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2026年Minecraft MOTD生成器完全指南

2026年Minecraft MOTD生成器完全指南

Alexandru Maftei
Alexandru Maftei
@ice
更新于
6 次浏览
太长不看:MOTD生成器通过颜色代码和格式创建自定义服务器消息。学习如何使用颜色代码、找到最佳工具并制作吸引玩家加入服务器的MOTD。

An MOTD generator is a tool that creates custom "Message of the Day" text for Minecraft servers. It lets you add color codes, formatting, and creative text that appears when players hover over your server in the list. This guide covers everything you need to know about crafting compelling MOTDs in 2026.

What's an MOTD Anyway

MOTD stands for Message of the Day. It's the text that pops up when someone hovers their mouse over your server in the server list. Most casual players don't think much about it, but honestly, it's one of the first things a potential player sees about your server.

Your MOTD has about three seconds to convince someone to click join.

That's it. Three seconds. In those three seconds, players are deciding whether your server looks worth their time or whether they'll scroll down to the next one. A blank MOTD that just says "My Server" loses instantly against colorful, creative alternatives. The better your MOTD, the more server selection traffic you'll convert into actual players.

What most people don't realize is that MOTD text can include formatting like bold, italics, color codes, and even special symbols. You're not stuck with plain text. You can use color codes to make text pop, create eye-catching designs, and communicate server status all in one or two lines. Some servers use their MOTD to advertise seasonal events, special features, or just pure creative flair that makes them memorable in a crowded server list.

How Color Codes and Formatting Work

Here's where most people get confused (and honestly, I had to double-check this myself when testing different generators last month). Honestly, minecraft color codes aren't emojis or special characters. They're formatting codes using the & symbol followed by a letter or number.

Common codes include: &c for red, &a for green, &b for cyan, &e for yellow, &l for bold, &n for underline, &m for strikethrough, and &r to reset formatting. Want "Welcome to My Server" where "Welcome" is red and bold? You'd write it as: "&c&lWelcome &rto My Server".

For modern Minecraft servers (especially Java Edition 26.2 and newer), you can also use hex color codes like &x&F&F&0&0&0&0 for specific RGB values. Different server software handles these differently though - Paper, Spigot, and Velocity each have their own quirks for rendering.

Actually, I should clarify - hex codes vary depending on your server software version. The & syntax is standard for most server implementations, but some newer versions support full RGB without the &x prefix. Testing your MOTD on your actual server is always the safest approach before you finalize it.

Pick the Right Tool for Your Needs

Not all MOTD generators are created equal. Some are clunky web interfaces from 2021, others are offline tools that require Java downloads, and a few are actually useful and modern.

Our Minecraft MOTD Creator is built specifically for simplicity and accuracy. You get a live preview of how your MOTD will actually look in the server list, color selectors instead of memorizing codes, and instant copy-to-clipboard functionality. No wading through Reddit posts trying to figure out which code does what or why your formatting broke.

Beyond our tool, there are other solid options scattered around the web. CurseForge has several MOTD generators with community voting - something worth checking if you want community-tested solutions that others have actually used. Some server hosting providers include MOTD builders in their control panels, though these are usually basic and limited to their specific platform.

For testing and verification, pair your MOTD generator with our Minecraft Server Status Checker. You want to verify that your carefully crafted MOTD actually displays correctly on your live server before announcing it to your community.

What Makes Players Click

So you've got your color codes ready and you're staring at a blank MOTD field. What do you actually write?

The best MOTDs do one or more of these things: they're immediately clear about what the server is, they include current player count or server status, they use color strategically (not every color at once), and they're short enough to read at a glance.

Here's what I've seen work well across servers I've tested on:

  • Clean and professional: "&b&lSkyblock Network &r| &a50 Players &r| &eLag-Free" - uses blue for the title, green for players, yellow for the tagline
  • Fun and creative: "&c&l=== &dWelcome &c===" - symmetrical, colorful, memorable
  • Information-first: "&a[1.21] &bSMP &r| &eNo Whitelist &r| &cTPA Enabled" - tells players exactly what they're getting into

One thing I notice players respond to: specificity. Don't just say "Join us!" Say what makes your server different. Is it a technical survival world? An RPG? A minigames hub? Your MOTD gets two lines to communicate that crucial information. Use them.

The way players engage with servers is evolving fast. Recent viral content around Minecraft has shown that personality and clear communication matter hugely. Your MOTD should reflect your server's personality. If you're running a casual chill SMP, make that clear with a laid-back vibe. If you're running competitive minigames, the MOTD should convey energy and speed. The tone you set in those two lines carries real weight.

Mistakes That Make Your MOTD Look Bad

Let me break down what kills an MOTD instantly.

First: using every color in sequence. "&c&a&b&e&dWelcome to my server" looks chaotic and unprofessional. Pick a color scheme - maybe two or three colors max - and stick with it. Your eyes scan a server list fast, and jarring color changes make people skip you entirely without reading.

Second: spelling errors and outdated info. I've seen MOTDs advertising events from 2024 still running in 2026. Nothing kills credibility like "Welcome to our summer event!" when the season ended six months ago. Update your MOTD when things change on your server.

Third: formatting that doesn't translate across versions. If you're testing on Java 26.2 but running a Bedrock-compatible proxy, some formatting codes won't work properly. Actually, most modern proxies handle this automatically now, but if you're running pure Java or pure Bedrock, you need to know what works where.

Fourth: lying in your MOTD. I've joined servers that promised "zero lag" and "custom content" only to find they're running default vanilla with terrible hosting. Your MOTD is a promise to potential players. Breaking it gets you bad reviews real fast and damages your server's reputation before people even join.

When you're ready to actually implement your MOTD, reference your Server Properties Generator to make sure you're editing the right configuration file with the correct syntax for your server software.

Testing Before You Launch

Don't launch a new MOTD without testing it first on your actual server.

Spin up a test server locally or use your hosting provider's staging environment, add your MOTD to the server.properties file (or your server software's equivalent), and restart. See how it looks in the actual server list. The preview in a generator is helpful, but the real server list is what matters. Colors sometimes display slightly differently depending on your graphics settings and how the server renders them.

If you're on a hosting provider, most let you change your MOTD through the control panel without restarting the whole server. Test it there, watch how it displays to real players, then make adjustments based on feedback.

One last practical tip: update your MOTD seasonally. I change mine when new snapshots drop or when the community is buzzing about something specific happening in the Minecraft world. A stale MOTD makes your server look abandoned, even if it's thriving with players. Fresh MOTDs signal that you actively care about the server's presentation.

关于作者
Alexandru Maftei
Alexandru Maftei主笔作者

Lead writer at minecraft.how. Long-time Minecraft player running a small SMP server, testing every build, mod, and seed before writing about it.

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