, and a bench in the corner looks like somewhere you'd genuinely want to hang out. Pick a style and lean into it. A rustic greenhouse uses oak or spruce frames, mossy accents, and a few cracked pots for that lived-in look. A modern one goes clean: quartz or smooth stone trim, perfectly even glass, maybe some sea lanterns recessed into the floor. Both look great. They just tell different stories. Quick note for Bedrock players: most of this is identical, though a few light values and growth quirks differ slightly between editions. Actually, the biggest difference you'll notice is how redstone-driven auto-farms behave, not the plants themselves. The greenhouse itself builds the same either way. And a bench and a lantern in the corner? Sells the whole thing. My Take Greenhouses punch way above their effort. A couple stacks of glass, one decent afternoon, and you've got a centerpiece that doubles as a working farm. Hard to argue with that return. Start with a plain rectangle, nail the lighting and water, then go wild on decoration once the bones are solid. The fancy pitched roof and the dripleaf can wait. A crops, less so. --- ### EternalCore: The Modern EssentialsX Alternative for 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/eternalcore-minecraft-plugin-guide Published: 2026-05-26 Author: ice EternalCodeTeam/EternalCore ♾️ A modern, actively maintained alternative to EssentialsX. .0 Running a Minecraft server and tired of stitching together five plugins just to get homes, warps, and private messages? EternalCore bundles the boring-but-essential stuff into one plugin. It's a modern take on EssentialsX, the tool most servers reach for first, and it covers 80+ commands out of the box.What EternalCore DoesThink of it as the plumbing for a multiplayer server. Players want to set a home and warp back to it. They want to message each other privately, get teleported to a friend, and not lose their build when they wander off and forget where spawn is. None of that ships in vanilla Minecraft, which is exactly where a "core" plugin like this earns its name.It's written in Java, sits at around 100 stars on GitHub, and ships under the GPL-3.0 license.Small project by star count, but it punches well above its weight in features.The team describes it as a modern, actively maintained alternative to EssentialsX. And that word "maintained" carries a lot of weight, and I'll circle back to why it matters more than you'd expect. Why You'd Switch From EssentialsXLet's be honest about the elephant in the room. EssentialsX is the default. It's been the default for years, it's battle-tested, and most server tutorials just assume you're running it. So why look anywhere else?A few reasons. EternalCore is built on a newer codebase and targets Java 21, which means it plays nicer with recent server software. The config structure is cleaner (the 2.0 release reworked a good chunk of it). And it's getting active development right now, not bug-fix-only life support.Here's my honest take, though: if your EssentialsX setup runs fine and you've already tuned every config file, there's no fire to put out. Swapping a live server's core plugin is a weekend project, not a five-minute job. I'd only make the jump on a new server, or one I was already rebuilding anyway.But for a fresh setup? I'd genuinely consider it. The feature parity is there, and the defaults look nicer out of the box. Getting It RunningThis is a standard Bukkit-style plugin, so installation is refreshingly dull. Download the JAR, drop it in your plugins folder, restart the server. That's the whole dance.The one thing that bites people: EternalCore needs Java 21 or later. Run an older Java and the plugin either refuses to load or behaves strangely. Check your version first:bashjava -versionIf that prints 21 or higher, you're set. If not, upgrade Java before going any further. Then grab the plugin and drop it into place:bash# from your server root cd plugins wget https://github.com/EternalCodeTeam/EternalCore/releases/download/v2.0.0/EternalCore.v2.0.0-SNAPSHOT.MC.1.17.x-1.21.x.jar # now fully restart the server, don't use /reloadYou can also grab it from Modrinth, Hangar, or SpigotMC if you'd rather click a button than copy a URL. All three carry the same builds.One more setup tip while you're here. Get your base server config sane before any plugin touches it. If you're hand-editing server.properties and second-guessing every line, our Server Properties Generator spits out a clean file you can drop straight in. Sort that first, then layer EternalCore on top. The Features That Earn Their KeepEighty-plus commands is a lot to wade through, so here's what I'd actually flag.Homes, Warps, and TeleportsThe bread and butter. Players run /sethome, /home, and /warp to bounce around the map. Admins set shared warps for spawn, the shop, the PvP arena, whatever you need. There's a full teleport-request system too (/tpa), plus /back to return to where you just died. And Random Teleport (/rtp) flings players out into the wild for fresh land, which is great for survival servers that don't want everyone building on top of each other.The Vanish SystemNew in the 2.0 release, and one of the more polished additions. Vanish lets staff go fully invisible to patrol a server, but it's loaded with toggles: silent join, godmode, night vision, a glow color, silent inventory peeking, plus blocks for item pickup, hunger loss, and chat while hidden. The changelog shows it off with a GIF, and it clearly had thought put into it rather than being a bare on/off switch.Notifications and Join MessagesEternalCore can fire messages through titles, the action bar, boss bars, and regular chat. So your welcome message, AFK alerts, and custom death lines all get proper formatting instead of plain gray text. If you want those to actually look good with colors and styling, build them with our Minecraft Text Generator and paste the codes into the config. The 2.0 update also tidied up the MOTD, so the chat welcome looks decent without you touching a thing.Chat and Moderation ToolsAdmin Chat (with a direct channel mode added in 2.0), slow mode for when chat gets rowdy, timed auto-messages, social spy for moderation, and an ignore system so players can mute each other. There's also /helpop so players can ping staff when something breaks. Standard moderation kit, all in one place.And a few smaller touches worth a nod: an AFK system that flags idle players automatically, a /playtime command added in 2.0 (so people can check how many hours they've quietly sunk into your server), and a server links feature that drops clickable links into the pause menu. Real talk, little things, but they add up. Stuff That Trips People UpThe Java 21 requirement is the big one, and I already hammered it, but it's genuinely the number one reason the plugin "doesn't work" for people.Wrong Java, no load. It's that blunt.Version support is a touch nuanced too. The README says it supports the latest minor of each major version from 1.19 onward, so think 1.19.4 rather than 1.19.0, and 1.21.11 rather than an older 1.21 patch. Actually, that's worth reading twice, because running an oddball patch in the middle of a major line can leave you with weird gaps.The 2.0 jump is also a major release with internal changes and config updates. One maintainers flag this hard in the release notes, and they're right to. Read the changelog before upgrading an existing server, or you'll spend an evening hunting for a config key that quietly moved.And don't apply it with /reload. Reloading plugins on a live server is a classic way to corrupt state. Full restart, every time. Alternatives Worth a LookEssentialsX is the obvious one, and it's still excellent. If you want the most documented, most-supported-by-tutorials option, that's it. EternalCore is the younger, sleeker challenger.CMI is another all-in-one core plugin, though it's paid and considerably heavier. It does more, but it's overkill for plenty of servers. And for permissions specifically, you'll likely pair whatever core you pick with LuckPerms, since none of these handle group permissions as cleanly as a dedicated plugin does.My pick? For a brand-new server in 2026, EternalCore is a genuinely solid first choice. For an established server that's already humming along, I'd leave EssentialsX alone unless there's a specific reason to move. It's free, open source under GPL-3.0, and that active development is the part that'd tip me over on a new build. Ready to try EternalCore? 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 EternalCodeTeam/EternalCore on GitHub ↗ --- ### Windswept Savanna Biome Guide: Loot, Mobs and Builds URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/windswept-savanna-biome-guide Published: 2026-05-26 Author: ice The Windswept Savanna is one of Minecraft's rarest biomes: a dry, brownish-green plateau torn apart into steep cliffs and floating stone shelves. You get exposed ores on the rock faces, acacia trees, and herds of horses and llamas. No rain, no villages, just dramatic terrain that's a pain to walk across. What Makes the Windswept Savanna So Strange Picture a normal savanna. Now imagine someone took a giant chisel to it. That's the windswept version: the same warm, yellow-green grass and the same acacia trees, but the land itself is wrecked into sheer cliffs, narrow ridges, and chunks of stone that jut into the sky at angles that really shouldn't hold up. It used to be called the Shattered Savanna before the Caves and Cliffs update renamed all the windswept biomes. The new name fits better. A few things stay true to regular savannas. It never rains here, so no thunderstorms and no crops getting watered for free. The grass keeps that dry, washed-out olive color. Water sources look a bit murkier than the bright blue you get in plains. And the temperature stays high enough that snow won't fall even at the top of the tallest peak. But the terrain is the whole point. Some of these cliffs climb past Y 130, with bare stone walls dropping straight down. You'll see dirt and stone exposed everywhere instead of a tidy grass carpet. Walking in a straight line? Forget it. Quick way to tell you've found the real thing and not just a hilly normal savanna: look for bare stone cliff faces taller than the trees, plus floating shelves of land with overhangs. Regular savanna rolls gently. And this one looks like it lost a fight. And because it never rains, fire spreads freely. One stray flint and steel near the dry grass and you've got a wildfire crawling up the slope. Worth knowing before you torch a path up a cliff. Loot and Resources Worth Grabbing Here's the part that makes the biome genuinely useful instead of just pretty. All that exposed stone means exposed ores, and lots of them. Exposed Ores: Free Early Game Coal and iron show up on the cliff faces constantly, and because the terrain hits such high and low points in a small area, you sometimes spot copper or even the occasional deeper ore poking out of a wall with no mining required. I once started a hardcore world next to one of these and had a full iron set before the first night, just from chipping ore off the rocks with a stone pickaxe. Felt like cheating. The other big draw is acacia wood. Those orange-barked trees with the flat, angular canopies only grow in savanna biomes, so if you want acacia planks or that specific orange-and-grey build palette, this is your supply. Don't overlook the smaller stuff either: Tall grass and seeds for an early wheat farm Horses and llamas roaming wild, ready to tame Acacia saplings to start a tree farm back at base Loads of raw stone and andesite for your first builds One caveat: no villages spawn in the windswept variant. The terrain is too broken for the generator to place one. If you want a savanna village with its acacia-and-cobblestone houses, you'll find those in the flat regular savanna next door, not on the shattered cliffs. Mobs You'll Run Into During the day it's a calm place. Herds of horses (this is one of the best biomes to find them), llamas in small groups, plus the usual cows, sheep, pigs, and chickens grazing on the slopes. Llamas are the sleeper pick here. Tame a few, throw chests on them, and you've got a walking caravan for hauling all that ore back home. They spit at you if you hit them, but honestly that's fair. One thing you won't find: foxes, wolves, or pandas. The windswept savanna keeps the standard savanna roster and nothing exotic. At night the cliffs turn nasty. Not because of special mobs, but because of the drops. Standard hostiles spawn (zombies, skeletons, creepers, spiders, the odd enderman), and on terrain this vertical a single creeper can knock you off a 40-block ledge. Skeletons love sniping from a higher ridge while you've got nowhere to dodge. So light up your paths. Seriously. Fall damage is the real killer in this biome, not the mobs themselves. Building on Broken Terrain This is where the windswept savanna earns its keep. The terrain that makes it annoying to cross makes it incredible to build on, and that trade is worth it. Cliffside bases are the obvious move: carve into a vertical stone wall and you get a fortress with a natural moat of empty air. Hanging builds work too, platforms cantilevered off the rock with a few support pillars, the kind of thing that looks like it took an engineering degree but really just needs patience and a stack of scaffolding. A few ideas that suit the landscape: Stilt village across a ravine, connected by rope bridges Waterfall base tucked behind a stream poured off a high ledge Acacia treehouse cluster using the natural height of the peaks Mountain monastery built into the highest accessible ridge The orange acacia and pale stone already give you a two-tone palette to work with. Add some terracotta (a quick trip to a nearby badlands biome) and you've got a desert-fortress look without importing a single fancy block. But it reads as deliberate even when you're improvising. If you're building somewhere this dramatic, you might as well look the part. A custom explorer or ranger skin made in the Minecraft Skin Creator beats running around the cliffs in the default Steve outfit. Finding a Windswept Savanna Rarity is the catch. This is genuinely one of the least common biomes in the game, so wandering randomly might take ages. Two faster options. First, use a seed. Sites like PCGamesN keep updated seed lists (their 2026 roundup is checked against version 26.1.2), and plenty of community seeds drop you near shattered savanna terrain at spawn. The biome layout stays mostly the same between Java and Bedrock, by the way, though PCGamesN notes some structures can differ between editions, so don't expect every chest to match. Second, if you're already in a regular savanna, look toward the edges. Windswept savannas generate as a rare border against normal savanna, so following the acacia until the ground starts breaking apart is often quicker than teleporting around with coordinates. Exploring with friends speeds things up a lot: more eyes, more ground covered. If you're running your own server for that, lock it down first with the Minecraft Whitelist Creator so only your group can hop in and claim the good cliffs. Worth Settling Here? Honestly? Look, yes, if you like a challenge and a view. The early-game ore access alone justifies a visit, and the building potential is some of the best in vanilla. Just respect the drops and light everything up before dark. It's not a beginner-friendly starter biome. But for a second base, a screenshot you'll actually want to share, or a hardcore run where free iron matters? Hard to beat. --- ### Cloth Config API: Why This Minecraft Mod Is Trending in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/cloth-config-api-minecraft-mod Published: 2026-05-26 Author: ice Cloth Config API is a library mod that gives other Minecraft mods a clean, unified settings screen. You don't install it for features of its own. Anyone install it because dozens of popular mods list it as a dependency, and in 2026 that list keeps growing. Built by shedaniel, it's quietly everywhere. What Cloth Config API Does Here's the short version: it's plumbing. Cloth Config hands mod developers a ready-made config GUI so they don't have to build one from scratch every single time. Toggles, sliders, dropdowns, color pickers, nested categories. The author defines the options, Cloth Config draws the screen. Without it, a lot of mods would either ship no settings menu at all (edit a JSON file by hand, have fun) or roll their own clunky interface that looks nothing like the next mod's. With it, you get one consistent layout across your whole pack. Open the config for one mod and you basically already know how to use all of them. That's the whole pitch. Not glamorous, but it's the kind of thing you only notice when it's gone. One point worth clearing up: Cloth Config on its own adds nothing you'll ever see while playing. No blocks, no mobs, no shaders. Install it solo, load a world, and you won't spot a single difference. It only wakes up when another mod calls on it. Who Made It, And Why That Matters Cloth Config comes from shedaniel, a developer plenty of modded players already rely on without realizing it. Same person behind Roughly Enough Items and Architectury, two tools propping up an enormous slice of the modding world. Why does that matter? Track record. A library mod is only as useful as it's reliable, and a dependency that goes unmaintained drags every mod relying on it straight down with it. shedaniel has kept these projects current through Minecraft version after version, which is exactly why developers trust Cloth Config enough to build on top of it in the first place. Why It's Trending in 2026 So why's a config library suddenly getting attention? A few reasons stacked up. First, the modding scene shifted hard toward Modrinth and NeoForge over the past couple of years, and a wave of mods got updated for 26.1. Every time a big mod updates, its dependencies get dragged along for the ride. Cloth Config sits underneath a huge chunk of the Fabric ecosystem, so its download numbers climb every time a popular mod ships a new build. Modrinth still lists it among the most-downloaded library mods, and that's not by accident. Second, modpack launchers now flag missing dependencies automatically. New players who never heard the name keep seeing it pop up in angry red text: "requires Cloth Config API." Curiosity does the rest. And third, it just works on the current version. As of the 26.1.2 release it's already updated, which is more than you can say for plenty of mods that go silent for months after a major Minecraft drop. Is it "trending" in the TikTok sense? No. Nobody's cutting montages about a settings menu. But in the practical sense of "the mod everybody ends up installing whether they planned to or not," yeah, it's having a moment. How to Install Cloth Config API Installing it's about as easy as modding gets, mostly because you aren't configuring anything yourself. You're just dropping a library where the game can find it. On Fabric You'll want the Fabric Loader and Fabric API installed first. Then grab Cloth Config from Modrinth or CurseForge, match the version to your Minecraft version (this part matters more than people think), and drop the.jar into your mods folder. Look, done. Most players run Mod Menu alongside it. Mod Menu adds the button that actually opens those config screens from the in-game pause menu. Cloth Config draws the screen, Mod