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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Biome#Biome_IDs] | [TOKENS: 9830]
Biome A biome is a region in a world with distinct geographical features, plants, mobs, temperatures, humidity levels, colors, and more. Biomes separate every generated world into different environments, such as forests, deserts, and oceans. The biome of a location is determined during world generation rather than by the current environment, even if all blocks in a large area are altered to imitate the terrain of other biomes. In Java Edition, the /fillbiome command can be used to change the biome in a selected area. Existing biomes can be located with the /locate biome command. Contents List of biomes In Java Edition, there are 65 different biome types: 54 for the Overworld, 5 for the Nether, and 5 for the End, plus one used only for a superflat preset. In Bedrock Edition, there are 87 biome types: 54 for the Overworld, 5 for the Nether, 1 for the End, and 27 unused. On this page, for convenience of description and reading, the biomes in Overworld are divided into 8 categories, which are not official. These biomes are used for the generation of oceans and mushroom fields. They are large, open biomes made entirely of water going up to Y=63, with underwater relief on the sea floor, such as small mountains and plains, usually including gravel, dirt, and sand. Squid and fish spawn frequently in the water, and dolphins spawn in non-frozen oceans. The basic ocean biome. Like its colder variants, its floor is largely made up of gravel, covered with kelp and seagrass. However, small patches of dirt, sand and clay can also appear. Cod and salmon‌[BE only] can spawn here alongside dolphins, squid and nautiluses. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. A variant of the ocean biome. In deep ocean biomes, the ocean can exceed 30 blocks in depth, making it twice as deep as the normal ocean. The ground is mainly covered with gravel. Ocean monuments generate in deep oceans, meaning guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges can spawn here. A variant of the ocean biome, with light teal water at the surface. Like the lukewarm ocean, it has a floor made of sand and like all oceans, it is populated with seagrass, but without kelp. Pufferfish and tropical fish spawn here alongside dolphins, squid and nautiluses. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. Unlike other ocean biomes, warm oceans allow for the generation of coral reefs and sea pickles. It is the only ocean biome that does not have a deep equivalent, but the terrain in this biome can reach the same depth as deep oceans. A variant of the ocean biome, with light blue water at the surface. Its floor is made of sand with an occasional patch of dirt or clay. Kelp and seagrass generates here. Unlike the warm ocean biome, cod and salmon‌[BE only] can spawn here, together with pufferfish‌[JE only] and tropical fish. Dolphins, squid, and nautiluses may also spawn here and drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses can spawn at night or during thunderstorms. Coral reefs cannot generate here. Similar to the lukewarm ocean biome, but twice as deep. Because they are a deep ocean variant, they can generate ocean monuments, resulting in the spawning of guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges. A variant of the ocean biome, with dark blue water at the surface. Like regular oceans and frozen oceans, its floor is made up of gravel, though occasional patches of dirt can be found. Kelp and seagrass generates here. Salmon, cod and nautiluses can spawn in cold ocean biomes alongside squid and dolphins‌[BE only]. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. Similar to the cold ocean biome, but twice as deep. Like other deep oceans, ocean monuments can generate here, which contain guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges. A variant of the ocean biome with dark indigo water at the surface. Like the cold ocean, it has a gravel seabed and squid swimming about. However, the water's surface is frequently broken up by patches of ice and large icebergs, consisting of packed ice and blue ice, and occasionally topped with snow blocks and snow‌[BE only]. Strays, drowned, rarely zombie nautiluses, living nautiluses, polar bears, and rabbits‌[BE only] can spawn here, but dolphins can't. Salmon and cod‌[BE only] may also spawn here. Like the frozen ocean biome, the only fish that spawn here are salmon and cod‌[BE only], squid and nautiluses may also spawn here, and the floor consists of gravel. The frozen deep ocean biome also contains ocean monuments and a deeper floor than normal oceans, like other deep oceans. Frequent floating icebergs with blue ice generate here. Polar bears, strays, drowned, rarely zombie nautiluses and rabbits‌[BE only] can also spawn here, but dolphins can't. This rare biome consists of a mostly flat island and has mycelium instead of grass as its surface. Mushroom fields are always adjacent to a deep ocean and are always isolated from other biomes, and they are typically a few hundred blocks wide. It is one of the few biomes where huge mushrooms can generate naturally, and where mushrooms can grow in full sunlight. No mobs other than mooshrooms, bats‌[JE only], and glow squid spawn naturally in this biome, including the usual night-time hostile mobs. This also applies to caves, mineshafts and other dark structures, meaning exploring underground is safe. However, monster spawners still spawn mobs, wandering traders along with their llamas can spawn, raids can still spawn illagers, but villages don't spawn here. the player can still breed animals and spawn mobs using spawn eggs and insomnia still attracts phantoms‌[JE only]. Highland biomes are biomes with a higher Y-level. Rugged terrain and snow-covered peaks appear above the snow line. One of the three biomes that generate in the peaks of a mountain. This biome is found in taller and more jagged and pointy peaks that often pass the clouds and can peak at Y=256. It is covered by a single layer of snow blocks with stone underneath often exposing ores such as coal, iron and emerald. Just like the snowy slopes, stone cliffs can generate in some sides of the mountain. Goats spawn in this biome. Polar bears and rabbits may also spawn here and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. The frozen peaks are covered by snow blocks and packed ice with occasional small blobs of ice. Goats can spawn in this biome. Polar bears and rabbits may also spawn here and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. This biome usually generates in smoother and less jagged mountains compared to the jagged peaks biome. The stony peaks are a warmer variation of peak biomes that generates in warmer regions to avoid temperature clashes. It is mainly covered by stone with large strips of calcite and exposed ores. No passive mobs spawn here and there's no snow in this biome. The meadow is an elevated grassy biome found in plateaus near mountain ranges. It is filled with patches of flowers and turquoise-green short grass and tall grass. All small flowers generate except blue orchids, tulips, lilies of the valley or wither roses. Rarely, a lone oak or birch tree can generate and always has a bee nest. Both pillager outposts and plains villages can generate in this biome. Sheep, donkeys and rabbits are the only passive mobs that spawn in this biome. Cherry groves are grasslands with a lot of short grass, tall grass and, instead of the traditional dandelion and poppy flowers, the ground is covered with pink petals. The main environmental feature of the cherry grove are cherry trees identified by their striking pink color. The cherry trees may generate densely enough to create a cover of leaves. Sheep, pigs and rabbits are the only passive mobs that spawn in this biome. The grove creates a forest of spruce trees beneath the mountain peaks when near a forested biome. It is quite reminiscent of the snowy taiga, but the surface is covered with snow blocks and powder snow instead of grass blocks. Rabbits, wolves and foxes can spawn in this biome. The snowy slopes generate beneath the mountain peaks and are covered with multiple layers of snow blocks and powder snow, with some sides also having stone cliffs. Goats spawn in this biome alongside rabbits and polar bears‌[BE only]. Strays may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. This is the only mountain biome where igloos can generate, making it one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. A highland biome with some steep hilltops and an occasional oak or spruce tree‌[JE only]. The terrain is usually flat, but sometimes hilly and shattered. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. Snowfall also occurs above certain heights, rarely creating snow layers on the top of the hills. Windswept hills are one of six biomes where emerald ore and infested stone can be found naturally. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. The windswept gravelly hills are mostly covered in gravel with occasional patches of grass and stone blocks. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. Due to the low amount of grass, the population of spruce and oak trees in this biome is sparse. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. This biome is found when windswept hills are located next to forested biomes. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. It does not generate stone patches, so the floor is entirely covered by grass. There are more spruce and oak trees in this biome, forming small forests with a lower tree density than other forest biomes. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. Woodland biomes are rich in plants with a variety of trees, flowers and grasses. A common biome with many oak and birch trees and a fair amount of short grass, mushrooms and flowers. The ground beneath the trees is covered with leaf litter. Wolves can spawn in this biome. This forest variant has fewer trees but contains nearly every type of flower and tall plant in the game. Wolves do not spawn in the flower forest, although rabbits spawn occasionally. Bee nests have a higher chance to generate in this biome. A biome covered by a forest of spruce trees. Ferns, large ferns and sweet berry bushes grow commonly on the forest floor. One can find packs of wolves here, along with small groups of foxes, rabbits or cold animal variants. Villages may generate in this biome; the houses in these villages are built with spruce wood. Pillager outposts may also generate in this biome. This is one of the few biomes where trail ruins can generate. A biome composed of spruce trees (despite it being called a pine taiga, since there is no pine in the game), much like the standard taiga biome. However, some trees are 2×2 thick and taller than normal, akin to large jungle trees. Mossy cobblestone boulders appear frequently, mushrooms are common, and podzol can be found on the forest floor. There are also patches of coarse dirt that do not grow grass, with some dead bushes. Wolves, foxes and cold animal variants can spawn here, as they do in normal taiga biomes. Rabbits may also spawn here‌[JE only]. At first glance, this biome may look almost exactly the same as its pine tree counterpart. However, the most striking feature of this biome is its giant spruce trees, which are essentially a scaled-up version of regular spruce trees. One can easily differentiate this from an old growth pine taiga by observing how the leaves almost completely cover the tree trunks, whereas in pine ones, leaves tend to cover only the top. Like the old growth pine taiga, wolves, foxes and cold animal variants spawn here, and trail ruins can also generate. Rabbits may also spawn here‌[JE only]. Similar to the standard taiga, except much of the biome is covered in snow. Ferns and large ferns generate here commonly, however sweet berry bushes generate more rarely than in the regular taiga. Wolves, foxes, rabbits and cold animal variants can spawn here. One may also find an igloo nestled between the trees, making it one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. Villages and pillager outposts may also generate here‌[BE only]. Villages use the same architecture as taiga villages, but the villagers wear snowy biome outfits. A forest that is solely made of birch trees. The grass is aqua in color, and unlike the regular forest, no wolves spawn in this biome. Wildflowers are very common in birch forests. Birch trees grow much taller than usual in this uncommon variant of the birch forest biome. Whereas normal birch trees grow up to 7 blocks tall, these trees can grow up to 13 blocks in height. This makes deforestation a much more difficult task, although it provides the player with far more resources. This is one of the few biomes where trail ruins can generate. This biome is mainly composed of dark oak trees, which create a mostly closed roof of leaves. Oak trees, birch trees, and huge mushrooms can also be found occasionally, and the ground is covered with leaf litter. Trees in this forest are so densely packed that some areas are dark enough for hostile mobs to spawn, even during the day. On rare occasions, a woodland mansion may generate. The pale garden is a rarer variation of the dark forest biome. It is, in fact, the rarest biome. The dark oak trees are replaced with pale oak trees, with lots of pale hanging moss hanging from the trees. Patches of pale moss blocks and pale moss carpets cover much of the ground, and patches of eyeblossoms dot the landscape. The sky, foliage, and water in this biome are gray and desaturated, and no music plays inside the biome. Some of the pale oak trees may have a creaking heart hidden within them, which spawns a creaking at night. No passive mobs spawn in this biome. Trees in this forest are so densely packed that some areas are dark enough for hostile mobs to spawn, even during the day. On rare occasions, a woodland mansion may generate, making the pale garden one of only two biomes where it can be found. A dense forested biome that includes many different plants and features. Jungle trees and mega jungle trees are common, with the mega trees having 2x2 thick trunks and possibly growing up to 31 blocks in height. Fancy oak trees are also common, and jungle bushes often cover much of the forest floor. Ferns and large ferns are found commonly, and vines are found growing on most types of blocks, especially on jungle trees. Additionally, cocoa can also grow on the sides of jungle trees. Melons can generate here in patches, similar to pumpkins, although they are much more common. Single shoots of bamboo can be found scattered throughout the biome. The foliage in the jungle is a bright, lush green color. Jungle pyramids and trail ruins can generate, and ocelots, parrots, pandas and warm animal variants can spawn in this biome. In contrast to the wild and overgrown vegetation of the jungle biome, the sparse jungle consists of jungle trees, fancy oak trees, and jungle bushes that are spaced out and isolated, creating a much more open environment. The terrain of this biome is often flat, but there may be some small rises in elevation. Parrots, ocelots, and pandas can still spawn in the sparse jungle‌[Bedrock Edition only]. Wolves can also spawn in this biome along with warm animal variants. In this biome, large areas of the landscape are covered with massive amounts of bamboo. Patches of podzol can be found underneath the densely packed bamboo. Additionally, mega jungle trees, fancy oak trees, and jungle bushes can also generate here. Pandas have a much higher chance to spawn here than the other jungle biomes, making this the best place to find them. Ocelots‌[BE only], parrots and warm animal variants are also able to spawn, and jungle pyramids can generate here‌[JE only]. Wetland biomes are rivers, swamps and beaches. They have a large amount of water resources. Rivers separate other biomes; beaches generate as a transition between the ocean and land. A biome that consists of water blocks that form an elongated, curving shape similar to a real river. Rivers cut through terrain or separate the main biomes. They attempt to join up with ocean biomes, but sometimes loop around to the same area of ocean. Rarely, they can have no connection to an ocean, instead forming a loop, or ending in a swamp or far inland. The grass has a dull aqua tone, much like the ocean, and trace amounts of oak trees, bushes, and firefly bushes tend to generate there as well. Rivers are also a reliable source of clay. These biomes are good for fishing, but drowned can spawn at night and during thunderstorms. In Bedrock Edition, mobs other than salmon, squid and drowned cannot spawn in this biome, even underground, except from a monster spawner. A river with a layer of ice covering its surface. It generates when a river goes through snowy biomes. Salmon spawn underwater while rabbits‌[BE only] and polar bears‌[BE only] spawn on the surface. At night and during thunderstorms, drowned can spawn below the ice with strays‌[BE only] on the surface. In Bedrock Edition, no hostile mobs other then strays and skeletons can spawn here, even underground, except from a monster spawner. A biome characterized by a mix of flat areas around sea level, and shallow pools of green water with floating lily pads. Clay, sand and dirt are commonly found at the bottom of these pools. Trees are covered with vines and can be found growing out from the water. Mushrooms, firefly bushes, dead bushes, and sugar canes are abundant, and blue orchids grow exclusively here. Frogs of the temperate variant can spawn here as well. Swamp huts with a black cat and a witch generate exclusively in swamps. Slimes also spawn naturally at night and during thunderstorms, most commonly on full moons. Some zombies may end up underwater, which can transform them into drowned, and some skeletons are