Menu gives you the door to walk through. Classic pairing. On NeoForge It runs on Fabric and Forge, well, NeoForge now really, since classic Forge support has mostly wound down for current versions. NeoForge handles it through Architectury, shedaniel's cross-loader toolkit. You still download the right file and drop it in mods, but double-check whether the mod you actually want needs the Fabric or NeoForge build. Grabbing the wrong one is the single most common mistake I see in support threads. Quick reality check on versions. A Cloth Config build for 1.20 won't load on 26.1. Sounds obvious, but half the "it crashed on startup" posts come down to a mismatch between the library and the loader. Read the file name. Twice. The Mods That Lean On It The easiest way to grasp why this thing matters is to look at what depends on it. Roughly Enough Items (REI), the recipe-viewing mod a lot of players prefer over JEI, is shedaniel's own and uses it. So do countless quality-of-life and tech mods that need a real settings panel instead of a raw text file. Config screens often control more than you'd guess. They can tweak which blocks a mod generates, adjust spawn rates, rebind features, switch entire systems on and off. If you're digging through options and need to confirm an exact block name to plug into a field, our Minecraft Block Search saves you the trip to the wiki. Server owners juggle a different flavor of config pain. Vote listeners, permission nodes, the lot. (If your server's vote rewards ever stop firing, our Votifier tester will tell you whether the signal is even reaching the box in the first place.) Cloth Config doesn't touch any of that server-side plumbing, to be clear, but it's the same principle at work: good tools make fiddly configuration far less miserable. The point stands. You rarely choose Cloth Config; the mod you actually wanted chose it for you. Common Problems And How to Dodge Them Most issues with it aren't really its fault, but here's what trips people up most: Version mismatch: the library version has to line up with your Minecraft and loader version. This is the big one. Wrong loader build: Fabric jar in a NeoForge instance (or vice versa) just silently won't load. Missing Fabric API: on Fabric, Cloth Config expects it to be present. No Fabric API, no dice. No Mod Menu: the config exists, you just can't reach it in-game without that button. Boring checklist? Sure. But it solves maybe nine out of ten "help, it won't launch" panics before they start. Is It Worth Installing? If a mod you want lists it as a dependency: yes, obviously, you don't get a vote and there's no downside. It's tiny, stable, and barely registers on performance. If you're asking whether to install it on its own hoping for some feature? Then no, there's nothing here for you. It's a foundation, not a house. My honest take after years of running modpacks: Cloth Config is one of those mods you forget you even have until you build a fresh pack and the game flat-out refuses to launch without it. That's the mark of good infrastructure. Invisible when it works, painfully loud when it's missing. Keep it updated, match your versions, and you'll basically never think about it again. Which is the entire point. --- ### Entity Culling: The Minecraft FPS Mod to Install in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/entity-culling-mod-fps-boost Published: 2026-05-26 Author: ice Entity Culling is a free client-side mod that stops Minecraft from rendering mobs, chests, and other entities hidden behind blocks. The payoff is a real frames-per-second boost, especially in storage rooms and packed mob farms. It runs on Fabric, Forge, and NeoForge, and it pairs nicely with Sodium. That's why it keeps trending. So why is a four-year-old optimization mod suddenly all over Reddit and YouTube again in 2026? Short answer: bigger builds, busier servers, and a lot of players finally upgrading to versions where the mod runs cleaner than ever. What Entity Culling Does Vanilla Minecraft is weirdly stubborn about this. Even if a skeleton is standing behind a solid stone wall, completely out of sight, your GPU still tries to draw it. Multiply that by a few hundred mobs in a farm, or a wall of double chests in your storage room, and you've got your graphics card doing a pile of pointless work on every single frame. Entity Culling, made by the developer tr7zw, fixes that. It runs asynchronous checks to figure out which entities and block entities are genuinely visible to you, then skips drawing the ones you can't see. Occlusion culling, basically. The game already does something similar for terrain chunks, and this mod extends the idea to entities, which vanilla never bothered with. And it covers far more than just mobs. Chests, banners, beds, shulker boxes, item frames, signs: all of those count as block entities, and they're surprisingly expensive to render in bulk. Ever walked into a base with 200 chests and watched your frames fall off a cliff? Look, yeah. This is the mod that fixes it. Why It's Trending Again in 2026 Builds got bigger. That's really the heart of it. The community has spent the last couple of years going wild with massive automatic farms, sprawling storage systems, and city-scale projects that would've crushed a machine back in 2019. Modern Minecraft, currently on Java release 26.1.2, throws more entities at your screen than ever, and players noticed their fancy gaming rigs still chugging inside their own bases. Frustrating when you spent good money on a graphics card. There's also the Sodium effect. As more people move to Fabric setups built around Sodium for rendering, Entity Culling has become the natural companion mod. The two solve different problems (Sodium rewrites the rendering engine, Entity Culling cuts the entity workload) and they stack without fighting each other. Over on the Minecraft modding subreddits, it's one of the most recommended additions to any performance pack. Not because it's flashy. Because it just works in the background and you forget it's even there. How Much FPS You Gain Here's where I have to be honest with you. The number depends entirely on what you're looking at. Standing in an empty field staring at the sunset? You'll gain almost nothing, because there's nothing hidden to cull. But the moment you turn to face a mob farm grinding away behind a wall, or step into a storage hall, the difference can be huge. I tested an old iron farm base of mine and went from a stuttery 40-ish FPS to a steady 90 plus, just by dropping the jar in. Let me walk that back slightly, though. Your mileage varies with your CPU, your render distance, and how many other mods you're running. The gains are biggest in entity-dense scenes and smallest in open terrain. Anyone promising a flat "doubles your FPS everywhere" is overselling it. Still, for a mod that costs you nothing and asks for almost no setup, the upside is hard to argue with. Where It Fits In Your Performance Pack Entity Culling isn't trying to be a one-stop fix, and that's a good thing. It does one job and gets out of the way. Picture a typical 2026 optimization setup as a small team. Sodium handles the core rendering rewrite and chunk drawing. Lithium tidies up game logic and tick performance. FerriteCore trims memory usage. Entity Culling takes the entity rendering load off your GPU. Each one targets a different bottleneck, and you genuinely feel the difference when they all run together. People sometimes ask whether they still need it if they've already got Sodium installed. Different jobs. Sodium makes the rendering pipeline faster, Entity Culling reduces how much there's to render in the first place. Running both is the whole point. Installing Entity Culling Without Breaking Your Game Setup is genuinely simple, but a couple of traps are worth knowing about before you start tossing jars into your mods folder. What You Need First A mod loader: Fabric, Forge, or NeoForge. Pick whichever your other mods use. Fabric API: required if you're on Fabric. Entity Culling won't load without it. The matching version: grab the build for your exact Minecraft version from CurseForge or Modrinth. Mismatched versions are the number one reason people get crashes. Download the mod, drop the jar in your mods folder, and launch. That's it. There's no config you're forced to touch, though the mod does include a small settings menu if you want to tweak how aggressively it culls. One Compatibility Heads-Up Running OptiFine? Be careful. OptiFine has its own entity rendering tweaks, and the two haven't always played nicely together. Most performance-focused players have moved to Sodium anyway, and that combo is rock solid. If you're set on staying with OptiFine, test it on a backup world first. Does It Help On Multiplayer Servers? Yes, and arguably more than in single player. Public servers are entity nightmares. Spawners, dropped items, dozens of players with their pets and armor stands, lag machines disguised as redstone art. Because Entity Culling is client-side, you can run it on any server without the host needing to install a thing. Your frames improve, and nobody else has to lift a finger. If you want somewhere to actually put those extra frames to use, our Minecraft server list is a solid place to start, with everything from survival SMPs to chaotic minigame hubs. And if you're the one running the server, you'll want players reaching it on a clean address instead of a string of numbers, which is exactly what our free Minecraft DNS tool sorts out for you. One caveat for server owners, though: Entity Culling won't reduce server-side lag. It only cuts what your own machine draws. Tick lag from overloaded farms is a separate problem entirely, and no client mod can touch it. Worth It Or Not My take? Install it. There are very few mods I'd call close to essential for a performance setup, and this is one of them. It's free, it's tiny, it doesn't change how the game looks or plays, and it quietly hands you frames in exactly the situations where vanilla struggles most. Pair it with Sodium and a sensible render-distance setting, and your big builds stop feeling like a slideshow. The only folks who genuinely won't notice much are people who play small, mostly outdoors, and never build dense bases. For everyone else, especially the farm-builders and the storage-hoarders (you know who you are), it's an easy yes. --- ### Xaero's Minimap in 2026: Why This Mod Is Worth Installing URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/xaeros-minimap-mod-guide Published: 2026-05-26 Author: ice Xaero's Minimap is a free Minecraft mod that adds a live minimap, waypoints, and an entity radar to the corner of your screen. It runs on both Fabric and Forge, barely touches your FPS, and works up to Minecraft 26.1. If you play survival or multiplayer, it's one of the easiest quality-of-life upgrades going. What Xaero's Minimap Does The pitch is simple. You get a small circular or square map in one corner that shows the terrain around you, rendered in real time as you explore. Mobs show up as dots. Other players show up as dots. Your friends show up as named dots if you want them to. That's the surface. Dig a little and it does more. There's a cave mode that switches the map to show the layout of tunnels around you when you're underground, which is the kind of thing you don't know you need until you've been lost in a ravine for ten minutes. There's a death marker that drops a waypoint exactly where you last got flattened, so recovering your stuff stops being a guessing game. And the whole thing is configurable to an almost silly degree: map size, zoom, shape, what entities show, whether north stays locked at the top. (I keep rotation on. Fight me.) The entity radar is underrated for plain survival too. Spot a creeper sneaking up behind you, find the cow herd you need for leather, notice that the dots ahead are a pillager patrol before you walk into it. None of that's cheating in single-player. It's just useful. Why It's Trending Again in 2026 Minimap mods aren't new. So why is this one getting passed around again? Part of it is timing. With Minecraft 26.1 out and the modding scene catching up fast, players rebuilding their mod lists tend to reach for the stuff that just works, and Xaero's has a reputation for updating quickly. Part of it's the explosion of new survival and SMP servers this year. More servers means more people wandering huge worlds and wanting a way to not get lost. The other reason is the companion mod. Xaero also makes a full-screen World Map mod that shares waypoints with the minimap. Run both and you get a Google-Maps-style overview of everywhere you've been, plus the little corner map for moment-to-moment navigation. They're built to work together, and a lot of the recent buzz is really people discovering the combo rather than the minimap alone. How It Compares to JourneyMap and VoxelMap It's not the only minimap in town. JourneyMap and VoxelMap have both been around for years and have loyal fans, so the honest question is where Xaero's fits. JourneyMap leans web-and-detail: it can serve a full map to your browser and looks gorgeous, but it's heavier and its default UI feels busier. VoxelMap pioneered a lot of the features everyone now copies, though updates have historically lagged on new Minecraft versions. Xaero's sits in the middle. Lighter than JourneyMap, more actively maintained than VoxelMap tends to be, and split cleanly into a minimap and a separate world map so you only run what you want. My take after bouncing between all three: Xaero's wins on the boring stuff that actually matters day to day. It updates fast, it doesn't tank performance, and the waypoint system is the cleanest of the bunch. JourneyMap is the prettier screenshot. Xaero's is the one I keep. Reddit threads on r/feedthebeast tend to land in the same place, for what it's worth. Lots of "I switched to Xaero's and never looked back" energy. Installing It Without Breaking Your Game Here's the short version: pick your loader, drop one file in a folder, launch. It's genuinely one of the lower-effort mods to set up. Fabric or Forge? Xaero's Minimap ships builds for both, so this comes down to whatever the rest of your mods use. Fabric tends to update to new Minecraft versions sooner, which matters when 26.1 just dropped. Forge has the deeper back catalog of big content mods. If you're starting fresh and only want the minimap, Fabric plus the Fabric API is the lighter path. Quick steps: Install your loader of choice (Fabric or Forge) for Minecraft 26.1. Grab the matching version of Xaero's Minimap from CurseForge or Modrinth. Match the Minecraft version exactly. If you're on Fabric, also grab the Fabric API. The mod won't load without it. Drop the.jar files into your mods folder. Launch, and the map appears top-left by default. One caveat I should correct myself on: the free version covers basically everything most people want. There's a paid "Plus" version too, but you don't need it to use waypoints or cave mode, despite what a few forum posts imply. The Plus version mostly adds cosmetic extras and a wider set of waypoint colors. Waypoints Are the Real Selling Point Ask anyone who's used it for a while and they'll tell you the same thing. The minimap is nice. So that waypoints are why you keep it installed. You hit a key, name a spot, pick a color and a little icon, and now there's a labeled beacon you can see from across the world with the exact distance to it. Base. Here's the thing, village. So that one mineshaft with the exposed diamonds you didn't have pickaxes for. The mob farm you swore you'd finish. On a big SMP this changes how you play. You stop memorizing coordinates like a phone number and start actually exploring, because getting home is now a glance and a direction. Ever tried navigating back to spawn from 4,000 blocks out using nothing but F3 coordinates and vibes? It's miserable. Waypoints fix that. The death waypoint deserves its own sentence. It has saved more diamond armor sets than I can count. Playing Fair on Multiplayer Servers This is the part people argue about. A minimap that shows other players as dots is, on a PvP server, basically a radar. Some servers ban that outright. The good news is Xaero's plays nice here. Server owners can configure it to hide players and mobs, and the mod respects those rules through server-side settings. Plenty of survival servers allow the terrain map and waypoints while switching off the entity radar, which is a fair compromise. Before you install it for a specific community, check that server's rules. Most list their allowed mods somewhere obvious. If you're hopping between servers a lot, it helps to know which ones are even online before you load in. You can run an address through our Minecraft server status checker to confirm it's up, and if you're still looking for somewhere to settle, our Minecraft server list is a decent place to start hunting. And no, the minimap won't get you banned on a server that allows it. It's a client-side display mod, not an X-ray hack. Big difference. Worth It Or Not Yes. For most players, easily. If you play vanilla survival and you've never minded counting blocks back to base, you can skip it and lose nothing. But that's a small group. For everyone running an SMP, exploring large worlds, or just tired of dying and never finding their loot again, Xaero's Minimap is one of those mods that quietly becomes non-negotiable. Install it once and you'll forget Minecraft ever shipped without it. The FPS hit is tiny, the setup takes two minutes, and the free version does almost everything. That's a hard combination to argue with. --- ### Lithium Mod in 2026: Why Minecraft Players Swear By It URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/lithium-minecraft-performance-mod Published: 2026-05-26 Author: ice Lithium is a free optimization mod that makes Minecraft run faster by streamlining the game's internal logic: mob AI, block ticking, physics, all without changing how anything behaves. If you run a server or push your world with farms and mobs, yes, it's worth installing. It's one of the most-used mods of 2026 for good reason. What Lithium Does Here's the short version. Lithium optimizes the parts of Minecraft you never see: the math behind mob pathfinding, how the game decides which blocks need updating, fluid flow, hopper transfers, collision checks, chunk handling. None of it touches gameplay. A creeper still creeps. Redstone still does the same thing. Your farms produce the exact same output. The game just spends less effort getting there. That last bit is the whole pitch. Plenty of optimization mods cut corners by quietly changing behavior, and then your villager breeder stops working or your mob farm rates tank. Lithium's entire design goal is vanilla parity: same results, fewer wasted CPU cycles. What it actually touches, roughly: Mob AI and pathfinding, usually the single biggest CPU cost on a busy world Block and fluid ticking, so water, lava, and random block updates cost less Hopper and container logic, a classic lag source in big storage systems Entity collision and physics, which matters once hundreds of dropped items pile up Chunk and region handling running quietly in the background Think of it like a tune-up rather than a new engine. The car drives the same, handles the same, gets you to the same places. It just burns less fuel doing it. For a single-player world that mostly means a smoother experience once your base gets big. For