replaced by bogged, making this an especially dangerous biome at night or during thunderstorms. Temperature varies within the biome, causing foliage and grass colors to vary. In Bedrock Edition, huge mushrooms also spawn in this biome. Visibility is also lower than other biomes when the player is underwater. A biome characterized by a dense foliage, featuring plenty of mangrove trees of varying heights. The floor is mainly composed of mud blocks with occasional grass patches. The grass has the same color as in the normal swamp but leaves and vines have a unique light green tint and the water is teal rather than gray. Warm frogs often spawn in this biome. Slimes also spawn naturally at night and during thunderstorms, most commonly on full moons. Some zombies may end up underwater, which can transform them into drowned, and some skeletons are replaced by bogged, making this an especially dangerous biome at night or thunderstorms. Visibility is also lower than other biomes when the player is underwater. Generated where oceans meet other biomes, beaches are primarily composed of sand. Beaches penetrate the landscape, removing the original blocks and placing in sand blocks. These are also useful for fishing. Buried treasure can be found under few blocks of sand, and an occasional shipwreck can also generate here. Passive mobs other than turtles do not spawn on beaches. Like a regular beach, one can find plenty of sand in this biome and buried treasure can be found underground in this snowy beach. However, sand is covered in a layer of snow. Snowy beaches are found when a snowy biome borders a frozen ocean biome. No passive mobs other than rabbits‌[BE only] spawn in this biome. This stone-covered biome generates at shores with low erosion values, usually close to mountains. Depending on the height of the nearby land, stony shores may generate as medium slopes or huge cliffs, its tops tall enough to be covered by snow even when near warmer biomes. No passive mobs spawn here. Buried treasure can generate here‌[BE only]. Strips of gravel can sometimes be found here. These biomes have a wide view on usually flat terrain, but can also generate on large hills or cliffs. Trees spawn less here and water sources are plentiful. They also have a higher number of passive mob spawns. A flat and grassy biome with rolling hills and few oak trees. Villages are common. Cave openings, lava lakes and waterfalls are easily identifiable due to the flat unobstructed terrain. Passive mobs are easily found in plains biomes; this biome is also one of the few biomes where horses and donkeys spawn naturally, while hostile zombie horses will spawn during the nighttime. Pillager outposts may also be generated. A fairly uncommon variation of the plains, this biome is the only place where sunflowers naturally generate. In Bedrock Edition, villages and pillager outposts may also generate here. An expansive biome with a huge amount of snow. Sugar cane can generate in this biome, but can become uprooted when chunks load as the water sources freeze to ice. There are few spruce trees in this biome. No animal mobs other than rabbits and polar bears can spawn; however, it is one of the few biomes where strays and zombie horses appear. In Bedrock Edition, this biome does not spawn monsters other than strays and skeletons, but monster spawners can still spawn monsters. This is one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. Villages and pillager outposts may also generate here. A rare variation of the snowy plains biome that features large spikes and glaciers of packed ice. Usually, the spikes are 10 to 20 blocks tall, but some long, thin spikes can reach over 50 blocks in height. The floor in this biome is entirely covered in snow blocks instead of grass, and ice patches made of packed ice can generate on it. Like the regular snowy plains, no animal mobs other than rabbits and polar bears can spawn and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms. In these biomes, it neither rains nor snows. The surface is covered with sparse vegetation. A barren biome consisting mostly of sand dunes, dead bushes, dry grass, and cacti. Sandstone and sometimes fossils are found underneath the sand. The only passive mobs that spawn naturally in deserts are gold/creamy rabbits and camels. At night and during thunderstorms, husks, parched, and camel husks usually spawn in the place of normal zombies and skeletons. Sugar cane can be found if the desert is next to a river biome. Desert villages, desert wells and desert pyramids are found exclusively in this biome. Pillager outposts can also generate here. A relatively flat and dry biome with a dull-brown grass color and acacia trees scattered around the biome, though oak trees may generate occasionally. Tall grass covers the landscape. Villages can generate in this biome, constructed of acacia wood, with some stained terracotta. Pillager outposts can also generate here. Horses, armadillos and warm animal variants can naturally spawn here, while hostile zombie horses will spawn during the nighttime. Llamas may also spawn here‌[BE only]. This biome generates when a normal savanna biome spawns at high altitudes and near mountains. It is mostly indistinguishable from the standard savanna, with the main differences being the fact that llamas and wolves can spawn, and villages and pillager outposts cannot generate. In contrast to the mostly flat and calm terrain of the savanna biome, this uncommon variant generates chaotic terrain, with gigantic mountains covered in coarse dirt and some patches of stone. The mountains in the windswept savanna are extremely steep, sometimes jutting out at 90-degree angles, making it almost impossible to climb. On top of that, they can reach heights comparable to the mountain peak biomes, sometimes rising above the clouds. Massive waterfalls and lavafalls are quite common, and ocean-like lakes can also generate. Unlike the regular savanna, villages and pillager outposts do not generate in this biome. Horses, armadillos and warm animal variants can still spawn in the windswept savanna, as well as hostile zombie horses during the nighttime. Llamas may also spawn here‌[BE only]. An uncommon biome where large mounds of terracotta and stained terracotta generate. Red sand also generates here instead of regular sand, with occasional cacti, dead bushes, and dry grass. This biome is usually found alongside desert biomes and it can generate in mountainous terrain. Armadillos are the only mobs that can be found here. Mineshafts generate at a higher altitude than normal - occasionally a player may come across a mineshaft jutting out of the badlands. Gold ore also occurs more frequently, because additional veins can generate within badlands up to Y=256. The composition of this biome is useful when other sources of terracotta and gold are scarce. The wooded badlands has layers of coarse dirt and grass blocks, and forests of oak trees with leaf litter that generate at higher altitudes in humid areas. The lower parts don't generate the oak forests, exposing terracotta and red sand to the sky. The color of the grass and leaves is a dull green-brown hue, giving it a dried and dead appearance. These trees are a rare source of wood when living in the otherwise barren badlands. Armadillos can spawn here during the day, and wolves and warm animal variants can spawn on the wooded plateaus. This rare variant generates unique terrain features that are similar to the structures in Utah's Bryce Canyon. Tall and narrow spires of colorful terracotta rise out of the floor of the canyon, which like all other badlands variants, is covered in red sand. Armadillos are the only passive mobs that can be found here. These biomes generate inside caves in the Overworld. They're mostly found underground but can sometimes leak out of cave entrances. A dimly lit cave biome that generates deep underground mostly within the deepslate layer. It is largely sculk blocks 1 block thick upon all surfaces, with frequent sculk sensors and occasional sculk shriekers, the latter of which can directly summon a warden. Large structures known as ancient cities can generate here, containing chests with unique loot. No mobs aside from wardens spawn here, except from a monster spawner. These are caves filled with dripstone blocks and pointed dripstone both hanging as stalactites and growing from the ground as stalagmites and small water wells of 1×1 in the ground. Large dripstone clusters structures generate occasionally inside these caves. Copper ore blobs found in this biome are much bigger compared to other biomes. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses can spawn in aquifers. Lush caves are often found underground below azalea trees. These caves are covered by moss blocks, moss carpets, short grass and azalea bushes on the floors. On the ceiling, vines and cave vines with glow berries grow down and light up the caves, and spore blossoms grow from the ceiling and spore particles. There are also shallow lakes with clay where dripleaf plants grow out of them and axolotls spawn, making this the only biome where they can spawn. Tropical fish can also spawn inside the aquifers in a lush cave. Can be accessed only through Single Biome world selection or The Void superflat preset. In a single biome world, the landscape consists of stone, as well as water and bedrock depending on the generator type. In The Void superflat preset, the world is completely empty except for a single structure: a 33×33 stone platform with a single block of cobblestone in the center. No mobs (passive or hostile) aside from phantoms and pillager patrols can spawn without spawn eggs, monster spawners or commands. It does not rain in this biome. The Nether is considered a different dimension. All biomes in this dimension are hot and dry, and it is not possible to place water; ice can still be placed, though it does not turn into water upon melting. Lava oceans are generated as a feature and are therefore not considered a separate biome. The Nether wastes is the most common biome in the Nether. The terrain mainly consists of netherrack, with glowstone clusters growing and lava leaking from the ceiling and gravel and soul sand lining its shores. Most of the Nether’s mobs can spawn here, including ghasts, zombified piglins, magma cubes, striders, piglins, and the occasional enderman. The soul sand valley mainly consists of soul sand, basalt and soul soil. Notable features of the biome are exposed Nether fossils in various shapes and sizes, large amounts of lava, blue fog, large spires made of basalt, soul fire, and the occasional Nether fortress or bastion remnant. Ghasts and skeletons are common in this biome while endermen are rare. Striders can spawn here as well. This is the only place to find dried ghasts naturally. The crimson forest consists of many huge crimson fungi, which act as the "trees" of this biome. The huge fungi often generate with weeping vines hanging from them, and shroomlights which light up the landscape. The floor is mostly covered with crimson nylium, with occasional patches of bare netherrack or Nether wart blocks. Crimson roots, crimson fungus, and occasionally warped fungus grow on the ground. Small patches of Nether wart blocks and weeping vines can also be found growing on the ceiling. Hoglins, piglins, zombified piglins, and striders can spawn in this biome. The warped forest consists of many huge warped fungi, which act as the "trees" of this biome. The huge fungi often generate with shroomlights, which light up the landscape. Twisting vines grow throughout the biome in patches. The floor is mostly covered with warped nylium, with occasional patches of bare netherrack or warped wart blocks. Warped roots, warped fungus, Nether sprouts, and occasionally crimson fungus grow on the ground. Endermen and striders are the only mobs that spawn in this biome. The biome emits out a magenta-purple fog upon entry. A gray biome, the basalt deltas are said to be the remnant of ancient volcanic eruptions.[citation needed] The ground consists of basalt and blackstone blocks, with small patches of netherrack and pools of lava. The shape of the terrain is chaotic and uneven, making it somewhat difficult to traverse and build on. Unlike the other biomes in the Nether, bastion remnants do not generate in basalt deltas. When this biome borders a lava ocean, clusters of basalt form near the coast. Fog is colored light-gray and particles of dust can be seen falling from the ceiling upon entry. Magma cubes have a high spawn rate in this biome, making the basalt deltas the best place to farm magma cream. This biome also contains a much higher abundance of blackstone compared to other Nether biomes. Ghasts and striders can spawn in this biome as well. The End is considered a different dimension. The terrain consists of end stone islands of varying sizes, floating in the void. They use five different biomes in Java Edition, or all use the End in Bedrock Edition, with no terrain differences. This biome is used to generate the circle of radius 1000 centered at the 0,0 coordinates in the End. The End central island is generated at the center of this circle, and it's surrounded by a complete vacuum all the way to the edge of the biome. Most of the End features are exclusive to that island, including the ender dragon, the obsidian pillars, the End crystals, the 5×5 spawn platform, the exit portal and the 20 central End gateways. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. It does not rain or snow in this biome unlike the other low-temperature biomes. The outer islands in the End can be accessed using End gateways after the ender dragon has been defeated. In Bedrock Edition, this biome is instead the biggest, as it is used to generate the whole dimension. If the biome is used for a superflat world, the sky appears nearly black and an ender dragon spawns at the 0,0 coordinates in the Overworld. Only endermen spawn at night. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the empty expanse between the larger islands, populated by the smaller, circular islands. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the gradual slope from the hilltops of each island down to the cliffs around the edge. End cities generate here, but chorus trees do not. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the hilltops of each island, and is the only biome in the End where both chorus trees and End cities generate. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the outer rims of each island, with steep cliffs below the edge. Neither End cities nor chorus trees generate in this biome. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. These biomes have been completely removed from the game in Java Edition. In Bedrock Edition, they still exist in the code, but do not generate and can only be found in old worlds. Most biomes were removed from the generator because the terrain was the only difference with their regular biome variant. This biome doesn't generate naturally from Pocket Edition Alpha 0.9.0 onward. When Bedrock Edition 1.4.0 introduced the new frozen ocean, this biome was not removed or replaced by the new frozen ocean, although the id name changed from frozen_ocean to legacy_frozen_ocean. This biome doesn't generate naturally from Pocket Edition v0.9.0 alpha and Java Edition 1.7.2 onward. The deep warm ocean did not naturally generate in any non-snapshot or non-beta version. Most hills were gentle rolling slopes on which the usual biome terrain generated, with some sharper cliffs here and there. Snowy mountains had a lower chance of spawning passive mobs during world generation than other biomes (7% versus 10%). Swamp hills and dark forest hills generated as 'modified' biomes instead of hills biomes, making them slightly rarer but also bigger in size. Tall birch hills generated as 'modified hills' biomes, which made them even rarer than modified biomes. Tall birch hills had much more mountainous terrain than most hills biomes. In Bedrock Edition, this biome did generate as a much hillier version of the giant spruce taiga, even more mountainous than regular hills biomes. However, the giant spruce taiga hills used the same trees as the giant tree taiga hills (with leaves only at the top), making this biome very similar to the giant tree taiga hills. With the new terrain generation in Caves & Cliffs: Part II, the regular badlands biome also featured these plateaus and this biome became redundant. In Bedrock Edition, the grass and foliage color was lush green (the same color as in mushroom fields), making it easily distinguishable from the regular shattered savanna. Because the terrain was the only difference with the regular mushroom fields biome, this biome became redundant after Caves & Cliffs: Part II. In Bedrock Edition, the regular gravelly mountains did not have any trees, but this biome did, making it slightly different. Because almost no grass blocks were generated between the gravel, trees did rarely generate. These biomes no longer exist in current versions of the game. Snow, grass blocks, ice Grass block, short grass, ferns, oak trees, birch trees Grass block, short grass, oak trees Sand, snow, ice Grass block, oak trees, birch trees These biomes can appear only in April Fools snapshots of the game. This "biome" includes all the other non-custom dimensions biomes. All mobs, blocks, particles and structures in 20w13b (vanilla) can generate in this biome. A dimension can have multiple of these randomly generated biomes. Tint All biomes use a set of colors for various environmental aspects such as the sky, water, fog, and some blocks. In Bedrock Edition, biomes specify their colors in the client_biome JSON files in the vanilla resource packs. Some biomes specify their colors directly, while others use colormaps or separate JSON files which can also control other environmental effects. In Bedrock Edition, all biome colors for blocks are also