a server it can be the difference between a community that holds a steady 20 TPS and one that turns into a slideshow every time a few players log on at once. It was built by jellysquid3, the same developer behind Sodium, and it now lives under the CaffeineMC umbrella. Open source, free, and available on both Modrinth and CurseForge. No premium tier, no nag screen, no account to make. And it just works in the background. You install it and forget it exists. Why Lithium Is Trending Again in 2026 Optimization mods spike in popularity every time a big update lands, because the new version always runs a little rough at first. With 26.1 (and the 26.1.2 patch) bringing denser worlds and heavier simulation, plenty of people started feeling the lag again. Lithium got updated fast, and word spread the way it always does. Modpack authors are a big driver too. Almost every serious Fabric pack ships Lithium by default now, often without players even realizing it's in there. It's quietly become infrastructure, like the foundation under a house nobody thinks about until it cracks. There's also the steady drumbeat of creators covering performance setups every time the game updates. A new version drops, someone makes a 'best mods for 26.1' video, Lithium is on the list, and a fresh wave of players installs it. That cycle has repeated for years, and 2026 is no exception. Server owners are the other half of the story. More on them below. Lithium vs Sodium (People Mix These Up Constantly) This trips up new players all the time, so let's settle it. Sodium fixes your frame rate, the rendering side, how smoothly the world draws on your screen. Lithium fixes tick performance, the simulation side, how fast the server (or your single-player game, which runs its own internal server) processes everything happening in the world. Different jobs. They stack. Run both. Quick way to remember it: low FPS but the world feels responsive? That's a rendering problem, reach for Sodium. World stutters, mobs freeze in place, hoppers lag behind even though your FPS looks fine? That's a tick problem, and that's Lithium's territory. There used to be a third sibling, Phosphor, for lighting. It's been deprecated and folded into other projects, so don't go hunting for it on new versions. Actually, to be fair, you can still dig up old builds, but I wouldn't bother on 26.1. How to Install Lithium It's about as easy as mods get. You need a mod loader first, then the mod itself. Install Fabric Loader for your exact Minecraft version using the official Fabric installer. Grab Fabric API from Modrinth or CurseForge, since most of the ecosystem expects it. Download the Lithium build that matches your Minecraft version. Version matching matters: a 26.1 build won't load on 26.2 snapshots. Drop the.jar into your mods folder. Launch the game. That's the whole process. No menu, no setup screen. Prefer NeoForge? There's a native build for that now too, and the steps are basically identical: install the loader, drop the jar in, done. You don't even need Fabric API on that side. For a dedicated server, same idea: the jar goes in the server's mods folder, and every connected player benefits whether or not they've installed anything client-side. That's the part admins love. By default there's nothing to configure, which is sort of the point. Power users can toggle individual optimizations through a config file if some edge-case mod misbehaves, but across a few years of running it on different setups I've never actually had to. Does It Make a Difference? Yes, and the gap widens the more your world is doing. On a quiet single-player survival world with a handful of animals, you might not notice much at all. Fire up a 40-player SMP with iron farms, mob grinders, and a couple thousand loaded entities, and the difference in tick time can be genuinely dramatic. Over on the Lithium issue tracker and various Reddit threads, server owners regularly report meaningful drops in mean tick time, sometimes close to halving it on entity-heavy worlds. Take exact percentages with a grain of salt, since every world is different, but the direction is consistent: less CPU per tick, higher sustained TPS, more headroom before things start chugging. And it helps single-player more than people expect, because your own machine is doing double duty: rendering the world and simulating it at the same time. Anything that frees up the simulation side leaves more room for frames, especially on laptops or older hardware that's already working hard. If you host your own server, it's worth keeping an eye on its health after any change. Our Minecraft server status checker shows whether it's online, its ping, and the current player count, which is handy for confirming nothing broke when you added the mod. And if you'd rather join a smooth, well-run world than manage one yourself, browse the Minecraft server list, since plenty of those communities are already running Lithium behind the scenes. Worth It Or Not Install it. Honestly, there's almost no argument against it. It's free, it's tiny, it doesn't change gameplay, and it's maintained by people who know the engine inside out. Worst case, you notice nothing because your world was already running fine, and you've lost nothing. My one real caveat: keep it updated alongside Minecraft and your loader. An out-of-date optimization mod is the fastest route to a crash on launch day. Check the version number before you panic about a 'broken' modpack. So yeah. If you're putting together a Fabric or NeoForge setup in 2026 and Lithium isn't in your mods folder, add it. Few mods give you this much for so little effort. --- ### CombatLogX: How to Stop Combat Logging on Your Server URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/combatlogx-minecraft-combat-logging Published: 2026-05-25 Author: ice "A modular Spigot plugin that prevents players from logging out during combat and has many expansions for extra features." SirBlobman/CombatLogX · github.com .0 Picture it: you chase someone across half the map in a PvP fight, you land the final hit, and they vanish. Disconnected. No drops, no kill, nothing to show for the sprint. That's combat logging, and CombatLogX is the plugin built to make sure it stops working. What CombatLogX does CombatLogX is a Spigot plugin (it runs on Paper and Folia too) built around one stubborn rule: if you're in a fight, you don't get to quit your way out of it. The moment a player attacks or takes a hit, the plugin "tags" them as in combat for a set window. Log out while that tag is active and you get punished, which usually means your character dies right there and drops everything, exactly as if you'd lost the duel honestly. It's written in Java, open source under the GPL-3.0 license, and sitting at around 154 stars on GitHub. The maintainer, SirBlobman, has kept it ticking over for years and supports Minecraft versions up to 26.1.2. That track record matters more than any star count when you're handing a plugin control over your server's combat rules. So that's the skeleton. The thing that keeps admins loyal to it, though, is the expansion system, and I'll get there. Why server owners run it Combat logging is the kind of problem that quietly poisons a PvP server. One player figures out they can alt-F4 the second their health bar gets scary, and within a week everyone's doing it. Fights stop meaning anything. Why risk your diamond gear when you can just yank the ethernet cable? Factions servers are the obvious home for this. Real talk, so are survival worlds with open PvP, hardcore-style setups, and anything where loot is on the line. If your players can lose items on death, someone will try to dodge that death by disconnecting. And it's not only about punishment. A fair anti-logging setup makes combat feel honest, which is half the reason people show up to a PvP server in the first place. Fair fights keep players around. Cheap escapes drive them off. It's a small plugin solving a genuinely annoying social problem. That's my favorite kind of mod. Getting it onto your server Heads up before you start: CombatLogX needs Java 25, a server running Spigot, Paper, or Folia (anywhere from 1.19.4 to 26.1.2), and a companion library called BlueSlimeCore, version 2.9.9 or newer. Miss the BlueSlimeCore part and the plugin simply won't load, which trips up a lot of first-timers. You can grab the latest build from the SpigotMC resource page, or from the maintainer's Jenkins server if you want beta builds. The current release is v11.4.0.0.1156. Once you've got the zip, the rough flow looks like this: bash# 1. Stop the server first stop # 2. Drop these into /plugins/ # CombatLogX.jar # BlueSlimeCore.jar # 3. Put the expansion jars into # /plugins/CombatLogX/expansions/ # 4. Start the server back up, then reload configs in-game /clx reload The zip ships with the main jar, the core dependency, and a bundle of expansion jars you copy into that expansions folder. Edit the config and language files to taste, run /clx reload, and you're live. No full restart needed for most config tweaks, which is honestly handy when you're dialing in tag durations. Quick tangent while we're on the subject of standing up a server: if you're testing this on a fresh box and want a clean address to hand to friends, our free Minecraft DNS tool gives you a tidy domain instead of making everyone memorize an IP. Back to the plugin. Expansions, where it gets interesting Here's the part that separates CombatLogX from a basic anti-logout script. Most of its features aren't baked into the core jar. They're expansions, little modules you drop into the expansions folder, each one its own jar file. Want a feature? Add the jar. Don't want it? Delete the jar. That's the whole model. The maintainer keeps the full list in the documentation, but the categories cover what you'd expect a PvP-focused admin to want: stopping players from running certain commands while tagged, blocking teleports out of a fight, keeping combatants out of safe zones, on-screen timers so players can see how long they're stuck, and protection windows for brand-new players so they don't get farmed the second they spawn. You control the knobs in the config too: how long the combat tag lasts, what counts as combat, who's exempt. Set it too short and players slip away; too long and people gripe about being stuck. Somewhere around fifteen to thirty seconds tends to feel right, though that depends entirely on your server's pace. The modular approach has a real upside. Your core plugin stays light, and you only run code for features you actually use. A small skyblock server and a sprawling factions network can both run CombatLogX without one of them lugging around dead weight. One nice touch: each expansion folder ships with its own README, so you're not flying blind when you switch something on. Where people get stuck The Java 25 requirement is the big one. A surprising number of budget hosts and older setups still run earlier Java, and CombatLogX flatly won't start without 25. Check your host's panel for a Java version selector before you blame the plugin. Forgetting BlueSlimeCore is the second classic mistake. It's a separate jar, it's required, and the plugin won't run on its own. Upload both, every time. Then there's the expansions folder. Some people drop in the main jar, restart, and wonder why none of the cool features showed up. Those features live in the separate expansion jars you've to copy across by hand. The base plugin handles the tagging and the logout punishment; everything else is opt-in. A small Folia note: it's supported, but Folia works very differently under the hood, so test your expansion set on a staging world before pushing to live. Actually, that's solid advice for any server software, not just Folia. While I'm handing out unrelated tips (combat plugins put me in a server-admin headspace): if your survival crowd keeps arguing about whether their nether portals line up, the nether portal calculator settles it in about ten seconds. Nothing to do with CombatLogX. Just useful. Alternatives and my honest take CombatLogX isn't the only anti-combat-log option out there. CombatTagPlus is a long-running, lightweight pick that plenty of older servers still swear by, and there are various smaller "combat tag" plugins floating around SpigotMC if you want something dead simple. The trade-off is usually flexibility: the simpler ones do one thing, while CombatLogX hands you the whole expansion buffet. Would I run it? On a PvP server, yeah, without much hesitation. It's actively maintained, the modular design is genuinely smart, and the price (free, GPL-3.0) is hard to argue with. The Java 25 requirement is the only thing I'd verify first, because it's a real gotcha on cheaper hosts. If your server has no PvP and no item loss on death, you can skip this one. For anyone running fights worth winning, it's an easy recommendation. 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 --- ### AppleSkin Mod Explained: The Food HUD Upgrade for 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/appleskin-minecraft-mod-guide Published: 2026-05-25 Author: ice AppleSkin is a lightweight Minecraft mod that shows the hidden numbers behind hunger: saturation, exhaustion, and exactly how much each food restores before you eat it. It changes nothing about gameplay, it just surfaces stats Mojang keeps invisible. For survival players in 2026, that information turns guesswork into smart eating. What AppleSkin Does Vanilla Minecraft is weirdly secretive about food. You see ten little drumsticks, you eat something, the bar fills up. That's the whole interface. Honestly, what you don't see is saturation, the invisible buffer that decides how long before that bar starts dropping again. AppleSkin drags all of it out into the open. The mod, built by squeek502, has been around for years and sits near the top of the most-downloaded charts on both CurseForge and Modrinth. We're talking hundreds of millions of downloads. There's a reason for that, and it isn't flashy graphics. Here's what it adds: Saturation overlay on the hunger bar, shown as a lighter shade behind the drumsticks Food value preview when you hold something edible, so you see exactly how many hunger and saturation points it'll restore before you commit Tooltip numbers on food items listing hunger and saturation restored Exhaustion indicator that jitters the bar as you burn energy through sprinting, jumping, and mining Health regen hints so you can tell when you're about to heal None of this touches the game's balance. Eat the same food, get the same result. The mod just stops hiding the math. Saturation: The Hidden Stat That Changes How You Eat Okay, this is the part that actually matters, so stick with me. Every food item in Minecraft restores two things: hunger (the drumsticks you can see) and saturation (a hidden value layered on top). Saturation works like a reserve tank. As long as you've some, your visible hunger bar stays full. Only when saturation hits zero does the drumstick bar start to drain. And here's the kicker: two foods that fill the same number of drumsticks can carry wildly different saturation. Ever packed a stack of melon slices for a long mining trip and starved halfway down? That's the saturation trap. Steak and melon might both fill chunks of your hunger bar, but steak's saturation is enormous while melon barely registers. Without AppleSkin you'd never know. You'd just notice you get hungry again way faster after the fruit, shrug, and carry on. Exhaustion is the other half of this. Sprinting, jumping, taking damage, and breaking blocks all generate exhaustion, which quietly eats your saturation first and then your hunger. AppleSkin shows that drain in real time. Once you can see it, you start making better calls. Foods worth keeping in your hotbar Golden carrots: top-tier saturation, the speedrunner's pick Cooked steak and cooked porkchop: huge saturation, easy to farm Bread: solid, cheap, stacks well for early game Melon and sweet berries: fill the bar but burn off fast I tested this properly on a survival realm with friends last winter. Switched from eating whatever was in the chest to actually checking values first. Trips back to base for food dropped by maybe half. Small thing. Adds up. How to Install AppleSkin in 2026 Good news: it's one of the easier mods to set up, because it has almost no dependencies beyond a mod loader. AppleSkin supports Fabric, Forge, NeoForge, and Quilt, and it keeps pace with current releases. As of the latest Java version 26.1.2, there's a build ready to go. The steps: Install a mod loader (Fabric and NeoForge are the popular picks in 2026) On Fabric, grab the Fabric API too, since AppleSkin needs it there Download the AppleSkin file matching your exact Minecraft version from CurseForge or Modrinth Drop it into your mods folder Launch the game and glance at your hunger bar That's genuinely it. No config-file wrestling, though there are toggles if you want to switch individual features on or off. One caveat worth adding: match the mod file to your Minecraft version precisely. A 26.1 build won't load on an older 1.21 world, and the reverse fails too. Mismatched versions are the number one reason mods "don't work," going by half the threads over on the Minecraft modding subreddit. Does AppleSkin Work on Servers? It's fully client-side. Well, mostly client-side, the exhaustion sync is the exception. You can run it on your own machine and get the tooltips and overlays even when the server doesn't have it installed. For the exhaustion and saturation displays to be perfectly accurate, the server benefits from having AppleSkin too, since some of that data lives server-side. On a plain vanilla server you'll still get food value previews and item tooltips, which is the bulk of the value anyway. If you're the one running the server, this is also a decent moment to tidy up the rest of your setup. Our Server Properties Generator builds a clean server.properties file without the usual copy-paste guesswork, and the Minecraft Server Status Checker tells you instantly whether players can actually reach your world. Both play fine alongside any modded setup. A Word on Looking the Part Quick tangent, because someone always asks. AppleSkin changes your HUD, not your character. So if you've stared at the same avatar since 2023, a mod won't fix that, but our skin library will. The Lockdown Life - Modern Survival skin suits the careful-eater playstyle, and there are some oddly named favourites worth a scroll: elmodag, Teemodolol, Modstack, and yes, one simply called Mod. You can browse all Minecraft skins or browse skins by category. Right, back to food. Worth It Or Not Yes. Easily. AppleSkin sits in that rare category of mod that costs you nothing and teaches you something. No performance hit, no balance changes, no learning curve. It just hands you information the base game decided you didn't need. For anyone who plays survival seriously, or who's tired of going hungry on a long expedition because they packed the wrong snacks, it's close to essential. Is it exciting? No. It won't add dragons or new dimensions. But it's the kind of quietly useful tool that, once you've used it, you forget you ever played without. And in 2026, with food management still core to survival, that's a strong reason it keeps trending. Install it, eat smarter, get on with your day. --- ### Xaero's Minimap: Why This Minecraft Mod Is Worth It in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/xaeros-minimap-minecraft-mod-guide Published: 2026-05-25 Author: ice Xaero's Minimap is a lightweight Minecraft mod that drops a live map into the corner of your screen, with waypoints, cave layouts, and an optional mob radar. It's trending in 2026 because it runs on almost every version, barely dents performance, and finally makes 'I can't find my base again' a thing of the past.That last bit is the real selling point. Anybody who has chased a woodland mansion 2,000 blocks out, then realized they never wrote down their home coordinates, already understands exactly what this mod fixes.What Xaero's Minimap doesThe basics: it renders a small circular or square map in a corner of your screen, drawing the terrain around you in real time. Rivers, biome borders, the trail behind you, nearby entities as little dots. Nothing complicated.Waypoints are where people get hooked, though. Press a key, name a spot, pick a color, and you're done. Your diamond stash, an ocean monument, the village with the cleric selling mending books: each gets a labeled marker visible from across the map and straight through walls. Drop a waypoint on your base before you wander off and the mod keeps a live distance counter pointing you home.Death waypoints happen automatically too. Fall in lava with a full inventory? A marker lands where you died, so the frantic recovery run has an actual destination instead of a vague guess.Waypoints with custom names, colors, and visibility through terrainCave mode that maps tunnels by slicing the view at your current levelEntity radar showing mobs, animals, and players as colored dotsDeath points dropped automatically the moment you dieZoom and rotation, so the map either spins with you or stays locked northWhy everyone's installing it again in 2026Minimap mods aren't a new idea. JourneyMap and VoxelMap have been around for years. So why is Xaero's the one clogging up YouTube tutorials and modpack lists this year?Speed, mostly. It's built light, and on a current machine you genuinely won't feel it eating frames. I run it next to roughly forty other mods on a Fabric profile and it has never once been the thing tanking my FPS.Reach is the other half. The mod updates quickly, already supports the current 26.1.2 release alongside a long list of older versions, and that matters when half your friends are stuck on whatever build their favorite server is running. Snapshots usually get patched in fast as well.And then there's the companion. Xaero's World Map, from the same developer, gives you a full zoomable map of everywhere you've been. Minimap for the here-and-now, world map for the grand overview. Most people just run both and never look back.Xaero's vs JourneyMap vs VoxelMapFair question: with three big minimap mods out there, which one wins?JourneyMap is the polished, feature-heavy option with a slick web map you can open in a browser. It's great, but heavier. VoxelMap has a loyal following and a clean look, though updates landed slowly on the newest versions for a while. Actually, that's gotten better recently, but Xaero's still patches new versions faster. It sits in the sweet spot: fast, frequently updated, and split into a minimap plus a separate world map so you only load what you actually use.My honest read? If you want the lightest setup that still does everything, Xaero's is the pick in 2026. If you love the browser map feature, JourneyMap might pull you back. There's no wrong answer, just trade-offs.Installing it without breaking your gameYou'll need a mod loader first: Fabric, Forge, or NeoForge depending on your version. New to mods? Fabric is the gentler starting point in 2026, and its installer handles the whole thing in about two minutes.After that, the flow looks like this:Install Fabric or Forge that matches your exact Minecraft versionDownload Xaero's Minimap from CurseForge or Modrinth (the official pages)On Fabric, add the Fabric API too, since most mods lean on itDrop the.jar file into your mods folderLaunch the game and glance at the corner of your screenOne caveat worth stating plainly: only grab it from CurseForge or Modrinth. Sketchy "free mod download" sites are how people wind up with junk in their game folder, and the real mod costs nothing anyway, so there's zero reason to look elsewhere.Settings hide behind a hotkey you'll find in the controls menu, and the config screen is refreshingly readable. Resize the map, swap between round and square, flip the radar off, rebind whatever you like.Settings worth changing right awayDefaults are fine, but a few tweaks make it much better. Turn on cave mode auto-switching so the map flips to tunnel view underground without you fiddling. Bump the waypoint visibility distance up if you build big. And if you're on a slower rig, shrink the map and lower the render quality before you blame the mod for stutters.Small thing, big payoff: set a permanent waypoint at every base and Nether portal. Sounds obvious. Most people forget until they're lost.The radar question, and why some servers ban itHere's where it gets spicy. That entity radar showing players as dots? Brilliant in singleplayer, deeply controversial in multiplayer.On loads of PvP and anarchy servers, spotting other players through the terrain counts as cheating, or near enough. Some servers block the radar server-side. Others ban the mod outright. The rules swing wildly between communities, so check before joining anywhere competitive and don't assume your minimap is welcome.Looking for a server that allows it, or just one you'd rather play fair on? Our Minecraft server list is a solid place to compare communities and see what each one permits before you commit. Plenty of survival and creative servers are perfectly happy with the minimap and only restrict the radar.The upside: Xaero's lets you switch radar features off yourself, so staying within the rules doesn't mean uninstalling a thing.Free version vs PlusBoth the minimap and the world map are free. Fully usable, no nagging pop-ups. The developer also sells a "Plus" version through their support page that unlocks extras like deeper waypoint customization and a few quality-of-life touches.Do you need Plus? Honestly, no. The free build covers what most players ever want from a minimap. Plus is more of an "I like this mod and want to support the person who made it" purchase, which feels fair given how many hours you'll get out of it.Worth it or notFor singleplayer survival, easy yes. The waypoint system alone reshapes how you explore, and once death markers have saved your gear a couple of times, scribbling coordinates on a sticky note feels medieval.For multiplayer, it depends entirely on the server, so read the rules first. (And while you're tweaking your setup, our Minecraft skin creator is a fun detour if you want your character looking sharp before you go map an entire world.)So, my take? Install it. It's free, it's quick, and it solves a genuine annoyance vanilla Minecraft has never bothered to address. Just be a good sport about the radar when you're sharing a server with other people. --- ### Mod Menu: The Fabric Mod Worth Installing in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mod-menu-fabric-mod-guide Published: 2026-05-25 Author: ice Mod Menu is a Fabric utility that adds a "Mods" button to your title screen, so you can see every mod you've installed and open their settings without alt-tabbing to a config file. It's tiny, it's free, and in 2026 it's pretty much required if you play with Fabric mods. Here's the honest rundown.What Mod Menu DoesStrip away the hype and it's simple. Mod Menu drops a button into your main menu and your pause screen. Click it, and you get a scrollable list of every mod currently loaded, complete with names, version numbers, authors, descriptions, and links back to each project page.That alone is handy when you're trying to remember which of your 80 mods is the one adding those weird floating islands. But the part that matters most is the small wrench icon sitting next to certain mods. Click it and you drop straight into that mod's config screen: sliders, toggles, keybinds and all, rendered right inside Minecraft.No digging through a folder full of.json files. No restarting the game five times to test one value.A few smaller touches don't get mentioned much but make daily use nicer. There's a search bar at the top of the list, which sounds trivial until you're hunting one mod out of 200. Mods carry little badges too, flagging which ones are libraries, which are client-side only, and which have been deprecated. You can also click straight through to a mod's source code, issue tracker, or homepage from its entry, which is genuinely useful when something breaks and you want to report it.Why It Keeps Trending in 2026Mod Menu shows up on "best mods" lists every single year, and there's a slightly boring reason for it: half your other mods quietly expect it to be there. Over on Modrinth it sits near the top of the all-time download charts, and a big chunk of those installs aren't people choosing it for its own sake. They're people installing some other mod that points to Mod Menu as the way to reach its settings.So it trends partly by accident. A new minimap mod blows up, a new shader controller makes the rounds, and Mod Menu rides along because it's how you actually configure the thing.The current builds track Minecraft 26.1.2, the latest Java release, and the team behind it (TerraformersMC) usually ships an update within a couple of days of a new version landing. That reliability is a big reason nobody bothers trying to replace it.Installing Mod MenuYou need three things before Mod Menu does anything useful:Fabric Loader installed for your Minecraft version (26.1.2 right now).Fabric API, the dependency that most Fabric content needs to run at all.The Mod Menu build that matches your exact game version.Grab the file from Modrinth or CurseForge, drop the.jar into your mods folder, and launch the game on your Fabric profile. If it worked, the new button shows up on the title screen straight away. If it didn't, nine times out of ten it's a version mismatch: a Mod Menu built for 26.0 won't load on 26.1.2, and the reverse is just as true.When the button doesn't show upOpen your launcher's log and look for a line moaning about a missing dependency. Usually it's Fabric API not being in the folder, or two mods arguing over different game versions. Pull everything out, add the jars back one at a time, and you'll find the troublemaker fast.The Config Screens Are the Real Selling PointTime to be honest about something. On its own, a list of installed mods is nice but not life-changing. The reason Mod Menu earns its permanent spot in my folder is the config integration, and that's worth understanding properly.Mods don't get those settings screens for free. Their developers have to wire them up, usually through a config library like Cloth Config, and Mod Menu just provides the door you walk through to reach them. Real talk, so a mod can fully support Mod Menu, support it half-heartedly, or ignore it completely. Most of the popular ones support it well, but not all of them do, and that's worth knowing before you assume every mod will have a tidy screen.A real example from my own setup: I run a HUD mod that piles a clock, a coordinate readout, and an FPS counter onto the screen. The toggles for hiding each one used to live in a config file. With Mod Menu, they're checkboxes I can flip mid-game. Tiny thing on its own, but multiply that across 40 mods and you've saved yourself a genuinely annoying afternoon.And no, it won't cost you frames. Mod Menu only does work when you actually open its screen, so it's not running anything in the background while you play. I've had it loaded alongside 150-plus mods on a mid-range laptop and the menu still opens instantly. The stuff that tanks your frame rate in a heavy pack is the shader pack and the world-gen mods, never this.Loaders and Servers: A Few GotchasQuick clarification first, because this trips people up constantly. Mod Menu is a Fabric and Quilt mod. It does not work on Forge or NeoForge, full stop. Those loaders already bake a mod list into the launcher screen, and a separate mod called Configured handles in-game settings instead. So when a YouTuber raves about Mod Menu and your Forge pack doesn't have it, you're not doing anything wrong. Wrong loader, that's all.Servers are the other gotcha. If you're loading Mod Menu and a stack of other mods onto a server for friends, everyone needs the same mods at the same versions, or the server kicks people the moment they try to join. Mismatched mod lists cause more failed joins than anything else I've run into.And once your modded world is live, lock it down. A modded survival server with random strangers wandering in is asking for trouble. Setting up a proper allowlist takes about two minutes with our Minecraft whitelist creator, and it saves you the pain of someone griefing a base you spent a whole weekend building.My TakeInstall it. Seriously, if you touch Fabric mods at all, there's no real reason to skip it. It's lightweight, it doesn't change how the game plays, and it turns "where on earth is this setting hidden" into a two-click job.Would I call it exciting? Not really. It's plumbing.But it's the kind of plumbing you stop noticing until it's gone, and then everything feels harder. (It's the same small quality-of-life lift as remembering you can swap your whole look in seconds over on our Minecraft skins page.)My one genuine gripe is the version-matching dance after every big Minecraft update. You'll wait a day or two for builds to catch up, then you're sorted. Small price for something this useful. --- ### Lithium Mod for Minecraft: Is It Worth Installing in 2026? URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/lithium-mod-minecraft Published: 2026-05-25 Author: ice Lithium is a free Fabric mod that rewrites parts of Minecraft's internal game logic to run faster. No new items, no changed mechanics, no visual difference. The game just behaves more efficiently, and on busy servers especially, that difference is noticeable. Install it. What Lithium Does Most mods add things. Lithium removes friction. Built by the CaffeineMC team (the same people behind Sodium), Lithium patches the parts of Minecraft's codebase that handle entity AI pathfinding, block ticking, world generation, and physics simulation. None of these are glamorous. None of them are things you'd normally think about. But vanilla Minecraft's implementations of all of them have been around since the early days of the game, and some of them just aren't efficient by modern standards. Lithium replaces those routines with faster equivalents that produce identical results. Your iron golems still patrol the village exactly as before. Redstone still behaves predictably. Mob farms still function normally. The only thing that changes is how much CPU work the game needs to do to simulate all of it. One important clarification: Lithium doesn't touch rendering. Frame rate is Sodium's department. Lithium targets game logic, so its benefits are most visible when you're watching your server's TPS counter rather than your client's FPS. That said, pairing both mods is extremely common and they work well together. The Server-Side Story Running a Fabric server? This is where Lithium earns its reputation. TPS (ticks per second) is the heartbeat of any Minecraft server. The target is 20 TPS. When it drops, everything degrades: mobs freeze, hopper chains stall, players start desyncing from each other. On a loaded survival server with active players, chunk loaders, and mob farms all running at once, keeping 20 TPS is genuinely difficult in vanilla. Mob AI is one of the biggest TPS killers. Every active mob in loaded chunks is running a pathfinding calculation every few ticks, and vanilla's pathfinder isn't optimized for scale. Lithium's pathfinding rewrite cuts this cost meaningfully. On a mid-range server I was helping admin last year, CPU usage on the main game thread dropped from around 30% to under 15% after installing Lithium. That kind of headroom prevents the lag spikes that turn survival servers into frustrating experiences for everyone on them. There's no configuration needed on the server side. Add the.jar to the mods folder, restart, done. How to Install Lithium in 2026 You need the Fabric loader installed first. If you're already running Fabric mods, you're most of the way there. Real talk, if not, install the Fabric loader for Minecraft 26.1.2 (the current Java release), then grab Fabric API to go alongside it. Lithium itself is on Modrinth and CurseForge. Always match the mod version to your game version exactly. A 26.1.2 install needs the 26.1.2-compatible build of Lithium, not a build targeting an older release. Install Fabric loader for Minecraft 26.1.2 Download Fabric API and add it to your mods folder Download Lithium from Modrinth or CurseForge, matching your exact game version Drop the Lithium.jar into the mods folder Launch the game No config files. No settings screens to dig through. It's one of the few mods where "install and forget" is genuinely the right approach. If you're setting up a server for friends, it's worth configuring your whitelist properly before anything else, so random players can't wander in. The Minecraft Whitelist Creator makes generating whitelist files quick without needing to type commands in-game. Small thing, easy to skip, always worth doing. What to Pair It With Lithium alone is useful. Combined with a few complementary picks, it becomes part of a genuinely well-tuned setup. Sodium handles rendering performance. If you've ever watched a comparison video of Sodium against vanilla, the frame rate difference is hard to ignore. Lithium and Sodium are completely complementary because they target different parts of the engine with zero overlap between them. FerriteCore cuts memory usage. On machines with under 8GB allocated to the game, this one is almost as impactful as Lithium. The two stack cleanly. Entity Culling stops Minecraft from rendering entities you can't see through solid walls. The fact that vanilla doesn't already do this is one of those things you can't un-know once you find out. This mod just fixes it. Starlight (or its current-version equivalent) handles lighting calculations, another documented bottleneck in vanilla. Worth adding if you're already running the others and want to squeeze out more headroom. None of these conflict. Running Lithium, Sodium, FerriteCore, and Entity Culling together is a sensible default for any performance-focused Fabric install. Some people add Iris for shader support on top of this stack, though that introduces specific compatibility requirements with Sodium depending on which shader pack you're using. One caveat worth naming: certain shader packs have requirements specific to Sodium. If you add Sodium and notice visual glitches with your shader pack, that's the likely source. Lithium has no shader compatibility issues since it stays entirely out of the rendering pipeline. Mod Loader Compatibility Lithium is a Fabric mod. That's the short version. Quilt also works since it can run Fabric mods. NeoForge users are in a different ecosystem: there are optimization mods available there (Embeddium does similar rendering work to Sodium, for instance), but Lithium specifically isn't one of them. And Bedrock edition doesn't support Fabric mods at all. The architecture is too different. Everything discussed