visible on maps. Biome grass and foliage colors are selected from three 256×256 colormap images: grass.png, foliage.png, and dry_foliage under assets/minecraft/textures/colormap‌[JE only] or textures/colormap‌[BE only] in the vanilla resource pack. The grass.png colormap sets the colors for grass block, short grass, tall grass, ferns, large ferns, ferns in flower pots, sugar canes, bushes and stems of pink petals and wildflowers. Meanwhile, the foliage.png colormap sets the colors for vines and tree leaves of oak, jungle, acacia, dark oak and mangrove. The dry_foliage.png colormap sets the colors for leaf litter. Only the colors in the lower-left halfs of the images are used, even though the upper-right side of foliage.png and dry_foliage.png is colored. The adjusted temperature and adjusted downfall values (recognized as AdjTemp and AdjDownfall in the following, respectively) are used when determining the biome color to select from the colormap. They are computed as follows: AdjTemp = clamp( Temperature, 0.0, 1.0 ) AdjDownfall = clamp( Downfall, 0.0, 1.0 ) * AdjTemp. "clamp" limits the range of the temperature and downfall to 0.0—1.0. The clamped downfall value is then multiplied by the adjusted temperature value, bringing its value to be inside the lower left triangle. Treating the bottom-right corner of the colormap as AdjTemp = 0.0 and AdjDownfall = 0.0, the adjusted temperature increases to 1.0 along the X-axis, and the adjusted downfall increases to 1.0 along the Y-axis. In the following cases, the plants are not tinted exactly according to the colormap. In Java Edition, several of them are specified in biome Jsons in vanilla data pack. Swamps In swamps and mangrove swamps, the grass color is based on a noise on XZ plane. When the value of this noise is less than -0.1, it uses the color #4c763c. Otherwise using #6a7039. The foliage color is #6a7039 in swamps and #8db127 in mangrove swamps, which are not affected by the colormap. The dry foliage color in swamps and mangrove swamps is #7b5334, which also ignores the colormap. In Bedrock Edition, all swamp biomes use colormaps to determine these colors, similar to regular colormaps described above. Dark forest In dark forests, the grass color is the result of the bitwise AND between the color in the colormap and #fefefe, and then averaging with #28340a. In vanilla, that is #507a32. Badlands In badlands, wooded badlands and eroded badlands, the grass color is #90814d and the foliage color and dry foliage color is #9e814d. They are not affected by the colormap. Cherry grove The color for grass and foliage in cherry groves is always #b6db61, which is not affected by the colormap. Pale garden In the pale garden, the grass color is #778272, the foliage color is #878d76, and the dry foliage color is #a0a69c They are not affected by the colormap. Other leaves The color for spruce leaves is #619961 and the color for birch leaves is #80a755. Both are not affected by the biome, but determined by colormaps in Bedrock Edition. The color of the daytime sky in Overworld changes according to the basic temperature value of the biome. The basic temperature is first modified as T = clamp( Temperature / 3 , -1.0, 1.0 ). Then the triple (0.62222224-0.05T, 0.5+0.1T, 1) is the sky color. The color of the sky in the pale garden biome is #b9b9b9, which is unaffected by the above formula. See § List of biome climates below for all sky colors. The colors and surface opacity of water are defined in the vanilla data pack‌[JE only] or client biome JSON files in vanilla resource packs.‌[BE only] Some biomes in Java Edition, or most biomes in Bedrock Edition have unique water colors. Swamps and warm oceans in Bedrock Edition have unique water surface opacities, 65% and 55% respectively. The color and density of water and sky fog is different for most biomes, defined by separate JSON files for each biome in Bedrock Edition. The underwater fog color is #050533 with a few exceptions in Java Edition, or the same as the water surface color with some exceptions in Bedrock Edition. The sky fog color is #c0d8ff‌[JE only] or #abd2ff‌[BE only] in all Overworld biomes, except pale gardens which use #817770. Nether biomes and the End have unique fog colors. Vibrant Visuals ignores default colors for the sky, water, and fog, and adds new effects for each biome or a set of biome. Which environmental settings are used is determined by the biome JSON file, and all environmental settings are stored in separate directories in resource packs. In vanilla, the following effects are affected by the biome: Water colors are not visible with Vibrant Visuals, but all regular fog colors still apply asides from the volumetric fog. When plants or water are at the borders between or among biomes, the color is affected by the biome of the surrounding blocks at the same Y-level. The range of the block involved in the calculation is determined by the biome blend radius in options. Takes the plant color or water color of the biomes within a square centered on this block and with the side length being the biome blend radius, and calculates their average value to get the final color for this block. The sky color‌[JE only] and the fog color use the color processed by Gaussian blur from colors of the biomes at each block in the range of 5×5×5 centered on the block the camera is in. Climate A biome has three climate attributes: temperature, downfall and precipitation. Each biome has a base temperature value (see § List of biome climates), but the actual temperature value at each location in the biome is also affected by the height of the location. Locations with Y≤80 use the base temperature as actual temperature. At Y=81, the actual temperature value randomly fluctuates up and down by -0.00875 — +0.01125 from the base temperature based on a noise on the XZ plane, and at Y≥81 the actual temperature decreases by 0.00125 (1⁄800) every block up. In frozen oceans and deep frozen oceans, it is also affected by a noise value on the XZ plane. In some regions according to the noise, the base temperature value is always regarded as 0.2. The actual temperature values for these regions are also calculated on this basis. This is detectable in frozen oceans, as its base temperature is low enough to freeze or snow, so that only these regions do not freeze or snow at sea level. The temperature affects at which height snowfall can occur, the sky and block colors, and whether sponges dry in the air.‌[BE only] The downfall value is a number between 0.0 and 1.0 (see § List of biome climates). When the downfall value is greater than 0.85, the biome is marked as humid, which is related only to the random extinction of fire and block colors. This value doesn't affect the weather. The precipitation value can be "true" or "false". If the precipitation of the biome is false, no rain or snow occurs. Otherwise, a location is rainable when its temperature value is equal or greater than 0.15, and snowable otherwise. So, if the base temperature is less than 0.15, it's snowable at any Y level. Even if equal or greater than 0.15, it will still snow above a certain Y level, which are listed below: Snowy Plains Ice Spikes Grove Frozen Peaks Jagged Peaks Snowy Slopes Snowy Taiga Snowy Beach Some regions of Frozen Ocean The exact minimum height for snowfall is randomized per block, with a margin of 8 blocks. In Bedrock Edition, this is a transition layer where both snow and rain particles are visible at the same time. This transition also appears when moving horizontally between snowy and rainy biomes, and the particle density decreases when moving to a dry biome. In Bedrock Edition, the amount of snow layers generated on the surface is based on the snow accumulation value of the biome. The snow height is randomly selected per block between a minimum and maximum value, with 0.0 being no snow and 1.0 being the full height of one block. During snowfall, snow can stack infinitely on top of generated snow, unlike in Java Edition where this is controlled by a snow accumulation game rule. #9c754d‌[BE only] Generation Biome IDs Each type of biome has its own Resource Location, shown in the following tables. Before 1.13 biomes used to have a numerical ID. These can be seen in this page: Biome/IDs before 1.13 In versions after 1.13 biomes use a numerical ID which is determined by the alphabetical ordering of their resource locations.[verify] This information is however only used by the game internals and is not included below. Each type of biome has its own Resource Location / IDs, shown in the following tables. Achievements Advancements History Issues Issues relating to "Biome" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery See also References External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Experience#Values_from_Java_Edition_Beta_1.8_to_1.3.1_(12w23a)] | [TOKENS: 1434]
Experience 5HP In Java Edition: Height: 0.5 blocksWidth: 0.5 blocks In Bedrock Edition: Height: 0.25 blocksWidth: 0.25 blocks Experience (EXP or XP for short) can be gained from defeating mobs or performing many kinds of other actions. Experience has no direct effect on the player character, but it can be used to enhance their equipment through enchanting, or by using an anvil to repair, rename, or combine enchantments on equipment. Most sources of experience are produced in the form of experience orbs. In Java Edition, experience gained affects the player's score on the death screen. Experience orbs also recover durability on items with Mending that are being worn or are in-hand. Contents Sources Experience can be gained from several different sources. Most sources drop experience in the form of orbs, which can be claimed by any player, while a few methods directly award the player experience upon completing the action. Gathering experience points increases the player's experience level by gradually filling a bar on the bottom of the screen until a new level is achieved when the bar is full. When the player dies, they drop experience orbs worth 7 * current level experience points, up to a maximum of 100 points (enough to reach approximately 7.5 levels), and all of the other experience vanishes. If the gamerule keepInventory is set to true, the experience is kept even if the player dies. Experience orbs Most experience sources drop experience in the form of experience orbs, which can then be claimed by any player. Experience orbs fade between green and yellow colors and float or glide toward the player up to a distance of 7.25 blocks (calculated from the center of player's feet and the center of the experience orb), speeding up as they get nearer to the player. Experience orbs pulled toward a player are slowed by cobwebs. Experience orbs can also be pulled around or away from the player by running water currents. When collected, experience orbs make a bell-like sound for a split second. Unlike items, experience points are picked up gradually: no matter how many orbs are in the range of the player, they are added to the player's experience one at a time (10 orbs/second). In extreme cases, this can result in the player being followed by a swarm of orbs for many seconds. If an experience orb isn't collected within 5 minutes of its appearance, it despawns. Experience orbs vary in value. The general worth of an orb is reflected by its size, with eleven possible sizes corresponding to specific values. The three smallest sizes are the most commonly encountered, as the majority of experience dropped by mobs and blocks is less than ten. Dense experience orbs with values 17 or higher have orange "eyes" or "cores", and are less frequently encountered, most commonly from defeating the ender dragon, wither and other players, disenchanting objects on a grindstone, breaking spawners, and collecting items from high-traffic furnaces. For performance improvement, experience orbs of the same value can merge into a single entity, but they do not create a higher value orb. Naturally spawned orbs always have an integer value of 1–11, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, or 2477. Fishing, breeding, and trading drop a single orb with a random value in the appropriate range. Breaking blocks, killing mobs and players, smelting items, and bottles o' enchanting calculate their total experience amount and then split it into the base values of orbs by size (1, 3, 7, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, and 2477). Higher values are chosen first, so, for example, a total value of 1000 would be dropped as orbs with values 617, 307, 73, and 3. While the first ender dragon in a world drops 12,000 experience, it is dropped in 10 waves of 1000 and one of 2000, so no orbs of value 2477 are dropped. Such orbs can exist in the world via furnaces that have had a lot of traffic. Like items, experience orbs float when on water. Experience orbs can be destroyed by fire, lava, explosions, and cacti, and can trigger pressure plates and tripwires. Experience orbs can also stop minecarts. In Bedrock Edition, although mob drops spawn the instant the final blow is dealt to the mob, experience orbs do not appear until the mob entity disappears and the smoke appears. In Java Edition, experience orbs appear in the same spatial and temporal location as loot when an entity is killed. Orbs with negative values can be created using the /summon command, either using values below 0 or above 32767 due to 16-bit integer overflow. They use the smallest texture of experience orb. Negative orbs behave differently from positive orbs, namely that they do not deduct experience when collected by the player. They deduct durability from a tool enchanted with Mending, provided the tool is already damaged prior to collection of the orbs. The following mobs and similar entities do not drop experience when killed: Leveling up The formulas for figuring out how many experience orbs needed to get to the next level are as follows: One can determine how much experience has been collected to reach a level using the equations: Likewise, to get the number of levels from the total experience value, one can utilize the following inverse equations: Score The score is the number of experience the player has collected since their last death. This number is the total experience the player has collected, rather than the amount of experience they had upon death. When the player dies, the score is displayed on the death screen. Sounds Java Edition: Experience orbs do not use entity-dependent sound events. Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Experience orbs have entity data associated with them that contain various properties. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Videos History The experience level costs were heavily revised in snapshot 12w22a and 12w23a, and again in version 1.8. Before these, reaching level 50 (the maximum usable on a single enchantment) required 4625 experience, corresponding to defeating 925 hostile mobs (assuming the "common" ones.) Afterward, considerably less experience is needed to get into higher levels. Higher levels cost more experience than lower ones, but the levels are still easier to get than in 1.2.5. Now, level 30 is the maximum for enchantments, and that cost is equivalent of 279 "common" enemies, less than 1/3 the old price. A player dropping excessive experience orbs upon death may cause performance degradation in the game. Issues Issues relating to "Experience" or "Orb" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery References Navigation More More Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Minecart_with_command_block] | [TOKENS: 394]
Minecart with Command Block No No Height: 0.7 blocksWidth: 0.98 blocks 6HP A minecart with command block is an impulse‌[JE only] or repeating‌[BE & edu only] command block inside a minecart. Contents Obtaining The minecart with command block is obtainable only using the command /give @s command_block_minecart, as it does not appear in the creative inventory‌[Bedrock Edition only] and has no crafting recipe. It can also be summoned using the command /summon command_block_minecart. It can be broken like any other minecart, but only the minecart is retained, while the command block is lost. Unlike most minecart types, command block minecarts can't be crafted with a minecart and a command block. Usage The minecart with command block combines the functionalities of both minecarts and command blocks. Although the minecart visually contains an impulse command block, it functions more similarly to a repeating command block, executing the command once every four game ticks (unlike a repeating command block that repeats every 1 game tick) when on an active activator rail. When it passes over a detector rail with a comparator connected next to it, it outputs the command block's success count value. The command is executed at the coordinates of the minecart, which can of course move, allowing for command execution relative to an entity without the /execute command. Sounds Java Edition: Minecarts with command blocks use the Friendly Creatures sound category for entity-dependent sound events.[sound 1] Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Minecarts with command blocks have entity data associated with them that contain various properties of the entity. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: History Issues Issues relating to "Minecart with Command Block" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Gallery References Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Cave_spider_spawner] | [TOKENS: 1653]