here's Java edition only. Worth Installing Even If Your Game Runs Fine? Honestly, yes. Even without visible lag, Lithium speeds up chunk loading, which means less of that annoying terrain pop-in when you're moving quickly. It makes mob farms more consistent because the AI tick cost is lower. And it frees up CPU headroom that shows up as smoother behavior in situations you might not have consciously noticed were slightly degraded. The mod is a few hundred kilobytes. Installation takes under a minute. Lithium has years of active maintenance behind it and a strong track record of not breaking things. The risk is about as low as it gets for a mod that touches core game systems. The only situation where I'd say skip it: you're on a modpack that explicitly lists its allowed mods and Lithium isn't included, or you're playing a snapshot version that the mod hasn't updated for yet. Always check Modrinth's version list before dropping it into a fresh snapshot world. While you're setting things up, it might also be a good time to sort out your character's look. The Minecraft skin library on this site has a solid range of options, and a decent skin looks a lot better once your game is actually running at the frame rate it should be. Install It or Skip It Free, actively maintained, and makes the game run better without changing how it plays. Lithium checks every practical box. If you're already on Fabric, there's almost no argument against adding it. If you're not on Fabric and are considering the switch purely for performance mods, the combined effect of Lithium plus Sodium plus FerriteCore is significant enough that it might genuinely be worth the switch, depending on how much your current setup is holding you back. For most players in 2026: just install it. Pair it with Sodium. Then go actually play the game. --- ### Mod Menu: Why This Fabric Mod Belongs in Your 2026 Setup URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/mod-menu-fabric-install-guide Published: 2026-05-24 Author: ice Mod Menu is a free Fabric mod that adds a Mods button to your Minecraft menu, so you can see every installed mod and open its config screen without leaving the game. It's tiny, client-side, and the unofficial control panel for Fabric packs in 2026. If you mod on Java, you probably already need it. What Mod Menu Does Open Minecraft with Fabric installed and the title screen looks a little different. There's a Mods button sitting under Multiplayer. Click it and you get a scrollable list of everything you've loaded: icons, version numbers, authors, and links to each mod's source code or issue tracker. It's basically a phone book for your modpack. That's the surface. The real value is the small config button next to mods that support it. Instead of editing JSON files by hand or alt-tabbing to a wiki, you click a wrench and change settings right inside the game. Sodium's performance options, a minimap's marker colors, hunger overhaul values, all of it where you can actually see it. Click any single mod and you drop into a detail page: full description, license, the people who built it, and buttons straight to the homepage or issue tracker. Sounds minor until two mods are fighting and you need to find the right bug report fast. And it pulls this off without dragging your frames down. Mod Menu loads its interface, then gets out of the way. No menus to memorize. No commands. Just a button. Why It's Trending Again in 2026 So why is everyone suddenly talking about a mod that's been around for years? Two reasons, mostly. The 26.1.2 update back in April brought a fresh wave of Fabric mods, and a big chunk of them list Mod Menu as a dependency for their settings. You install some shiny new biome mod, and it quietly asks for Mod Menu so you can actually configure it. Multiply that across a 40-mod pack and the download counts explain themselves. The other reason is simpler: the modpack scene got bigger this year. More players are building custom setups. That means more players hitting that exact moment where they need to flip one setting and really don't want to go spelunking through config folders to do it. (Every Fabric pack I grabbed off Modrinth last month bundled it, for what that's worth.) For context, Mod Menu has sat near the top of the most-downloaded Fabric mods on Modrinth for ages, comfortably in the tens of millions. Numbers like that don't come from hype, and over on the modding subreddits it's the standard 'install this first' suggestion for anyone new to Fabric. Worth remembering that Fabric and Forge are different ecosystems. Forge ships with its own built-in mod list, so Mod Menu is really the Fabric answer to something Forge users already had. As Fabric kept eating into the modding space this year, more newcomers showed up who'd never seen an in-game mod list, and this became their default first install. The mod also keeps pace with snapshots. Here's the thing, by the time most of us are poking at the 26.2 snapshots, a compatible build is usually already up, which keeps it glued to the front of everyone's pack. It's the mod you forget you installed until the day you genuinely need it. How to Install Mod Menu Setting it up takes about two minutes, assuming you already have Fabric Loader running. If you don't, install Fabric first using the official installer, then come back here. The quick version Download Mod Menu from Modrinth or CurseForge, matching your Minecraft version (26.1.2 at the time of writing). Drop the.jar file into your .minecraft/mods folder. Launch the game using the Fabric profile, not vanilla. Look for the new Mods button on the title screen. One thing worth flagging: Mod Menu needs the Fabric API mod sitting alongside it, the same as most Fabric mods do. If the button never appears, that missing dependency is usually why. Actually, scratch that, sometimes it's a version mismatch instead, so double-check your jar matches your game version before you start panicking. Because it runs purely on your client, you can use it on any server without the server needing it too. Join a survival world, a minigame hub, or anything else you dig up on a decent Minecraft server list, and Mod Menu just rides along on your end. The server never even knows it's there. If you're new to all this, the jump from vanilla to modded can feel intimidating. It really isn't. Fabric Loader, Fabric API, Mod Menu, and you've got a foundation that hundreds of other mods build on top of. The Little Features That Add Up Past the obvious mod list, there's a search bar (a lifesaver once you're past 30 mods), badges that tag each mod as client-side, server-side, library, or deprecated, and a live count of exactly how many mods you're running. Great for those 'wait, how did my pack get to 180 mods' moments. The badges deserve a mention. They tell you at a glance whether a mod actually does something on its own or just sits in the background supporting others. Handy when you're trimming a bloated pack and trying to work out what's safe to pull. There's also a config screen bridge for mods that use older config libraries, and Mod Menu plays nice with most of them. Cloth Config, for instance, hooks right in, which is why so many popular mods get clean in-game settings without their authors building anything custom. And if you maintain a pack for friends, the mod list doubles as documentation. Anyone can open Mods, see exactly what's installed and which version, and report problems with real details instead of 'the game broke'. That alone has saved me more troubleshooting headaches than I can count. The Settings People Skip Here's the bit nobody reads: Mod Menu has its own config, and it's more useful than it looks. You can switch the list to compact view, which genuinely matters once you cross 50 mods. Hiding library mods stops the whole thing looking like a wall of names you don't recognize. There's a toggle for showing the Mods button in the pause menu too, not just the title screen, which I'd argue should be on by default. My pick: compact list on, libraries hidden. Cleaner, faster to scan, far less intimidating for anyone opening your pack for the first time. You can also sort the list alphabetically or by load order, which sounds trivial until you're hunting for one mod in a sea of them. Small thing. Saves real time. Mod Menu won't do any of the actual playing for you, mind. It's not going to crunch your Nether coordinates (grab a proper Nether portal calculator for that) or build your base while you sleep. It organizes, it doesn't cheat. Good to set expectations there. Worth It Or Not Honestly? If you play Fabric, this isn't really a decision you get to make. Half your other mods expect it to be there, and the ones that don't still benefit from living in one tidy, searchable list. Is it exciting on its own? Not even slightly. Nobody boots up Minecraft thrilled to browse a mod list. But it's the kind of quiet, dependable utility that makes everything around it easier, and that's exactly why it keeps trending year after year. Bedrock players, this one passes you by, sorry. Mod Menu is Fabric-only, and Fabric is a Java thing. Bedrock add-ons work in a completely different way, so if you're on console or pocket edition, skip it. Install it, set up that compact list, and forget about it until the day you need to change a setting in a hurry. That day always shows up eventually. --- ### Iris Shaders: The Best Way to Run Minecraft Shaders in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/iris-shaders-minecraft-2026 Published: 2026-05-24 Author: ice Iris Shaders is an open-source shader loader for Minecraft Java Edition that works without OptiFine. It runs alongside Sodium, gets updated faster than OptiFine typically does, and in 2026 it's the obvious choice for anyone who wants visual improvements without the performance hit OptiFine typically brings. What Iris Does Here's the short version: Iris is a Fabric mod that lets you load shader packs. The shader packs themselves are the same ones you've always used with OptiFine. BSL, Complementary Reimagined, SEUS Renewed, Sildur's Vibrant, all compatible. The difference is what's happening underneath. OptiFine is a monolithic mod that does shaders, performance tweaks, zoom, custom entity models, connected textures, and a dozen other things all in one package. Iris just does shaders, and it does them while working alongside Sodium instead of competing with it. Sodium is currently one of the best performance optimization mods for Minecraft Java Edition, and the two work together cleanly. The project started around 2021 when a developer got frustrated waiting for OptiFine to support a newer version and decided to build something better. That origin story explains a lot about the project's philosophy: fast updates, open-source development, and no single-point-of-failure maintainer situation. The OptiFine Comparison Nobody Talks About Honestly OptiFine had a long run as the default answer for anyone asking 'how do I get shaders in Minecraft.' It deserves credit for making visual improvements accessible when there was no real alternative for shader loading combined with performance gains. But it has genuine problems now. The main one is update speed. Whenever Mojang ships a new version, OptiFine goes quiet for weeks or months. Since Mojang switched to quarterly 'drops' format (which has been genuinely good for getting features out faster), this lag has become more noticeable. The current release is Java Edition 26.1.2, and Iris fully supports it. OptiFine's compatibility situation at any given time is... uncertain, let's say. Performance is the other thing. OptiFine used to be the only way to get decent frames. That hasn't been true for a while. Sodium alone typically outperforms OptiFine on raw FPS. Add Iris into the mix and you're getting shader support on top of Sodium's optimizations, whereas OptiFine's performance improvements are baked in alongside its shader loader in a way that creates friction with other mods. I ran a rough comparison on a Ryzen 5 5600 with an RTX 3060 at 1440p using Complementary Reimagined at medium quality. Iris plus Sodium gave consistently better framerates, usually around 15-20% higher. Not scientific, but the gap is real enough that you'd notice it during actual play, especially in dense builds or near particle effects. There's a caveat though: some things OptiFine does, Iris doesn't. Custom entity models, certain connected texture configurations, and zoom are handled by separate companion mods in the Fabric ecosystem (Entity Model Features, Continuity, and Zoomify, respectively). It's more modular, which some people dislike. Personally I think it's cleaner because you only install what you actually use. Shader Packs Worth Using With Iris The compatibility list is long, but here are the ones that actually get used: Complementary Reimagined: The most popular pick for a reason. Balanced between performance and looks, well-maintained, and it has a configuration screen that's actually navigable. BSL Shaders: Extremely customizable. The settings menu is overwhelming at first but lets you get very specific about the look you want. SEUS Renewed: Resource-heavy but produces a distinct, photorealistic aesthetic that no other pack really matches. Skip this on mid-range hardware. Sildur's Vibrant Shaders: Several performance tiers including a 'Lite' version that runs well on weaker machines. Good first pack if you're not sure what your GPU can handle. Rethinking Voxels: A newer pack built specifically for Iris that uses rendering features OptiFine doesn't even support. Impressive results but more demanding than most. Worth knowing: some recent packs are being developed Iris-only, taking advantage of GLSL features OptiFine doesn't implement. So this is a sign the ecosystem is maturing, but it also means those packs won't work if you ever need to fall back to OptiFine. Installing Iris in 2026: Five Steps You need Fabric first. Real talk, this is a separate launcher profile from vanilla, Forge, or NeoForge. Download the Fabric installer from the official site and run it, pointing at Java Edition 26.1.2. Launch the Fabric profile once from the Minecraft launcher to generate the mods folder. Go to Modrinth and download 'Iris Shaders.' The current version comes bundled with Sodium, which is what you want. Drop the jar file into your.minecraft/mods folder. Launch Minecraft, go to Options > Video Settings > Shader Packs, and select whatever shader pack you downloaded. That's it. No complicated config, no installer wizard, no editing text files manually. If you're running other mods alongside Iris, check compatibility on Modrinth before adding anything. Most Fabric mods work fine, but there are occasional conflicts. The Iris Discord has a running list of known incompatibilities, and it's worth a quick check before spending twenty minutes troubleshooting a crash. What to Expect From Performance Shaders are expensive. Iris and Sodium do a lot to minimize the cost, but there's no magic here. Integrated graphics or low-end GPU: Sildur's Lite is probably your ceiling, or try Vanilla Plus shaders for subtle improvements at very low cost. Mid-range GPU (GTX 1060/1660, RX 580/5600 XT): Complementary or BSL at medium settings, 1080p, expecting 40-60fps depending on the scene. High-end GPU (RTX 30/40 series, RX 6700 XT or better): Full quality at 1440p or 4K, usually stable 60fps with most packs. Render distance matters more than people realize. Dropping from 16 chunks to 10 or 12 often recovers 20-30% of your framerate with almost no visual impact at normal play distances. Try that before lowering shader quality settings. Multiplayer and Servers: The Quick Clarification Iris is client-side only. The server doesn't need it installed, doesn't detect it, and doesn't care whether you're using it. Every player installs it locally if they want shaders. This means Iris works on any Java Edition server you connect to, vanilla or modded, public or private. If you're managing a small private server while friends get their Fabric setups sorted, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator is handy for building and exporting your whitelist file without editing JSON by hand. Nothing to configure on the server end. The whole visual experience lives on each client. Iris in the Broader Mod Ecosystem Iris has become the default shader solution in basically every serious Fabric modpack. If you download a performance-focused Fabric pack from Modrinth and it mentions shader support, it's almost certainly set up for Iris. The development team has been consistent about shipping compatibility updates quickly. When Mojang releases a new version, Iris usually has at least a beta-compatible build within a few days. The upcoming Chaos Cubed update (PCGamesN estimates a June 16 release based on Mojang's quarterly schedule) will likely have Iris support available close to launch. This team tracks Mojang's snapshot releases, so compatibility surprises are rare. Open source also means community contributions. When there's a rendering bug or performance issue, anyone can submit a fix rather than waiting on a single developer's schedule. So that responsiveness has been noticeably better than the OptiFine era. One thing I genuinely like: Iris pairs well with resource packs and a custom skin. If you're investing time into how Minecraft looks, it makes sense to have a character that matches the vibe. The Minecraft Skin Creator on this site lets you design your own skin, which goes a long way toward making a shader-lit world feel like yours rather than someone else's screenshot. Before You Install A few things worth knowing first. Fabric only. If your setup runs Forge or NeoForge, Iris isn't an option. Oculus is a Forge-compatible fork, but it's not as actively maintained. Check whether your existing mods have Fabric versions before committing to the switch. Check your RAM allocation. With Iris, Sodium, and a shader pack active, memory usage goes up. Allocate at least 4GB to the JVM in the Minecraft launcher's Installation settings, or 6-8GB if you're running additional mods alongside it. And accept that some things will look different. Shaders change how lighting, water, and shadows render, which sometimes makes dark areas or caves harder to navigate. Most shader packs have their own brightness slider inside the shader configuration menu, separate from Minecraft's main brightness setting. Tweak that before deciding a pack isn't for you. --- ### Iris Shaders in 2026: Why This Minecraft Mod Is Trending URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/iris-shaders-minecraft-mod-1 Published: 2026-05-24 Author: ice Iris Shaders is a free, open-source Minecraft mod that loads shaderpacks with much better performance than OptiFine, which is the short answer for why everyone keeps recommending it. Run it next to Sodium and you get rich lighting, real water, and soft shadows while keeping your frame rate healthy. It supports the current 26.1.2 release.So what's Iris Shaders, really?Iris is a shader-loading mod. By itself it doesn't make anything prettier. Its whole job is to load shaderpacks (those community-built files that overhaul how light, water, clouds, and shadows behave) on top of Sodium, the performance mod most people already have installed.For years the answer to 'how do I get shaders' was just OptiFine. That was the deal. OptiFine handled everything: performance tweaks, shader support, zoom, dynamic lighting, all of it. But it's closed source, it picked fights with other mods, and it usually showed up late to every new version.Iris took a different road.It's designed to ride along with Sodium instead of competing with it, so the FPS boost from Sodium and the visuals from your shaderpack happen together. I moved my main setup over a couple of versions back and haven't gone back since. Honestly, on a fairly modest laptop (an RTX 3050, nothing exotic) I picked up something like 30 to 40 extra frames just from dropping OptiFine for the Iris and Sodium combo.That's the pitch. Faster and prettier, at the same time, for free.Why Iris is trending right nowPart of it is timing. Minecraft moved to quarterly drops instead of one giant update a year, so the game changes more often. The Tiny Takeover drop brought baby mobs, pet name tags, and that golden dandelion that keeps your animals tiny forever, and PCGamesN reckons the next drop, Chaos Cubed, should land around June 16. Every time a new version appears, OptiFine users tend to wait. Iris and Sodium usually update within days.Speed of updates matters more than people think. Nobody wants to sit on an old version for three weeks because their shader mod isn't ready.The other big shift: Iris added Forge and NeoForge support. It started life as a Fabric-only project, which meant the huge crowd running Forge modpacks couldn't touch it. That wall is mostly gone now, and plenty of pack authors bundle Iris by default. So more players bump into it without even going looking.And honestly, word of mouth. Shaders look incredible in screenshots, those screenshots get shared, and the comments fill up with 'what shaders are those?' The answer, more and more, points back to Iris.The best shaderpacks to pair with itIris is the engine. The shaderpack is the actual look. Here's what I'd point a new player toward, roughly from 'runs on a potato' to 'melts your GPU':Complementary Reimagined: the safe default. Balanced, gorgeous, loaded with settings, and it runs well on mid-range machines. If you only try one, try this.BSL Shaders: bright, clean, and beginner-friendly. Great water and a warm look that suits survival builds.Sildur's Vibrant: the low-end champion. Comes in tiers, so you can scale it down to Lite on older hardware and still get real lighting.Photon: newer, stylized, leans cinematic. A favorite with the screenshot crowd.SEUS PTGI: path-traced lighting that looks borderline unreal. Stunning. It'll also punish a weak GPU, so go in with expectations.My pick for most people is Complementary Reimagined, and it's not close. It nails the brightness and shadow balance straight out of the box, which the flashier packs often don't.How to install Iris (the five-minute version)You've got two easy routes. The Iris installer does the setup for you, or you go the manual Fabric way. That manual path is barely harder, and it's the one I'd suggest, because you'll actually know what's on your machine.Install the Fabric loader for your Minecraft version (26.1.2 right now).Download Iris and Sodium from Modrinth. Iris bundles a compatible Sodium build, but grabbing both yourself avoids version mismatches.Drop both.jar files into your mods folder.Launch the Fabric profile, open Video Settings, and you'll see a new Shader Packs button.Put a shaderpack.zip into the shaderpacks folder, click it in that menu, and apply.That's it. No account, no payment, no strange launcher.One caveat worth adding: shaderpacks made strictly for OptiFine sometimes have small quirks under Iris, like a misbehaving custom sky. It's rare with the popular packs above, but if something looks off, that's usually the reason, not Iris itself.Does it change anything on servers?No, and this trips people up. Shaders are entirely client-side. They live on your computer and nowhere else, so the server has no idea you're running them and doesn't need to. You can hop onto any vanilla, Paper, or modded server and flip your shaders on without asking permission.Which is the fun part, really. Those screenshots of shader-lit survival bases? Plenty of them are taken on ordinary multiplayer servers, no special setup required.If you're the one running the server, though, the visuals are on your players, but the experience is on you. Get the foundation right first. Our Server Properties Generator takes the guesswork out of view distance, spawn settings, and the dozens of other server.properties values that make a world feel good to explore (and a generous render distance genuinely helps shaders look their best). And if you're building a community server with voting rewards, confirm the plugin side actually fires using our Minecraft Votifier tester before you promise players their daily crates.Worth installing or not?Yes. For nearly everyone, yes.If your machine can run vanilla Minecraft at a comfortable frame rate, you can almost certainly run Iris with a lighter shaderpack and a sensible render distance. The performance floor sits far lower than the OptiFine era led people to expect, mostly because Sodium does the heavy lifting underneath.The only people I'd warn carefully are those on very old integrated graphics. Even then, Sildur's Vibrant on its Lite tier at a modest render distance is worth a shot before writing it off.Iris is free, it's quicker than the old way, it updates fast, and it now plays nice with both Fabric and Forge. Hard to argue with that. Grab Complementary Reimagined, give it ten minutes, and see your world in real sunlight for the first time. --- ### Minecraft Ghast Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-ghast-farming-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Ghasts are one of the few hostile mobs worth farming intentionally. They spawn predictably in the Nether, they drop useful items (especially their tears), and a decent setup will outproduce random hunting by miles. Here's what you need to know about how they work and how to farm them effectively in Minecraft 26.1.2. Ghast Spawning and Mechanics Ghasts spawn exclusively in the Nether, and they don't care about light levels. Unlike most mobs that need darkness, ghasts will appear in full brightness. This makes them more reliable to farm than many other hostile mobs. What ghasts do require is vertical clearance. They need at least 4 blocks of empty space above their spawn location. But this detail matters enormously for farm design. You can't spawn them in enclosed rooms or under low ceilings. Build a roof and ghasts won't appear underneath it, no matter how perfect the conditions otherwise are. Ghasts spawn on any solid block in the Nether - netherrack, soul sand, magma, lava, even dirt if you're carrying any. And this means they appear all over the place naturally. You'll see them flying above lava lakes, in massive caverns, and around cliff edges. The only requirement is enough open space above the spawn surface. This is crucial for farm planning. Since ghasts spawn on any surface with proper vertical clearance, you can build your platform out of whatever material you want. Netherrack is cheap, but any solid block works. Spawn rates depend on how many other mobs are already loaded in your world. Clean areas spawn ghasts more frequently than crowded regions. This is why most dedicated farms are built far from your main base - isolation means higher spawn rates. One last thing about behavior: ghasts are hostile, so they'll attack if you get close. They shoot fireballs that destroy blocks. These move constantly and unpredictably. And ghasts take fall damage. Most flying mobs ignore it, but ghasts don't. This last detail is useful for certain farm designs. What Ghasts Drop and Why It Matters Each killed ghast drops 0-1 ghast tears and 0-2 gunpowder on average. The tears are what make farming worthwhile. Gunpowder is bonus loot, but creepers give you that more reliably. 2025 06 09 11.01.56 Copy in Minecraft Ghast tears craft into end rods, brewing stands, and a few niche items. If you're building in the End dimension or brewing potions seriously, you need steady tear supplies. Hunting random ghasts in the Nether wastes enormous amounts of time. A farm delivers tears on demand instead. The economics work out clearly. Beyond early-game survival, a farm makes sense if you do endgame activities. For casual players, it's optional. But once you hit the point where you want regular tears, farming becomes dramatically faster than hunting. Designing Your First Farm The simplest working ghast farm has three components: a spawning platform, a killing mechanism, and a collection system. You build an open platform where ghasts spawn. Most players add a way to kill them quickly. Their drops fall into hoppers leading to a collection chest. Acid Ghast in Minecraft Here's a concrete setup. Build a platform at least 15-20 blocks above surrounding terrain. This gives ghasts clearance to spawn freely. Keep the platform open and spacious - don't enclose it. When ghasts appear, repeating pistons push them into a suffocation chamber. That's just a narrow corridor with pistons pointing inward from both sides. Ghasts take damage with each push until dead. Their drops funnel into hoppers below. The beauty is simplicity. No command blocks. No complex detection systems. Just pistons, redstone, and time. Here's the thing, works at any hour, any weather. You can watch it run or come back after a few hours and collect. Want to go more advanced? Some designs use water channels to funnel ghasts into kill zones. Others push ghasts into the End dimension where they're neutral and easier to handle. Some setups use fall damage instead of suffocation. But honestly, unless you need absurd quantities of tears, the basic piston approach produces enough. Building this requires understanding mob spawning, basic redstone, and Nether navigation. It's intermediate-level work. Not trivial, but achievable if you've played for a while. Before you commit to a big build, verify your server stability with the Minecraft Server Status Checker. Nothing's worse than spending hours building, then discovering server issues. Also think about location carefully. Build far from your main base in an empty Nether region. You want isolation so your farm doesn't accidentally interact with other projects. AFK Versus Active Farming Truly automatic, completely hands-off ghast farms exist, but they're complicated. You'd need command blocks programmed with scoreboards to detect ghasts, then trigger complex mechanics to guarantee kills. It's doable if you know command block programming. Most players don't bother though. 15 Year Journey Baby Ghast in Minecraft A semi-AFK approach works better. Build a simple farm you can check on every 10-20 minutes. Let it run while you do other stuff nearby. This still produces tremendously more tears than random hunting, without the headache of full automation. Test your design first. Watch how ghasts actually interact with your platform. Notice which ones escape, which get caught. Use that data to iterate and improve. Every farm becomes better through observation. Making Your Farm Look Intentional Most ghast farms are visually terrible. Platforms with pistons and hoppers everywhere. Redstone trailing all over. Looks like someone's testing ground, not an actual build. Baby Ghast in Minecraft If you want it to look intentional, add theming. Use Nether-appropriate blocks like blackstone, soul sand, or bone blocks. Frame your platform properly. Add shelter around the collection area. Suddenly it looks like you built something instead of just throwing blocks down. Push further if you want. Use the Minecraft Text Generator to create a fancy entrance sign. Adds personality. Shows you put thought into the project. It's small touches, but they change the impression from "functional mess" to "actual build." People's reactions differ dramatically. Plus you're way less embarrassed showing it to friends. Is Farming Worth It? Not every player needs a ghast farm. You could hunt ghasts randomly. Find tears in End cities. Get them from villager trades. Random hunting works if you're patient enough. Once you hit the point where you need regular tears though, farming becomes dramatically faster. A basic farm running a few hours produces more tears than days of hunting. The time difference is enormous. Ghast farming is intermediate-level work. Requires mob spawning knowledge, basic redstone, Nether navigation. Not complicated, but not trivial. The payoff justifies it though. Once running, you've tears whenever you need them. That frees you to focus on actual projects instead of grinding. Start simple. Build the basic piston design. Watch it work. See how ghasts actually behave in your setup. Improve from there. That's how good farms develop. You'll learn stuff that applies to future projects too. --- ### Minecraft Skeleton Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-skeleton-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Skeletons are one of Minecraft's most valuable hostile mobs. They drop bones for bone meal and arrows, making farms essential for resource gathering. This guide covers everything: where skeletons spawn, their drop mechanics, and how to build efficient farms. How Skeletons Spawn Let's start with the basics. Skeletons only spawn in darkness. They need a light level of 7 or lower, which is why you'll see them everywhere at night but almost never during the day above ground. They'll spawn on any solid block as long as there's air above, though they're picky about certain spawning surfaces in different biomes. This matters for farm building. Underground, skeletons spawn freely across the board. Caves, mineshafts, any dark space with a solid floor will do. But surface-level spawning gets more complicated. Grass blocks are a no-go for skeleton spawning, which is why most farms are built underground or in the Nether where you've got more predictable conditions. On Java Edition version 26.1.2, skeleton spawning works the same as it has for years, though the Nether does allow them to spawn on soul sand and similar blocks. Bedrock Edition has some quirks here. Skeletons prefer certain block types, and the spawn mechanics feel slightly more restrictive than Java if you're testing across both versions. Building near water sources will actually reduce spawning rates since they avoid water-adjacent areas. Biome choice affects skeleton frequency too. They spawn more commonly in dark oak forests, swamps, and anywhere with heavy tree coverage that creates natural darkness. Deserts, despite being open, can have decent spawning if you dig down a bit. What Skeletons Drop Skeletons have one of the most generous loot tables in Minecraft. Honestly, each skeleton typically drops bones and arrows, which is what you're farming them for in the first place. Bones: 0-2 per skeleton, stackable for bone meal crafting. This is your main harvest. Arrows: 0-2 per skeleton. You'll never lack arrows again. String: Rarely, if a skeleton was wearing it (usually from mob combinations). Enchanted gear: Very rare chance for bow or helmet with enchantments. Honestly, it's hard to complain about the skeleton drop table. The real value is in bone meal production. A working skeleton farm can net you hundreds of bones per hour, which converts to thousands of bone meal. That's fertilizer for crops, dye production, and coral farming all rolled into one mob. Arrows are almost a side benefit at this point, but they're nice to have if you're low on flint or string. One thing to note: looting enchantments make a real difference here. A Looting III sword will bump your drops significantly, turning a decent farm into an absurdly productive one. Building Your First Skeleton Farm The basic farm design follows the same principle as most XP farms: create darkness, force spawning, and collect drops. Here's the general layout: Find a dark area or dig underground at least 50 blocks from your base (to prevent unintended mobs). Create a flat platform at least 22 blocks square. And this is your spawning floor. Above it, build another platform with gaps or use slabs to keep your farm from getting too cramped. The idea is to give skeletons room to spawn without packing them so tight that the system jams up. Add water channels to push mobs toward a central collection point. At the collection point, you've options. A simple setup uses a 2-block-high section that funnels skeletons into a line where they take fall damage. Once weakened to half a heart, a single hit kills them and they drop everything. For fully AFK farms, add a flying machine or piston system that damages them automatically (Nether farms work great for this since you can use magma blocks). Lighting is critical. Your entire spawning area needs to be completely dark. Even one torch ruins the whole setup. Some builders use lower platforms slightly above sea level to access the farm without accidentally placing light sources. If you're checking out tools to monitor your progress, the Minecraft Server Status Checker can help verify your server's uptime while you're testing farms on multiplayer servers. Not directly related to farm design, but useful context. Optimization: Moving From Basic to Efficient Once you've got bones dropping, you'll want to push efficiency higher. Most successful farms scale by expanding the spawning platform rather than adding complexity. Larger platforms mean more simultaneous mobs. A 40x40 platform spawns significantly more than 22x22, but building one takes real time. The spawning rate caps at roughly one mob per second per 40 blocks of spawning surface, so you're looking at realistic limits around 400-600 mobs per minute on a truly massive platform. Water channels work best when they're unobstructed and flowing downward at a gentle slope. Skeletons navigate water poorly, so steep drops can jam your system. Gentle channels over multiple levels work better than one sharp drop. For the killing mechanism, splash potions or status effects beat pure fall damage if you're going AFK. A single skeleton with Wither effect dies automatically while others nearby see it and get confused (yes, really), slowing the farm sometimes. Better to use suffocation damage from pistons or magic damage from Wither roses if you're on Java. Java vs Bedrock: The Real Differences Farms work on both, but they're not identical. Java Edition (26.1.2) has predictable mob behavior and spawning. Your farm works the way you designed it. Bedrock is more chaotic. Mobs pathfind differently, sometimes standing around instead of moving forward. Farms need to account for this stubbornness. Bedrock farms benefit from wider channels and gentler slopes. Java farms can be more compact. If you're building on Bedrock, expect to spend more time troubleshooting pathfinding issues. Nether farms work on both versions, which is why so many Nether skeleton farms exist. Lava damage is reliable and consistent across versions. Soul sand and magma block setups hit the same on Java and Bedrock, removing some variables. For creating skins to match your character while you're grinding skeletons, check out the Minecraft Skin Creator if you want a fresh look for your farming sessions. Worth the Effort? Short answer: absolutely. Bone meal is essential for late-game progression. Building a full farm might take a few hours, but you're setting yourself up for infinite fertilizer. That means infinite crops, automatic tree farms, and unhinged terraforming projects. The early investment pays dividends within a week of use. Plus, there's something satisfying about watching