Monster Spawner Common No Yes (64) 5 5 No JE: Partial[a]BE: Yes JE: NoBE: Yes No No 11 STONE A monster spawner is a type of spawner found in a variety of structures. It constantly summons instances of the mob displayed within it as long as a player is in range and it is dark enough for that mob type to spawn nearby. It only drops experience orbs when broken, and cannot be moved from where it is found. Contents Obtaining Monster spawners cannot be obtained in Survival, even with Silk Touch. A monster spawner can be obtained in Creative mode by taking it from Creative inventory, by using the /give command, or by using pick block. It is initially empty and inert, but can be configured to spawn a desired mob by using a spawn egg on the placed block. A /setblock, /clone or /fill command can also be used to obtain a monster spawner. If broken with a pickaxe, a monster spawner drops 15-43 experience. When mined with anything else, it drops nothing. Monster spawners can generate naturally in the following places: Usage A monster spawner spawns mobs in an (at most) 9×3×9 volume (see § Mechanics) around it when the player is within 16 blocks. Suitable spawning locations for the block's mob type are provided in or around the spawning volume. The monster spawner attempts to spawn four mobs around it, then waits from 10 to 39.95 seconds before attempting to spawn more. In Peaceful difficulty, monster spawners still activate but do not spawn monsters, including zombie horses and camel husks in Java Edition. Monster spawners are transparent, but they behave like leaves in that they diffuse sky light coming from directly above. A monster spawner activates when a player (that's not in Spectator mode) comes within a spherical radius of 16 blocks from the center point of the block; i.e. 15.5 blocks from the monster spawner itself. The player's presence is determined by coordinates at their foot level, meaning that a player standing exactly 15.5 blocks below the spawner doesn't activate it, even though their head is in range. In Java Edition an active monster spawner attempts to spawn mobs within a 4-block horizontal and 1-block vertical range; that is, in a 9×3×9 volume centered on the monster spawner. In Bedrock Edition, the horizontal spawning range is 4 blocks taxicab distance, creating spawning volume extending 4 blocks in each cardinal horizontal direction from the sides of the monster spawner; its horizontal cross-section is therefore diamond-shaped. Mobs can spawn anywhere in this range that is suitable, with mobs more likely to spawn closer to the monster spawner than farther away. While mobs are spawned at fractional x and z-coordinates (i.e. not aligned to blocks), they are spawned at an integer y-coordinate. Horizontally, a mob can spawn with its center point anywhere within range, but vertically, mobs spawn with their legs at either the same layer as the monster spawner block, one block above it, or one block below it. (Note that when there are other blocks slightly intersecting the mob's hitbox, they can sometimes glitch further away - often up - but this does not make it a true spawning point.) A monster spawner attempts to spawn 4 mobs at randomly chosen points within the spawning volume, then waits anywhere from 200 to 799 ticks (10 to 39.95 seconds) before spawning again. As it waits, the mob model inside the block spins faster and faster. Except for the normal solid-block spawning requirement, all the remaining ones must be met (not in a solid block, correct light level, etc.), so the monster spawner often produces fewer than 4 mobs. When it does spawn, more flame particles temporarily appear around it, and puffs of smoke are emitted from the spawned mobs in Java Edition or the northwest corner of the spawner in Bedrock Edition. If the monster spawner fails to spawn any mobs because it did not pick any suitable locations, it repeats this process every tick until it succeeds. It starts the next wait cycle only after successfully spawning at least one mob. If 6 or more mobs of a monster spawner's type have their hitbox intersecting a 9×9×9 volume centered on the monster spawner block in Java Edition or a 16×10×16 volume centered on the lower northwest corner of the monster spawner block in Bedrock Edition, the monster spawner "poofs" without creating any mobs and then waits for the next cycle.[needs testing in Bedrock Edition] This is checked before each of the four spawn attempts. A monster spawner performs a relaxed version of the ordinary spawning check: the general solid block requirement is removed, but the volume (hitbox of the mob) is kept along with some other checks according to mob specifics. As a result, for some types of mobs to spawn in the outer planes of the spawning volume, some planes outside the volume may also need to be free of solid blocks to conform with the mobs' height, width, or other rules governing their individual spawn volumes. Examples: For all of the volumes listed in the table, the horizontal plane is centered on the center of the monster spawner. While the spawning volume for pigs is 8.9×2.9×8.9, the requirement of grass blocks that are necessary for pigs to spawn reduces the actual volume in which they successfully spawn to 8.9×1.0×8.9. Other mobs can spawn in mid-air, ignoring general rules about spawning on solid ground. The spawn conditions do not include biomes for most mobs. As such, monster spawners can place mobs where they normally wouldn't generate. For example, a mooshroom monster spawner can operate in a plains biome as long as there are mycelium blocks within the spawn area because the mooshroom's spawning code checks only for mycelium. The reason mooshrooms are not actually spawned elsewhere is that the game does not normally try to spawn them in other biomes: only the mushroom field biome has mooshroom on the list of things to spawn. The way a monster spawner can be disabled depends on the entity it tries to spawn. For a monster spawner that generates mobs that spawn only in dark conditions (light level = 0), a torch placed on any side or top of the monster spawner is sufficient to disable it for the whole 9×3×9 volume. For a blaze or silverfish spawner, a light level of 12 is required to prevent spawning. This can be achieved by: A monster spawner is also disabled by filling the spawning volume with solid blocks. This is often used to disable magma cube monster spawners, as magma cubes can spawn in any light level. However, since all magma cubes require the space of a large magma cube in order to spawn, a clever placement of as little as 9 solid blocks a layer above the monster spawner (see right image) can completely disable it. In Java Edition, using commands, monster spawners can be customized: Detailed technical information about custom monster spawners can be found below. In Bedrock Edition, monster spawner customization cannot be done in the base game (i.e. without addons/behavior packs). A monster spawner can be placed under a note block to produce "bass drum" sounds. Monster spawners cannot be pushed by pistons. They also cannot be pushed nor pulled by sticky pistons. Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: A monster spawner has a block entity associated with it that holds additional data about the block. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Monster Spawner" or "Spawner" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery See also Notes References External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Crafting?section=2&veaction=edit] | [TOKENS: 1274]
Crafting Crafting is the process of constructing tools, items, and blocks in Minecraft that can be performed via the inventory, a crafting table, or automatically using a crafter. Contents Crafting system Players in Survival and Adventure mode, as well as Creative in Bedrock Edition and Spectator in Java Edition, have access to a 2×2 crafting grid from their inventory screen. Players craft by arranging items in the crafting grid to match a given recipe. Small crafting recipes that are at most 2×2 can be made there, including wooden planks, sticks, crafting tables, and torches. To craft more complex items, a crafting table must be created, placed, and used. This brings up an interface with a larger 3×3 crafting grid in which the player can use to craft any crafting recipe in the game. Recipes fitting the 2×2 grid can also be crafted in the crafting table's 3×3 grid. There is a recipe book button in the inventory where the player can access all of their unlocked crafting recipes. Some recipes don't require their ingredients to be arranged in a specific way on the crafting grid. These are commonly known as "shapeless" recipes. For example, players may craft a fermented spider eye by placing its ingredients anywhere within the grid. Most recipes must have their ingredients placed in the correct relative positions on the crafting grid. These are commonly known as "shaped" recipes. Ingredients in shaped recipes can be moved up, down, left, or right. They can also be flipped horizontally, but not vertically. For example, a 3×1 recipe, such as bread, can be made using the top, middle, or bottom row of the 3×3 grid, and a bow may be made with the strings placed on the left instead of on the right. There are recipes that may not be moved or mirrored in this way. These are commonly known as "fixed" recipes. For example, dyes in banner recipes - only available in Bedrock Edition - must be specifically placed to achieve the desired pattern. No fixed recipes exist in Java Edition, but they can be added by data packs, add-ons, or mods. Unlike other in-game actions such as smelting, brewing, and enchanting, crafting is completely silent. Crafting can be automated using the crafter. The simplest way to do this is for the player to add the items for the crafting into the crafter manually, however this process can itself be automated using hoppers. In order to control which slots the hopper puts the item into it is possible to disable certain slots to prevent the input of items. When items are put into a crafter automatically they fill every enabled slot equally from left to right and top to bottom, in that order. If all slots are disabled, then hoppers connected to it cannot put items in it. The crafter can craft anything that a normal crafting table can. Crafters require a redstone signal to activate. Automated crafting is useful in both storage systems and automated farms, as it provides a way to automatically craft items and blocks that otherwise requires manual input. The recipe book is a mechanic that serves as a catalog of recipes and as a crafting guide. It shows every crafting recipe that the player has unlocked. Crafting recipes are organized in several different categories. The categories differ between Java and Bedrock. In Bedrock Edition, categories consist of craftable items from each Creative inventory tab. In Java Edition, the categories are as follows: Recipes, including crafting recipes, can be configured by data packs in Java Edition or add-ons in Bedrock Edition. Complete recipe list To save space, some recipes are animated (requires JavaScript). On this wiki, shapeless recipes are marked with a pair of intertwined arrows on the crafting table graphic, while fixed crafting recipes are marked by an exclamation point. These symbols do not appear in the game. Some items had different crafting recipes and have since been updated in later versions of Minecraft. Indev 0.31 20100130 Infdev 20100227-1414 Alpha v1.0.14 Recipe became shapeless. 13w36a Changed to 3 wheat instead of 6. Indev 20100223 Changed to leather instead of light gray wool. Note: Wool was called Cloth, and Leather Armor was called Cloth Armor at that time. Alpha v1.0.8 Beta 1.3 Beta 1.3 Changed to 4 string instead of 9. Beta 1.6.6 Beta 1.6.6 Recipe became shapeless. Beta 1.9 Prerelease 3 1.1 13w23a Alpha v1.0.6 Recipe became shapeless. 12w17a 14w32b 12w34b 19w45a 1.19.4-pre1 1.20-pre1 22w45a 22w45a 24w18a 24w33a 25w02a 25w18a 25w18a 25w32a Was changed to match Java Edition. Beta 1.14.0.2 Beta/Preview 1.19.60.20 Beta/Preview 1.19.60.20 Was changed to match Java Edition. Beta/Preview 1.20.10.20 Was changed to match Java Edition. Beta/Preview 1.20.10.20 Was changed to match Java Edition. Beta/Preview 1.20.10.21 Beta/Preview 1.21.0.24 Beta/Preview 1.21.60.25 Beta/Preview 1.21.90.21 Beta/Preview 1.21.90.21 Beta/Preview 1.21.110.23 Changed to match Java Edition. Beta/Preview 1.21.120.23 Some items could be crafted previously, but cannot be crafted in the current version of Minecraft. "Dandelion Yellow" and "Rose Red" are the former names for Yellow dye and Red dye, respectively. Videos Achievements History Issues Issues relating to "Crafting" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Gallery See also Navigation More More Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Experience#Values_from_Java_Edition_1.3.1_to_1.8_(14w02a)] | [TOKENS: 1434]
Experience 5HP In Java Edition: Height: 0.5 blocksWidth: 0.5 blocks In Bedrock Edition: Height: 0.25 blocksWidth: 0.25 blocks Experience (EXP or XP for short) can be gained from defeating mobs or performing many kinds of other actions. Experience has no direct effect on the player character, but it can be used to enhance their equipment through enchanting, or by using an anvil to repair, rename, or combine enchantments on equipment. Most sources of experience are produced in the form of experience orbs. In Java Edition, experience gained affects the player's score on the death screen. Experience orbs also recover durability on items with Mending that are being worn or are in-hand. Contents Sources Experience can be gained from several different sources. Most sources drop experience in the form of orbs, which can be claimed by any player, while a few methods directly award the player experience upon completing the action. Gathering experience points increases the player's experience level by gradually filling a bar on the bottom of the screen until a new level is achieved when the bar is full. When the player dies, they drop experience orbs worth 7 * current level experience points, up to a maximum of 100 points (enough to reach approximately 7.5 levels), and all of the other experience vanishes. If the gamerule keepInventory is set to true, the experience is kept even if the player dies. Experience orbs Most experience sources drop experience in the form of experience orbs, which can then be claimed by any player. Experience orbs fade between green and yellow colors and float or glide toward the player up to a distance of 7.25 blocks (calculated from the center of player's feet and the center of the experience orb), speeding up as they get nearer to the player. Experience orbs pulled toward a player are slowed by cobwebs. Experience orbs can also be pulled around or away from the player by running water currents. When collected, experience orbs make a bell-like sound for a split second. Unlike items, experience points are picked up gradually: no matter how many orbs are in the range of the player, they are added to the player's experience one at a time (10 orbs/second). In extreme cases, this can result in the player being followed by a swarm of orbs for many seconds. If an experience orb isn't collected within 5 minutes of its appearance, it despawns. Experience orbs vary in value. The general worth of an orb is reflected by its size, with eleven possible sizes corresponding to specific values. The three smallest sizes are the most commonly encountered, as the majority of experience dropped by mobs and blocks is less than ten. Dense experience orbs with values 17 or higher have orange "eyes" or "cores", and are less frequently encountered, most commonly from defeating the ender dragon, wither and other players, disenchanting objects on a grindstone, breaking spawners, and collecting items from high-traffic furnaces. For performance improvement, experience orbs of the same value can merge into a single entity, but they do not create a higher value orb. Naturally spawned orbs always have an integer value of 1–11, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, or 2477. Fishing, breeding, and trading drop a single orb with a random value in the appropriate range. Breaking blocks, killing mobs and players, smelting items, and bottles o' enchanting calculate their total experience amount and then split it into the base values of orbs by size (1, 3, 7, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, and 2477). Higher values are chosen first, so, for example, a total value of 1000 would be dropped as orbs with values 617, 307, 73, and 3. While the first ender dragon in a world drops 12,000 experience, it is dropped in 10 waves of 1000 and one of 2000, so no orbs of value 2477 are dropped. Such orbs can exist in the world via furnaces that have had a lot of traffic. Like items, experience orbs float when on water. Experience orbs can be destroyed by fire, lava, explosions, and cacti, and can trigger pressure plates and tripwires. Experience orbs can also stop minecarts. In Bedrock Edition, although mob drops spawn the instant the final blow is dealt to the mob, experience orbs do not appear until the mob entity disappears and the smoke appears. In Java Edition, experience orbs appear in the same spatial and temporal location as loot when an entity is killed. Orbs with negative values can be created using the /summon command, either using values below 0 or above 32767 due to 16-bit integer overflow. They use the smallest texture of experience orb. Negative orbs behave differently from positive orbs, namely that they do not deduct experience when collected by the player. They deduct durability from a tool enchanted with Mending, provided the tool is already damaged prior to collection of the orbs. The following mobs and similar entities do not drop experience when killed: Leveling up The formulas for figuring out how many experience orbs needed to get to the next level are as follows: One can determine how much experience has been collected to reach a level using the equations: Likewise, to get the number of levels from the total experience value, one can utilize the following inverse equations: Score The score is the number of experience the player has collected since their last death. This number is the total experience the player has collected, rather than the amount of experience they had upon death. When the player dies, the score is displayed on the death screen. Sounds Java Edition: Experience orbs do not use entity-dependent sound events. Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Experience orbs have entity data associated with them that contain various properties. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Videos History The experience level costs were heavily revised in snapshot 12w22a and 12w23a, and again in version 1.8. Before these, reaching level 50 (the maximum usable on a single enchantment) required 4625 experience, corresponding to defeating 925 hostile mobs (assuming the "common" ones.) Afterward, considerably less experience is needed to get into higher levels. Higher levels cost more experience than lower ones, but the levels are still easier to get than in 1.2.5. Now, level 30 is the maximum for enchantments, and that cost is equivalent of 279 "common" enemies, less than 1/3 the old price. A player dropping excessive experience orbs upon death may cause performance degradation in the game. Issues Issues relating to "Experience" or "Orb" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery References Navigation More More Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Lapis_Lazuli] | [TOKENS: 346]