hundreds of skeletons funnel into your collection system. It's functional and oddly entertaining. If you've got the time and resources, start digging. --- ### Minecraft Snow Golem Guide: Spawning, Drops and Farming URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/snow-golem-guide-spawning-drops Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Snow golems are one of the easiest mobs to create in Minecraft, and they're surprisingly useful for mob farming and testing. Spawning one takes just two snow blocks and a pumpkin, they drop snowballs and seeds, and setting up a farm to mass-produce them takes about an hour of work. Here's everything you need to know. How to Spawn a Snow Golem It's almost embarrassingly simple. Stack two snow blocks vertically, then place a pumpkin (or carved pumpkin, or jack-o-lantern) on top. The snow golem spawns immediately, ready to roam and attack nearby hostiles. Direction doesn't matter, snow won't matter, and honestly it's one of the few mob spawning recipes that doesn't involve staring at a wiki screen mid-game. The catch? You need snow blocks, not snow layers. Actually, that's not even really a catch - you can mine snow blocks with a shovel, they're everywhere in snowy biomes, and you can craft them with 4 snowballs if you're desperate. And pumpkins? Grow them like you'd grow anything else, or find them in taiga villages. The resource cost is basically zero. What matters is placement. The Location Problem Nobody Talks About Snow golems have one serious limitation that ruins farms in wrong biome. They melt in warm biomes. Not slightly uncomfortable - they literally take damage and die if the temperature is too high. This means deserts, jungles, and the Nether are out. You need a cold or temperate biome. Snow biomes obviously work. Taiga, windswept terrain, and dark forests are all fine. Underground in a cold biome works too, actually - wait, no, biome temperature is what matters, not location, so altitude doesn't protect you in a warm biome. In Minecraft 26.1.2, here's the thing: snow golems also generate snow where they walk, which is fun for aesthetics but means your farm will gradually fill with snow. Look, not a problem if you're harvesting them fast. Bigger problem? They take knockback from blazes and striders, they get stuck on terrain easily, and they refuse to cross water without your help. This is why most farms are built vertically with water elevators. What Snow Golems Drop Snowballs. Tons of them. A single snow golem drops 4 to 6 snowballs on death, which seems small until you understand snowballs are useful for testing, knockback experiments, and... well, honestly, that's about it for serious players. Snowballs don't turn into powder or sell for anything meaningful. But in creative or on multiplayer servers where you're trying to grief someone with knockback, snowballs are hilarious. They're genuinely worthless for survival. Here's what actually makes snow golem farming worth considering: if your farm is in a grassy biome, they drop seeds. Any seeds. Wheat, melon, pumpkin seeds from torches and crops nearby - whatever's growing around the farm gets seeded when snow golems die. This is renewable seed farming, and it's better than most methods if you set it up right. The third drop is the pumpkin you placed on top, which respawns if it's water-transported properly. Building a Real Snow Golem Farm Choose a cold biome or find a shaded underground area in a temperate zone. Open terrain is fine. You'll need: A platform where snow golems spawn (two snow block pairs) Water current pushing them toward a central shaft A vertical drop into a dark chamber (kills them via fall damage or suffocation) Hoppers at the bottom collecting drops A chest system for storage The spawn platform should be flat and loaded. If you're AFK farming, stay within about 128 blocks or use a chunk loader if your server allows. Snow golems spawn passively on snow blocks without any special spawning mechanics, so you don't need dark rooms or spawning platforms like you would for mob grinders. Just stick them in a walkable space and let the water do the work. Water pushes them toward a central shaft that drops them 25-30 blocks into a collection chamber. At that height they die instantly without needing to be killed. Hoppers funneling into double chests mean you can AFK for hours. It's not complicated, which is honestly the appeal. The Snowball Economy and Real Farming Let's be honest: snowball farms aren't meta. But they work for specific situations. If you're playing on a whitelist server and you've got friends trying to knock each other around, snowballs are infinite ammunition. If you're testing knockback mechanics for a build, farm a stack quickly. If you're doing a snowball-only challenge run (yes, those exist), you need a farm. The seed farming angle is actually stronger. Combine your snow golem setup with planted crops around the farm chamber, and you're generating seeds faster than you'd expect. This pairs surprisingly well with composter systems if you're trying to push crops. Seed to bone meal to tree farming - it's not a direct path, but it works. For efficiency? Sugarcane or kelp farms beat this by a mile. Mob grinders produce more drops per hour. But snow golems are stupid simple and require almost zero maintenance once built. That simplicity has value on survival servers where complexity kills progress. Making Snowballs Useful This is where it gets weird. Snowballs don't stack to 64 in Java Edition - they stack to 16, which was always baffling. So a massive farm produces hundreds of snowballs you can't fit in a double chest. Is that a bug? Unclear. Mojang's never explained it. Just take note if you're farming large scale. Where snowballs shine: they're perfect for creative testing, multiplayer pranks, and knockback situations. If you've got a PvP arena on your server, snowballs let newer players practice without needing swords. They deal no damage, so nobody's upset about balance, and they create a learning curve for knockback combat that actual swords can replicate later. You can also use them in comparators and redstone circuits as items for logic gates, but that's niche and usually harder than alternatives. Why Bother? Fair question. If you're playing single-player vanilla Survival and optimizing for efficiency, snow golem farms are a waste of time. Their drops don't feed your economy. But if you're on a multiplayer server, testing mechanics, or just want something mindless to build while listening to music, they're perfect. They require almost zero materials, they work in any cold biome, and they're so simple that even new players can understand them at a glance. Plus, if you're into creating custom server experiences, snow golems are a building block. Use them as part of a larger system - maybe combine snowball drops with knockback traps, or seed farming with your crop renewal system. One more thing: if you're running a server and want to encourage new players to explore creative building, snowball wars are genuinely fun. Hand them a stack of snowballs and a safe arena, and watch them figure out knockback combat without the stress of actual combat. Tools to Build Around Your Farm If you're building a whole server ecosystem, you'll want consistent tools for your players. Use the Minecraft Skin Creator to let players build their own skins before joining - more invested players engage with content better. And if you're managing a whitelist, the Minecraft Whitelist Creator makes administration painless instead of tedious text editing. Snow golem farms fit into that same philosophy: simple tools that unlock creativity. They're not about maximum efficiency. They're about having fun with what Minecraft offers. --- ### How to Build an Enchanting Room in Minecraft URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/how-to-build-enchanting-room Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Building an enchanting room isn't complicated, but it does require understanding the basics. You need bookshelves (up to 15) surrounding your table to maximize enchantment levels, proper lighting so you can actually see what you're doing, and enough breathing room to move without punching your own decorations. The real question though: why build a dedicated room at all? Because a proper setup looks incredible, runs more efficiently, and honestly, it's one of those projects that genuinely feels rewarding when it's done. Understanding Your Enchanting Table Setup Your enchanting table is the centerpiece. Place it somewhere central and think about how players will approach it. Bookshelves need to be exactly one block away from the table (measured horizontally or vertically, not diagonally), and there's a bit of geometry involved in maximizing your power. Fifteen bookshelves max out the enchanting table at level 30 enchantments. You don't strictly need all 15 for decent results, but if you're building a room, you might as well commit. The classic layout is a hollow rectangle around the table, or a 3x3 grid with the table in the center and bookshelves filling the surrounding blocks. Pick whichever feels right for your space. Here's something I stumbled on after testing multiple layouts: placement height actually matters. The game checks line-of-sight from the table to each bookshelf, so if your bookshelves are floating at the wrong elevation or blocked by other blocks, they won't contribute to your enchantment level. Put the table on the ground floor, bookshelves on the same level or one block above, and you're in business. Also, don't overthink it. Lighting Makes or Breaks the Room You need light. Watching someone enchant gear in the dark is genuinely depressing. Glowstone, lanterns, amethyst clusters, candles, or standard torches all work fine from a mechanical perspective. My personal preference? Lanterns. They cast clean light, look intentional rather than haphazard, and fit almost any building style. Hang them from the ceiling or mount them on poles along the walls. Glowstone feels sterile but works great if you want maximum brightness. Candles are atmospheric but dimmer. Torches are reliable but cheap-looking if you're going for something nicer. The goal is even illumination without harsh dark corners where you can't read your enchantment options. Budget 10-15 light sources depending on room size. Uneven lighting isn't a game mechanic, but it's a quality-of-life issue that separates slapped-together spaces from actual rooms. The Decorative Layer Bookshelves are functional and decorative, but a real room needs more. Surround them with complementary blocks that match your base's aesthetic: dark oak logs, blackstone, deepslate, dark prismarine. Add carpet, stairs, maybe a crafting table in the corner or a potion brewing station nearby since you're often prepping for the same adventures. One detail I genuinely love: lapis lazuli blocks behind the bookshelves. They serve zero mechanical purpose, but they immediately tell anyone entering the room what this space is for. I've seen builds where the entire floor is lapis beneath the shelves, and it just hits different. Small touches like this separate functional rooms from spaces that actually feel like part of your world. Add some personality here. Consider what else belongs nearby. Real talk, a storage system for enchanting materials? A few display cases with gear you've already enchanted? A small seating area? None of this changes how enchanting works, but it transforms the room from a utility closet into somewhere you actually want to spend time. Designing for Your Playstyle Survival-mode bases need something compact and functional. You're probably building near your main base, so something 5x5 or 6x6 is manageable. Multiplayer servers (especially active ones where you might want to check the server status to see who's online) might benefit from something tucked away but accessible. Creative mode and mega-bases? Go wild. I've seen enchanting rooms carved into mountain faces, floating on sky islands with bridge access, hidden underground in cavern complexes. The mechanics are identical, but theming matters. A room in a fantasy castle should feel different from one in a tech-heavy base. A library aesthetic with shelves on multiple levels reads completely different from a minimalist chamber. The space doesn't have to be rectangular. On multiplayer servers, some players build their rooms behind secret doors for that exclusivity feeling (which doesn't matter mechanically but psychologically it does). Others make them elaborate communal spaces. I've seen underground enchanting chambers in cave systems that look like they're carved from ancient stone. Your choice depends on your world's vibe. Practical Layout Templates The simplest working setup: a 5x5 room with the enchanting table dead center and bookshelves in a frame around it. Functional, efficient, done in 30 minutes. Boring but it works. The library aesthetic is bigger, like a 7x7 or 9x9 space, with bookshelves on multiple levels, reading nooks, lantern posts, and plenty of wood and decorative blocks. Looks excellent and takes 1-2 hours depending on detail level. Then there's the hidden-chamber approach: tucked behind a secret door, revealed only when you need it. Feels exclusive and cool even though mechanically it's identical to every other setup. Psychological wins matter. You could also go vertical. Some players build tall towers with the enchanting table at mid-level and bookshelves stacked above and below. Sounds inefficient (the vertical stacking doesn't help), but it looks dramatic and you're not losing anything mechanically. Some spaces even have the bookshelves in a cylinder or spiral pattern. There's genuinely no wrong shape as long as the table has one block of clear space to each bookshelf. Version Considerations If you're playing on Minecraft 26.1.2 (the latest Java release), enchanting mechanics haven't shifted significantly from earlier versions. Bedrock Edition has the same bookshelf rules but slightly different aesthetics for some blocks. Older versions are pretty stable too, but minor tweaks do happen. If you're building on a public server and unsure which version you're running, check the server status tool to confirm before you commit to any block choices that might look different across versions. Takes 30 seconds and saves frustration later. The real takeaway isn't some cheesy final wisdom. It's that enchanting rooms are straightforward enough to build in an afternoon but detailed enough that they make your base feel polished and intentional. No mods required, no resource packs, no creative-mode shortcuts. Just the vanilla game, about 50 blocks of materials, and a little thought about what makes a space feel real rather than temporary. --- ### Minecraft PvP Leaderboards: Complete 2026 Ranking Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/minecraft-pvp-leaderboard-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Minecraft PvP leaderboards rank players based on combat performance, kills, win rates, or server-specific metrics. Top players compete across Java and Bedrock editions on multiplayer servers. Understanding how rankings work helps you track progress, find worthy opponents, and join competitive communities that reward your fighting skills. Understanding Minecraft PvP Leaderboards Wait, what actually defines the top players in Minecraft PvP? It's not like there's a global ranking system (sadly). Instead, leaderboards exist on individual servers, server networks, and community platforms. Different servers track different stats. Some focus on kill-to-death ratios, others on total wins in duels, and some measure dominance in larger game modes like team battles or king-of-the-hill. The servers powering competitive Minecraft PvP have become increasingly sophisticated. Networks like HypixelGames and Mineplex track your stats obsessively, storing kill counts, win streaks, and seasonal achievements. But honestly, not every competitive player cares about these global networks. Some of the best PvPers hang out on smaller, hardcore servers where the skill ceiling is brutal and the competition is real. How Rankings and Stats Are Calculated Most servers use one of a few systems. Kill-death ratio (K/D) is the most straightforward. You get points for kills, lose points for deaths. Some servers weight this differently though (a kill might give you 10 points, a death might only cost 5, for example). Others use Elo ratings, borrowed from chess, that adjust based on the strength of your opponents. Beat someone ranked much higher? Your rating jumps. Lose to a lower-ranked player? It drops more steeply. Then there are seasonal rankings, which reset periodically. Honestly, this keeps things fresh and lets newer players feel like they've a shot at climbing to the top before the season ends. Bedrock Edition servers often use simpler systems since the game has less API flexibility. Java Edition lets server admins tap into way more detailed player data, which is why you'll find the most sophisticated PvP tracking there. Different PvP Modes and What They Reward Not all Minecraft PvP is the same, and leaderboards vary wildly depending on the game mode. Duels (one-on-one fights) reward mechanical skill and decision-making. Capture-the-flag and team battles test coordination and positioning. Hunger Games and battle royale modes emphasize resource gathering and survival instincts alongside pure combat. Some servers specialize in bow PvP, others in sword combat, and some mix everything together. If you're chasing leaderboard rankings, your best bet is finding a server that matches your strengths. Actually, let me back up. I've tested PvP on servers with totally different mechanics, and the skills don't transfer one-to-one. A knockout artist in duels might struggle in larger team games where prediction and teammate callouts matter more. Pick a mode you genuinely enjoy playing, because grinding for ranks in something boring is... well, boring. Getting Better and Climbing the Ranks Here's the unsexy truth: there's no shortcut to a high leaderboard ranking. You need to play a lot and actually improve. That said, there are some smart ways to optimize your grind. First, focus on your positioning and eating. Yes, eating. Sounds dumb, but constantly consuming food keeps your health topped off and prevents quick eliminations. Most casual players neglect this and pay for it. Second, choose fights strategically. If you're at a disadvantage (low health, bad gear, multiple opponents), back off. Your K/D matters more than individual ego. Third, study the better players on your chosen server. Watch their replays if the server supports them. Notice how they strafe, when they back up, which blocks they prioritize. You don't need to copy their style exactly, but steal ideas. If you're playing on a server with frequent tournaments, those are goldmines for experience. You'll face stronger opponents in shorter bursts, which accelerates your growth. One season on a tournament-heavy server teaches you more than a month of casual grinding. Tools and Resources to Level Up Some players use external tools to track their stats and identify weaknesses. If you run your own server and want to track PvP stats properly, check out the Free Minecraft DNS tool to set up your server infrastructure cleanly (it's surprisingly useful for private competitive servers). For strategic plays involving base building and positioning, the Nether Portal Calculator