Lapis Lazuli Common Yes Yes (64) Lapis lazuli is a mineral required to enchant items in an enchanting table. It is also a major source of blue dye. Contents Obtaining When mined with a stone pickaxe or better, lapis lazuli ore or deepslate lapis lazuli ore drops 4–9 lapis lazuli. With the Fortune III enchantment, a single block has a chance of dropping up to 36 items. The ore is most common at y level -2. Aside from villager gifts in Java Edition, trading is the only renewable way to obtain lapis lazuli. In Java Edition, cleric villagers give players lapis lazuli if they have the Hero of the Village effect. Usage 1–3 pieces of lapis lazuli are required to use an enchanting table to enchant an item. More specifically, the enchanting table UI shows 3 options (see Enchanting mechanics for details): the first, second, and third options cost 1, 2, and 3 lapis lazuli, respectively. Lapis lazuli can be used to make blocks of lapis lazuli and blue dye. In Bedrock Edition, it can also be used directly as a substitute for blue dye. In Bedrock Edition, lapis lazuli can be also used in banner patterns: In Bedrock Edition and Minecraft Education, lapis lazuli can be: The following color palette is shown on the designs on trimmed armor: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Advancements Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Lapis Lazuli" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Cobweb] | [TOKENS: 1040]
Cobweb Yes Yes (64) 4 4 No JE: Partial (diffuses sky light)BE: Yes JE: NoBE: Yes No No 3 WOOL A cobweb is a block that drastically slows down the movement of most entities touching it. The Weaving effect lessens this movement speed decrease. Contents Obtaining Cobwebs can be obtained as an item using shears. Cobwebs can also be obtained with a sword enchanted with Silk Touch, which is possible only through commands or while in Creative mode‌[JE only]. A cobweb drops one piece of string if broken with a non-Silk Touch sword, if water touches or flows over it, or a piston pushes it. Breaking cobwebs costs two durability on a sword. It drops nothing when broken using anything else, or if lava flows over it. Cobwebs generate naturally in mineshafts, stronghold libraries, igloo basements, abandoned villages, woodland mansion spider spawner rooms, and trial chambers around specific trial spawners. When an entity with the Weaving effect dies, 2–3 cobwebs can generate in a 3×3×3 cube centered on the entity's location of death. The cobwebs can generate only on top of blocks with a full top face, meaning that cobwebs cannot generate on top of other cobwebs. When the game rule mobGriefing is set to false, entities excluding the player do not generate cobwebs upon death. Usage Mobs can spawn inside of cobwebs. Cobwebs also diffuse sky light. Undead mobs do not catch fire from sunlight if they are under a cobweb or their head is inside a cobweb. Blocks can be placed on cobwebs. Paintings‌[Java Edition only] and signs can be placed on their sides, or on top in the case of signs. Despite being slowed down by them, mobs do not try to pathfind around cobwebs, which can be exploited to construct clever mob traps. Cobwebs can be used as a delaying mechanism in a redstone circuit, for example, to delay an item falling on a pressure plate or into a hopper. They can also be used to cancel random momentum of an item thrown from a dispenser or dropper by placing them directly on their face. All mobs except for spiders, cave spiders, shulkers and vexes experience slow movement through a cobweb and, if affected by gravity, fall approximately 0.078 blocks/second while within it, taking nearly 13 seconds to fall 1 full block. A cobweb can partially stop blast damage if a player/entity and another entity causing the explosion are both caught in the cobweb. Cobwebs halt item entities' horizontal momentum completely and make item entities fall around twice as slow as mobs do, taking ~27 seconds to fall 1 full block. Experience orbs, on the other hand, would fall approximately ~2.54× slower than mobs, taking ~33 seconds. A cobweb affects the player's movement abilities, as well. While in contact with it, the player can move at a speed of about 25% of the normal walking speed, and their jumping height is severely reduced. A cobweb also limits the rate at which a player can break blocks. Like water, falling into a cobweb prevents a player from taking fall damage, meaning a fatal fall can be mitigated with cobwebs. Attacking while falling through cobwebs counts as a critical hit, the same as when falling after a jump. Players and mobs affected by the Weaving effect move through cobwebs at 50% of their normal speed instead of 25%. The slowing effect of the cobweb increases if it is placed on ice. The slowest a player can move in vanilla Minecraft without commands or other third-party tools is by placing cobwebs on blue ice, sneaking, drinking a level IV Turtle Master potion, and blocking, which causes the player come to a near-total standstill, moving only a single block every few minutes. Items thrown into a cobweb are slowed and fall through it after a maximum of about 24 seconds depending on where it enters. They do not merge with other items of the same type thrown on the ground. Cobwebs have different effects on other moving entities. An arrow shot at a cobweb passes through without being slowed. In Java Edition, a falling block that enters a cobweb slows down, then drops as an item after existing for 30 seconds. A minecart with no players in it takes about 9 seconds to fall through a cobweb if a rail is placed directly under the cobweb, however, if there is air between the cobweb and the rail, the minecart takes about 34 seconds to fall. Every extra cobweb added gives an additional 25 seconds of falling time. Players are unaffected by cobwebs when in a minecart unless they come into direct contact. Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: History Issues Issues relating to "Cobweb" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Gallery Notes External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Crafting?action=edit&section=2] | [TOKENS: 223]
Editing Crafting (section) Please note that all contributions to Minecraft Wiki are considered to be released under the CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 license, except for pages imported from wiki.vg or pages derived from such pages, which are considered to be released under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license. See Minecraft Wiki:Copyrights for details. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here. You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission! You may also post content obtained from Mojang, its websites, manuals and guides, concept art and renderings, press and fansite kits, and other such copyrighted material that Mojang has made available to the general public, to the Minecraft Wiki. All rights, title and interest in and to such content shall remain with Mojang, as applicable, and such content is not licensed pursuant to the Terms of Use. This page is a member of 4 hidden categories: Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Bedrock_Editor_0.6.5] | [TOKENS: 93]
Bedrock Editor 0.6.5 Bedrock Editor May 29, 2024 1.21.10.21 ◄ 0.6.4 0.6.6 ► Bedrock Editor v0.6.5 is a minor alpha release for the Bedrock Editor released on May 29, 2024, which adds Color Picker, makes some changes to tools and the API. Contents Additions Changes References Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Milk_bucket] | [TOKENS: 304]
Milk Bucket Common 32 game ticks (1.6 seconds) Clears all Yes Yes No A milk bucket is a drink obtained from using a bucket on cows, mooshrooms and goats that can be consumed to clear all effects. Contents Obtaining Milk buckets can be obtained from cows, mooshrooms, and goats by pressing use while looking at them with an empty bucket. A milk bucket has an 8.5% chance of dropping from a wandering trader, if the trader is killed while holding it. The drop chance increases by 1% per level of Looting used (max chance 11.5% with Looting III). Usage To drink milk, press and hold use while it is selected in the hotbar. Drinking it immediately removes all status effects from the player and returns an empty bucket. Note that fire is not a status effect; therefore, drinking milk doesn't extinguish a burning player. In Java Edition, the drinking animation for milk is shown only in first-person camera mode. The benefits of area status effects granted by beacons and conduits are restored almost immediately in Bedrock Edition and after a few seconds in Java Edition. Wandering traders occasionally purchase a milk bucket for 2 emeralds. Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Achievements Advancements Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Milk Bucket" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. See also Notes References External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Biome#Achievements] | [TOKENS: 9830]
Biome A biome is a region in a world with distinct geographical features, plants, mobs, temperatures, humidity levels, colors, and more. Biomes separate every generated world into different environments, such as forests, deserts, and oceans. The biome of a location is determined during world generation rather than by the current environment, even if all blocks in a large area are altered to imitate the terrain of other biomes. In Java Edition, the /fillbiome command can be used to change the biome in a selected area. Existing biomes can be located with the /locate biome command. Contents List of biomes In Java Edition, there are 65 different biome types: 54 for the Overworld, 5 for the Nether, and 5 for the End, plus one used only for a superflat preset. In Bedrock Edition, there are 87 biome types: 54 for the Overworld, 5 for the Nether, 1 for the End, and 27 unused. On this page, for convenience of description and reading, the biomes in Overworld are divided into 8 categories, which are not official. These biomes are used for the generation of oceans and mushroom fields. They are large, open biomes made entirely of water going up to Y=63, with underwater relief on the sea floor, such as small mountains and plains, usually including gravel, dirt, and sand. Squid and fish spawn frequently in the water, and dolphins spawn in non-frozen oceans. The basic ocean biome. Like its colder variants, its floor is largely made up of gravel, covered with kelp and seagrass. However, small patches of dirt, sand and clay can also appear. Cod and salmon‌[BE only] can spawn here alongside dolphins, squid and nautiluses. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. A variant of the ocean biome. In deep ocean biomes, the ocean can exceed 30 blocks in depth, making it twice as deep as the normal ocean. The ground is mainly covered with gravel. Ocean monuments generate in deep oceans, meaning guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges can spawn here. A variant of the ocean biome, with light teal water at the surface. Like the lukewarm ocean, it has a floor made of sand and like all oceans, it is populated with seagrass, but without kelp. Pufferfish and tropical fish spawn here alongside dolphins, squid and nautiluses. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. Unlike other ocean biomes, warm oceans allow for the generation of coral reefs and sea pickles. It is the only ocean biome that does not have a deep equivalent, but the terrain in this biome can reach the same depth as deep oceans. A variant of the ocean biome, with light blue water at the surface. Its floor is made of sand with an occasional patch of dirt or clay. Kelp and seagrass generates here. Unlike the warm ocean biome, cod and salmon‌[BE only] can spawn here, together with pufferfish‌[JE only] and tropical fish. Dolphins, squid, and nautiluses may also spawn here and drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses can spawn at night or during thunderstorms. Coral reefs cannot generate here. Similar to the lukewarm ocean biome, but twice as deep. Because they are a deep ocean variant, they can generate ocean monuments, resulting in the spawning of guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges. A variant of the ocean biome, with dark blue water at the surface. Like regular oceans and frozen oceans, its floor is made up of gravel, though occasional patches of dirt can be found. Kelp and seagrass generates here. Salmon, cod and nautiluses can spawn in cold ocean biomes alongside squid and dolphins‌[BE only]. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. Similar to the cold ocean biome, but twice as deep. Like other deep oceans, ocean monuments can generate here, which contain guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges. A variant of the ocean biome with dark indigo water at the surface. Like the cold ocean, it has a gravel seabed and squid swimming about. However, the water's surface is frequently broken up by patches of ice and large icebergs, consisting of packed ice and blue ice, and occasionally topped with snow blocks and snow‌[BE only]. Strays, drowned, rarely zombie nautiluses, living nautiluses, polar bears, and rabbits‌[BE only] can spawn here, but dolphins can't. Salmon and cod‌[BE only] may also spawn here. Like the frozen ocean biome, the only fish that spawn here are salmon and cod‌[BE only], squid and nautiluses may also spawn here, and the floor consists of gravel. The frozen deep ocean biome also contains ocean monuments and a deeper floor than normal oceans, like other deep oceans. Frequent floating icebergs with blue ice generate here. Polar bears, strays, drowned, rarely zombie nautiluses and rabbits‌[BE only] can also spawn here, but dolphins can't. This rare biome consists of a mostly flat island and has mycelium instead of grass as its surface. Mushroom fields are always adjacent to a deep ocean and are always isolated from other biomes, and they are typically a few hundred blocks wide. It is one of the few biomes where huge mushrooms can generate naturally, and where mushrooms can grow in full sunlight. No mobs other than mooshrooms, bats‌[JE only], and glow squid spawn naturally in this biome, including the usual night-time hostile mobs. This also applies to caves, mineshafts and other dark structures, meaning exploring underground is safe. However, monster spawners still spawn mobs, wandering traders along with their llamas can spawn, raids can still spawn illagers, but villages don't spawn here. the player can still breed animals and spawn mobs using spawn eggs and insomnia still attracts phantoms‌[JE only]. Highland biomes are biomes with a higher Y-level. Rugged terrain and snow-covered peaks appear above the snow line. One of the three biomes that generate in the peaks of a mountain. This biome is found in taller and more jagged and pointy peaks that often pass the clouds and can peak at Y=256. It is covered by a single layer of snow blocks with stone underneath often exposing ores such as coal, iron and emerald. Just like the snowy slopes, stone cliffs can generate in some sides of the mountain. Goats spawn in this biome. Polar bears and rabbits may also spawn here and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. The frozen peaks are covered by snow blocks and packed ice with occasional small blobs of ice. Goats can spawn in this biome. Polar bears and rabbits may also spawn here and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. This biome usually generates in smoother and less jagged mountains compared to the jagged peaks biome. The stony peaks are a warmer variation of peak biomes that generates in warmer regions to avoid temperature clashes. It is mainly covered by stone with large strips of calcite and exposed ores. No passive mobs spawn here and there's no snow in this biome. The meadow is an elevated grassy biome found in plateaus near mountain ranges. It is filled with patches of flowers and turquoise-green short grass and tall grass. All small flowers generate except blue orchids, tulips, lilies of the valley or wither roses. Rarely, a lone oak or birch tree can generate and always has a bee nest. Both pillager outposts and plains villages can generate in this biome. Sheep, donkeys and rabbits are the only passive mobs that spawn in this biome. Cherry groves are grasslands with a lot of short grass, tall grass and, instead of the traditional dandelion and poppy flowers, the ground is covered with pink petals. The main environmental feature of the cherry grove are cherry trees identified by their striking pink color. The cherry trees may generate densely enough to create a cover of leaves. Sheep, pigs and rabbits are the only passive mobs that spawn in this biome. The grove creates a forest of spruce trees beneath the mountain peaks when near a forested biome. It is quite reminiscent of the snowy taiga, but the surface is covered with snow blocks and powder snow instead of grass blocks. Rabbits, wolves and foxes can spawn in this biome. The snowy slopes generate beneath the mountain peaks and are covered with multiple layers of snow blocks and powder snow, with some sides also having stone cliffs. Goats spawn in this biome alongside rabbits and polar bears‌[BE only]. Strays may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. This is the only mountain biome where igloos can generate, making it one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. A highland biome with some steep hilltops and an occasional oak or spruce tree‌[JE only]. The terrain is usually flat, but sometimes hilly and shattered. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. Snowfall also occurs above certain heights, rarely creating snow layers on the top of the hills. Windswept hills are one of six biomes where emerald ore and infested stone can be found naturally. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. The windswept gravelly hills are mostly covered in gravel with occasional patches of grass and stone blocks. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. Due to the low amount of grass, the population of spruce and oak trees in this biome is sparse. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. This biome is found when windswept hills are located next to forested biomes. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. It does not generate stone patches, so the floor is entirely covered by grass. There are more spruce and oak trees in this biome, forming small forests with a lower tree density than other forest biomes. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. Woodland biomes are rich in plants with a variety of trees, flowers and grasses. A common biome with many oak and birch trees and a fair amount of short grass, mushrooms and flowers. The ground beneath the trees is covered with leaf litter. Wolves can spawn in this biome. This forest variant has fewer trees but contains nearly every type of flower and tall plant in the game. Wolves do not spawn in the flower forest, although rabbits spawn occasionally. Bee nests have a higher chance to generate in this biome. A biome covered by a forest of spruce trees. Ferns, large ferns and sweet berry bushes grow commonly on the forest floor. One can find packs of wolves here, along with small groups of foxes, rabbits or cold animal variants. Villages may generate in this biome; the houses in these villages are built with spruce wood. Pillager outposts may also generate in this biome. This is one of the few biomes where trail ruins can generate. A biome composed of spruce trees (despite it being called a pine taiga, since there is no pine in the game), much like the standard taiga biome. However, some trees are 2×2 thick and taller than normal, akin to large jungle trees. Mossy cobblestone boulders appear frequently, mushrooms are common, and podzol can be found on the forest floor. There are also patches of coarse dirt that do not grow grass, with some dead bushes. Wolves, foxes and cold animal variants can spawn here, as they do in normal taiga biomes. Rabbits may also spawn here‌[JE only]. At first glance, this biome may look almost exactly the same as its pine tree counterpart. However, the most striking feature of this biome is its giant spruce trees, which are essentially a scaled-up version of regular spruce trees. One can easily differentiate this from an old growth pine taiga by observing how the leaves almost completely cover the tree trunks, whereas in pine ones, leaves tend to cover only the top. Like the old growth pine taiga, wolves, foxes and cold animal variants spawn here, and trail ruins can also generate. Rabbits may also spawn here‌[JE only]. Similar to the standard taiga, except much of the biome is covered in snow. Ferns and large ferns generate here commonly, however sweet berry bushes generate more rarely than in the regular taiga. Wolves, foxes, rabbits and cold animal variants can spawn here. One may also find an igloo nestled between the trees, making it one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. Villages and pillager outposts may also generate here‌[BE only]. Villages use the same architecture as taiga villages, but the villagers wear snowy biome outfits. A forest that is solely made of birch trees. The grass is aqua in color, and unlike the regular forest, no wolves spawn in this biome. Wildflowers are very common in birch forests. Birch trees grow much taller than usual in this uncommon variant of the birch forest biome. Whereas normal birch trees grow up to 7 blocks tall, these trees can grow up to 13 blocks in height. This makes deforestation a much more difficult task, although it provides the player with far more resources. This is one of the few biomes where trail ruins can generate. This biome is mainly composed of dark oak trees, which create a mostly closed roof of leaves. Oak trees, birch trees, and huge mushrooms can also be found occasionally, and the ground is covered with leaf litter. Trees in this forest are so densely packed that some areas are dark enough for hostile mobs to spawn, even during the day. On rare occasions, a woodland mansion may generate. The pale garden is a rarer variation of the dark forest biome. It is, in fact, the rarest biome. The dark oak trees are replaced with pale oak trees, with lots of pale hanging moss hanging from the trees. Patches of pale moss blocks and pale moss carpets cover much of the ground, and patches of eyeblossoms dot the landscape. The sky, foliage, and water in this biome are gray and desaturated, and no music plays inside the biome. Some of the pale oak trees may have a creaking heart hidden within them, which spawns a creaking at night. No passive mobs spawn in this biome. Trees in this forest are so densely packed that some areas are dark enough for hostile mobs to spawn, even during the day. On rare occasions, a woodland mansion may generate, making the pale garden one of only two biomes where it can be found. A dense forested biome that includes many different plants and features. Jungle trees and mega jungle trees are common, with the mega trees having 2x2 thick trunks and possibly growing up to 31 blocks in height. Fancy oak trees are also common, and jungle bushes often cover much of the forest floor. Ferns and large ferns are found commonly, and vines are found growing on most types of blocks, especially on jungle trees. Additionally, cocoa can also grow on the sides of jungle trees. Melons can generate here in patches, similar to pumpkins, although they are much more common. Single shoots of bamboo can be found scattered throughout the biome. The foliage in the jungle is a bright, lush green color. Jungle pyramids and trail ruins can generate, and ocelots, parrots, pandas and warm animal variants can spawn in this biome. In contrast to the wild and overgrown vegetation of the jungle biome, the sparse jungle consists of jungle trees, fancy oak trees, and jungle bushes that are spaced out and isolated, creating a much more open environment. The terrain of this biome is often flat, but there may be some small rises in elevation. Parrots, ocelots, and pandas can still spawn in the sparse jungle‌[Bedrock Edition only]. Wolves can also spawn in this biome along with warm animal variants. In this biome, large areas of the landscape are covered with massive amounts of bamboo. Patches of podzol can be found underneath the densely packed bamboo. Additionally, mega jungle trees, fancy oak trees, and jungle bushes can also generate here. Pandas have a much higher chance to spawn here than the other jungle biomes, making this the best place to find them. Ocelots‌[BE only], parrots and warm animal variants are also able to spawn, and jungle pyramids can generate here‌[JE only]. Wetland biomes are rivers, swamps and beaches. They have a large amount of water resources. Rivers separate other biomes; beaches generate as a transition between the ocean and land. A biome that consists of water blocks that form an elongated, curving shape similar to a real river. Rivers cut through terrain or separate the main biomes. They attempt to join up with ocean biomes, but sometimes loop around to the same area of ocean. Rarely, they can have no connection to an ocean, instead forming a loop, or ending in a swamp or far inland. The grass has a dull aqua tone, much like the ocean, and trace amounts of oak trees, bushes, and firefly bushes tend to generate there as well. Rivers are also a reliable source of clay. These biomes are good for fishing, but drowned can spawn at night and during thunderstorms. In Bedrock Edition, mobs other than salmon, squid and drowned cannot spawn in this biome, even underground, except from a monster spawner. A river with a layer of ice covering its surface. It generates when a river goes through snowy biomes. Salmon spawn underwater while rabbits‌[BE only] and polar bears‌[BE only] spawn on the surface. At night and during thunderstorms, drowned can spawn below the ice with strays‌[BE only] on the surface. In Bedrock Edition, no hostile mobs other then strays and skeletons can spawn here, even underground, except from a monster spawner. A biome characterized by a mix of flat areas around sea level, and shallow pools of green water with floating lily pads. Clay, sand and dirt are commonly found at the bottom of these pools. Trees are covered with vines and can be found growing out from the water. Mushrooms, firefly bushes, dead bushes, and sugar canes are abundant, and blue orchids grow exclusively here. Frogs of the temperate variant can spawn here as well. Swamp huts with a black cat and a witch generate exclusively in swamps. Slimes also spawn naturally at night and during thunderstorms, most commonly on full moons. Some zombies may end up underwater, which can transform them into drowned, and some skeletons are replaced by bogged, making this an especially dangerous biome at night or during thunderstorms. Temperature varies within the biome, causing foliage and grass colors to vary. In Bedrock Edition, huge mushrooms also spawn in this biome. Visibility is also lower than other biomes when the player is underwater. A biome characterized by a dense foliage, featuring plenty of mangrove trees of varying heights. The floor is mainly composed of mud blocks with occasional grass patches. The grass has the same color as in the normal swamp but leaves and vines have a unique light green tint and the water is teal rather than gray. Warm frogs often spawn in this biome. Slimes also spawn naturally at night and during thunderstorms, most commonly on full moons. Some zombies may end up underwater, which can transform them into drowned, and some skeletons are replaced by bogged, making this an especially dangerous biome at night or thunderstorms. Visibility is also lower than other biomes when the player is underwater. Generated where oceans meet other biomes, beaches are primarily composed of sand. Beaches penetrate the landscape, removing the original blocks and placing in sand blocks. These are also useful for fishing. Buried treasure can be found under few blocks of sand, and an occasional shipwreck can also generate here. Passive mobs other than turtles do not spawn on beaches. Like a regular beach, one can find plenty of sand in this biome and buried treasure can be found underground in this snowy beach. However, sand is covered in a layer of snow. Snowy beaches are found when a snowy biome borders a frozen ocean biome. No passive mobs other than rabbits‌[BE only] spawn in this biome. This stone-covered biome generates at shores with low erosion values, usually close to mountains. Depending on the height of the nearby land, stony shores may generate as medium slopes or huge cliffs, its tops tall enough to be covered by snow even when near warmer biomes. No passive mobs spawn here. Buried treasure can generate here‌[BE only]. Strips of gravel can sometimes be found here. These biomes have a wide view on usually flat terrain, but can also generate on large hills or cliffs. Trees spawn less here and water sources are plentiful. They also have a higher number of passive mob spawns. A flat and grassy biome with rolling hills and few oak trees. Villages are common. Cave openings, lava lakes and waterfalls are easily identifiable due to the flat unobstructed terrain. Passive mobs are easily found in plains biomes; this biome is also one of the few biomes where horses and donkeys spawn naturally, while hostile zombie horses will spawn during the nighttime. Pillager outposts may also be generated. A fairly uncommon variation of the plains, this biome is the only place where sunflowers naturally generate. In Bedrock Edition, villages and pillager outposts may also generate here. An expansive biome with a huge amount of snow. Sugar cane can generate in this biome, but can become uprooted when chunks load as the water sources freeze to ice. There are few spruce trees in this biome. No animal mobs other than rabbits and polar bears can spawn; however, it is one of the few biomes where strays and zombie horses appear. In Bedrock Edition, this biome does not spawn monsters other than strays and skeletons, but monster spawners can still spawn monsters. This is one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. Villages and pillager outposts may also generate here. A rare variation of the snowy plains biome that features large spikes and glaciers of packed ice. Usually, the spikes are 10 to 20 blocks tall, but some long, thin spikes can reach over 50 blocks in height. The floor in this biome is entirely covered in snow blocks instead of grass, and ice patches made of packed ice can generate on it. Like the regular snowy plains, no animal mobs other than rabbits and polar bears can spawn and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms. In these biomes, it neither rains nor snows. The surface is covered with sparse vegetation. A barren biome consisting mostly of sand dunes, dead bushes, dry grass, and cacti. Sandstone and sometimes fossils are found underneath the sand. The only passive mobs that spawn naturally in deserts are gold/creamy rabbits and camels. At night and during thunderstorms, husks, parched, and camel husks usually spawn in the place of normal zombies and skeletons. Sugar cane can be found if the desert is next to a river biome. Desert villages, desert wells and desert pyramids are found exclusively in this biome. Pillager outposts can also generate here. A relatively flat and dry biome with a dull-brown grass color and acacia trees scattered around the biome, though oak trees may generate occasionally. Tall grass covers the landscape. Villages can generate in this biome, constructed of acacia wood, with some stained terracotta. Pillager outposts can also generate here. Horses, armadillos and warm animal variants can naturally spawn here, while hostile zombie horses will spawn during the nighttime. Llamas may also spawn here‌[BE only]. This biome generates when a normal savanna biome spawns at high altitudes and near mountains. It is mostly indistinguishable from the standard savanna, with the main differences being the fact that llamas and wolves can spawn, and villages and pillager outposts cannot generate. In contrast to the mostly flat and calm terrain of the savanna biome, this uncommon variant generates chaotic terrain, with gigantic mountains covered in coarse dirt and some patches of stone. The mountains in the windswept savanna are extremely steep, sometimes jutting out at 90-degree angles, making it almost impossible to climb. On top of that, they can reach heights comparable to the mountain peak biomes, sometimes rising above the clouds. Massive waterfalls and lavafalls are quite common, and ocean-like lakes can also generate. Unlike the regular savanna, villages and pillager outposts do not generate in this biome. Horses, armadillos and warm animal variants can still spawn in the windswept savanna, as well as hostile zombie horses during the nighttime. Llamas may also spawn here‌[BE only]. An uncommon biome where large mounds of terracotta and stained terracotta generate. Red sand also generates here instead of regular sand, with occasional cacti, dead bushes, and dry grass. This biome is usually found alongside desert biomes and it can generate in mountainous terrain. Armadillos are the only mobs that can be found here. Mineshafts generate at a higher altitude than normal - occasionally a player may come across a mineshaft jutting out of the badlands. Gold ore also occurs more frequently, because additional veins can generate within badlands up to Y=256. The composition of this biome is useful when other sources of terracotta and gold are scarce. The wooded badlands has layers of coarse dirt and grass blocks, and forests of oak trees with leaf litter that generate at higher altitudes in humid areas. The lower parts don't generate the oak forests, exposing terracotta and red sand to the sky. The color of the grass and leaves is a dull green-brown hue, giving it a dried and dead appearance. These trees are a rare source of wood when living in the otherwise barren badlands. Armadillos can spawn here during the day, and wolves and warm animal variants can spawn on the wooded plateaus. This rare variant generates unique terrain features that are similar to the structures in Utah's Bryce Canyon. Tall and narrow spires of colorful terracotta rise out of the floor of the canyon, which like all other badlands variants, is covered in red sand. Armadillos are the only passive mobs that can be found here. These biomes generate inside caves in the Overworld. They're mostly found underground but can sometimes leak out of cave entrances. A dimly lit cave biome that generates deep underground mostly within the deepslate layer. It is largely sculk blocks 1 block thick upon all surfaces, with frequent sculk sensors and occasional sculk shriekers, the latter of which can directly summon a warden. Large structures known as ancient cities can generate here, containing chests with unique loot. No mobs aside from wardens spawn here, except from a monster spawner. These are caves filled with dripstone blocks and pointed dripstone both hanging as stalactites and growing from the ground as stalagmites and small water wells of 1×1 in the ground. Large dripstone clusters structures generate occasionally inside these caves. Copper ore blobs found in this biome are much bigger compared to other biomes. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses can spawn in aquifers. Lush caves are often found underground below azalea trees. These caves are covered by moss blocks, moss carpets, short grass and azalea bushes on the floors. On the ceiling, vines and cave vines with glow berries grow down and light up the caves, and spore blossoms grow from the ceiling and spore particles. There are also shallow lakes with clay where dripleaf plants grow out of them and axolotls spawn, making this the only biome where they can spawn. Tropical fish can also spawn inside the aquifers in a lush cave. Can be accessed only through Single Biome world selection or The Void superflat preset. In a single biome world, the landscape consists of stone, as well as water and bedrock depending on the generator type. In The Void superflat preset, the world is completely empty except for a single structure: a 33×33 stone platform with a single block of cobblestone in the center. No mobs (passive or hostile) aside from phantoms and pillager patrols can spawn without spawn eggs, monster spawners or commands. It does not rain in this biome. The Nether is considered a different dimension. All biomes in this dimension are hot and dry, and it is not possible to place water; ice can still be placed, though it does not turn into water upon melting. Lava oceans are generated as a feature and are therefore not considered a separate biome. The Nether wastes is the most common biome in the Nether. The terrain mainly consists of netherrack, with glowstone clusters growing and lava leaking from the ceiling and gravel and soul sand lining its shores. Most of the Nether’s mobs can spawn here, including ghasts, zombified piglins, magma cubes, striders, piglins, and the occasional enderman. The soul sand valley mainly consists of soul sand, basalt and soul soil. Notable features of the biome are exposed Nether fossils in various shapes and sizes, large amounts of lava, blue fog, large spires made of basalt, soul fire, and the occasional Nether fortress or bastion remnant. Ghasts and skeletons are common in this biome while endermen are rare. Striders can spawn here as well. This is the only place to find dried ghasts naturally. The crimson forest consists of many huge crimson fungi, which act as the "trees" of this biome. The huge fungi often generate with weeping vines hanging from them, and shroomlights which light up the landscape. The floor is mostly covered with crimson nylium, with occasional patches of bare netherrack or Nether wart blocks. Crimson roots, crimson fungus, and occasionally warped fungus grow on the ground. Small patches of Nether wart blocks and weeping vines can also be found growing on the ceiling. Hoglins, piglins, zombified piglins, and striders can spawn in this biome. The warped forest consists of many huge warped fungi, which act as the "trees" of this biome. The huge fungi often generate with shroomlights, which light up the landscape. Twisting vines grow throughout the biome in patches. The floor is mostly covered with warped nylium, with occasional patches of bare netherrack or warped wart blocks. Warped roots, warped fungus, Nether sprouts, and occasionally crimson fungus grow on the ground. Endermen and striders are the only mobs that spawn in this biome. The biome emits out a magenta-purple fog upon entry. A gray biome, the basalt deltas are said to be the remnant of ancient volcanic eruptions.[citation needed] The ground consists of basalt and blackstone blocks, with small patches of netherrack and pools of lava. The shape of the terrain is chaotic and uneven, making it somewhat difficult to traverse and build on. Unlike the other biomes in the Nether, bastion remnants do not generate in basalt deltas. When this biome borders a lava ocean, clusters of basalt form near the coast. Fog is colored light-gray and particles of dust can be seen falling from the ceiling upon entry. Magma cubes have a high spawn rate in this biome, making the basalt deltas the best place to farm magma cream. This biome also contains a much higher abundance of blackstone compared to other Nether biomes. Ghasts and striders can spawn in this biome as well. The End is considered a different dimension. The terrain consists of end stone islands of varying sizes, floating in the void. They use five different biomes in Java Edition, or all use the End in Bedrock Edition, with no terrain differences. This biome is used to generate the circle of radius 1000 centered at the 0,0 coordinates in the End. The End central island is generated at the center of this circle, and it's surrounded by a complete vacuum all the way to the edge of the biome. Most of the End features are exclusive to that island, including the ender dragon, the obsidian pillars, the End crystals, the 5×5 spawn platform, the exit portal and the 20 central End gateways. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. It does not rain or snow in this biome unlike the other low-temperature biomes. The outer islands in the End can be accessed using End gateways after the ender dragon has been defeated. In Bedrock Edition, this biome is instead the biggest, as it is used to generate the whole dimension. If the biome is used for a superflat world, the sky appears nearly black and an ender dragon spawns at the 0,0 coordinates in the Overworld. Only endermen spawn at night. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the empty expanse between the larger islands, populated by the smaller, circular islands. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the gradual slope from the hilltops of each island down to the cliffs around the edge. End cities generate here, but chorus trees do not. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the hilltops of each island, and is the only biome in the End where both chorus trees and End cities generate. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the outer rims of each island, with steep cliffs below the edge. Neither End cities nor chorus trees generate in this biome. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. These biomes have been completely removed from the game in Java Edition. In Bedrock Edition, they still exist in the code, but do not generate and can only be found in old worlds. Most biomes were removed from the generator because the terrain was the only difference with their regular biome variant. This biome doesn't generate naturally from Pocket Edition Alpha 0.9.0 onward. When Bedrock Edition 1.4.0 introduced the new frozen ocean, this biome was not removed or replaced by the new frozen ocean, although the id name changed from frozen_ocean to legacy_frozen_ocean. This biome doesn't generate naturally from Pocket Edition v0.9.0 alpha and Java Edition 1.7.2 onward. The deep warm ocean did not naturally generate in any non-snapshot or non-beta version. Most hills were gentle rolling slopes on which the usual biome terrain generated, with some sharper cliffs here and there. Snowy mountains had a lower chance of spawning passive mobs during world generation than other biomes (7% versus 10%). Swamp hills and dark forest hills generated as 'modified' biomes instead of hills biomes, making them slightly rarer but also bigger in size. Tall birch hills generated as 'modified hills' biomes, which made them even rarer than modified biomes. Tall birch hills had much more mountainous terrain than most hills biomes. In Bedrock Edition, this biome did generate as a much hillier version of the giant spruce taiga, even more mountainous than regular hills biomes. However, the giant spruce taiga hills used the same trees as the giant tree taiga hills (with leaves only at the top), making this biome very similar to the giant tree taiga hills. With the new terrain generation in Caves & Cliffs: Part II, the regular badlands biome also featured these plateaus and this biome became redundant. In Bedrock Edition, the grass and foliage color was lush green (the same color as in mushroom fields), making it easily distinguishable from the regular shattered savanna. Because the terrain was the only difference with the regular mushroom fields biome, this biome became redundant after Caves & Cliffs: Part II. In Bedrock Edition, the regular gravelly mountains did not have any trees, but this biome did, making it slightly different. Because almost no grass blocks were generated between the gravel, trees did rarely generate. These biomes no longer exist in current versions of the game. Snow, grass blocks, ice Grass block, short grass, ferns, oak trees, birch trees Grass block, short grass, oak trees Sand, snow, ice Grass block, oak trees, birch trees These biomes can appear only in April Fools snapshots of the game. This "biome" includes all the other non-custom dimensions biomes. All mobs, blocks, particles and structures in 20w13b (vanilla) can generate in this biome. A dimension can have multiple of these randomly generated biomes. Tint All biomes use a set of colors for various environmental aspects such as the sky, water, fog, and some blocks. In Bedrock Edition, biomes specify their colors in the client_biome JSON files in the vanilla resource packs. Some biomes specify their colors directly, while others use colormaps or separate JSON files which can also control other environmental effects. In Bedrock Edition, all biome colors for blocks are also visible on maps. Biome grass and foliage colors are selected from three 256×256 colormap images: grass.png, foliage.png, and dry_foliage under assets/minecraft/textures/colormap‌[JE only] or textures/colormap‌[BE only] in the vanilla resource pack. The grass.png colormap sets the colors for grass block, short grass, tall grass, ferns, large ferns, ferns in flower pots, sugar canes, bushes and stems of pink petals and wildflowers. Meanwhile, the foliage.png colormap sets the colors for vines and tree leaves of oak, jungle, acacia, dark oak and mangrove. The dry_foliage.png colormap sets the colors for leaf litter. Only the colors in the lower-left halfs of the images are used, even though the upper-right side of foliage.png and dry_foliage.png is colored. The adjusted temperature and adjusted downfall values (recognized as AdjTemp and AdjDownfall in the following, respectively) are used when determining the biome color to select from the colormap. They are computed as follows: AdjTemp = clamp( Temperature, 0.0, 1.0 ) AdjDownfall = clamp( Downfall, 0.0, 1.0 ) * AdjTemp. "clamp" limits the range of the temperature and downfall to 0.0—1.0. The clamped downfall value is then multiplied by the adjusted temperature value, bringing its value to be inside the lower left triangle. Treating the bottom-right corner of the colormap as AdjTemp = 0.0 and AdjDownfall = 0.0, the adjusted temperature increases to 1.0 along the X-axis, and the adjusted downfall increases to 1.0 along the Y-axis. In the following cases, the plants are not tinted exactly according to the colormap. In Java Edition, several of them are specified in biome Jsons in vanilla data pack. Swamps In swamps and mangrove swamps, the grass color is based on a noise on XZ plane. When the value of this noise is less than -0.1, it uses the color #4c763c. Otherwise using #6a7039. The foliage color is #6a7039 in swamps and #8db127 in mangrove swamps, which are not affected by the colormap. The dry foliage color in swamps and mangrove swamps is #7b5334, which also ignores the colormap. In Bedrock Edition, all swamp biomes use colormaps to determine these colors, similar to regular colormaps described above. Dark forest In dark forests, the grass color is the result of the bitwise AND between the color in the colormap and #fefefe, and then averaging with #28340a. In vanilla, that is #507a32. Badlands In badlands, wooded badlands and eroded badlands, the grass color is #90814d and the foliage color and dry foliage color is #9e814d. They are not affected by the colormap. Cherry grove The color for grass and foliage in cherry groves is always #b6db61, which is not affected by the colormap. Pale garden In the pale garden, the grass color is #778272, the foliage color is #878d76, and the dry foliage color is #a0a69c They are not affected by the colormap. Other leaves The color for spruce leaves is #619961 and the color for birch leaves is #80a755. Both are not affected by the biome, but determined by colormaps in Bedrock Edition. The color of the daytime sky in Overworld changes according to the basic temperature value of the biome. The basic temperature is first modified as T = clamp( Temperature / 3 , -1.0, 1.0 ). Then the triple (0.62222224-0.05T, 0.5+0.1T, 1) is the sky color. The color of the sky in the pale garden biome is #b9b9b9, which is unaffected by the above formula. See § List of biome climates below for all sky colors. The colors and surface opacity of water are defined in the vanilla data pack‌[JE only] or client biome JSON files in vanilla resource packs.‌[BE only] Some biomes in Java Edition, or most biomes in Bedrock Edition have unique water colors. Swamps and warm oceans in Bedrock Edition have unique water surface opacities, 65% and 55% respectively. The color and density of water and sky fog is different for most biomes, defined by separate JSON files for each biome in Bedrock Edition. The underwater fog color is #050533 with a few exceptions in Java Edition, or the same as the water surface color with some exceptions in Bedrock Edition. The sky fog color is #c0d8ff‌[JE only] or #abd2ff‌[BE only] in all Overworld biomes, except pale gardens which use #817770. Nether biomes and the End have unique fog colors. Vibrant Visuals ignores default colors for the sky, water, and fog, and adds new effects for each biome or a set of biome. Which environmental settings are used is determined by the biome JSON file, and all environmental settings are stored in separate directories in resource packs. In vanilla, the following effects are affected by the biome: Water colors are not visible with Vibrant Visuals, but all regular fog colors still apply asides from the volumetric fog. When plants or water are at the borders between or among biomes, the color is affected by the biome of the surrounding blocks at the same Y-level. The range of the block involved in the calculation is determined by the biome blend radius in options. Takes the plant color or water color of the biomes within a square centered on this block and with the side length being the biome blend radius, and calculates their average value to get the final color for this block. The sky color‌[JE only] and the fog color use the color processed by Gaussian blur from colors of the biomes at each block in the range of 5×5×5 centered on the block the camera is in. Climate A biome has three climate attributes: temperature, downfall and precipitation. Each biome has a base temperature value (see § List of biome climates), but the actual temperature value at each location in the biome is also affected by the height of the location. Locations with Y≤80 use the base temperature as actual temperature. At Y=81, the actual temperature value randomly fluctuates up and down by -0.00875 — +0.01125 from the base temperature based on a noise on the XZ plane, and at Y≥81 the actual temperature decreases by 0.00125 (1⁄800) every block up. In frozen oceans and deep frozen oceans, it is also affected by a noise value on the XZ plane. In some regions according to the noise, the base temperature value is always regarded as 0.2. The actual temperature values for these regions are also calculated on this basis. This is detectable in frozen oceans, as its base temperature is low enough to freeze or snow, so that only these regions do not freeze or snow at sea level. The temperature affects at which height snowfall can occur, the sky and block colors, and whether sponges dry in the air.‌[BE only] The downfall value is a number between 0.0 and 1.0 (see § List of biome climates). When the downfall value is greater than 0.85, the biome is marked as humid, which is related only to the random extinction of fire and block colors. This value doesn't affect the weather. The precipitation value can be "true" or "false". If the precipitation of the biome is false, no rain or snow occurs. Otherwise, a location is rainable when its temperature value is equal or greater than 0.15, and snowable otherwise. So, if the base temperature is less than 0.15, it's snowable at any Y level. Even if equal or greater than 0.15, it will still snow above a certain Y level, which are listed below: Snowy Plains Ice Spikes Grove Frozen Peaks Jagged Peaks Snowy Slopes Snowy Taiga Snowy Beach Some regions of Frozen Ocean The exact minimum height for snowfall is randomized per block, with a margin of 8 blocks. In Bedrock Edition, this is a transition layer where both snow and rain particles are visible at the same time. This transition also appears when moving horizontally between snowy and rainy biomes, and the particle density decreases when moving to a dry biome. In Bedrock Edition, the amount of snow layers generated on the surface is based on the snow accumulation value of the biome. The snow height is randomly selected per block between a minimum and maximum value, with 0.0 being no snow and 1.0 being the full height of one block. During snowfall, snow can stack infinitely on top of generated snow, unlike in Java Edition where this is controlled by a snow accumulation game rule. #9c754d‌[BE only] Generation Biome IDs Each type of biome has its own Resource Location, shown in the following tables. Before 1.13 biomes used to have a numerical ID. These can be seen in this page: Biome/IDs before 1.13 In versions after 1.13 biomes use a numerical ID which is determined by the alphabetical ordering of their resource locations.[verify] This information is however only used by the game internals and is not included below. Each type of biome has its own Resource Location / IDs, shown in the following tables. Achievements Advancements History Issues Issues relating to "Biome" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery See also References External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Redstone_dust] | [TOKENS: 1279]