can help you plan routes and establish spawn points that give you tactical advantages in map control scenarios. Beyond tools, join communities. Minecraft Discord servers dedicated to competitive PvP are where real players hang out. Reddit communities like r/CompetitiveMinecraft exist for a reason. You'll find servers recruiting skilled players, tournament announcements, and people genuinely interested in getting better. Don't underestimate the value of talking to other competitive players. Someone's figured out something you haven't, guaranteed. Server Recommendations and What to Look For Finding a server that fits your competitive style matters. Java Edition dominates competitive Minecraft right now, especially with Minecraft 26.1.2 supporting stable multiplayer infrastructure. Bedrock is improving, but Java is where most leaderboard culture exists and will remain for the foreseeable future. Look for servers with active moderation, transparent leaderboard systems, and fair anti-cheat protection. Nothing kills ranks faster than playing on a server infested with hackers. A leaderboard only matters if it's legitimate. PvPLand, Mineplex, and various smaller private servers each have their own cultures. Some are sweaty and hardcore, others more casual. Server selection is personal. I've seen players absolutely dominate tiny servers with weird rule sets while struggling on big networks. That doesn't make them worse at PvP, just means the environment matters. If a server feels toxic or the rules seem unfair, find another one. You'll improve faster somewhere that respects competition. Also pay attention to how frequently they update their leaderboards and how they handle season resets. Servers that neglect their ranking systems breed frustration. You want a server that treats competition seriously. --- ### Stony Peaks Biome: Your Complete Minecraft Guide URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/stony-peaks-biome-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Stony Peaks is one of those biomes that looks boring at first glance, but stick around and you'll find solid resources, decent mob variety, and honestly some of the best building potential in Minecraft 26.1.2. It's all steep mountains, gravel, and gray stone - which sounds dull until you realize that's exactly what makes it feel like an actual mountain range instead of a painted postcard. What You'll Find in Stony Peaks So here's the thing about Stony Peaks: it's basically the game asking "what if mountains were just mountains?" You get extreme elevation changes, very few trees, and tons of exposed stone layers. The biome generates with peaks that actually feel imposing, which is refreshing compared to some of the rounder mountain biomes. If you're looking for a dramatic landscape to build in, this is your answer. Temperatures vary depending on the specific variant (Stony Peaks comes in regular and snowy flavors), but honestly both feel pretty hostile. You won't find waterfalls cascading nicely down the sides. It's all sharp, angular terrain that'll chunk your fall damage faster than you can say "clutch bucket." Mobs That Spawn Here (And What They Want From You) Stony Peaks isn't exactly a mob spawning hotspot like dark oak forests or deep caves, but you'll definitely encounter hostile creatures. Goats are the signature mob - they're harmless but annoying, especially if you're trying to cross a narrow ridge and one decides to headbutt you off into the void. They also drop goat horns, which are actually useful for making the Goat Horn instrument. Not the worst drop in the game, honestly. You'll also see the usual suspects at night: zombies, skeletons, spiders, and endermen. Snow variants bring in strays instead of regular skeletons, which fire slowing arrows. On the plus side, the extreme terrain means mobs sometimes deal with the landscape before you do. I've watched a skeleton drown trying to navigate the steep ravines. Nature's way of handling pest control. One thing most players miss: mountain goats can sometimes fall and drop cooked mutton. If you're desperate early-game, camping near some goats isn't the worst survival strategy. Loot and Resources Worth Your Time Now we're talking. Stony Peaks exposes massive amounts of stone - diorite, andesite, granite, deepslate. If you're building something that needs bulk stone without the hassle of mining, this biome saves you hours. The exposed layers mean you can see exactly what you're working with instead of digging blind. More the exposed cliff faces often reveal ore veins. You'll spot coal, copper, and iron easily. At deeper elevations, you might catch emerald ore veins if you're lucky (though not as common as in mountains). The real prize is actually the gravel - lots of it generates here, and gravel drops flint reliably, which is still useful for flint and steel if you're doing early-game stuff. Buried treasure is rare in Stony Peaks because... well, there's barely any water. But exposed dungeons and mineshafts sometimes cut through the terrain. I've found abandoned mineshafts with decent loot just by walking around and spotting exposed wooden beams. Honestly, free pickaxe materials right there. Building Ideas That Work Here This is where Stony Peaks shines. The dramatic terrain is begging for a signature build, and I mean that seriously. Consider a mountaintop fortress - something with deep stone foundations that actually feel anchored to the landscape instead of floating awkwardly. The pre-existing slopes work in your favor. Mountain huts are another natural fit. Build into the cliff face, let the stone do most of the visual heavy lifting. You could set up a lookout tower that commands a view of several biomes, or create a mining outpost with the quarry-style cuts already provided by the terrain. And if you're running a server, a Stony Peaks hub base is genuinely spectacular. Need a name for it? The text generator tool can help you create custom signs with themed building names. For the ambitious: consider terracing a section for farms. Stony Peaks looks harsh, but modifying it slightly to add some cultivated greenery creates a really striking contrast. Marble buildings work great here too. Survival Tips for Peak Life First thing: bring a lot of food and water. The terrain is unforgiving, and you'll fall. Multiple times. Build on flat sections or create platforms before you start your main build. You're not doing yourself any favors trying to place blocks on a 75-degree slope mid-combat. Second, watch your step. Honestly. I can't stress this enough. Sprint-jumping across narrow ridges is how you lose gear to the void. Walk in tight spaces. Your ego isn't worth the lost diamonds. Also, bring a bed. Nights in Stony Peaks get cold fast, and there's nowhere to hide if hostile mobs spawn on your building site. If you're harvesting resources here for a server setup, check out free DNS tools to manage your server's domain - you might want to host a server with a themed name tied to your Stony Peaks base. Is Stony Peaks Worth Visiting? Yeah, it's. Not for survival grinding - you'll find better resources in other biomes. But if you want a genuinely cool place to build something memorable, Stony Peaks delivers. The landscape does most of the architectural work for you. A building potential is legitimately top-tier once you stop thinking of it as a harsh, unwelcoming biome and start thinking of it as raw material for something ambitious. Plus, there's something satisfying about building where the environment is already dramatic and extreme. You're not fighting the landscape - you're working with it. --- ### Fabric API: The Trending Minecraft Mod Worth Installing in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/fabric-api-modding-guide-2026 Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Fabric API is the lightweight modding framework that's become the de facto standard for Minecraft modders in 2026. It's faster, simpler, and more stable than older alternatives. If you're curious about modding or want to enhance your game without major compatibility headaches, Fabric deserves serious consideration. What Exactly Is Fabric API? Fabric is a minimal modding framework for Minecraft Java Edition. Think of it as the scaffolding that lets mod developers build their creations without stepping on each other's toes or crashing the game every five minutes. The framework itself doesn't change gameplay or add features. It's the infrastructure behind the scenes, the unglamorous plumbing that makes everything else possible. Mods like Sodium (graphics optimization), Lithium (performance), and Rei's Minimap all depend on Fabric to function. They're the actual content you install; Fabric just makes them possible. Unlike some competing frameworks that try to do everything, Fabric stays intentionally minimal. That's the whole philosophy. The installer is straightforward. Download it, pick your Minecraft version, run it. You're done in seconds. Then drop mods in your.minecraft/mods folder and launch the game. Why Modders Switched in 2026 Three years ago? Forge was the undisputed king. Everyone modded with it, server admins used it, the whole ecosystem was built around it. But things shifted quickly. Minecraft itself kept evolving, the game got heavier, and players started demanding better performance and faster mod updates. Fabric solved something real: bloat. A server running a dozen Forge mods could take three, four, sometimes five minutes to boot up. The same mods on Fabric? Thirty seconds. That's not hype. That's architecture. Forge accumulated features over years, and all that extra code sits in memory whether you use it or not. Fabric doesn't. Server admins noticed first. Then content creators. Then everyone else. Performance matters when you're running a multiplayer server. Players abandon slow servers. If you're setting up a custom community space with a welcoming MOTD using our Minecraft MOTD Creator, your startup time directly affects whether players stick around. Every optimization counts. The community responsiveness helped too. Forge had become slow to update after major Minecraft releases. The Fabric team adapted to version 26.1.2 in days, not weeks. Modders were tired of waiting. Here's the thing, they switched. Fabric vs. Forge: The Real Differences Everyone compares these two, and for good reason. They're the main options available. But comparing them is like comparing a specialized tool to a bloated swiss army knife. Forge is older, heavier, and includes tons of built-in developer tools. It's full. Some modders love that. Others find it exhausting to navigate. Fabric is deliberately minimal, almost sparse. You get the absolute essentials and nothing else. So it sounds like a weakness until you realize that unnecessary features create unnecessary problems. Run Minecraft 26.1.2 with shader mods on Forge and you're loading systems you'll never touch. Run it on Fabric and you get exactly what you need. That philosophy permeates everything. Here's the catch: Forge has more mods in raw numbers because it's been around since 2011. But quality matters more than quantity. The mods worth installing? Increasingly they're Fabric-first. Performance optimizations, gameplay enhancements, quality-of-life features. They're all migrating. Mod compatibility is where it gets murky. Forge and Fabric mods can't mix without bridges, and even then it's risky. You pick a side. Most new players are picking Fabric. Installation and Getting Started (Properly) The actual installation is trivial. Go to fabricmc.net, grab the installer, run it, select your version, done. Thirty seconds maximum. Then you download mods from CurseForge, Modrinth, or other repositories and drop them in your.minecraft/mods folder. Restart the game. They work. Some mods have dependencies, meaning they require other mods or libraries to function. Sodium might need Cloth Config. Most repository sites will flag these, so you'll know what to grab alongside your main choices. It's not complicated, just requires paying attention. For servers, it's identical except you put mods in the server's mods folder. Hosting companies and community admins have switched to Fabric en masse because of startup speed. A server that took four minutes to boot with Forge? Three minutes with Fabric optimizations. On a game where server downtime costs players, that matters. If your server has a unique identity, don't overlook your player skins. Browse our Minecraft skins collection to find designs that fit your community's vibe. Visual consistency matters for community building. Performance Improves (Not Just Marketing) Fabric's reputation for performance isn't marketing fluff. The framework itself is lean, obviously. But the magic comes from what Fabric enables. Sodium is the most famous example. This graphics optimization mod can literally double your FPS on older hardware. It's not voodoo, it's just superior rendering code that Fabric allows. Lithium does similar work on the server side, optimizing chunk loading and entity processing. Together with a decent CPU, they make the game feel genuinely faster. Not everything is perfect. Some Fabric mods are experimental. The 0.1 release of someone's passion project might break everything. Read changelogs before updating on a live server. Most developers are responsible. Occasionally, you'll find the exception. OptiFine doesn't work with Fabric. They conflict at a fundamental level. But Iris Shaders does the same job better anyway. You're not missing anything. Should You Use It? Yes, if you want to mod without headaches. If you run a server and care about startup time and performance, absolutely. The only reason to skip Fabric is if you depend on a specific Forge-only mod. That's increasingly rare. Check first. For casual players who want better graphics or less lag? Fabric plus Sodium plus Iris is hands down the best experience available in 2026. No asterisks, no caveats. It just works, and it works fast. --- ### Sodium: The Trending Minecraft Mod Worth Installing in 2026 URL: https://minecraft.how/blog/post/sodium-minecraft-mod-performance-guide Published: 2026-05-23 Author: ice Sodium is a performance optimization mod for Minecraft Java that rewrites the rendering pipeline to maximize GPU efficiency. If your game stutters at high render distances or your laptop struggles with vanilla Minecraft, Sodium is genuinely worth the five-minute install. It's not about new content or features. It's purely speed, and it works on servers. Why Sodium Has Become The Performance Standard Minecraft's renderer is ancient. Notch built the original pipeline, and while Mojang has patched it countless times over the years, it was never designed for modern GPUs. Sodium replaces that old code with something that actually understands how to talk to your graphics card. The frame rate improvements are usually massive. On my testing, a laptop that hit 40 FPS on defaults jumped to 90+ FPS with Sodium installed. I've seen people go from 60 FPS to 140+ FPS. Your mileage varies depending on your hardware (older GPUs and integrated graphics see smaller gains), but you're always getting something. Here's what makes Sodium different from other optimization attempts: it's client-only. You don't need server permission. Join any vanilla server, load Sodium, and suddenly everything renders smoother. The server never knows you're running it. What Sodium Changes (And What It Doesn't) This is important. Sodium adds zero content. No blocks, no items, no mechanics. You're not getting new biomes or weapons or anything that changes how Minecraft plays. You're only getting technical improvements. Specifically, Sodium optimizes chunk rendering, memory usage during garbage collection, GPU upload efficiency, and lighting calculations. What it doesn't touch: game logic, survival mechanics, or multiplayer compatibility. Vanilla servers work fine. One thing to know upfront: Sodium disables some vanilla graphics options because they conflict with its optimization engine. Things like native windowscreen mode get grayed out. If you're obsessed with vanilla parity, that might bother you. But you're installing Sodium for speed, not to keep the old renderer. Installation Is Straightforward You need a mod loader first. Fabric is the standard choice for Sodium. Download Fabric for your Minecraft version (26.1.2 is the latest release) Run the installer Download Sodium's.jar from CurseForge or Modrinth Drop it in your mods folder Launch and play Total time: five minutes. Maybe ten if you've never touched a mod loader before. There's a catch. Mod loaders aren't bundled by Mojang because they want to avoid liability if something breaks. It's not complicated, but it's not "download an exe" simple either. If you're comfortable downloading files and organizing folders, you'll be fine. Server Setup And Customization Running your own server? The client installation is the same. Drop Sodium on your game, restart, and you're done. Your friends don't need to install anything. It only affects your computer. Once your server is running smoothly with better frame rates, you can focus on the fun stuff. If you want to customize how your server appears to players, our MOTD creator tool handles the formatting and color codes. And if you need to point a domain at your server, check out our free Minecraft DNS tool to get that running without extra costs. Sodium Versions And Compatibility Sodium updates regularly. Version compatibility matters. You want the newest stable build for your Minecraft version. If you're on 26.1.2, grab a Sodium build tagged for 1.26. CurseForge and Modrinth handle this automatically. Don't dig into GitHub trying to find latest dev builds unless you enjoy debugging crashes. Stable releases are always your safest bet. Test on a single-player world first, then commit to using it long-term once you confirm it's stable on your machine. Working With Other Mods Sodium plays nicely with most mods. Inventory mods, storage mods, teleportation mods, building mods, command mods. All compatible. But rendering mods are the exception. Install another optimization mod alongside Sodium and you'll hit conflicts. Same goes for shader mods (though Iris pairs perfectly with Sodium and is designed to work on top of it). Some mods that heavily modify block rendering or entities need extra configuration. You might see lighting glitches or odd rendering artifacts. The Sodium Discord community is active and most issues have known solutions. Is It Safe? Sodium's been around since 2020. It's got thousands of GitHub stars, hundreds of thousands of downloads, and a stable five-year track record. The developer is active and responsive. It's open-source, so you can audit the code yourself. Honestly, it doesn't touch account credentials or server connections. It's legitimate, widely trusted, and works on servers without getting you in trouble. Mods always carry a small technical risk. Updates could theoretically break something. But with Sodium's maturity and community size, that risk is tiny. My Take Sodium does one thing and does it better than anything else available. It's free, open-source, and works on vanilla servers. Installation takes five minutes. If you're getting 30-40 FPS and have a decent GPU, Sodium probably doubles your frame rate. That's worth your time. If you're already running 100+ FPS on max settings, you probably don't need it. But most players are bottlenecked somewhere, and Sodium fixes that bottleneck. ---