Redstone Dust Yes Yes (64) Any tool 0 0 No Yes No No Redstone dust is a mineral used in crafting, brewing, trimming, and as a placeable wire. Redstone wire is a non-solid block that can transmit a redstone power signal up to 15 blocks in distance; signal strengths below 15 have reduced distance. Redstone wire can power blocks it is placed on or pointing at. Contents Obtaining Redstone dust is immediately destroyed when broken. Redstone dust is removed and drops as an item if: Redstone dust drops itself when destroyed. Redstone ore mined using an iron pickaxe or higher drops 4 or 5 redstone dust (or more with Fortune, averaging at 6 redstone dust with Fortune III). If mined with Silk Touch, the block drops itself instead of redstone dust. When the ore itself is clicked on/touched, it emits a light level of 9 and glows. 15 lengths of redstone dust are naturally generated as part of the trap in each jungle pyramid. 5 lengths of redstone dust can be found in one type of a jail cell room in a woodland mansion. In ancient cities, multiple pieces of redstone dust can be found integrated into circuitry. 1 piece of redstone dust can be found in the "Encounter 4" room in trial chambers. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Redstone dust can be crafted from blocks of redstone. In Java Edition, when the player has the Hero of the Village status effect, clerics might throw that player a redstone dust as a gift. Usage Redstone dust is used for brewing, crafting, and in redstone circuits by placing it on the ground to create redstone wire. It can also be used to power redstone components. The following color palette is shown on the designs on trimmed armor: When placed in the world, redstone dust becomes a block of redstone wire, which can transmit redstone signal. Redstone dust can be placed on conductive blocks as well as glowstone, upside-down slabs, glass, upside-down stairs, and hoppers. It can also be placed on some non-conductive blocks; see Opacity/Placement for more information. It cannot be placed suspended in midair, even with commands. Redstone wire configures itself to point toward adjacent redstone power components and transmission component connection points. Redstone wire also configures itself to point toward adjacent redstone wire one block higher or lower – unless there is a conductive block above the lower redstone wire. If there is only one such adjacent redstone component, redstone wire configures itself into a line pointing both at the neighbor and away from it. If there are two or more such adjacent components, redstone wire connects them in the form of , , , or as needed. When there are no adjacent components, a single redstone wire configures itself into a plus sign, which can provide power in all four directions. By right-clicking, it can be changed into a dot, which does not provide power to any of the four directions.‌[Java Edition only] Redstone wire does not automatically configure itself to point toward mechanism components; the only exceptions are the back and side faces of pistons and sticky pistons in Bedrock Edition. If such a configuration is desired, the other neighbors of the redstone wire must be arranged to create it, i.e the redstone dust must be placed in a way that it would be pointed at the block’s location even if it were not there. When redstone wire is reconfigured after placement, it does not update other redstone components around it of the change unless that reconfiguration also includes a change in power level or another component provides an update. This can create situations where a mechanism component remains activated when it shouldn't, or vice versa, until it receives an update from something else – a "feature" of redstone wire that can be used to make a block update detector. Redstone wire can transmit power, which can be used to operate mechanism components (doors, pistons, redstone lamps, etc.). Redstone wire can be "powered" by a number of methods: The "power level" of redstone dust can vary from 0 to 15. Most power components power-up adjacent redstone dust to power level 15, but a few (daylight sensors, trapped chests, and weighted pressure plates) may create a lower power level. Redstone repeaters output power level 15 (when turned on), but redstone comparators may output a lower power level. Power level drops by 1 for every block of redstone wire it crosses. Thus, redstone wire can transmit power for no more than 15 blocks. To go further, the power level must be re-strengthened – typically with a redstone repeater. Powered redstone wire on top of, or pointing at, a conductive block provides weak power to the block. A weakly-powered block cannot power other adjacent redstone wire, but can still power redstone repeaters and comparators, and activate adjacent mechanism components. Non-conductive blocks cannot be powered. When redstone wire is unpowered, it appears dark red. When powered, it becomes bright red at power level 15, fading to darker shades with decreasing power. Powered redstone wire also produces "dust" particles of the same color. While redstone wire always provides power to the directions it points into, it can still point into directions in which it cannot give power. If redstone wire comes in the form of a cross, the player can right-click to toggle it between a cross and dot. A redstone dot does not power anything adjacent to it, but powers the block under it. Redstone dust is destroyed when a piston tries to push it. It can't be pulled by sticky pistons. Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Achievements Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Redstone", "Redstone dust", or "Redstone wire" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery All renders can be viewed in-game in the debug world. References External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Transparent] | [TOKENS: 1744]
Opacity Opacity (and its inverse, transparency) are properties of blocks which affect how the game renders it and other nearby blocks, as well as how occlusion culling is handled. Contents Properties The primary purpose of opacity is to tell the game engine if it needs to render other blocks behind that block; an opaque block completely obscures the view behind it, while a transparent block does not. Therefore, transparency applies not only to solid blocks like ice and glass, but also to blocks like cacti, stairs, chests, and single slabs, which are not considered full blocks. By this definition, transparency does not imply that a block is actually see-through, which is a quality of the item texture specified by the game or resource pack. In Bedrock Edition, most transparent blocks become opaque when located far away from the player. This is especially noticeable when looking long distances with the spyglass. The distance at which blocks become opaque is proportional to the render distance. Water that is completely surrounded by water or opaque blocks does not have a current. However, if one of the surrounding blocks is transparent, the water shows a downward current on its side, like a waterfall, although swim speed through that water remains unchanged. Opacity is independent of redstone conductivity and spawnability for full blocks, although they often coincide. A slime block is an example of this independence: a slime block is partially light-transparent and has a see-through texture, but still conducts redstone power and allows mob spawning on top. Lighting Opacity also affects how light propagates through the world. Opaque blocks completely prevent light from traveling through them, while transparent blocks generally diminish the light by one light level per block (these values can be overridden however, and there are several exceptions). The growth of grass blocks is linked to the amount of light in the blocks directly above them. A grass block can be killed by placing an opaque or partially transparent block above it. Some transparent blocks can reduce or block light, according to type: Types of transparent blocks Occlusion Shape The occlusion shape manages if a block prevent or not the propagation of light, prevents or not the rendering of adjacent faces of other blocks, among other functions. Most blocks have their occlusion shape identical to their interaction box or an empty occlusion shape. A block has an empty occlusion shape if it doesn't have a collision box[note 1] or if it is explicitly defined not to have a occlusion. However, there are blocks that, even though they have a non-empty occlusion shape, have an occlusion shape that differs from their interaction box. The table below shows all the exceptions in Java Edition:[note 2] Additionally, for all sides set to true: Additionally, for all sides set to true: For the occlusion shape, the additional boxes's top are 1px below the top of the block. Two boxes 2×11×2 Each box is adjacent to opposite vertical faces of the block. If facing is east/west: The boxes are centralized on the Y-axis. If facing is north/south: The boxes are centralized on the X-axis. Not in wall, facing is east/west: 16×16×4 Not in wall, facing is north/south: 4×16×16 In wall, facing is east/west: 16×13×4 In wall, facing is north/south: 4×13×16 If in_wall is false: The boxes's top are at the top of the block. If in_wall is true: The boxes's top are 3px below the top of the block. 16×2×16, with an 8x12x8 column above If a block's occlusion shape is a full block, it is considered a solid render block. When a block has a light level greater than one, it attempts to propagate the light in all six directions. If successful, the light is propagated to the adjacent block and with one less level. However, there are two situations that can prevent light propagation between blocks: For example, a top slab does not propagate light to a horizontally adjacent bottom slab. Because, by joining the adjacent faces of its occlusion shape, that is, the top 8×16 with the bottom 8×16, it forms a full square. However, not all blocks use their shape to prevent light propagation; in reality, only a select list of blocks uses their occlusion shape for this purpose. All other blocks are considered to have an empty occlusion shape when it comes to light propagation. Considering solid render blocks with an empty occlusion shape is important for the functioning of light emitters. If, for example, glowstone considered its shape, it could never propagate light to other blocks. This would occur because each of its faces is already a complete square, and when joined with a face of any other block (even if it is empty) would generate a full square. Therefore, solid render blocks do not receive light (due to the first condition at the beginning of the session) but can still emit light (due it to be considered with an empty occlusion shape). Some blocks that use their shape for light occlusion are also light emitters, from exemple the enchanting table. Unlike solid render blocks, these can obstruct their own emitted light. This could be a total obstruction on one face (e.g., the enchanting table does not emit its light from the face below) or a partial obstruction on one face (e.g., the enchanting table does not emit its light to a horizontally adjacent top slab). This behavior works for both block light and sky light propagated between blocks. For light emitted directly from the sky onto the block, the behavior is slightly different. The game creates a column of blocks with level 15 sky light starting from the top of the world and extending to the tallest block that satisfies at least one of the conditions below: To improve game performance, Minecraft does not render all block faces. Block faces that are completely hidden by the face of the adjacent block do not need to be rendered, and rendering them will result in a performance loss without any gain. The occlusion shape is used to determine when one face of a block is hiding the face of another. If face A of one block is adjacent to face B of another block, and when comparing the shape of each face, considering the occlusion shape of each block, if there is no point that is only on face B, then face B is not rendered. In other words: if the face B is contained in the face A, the face B will not be rendered. This is the only time in the game when the occlusion format of all blocks is actually used. For light rendering, only blocks with a full block occlusion shape (solid render blocks) and blocks from a select list are used. In other uses, only the fact that a block is or is not a solid render block is used. However, there are certain non-occluded blocks that sometimes do not render the face of the adjacent block. This often occurs when there are transparent blocks next to the same transparent block. For example, in a glass cuboid, only the sides are rendered, preventing many glass faces from being visible within the cuboid, which would be visible due to the transparency of the glass and would break the continuity of the cuboid. Mangrove roots does not render other magoves rootes that are directly above or below it. However, it still renders those that are next to it. Iron bars, copper bars, glass pane and stained glass pane don't render the face of adjacent blocks of the same type. Furthermore, these blocks will not render the faces of adjacent blocks if both the block itself and the adjacent block are within the #bars tag. In vanilla, only the iron bar and (all) copper bars are in this tag, however, using data packs it is possible to add the glass pane and stained glass pane. When "Options" → "Accessibility Settings" → "See-Through Leaves" is not enabled, leaves don't render other leaves, even if they are of different types. Water and lava normally don't render block faces that are in the same fluid. Because the rendering of liquids is more complex, sometimes the faces are rendered. For example, a waterlogged top slab will still have its upper face rendered if there is a block of water on top of it. Videos Issues Issues relating to "Opacity" or "Transparency" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia See also Notes References Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Redstone_Dust] | [TOKENS: 1279]
Redstone Dust Yes Yes (64) Any tool 0 0 No Yes No No Redstone dust is a mineral used in crafting, brewing, trimming, and as a placeable wire. Redstone wire is a non-solid block that can transmit a redstone power signal up to 15 blocks in distance; signal strengths below 15 have reduced distance. Redstone wire can power blocks it is placed on or pointing at. Contents Obtaining Redstone dust is immediately destroyed when broken. Redstone dust is removed and drops as an item if: Redstone dust drops itself when destroyed. Redstone ore mined using an iron pickaxe or higher drops 4 or 5 redstone dust (or more with Fortune, averaging at 6 redstone dust with Fortune III). If mined with Silk Touch, the block drops itself instead of redstone dust. When the ore itself is clicked on/touched, it emits a light level of 9 and glows. 15 lengths of redstone dust are naturally generated as part of the trap in each jungle pyramid. 5 lengths of redstone dust can be found in one type of a jail cell room in a woodland mansion. In ancient cities, multiple pieces of redstone dust can be found integrated into circuitry. 1 piece of redstone dust can be found in the "Encounter 4" room in trial chambers. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Redstone dust can be crafted from blocks of redstone. In Java Edition, when the player has the Hero of the Village status effect, clerics might throw that player a redstone dust as a gift. Usage Redstone dust is used for brewing, crafting, and in redstone circuits by placing it on the ground to create redstone wire. It can also be used to power redstone components. The following color palette is shown on the designs on trimmed armor: When placed in the world, redstone dust becomes a block of redstone wire, which can transmit redstone signal. Redstone dust can be placed on conductive blocks as well as glowstone, upside-down slabs, glass, upside-down stairs, and hoppers. It can also be placed on some non-conductive blocks; see Opacity/Placement for more information. It cannot be placed suspended in midair, even with commands. Redstone wire configures itself to point toward adjacent redstone power components and transmission component connection points. Redstone wire also configures itself to point toward adjacent redstone wire one block higher or lower – unless there is a conductive block above the lower redstone wire. If there is only one such adjacent redstone component, redstone wire configures itself into a line pointing both at the neighbor and away from it. If there are two or more such adjacent components, redstone wire connects them in the form of , , , or as needed. When there are no adjacent components, a single redstone wire configures itself into a plus sign, which can provide power in all four directions. By right-clicking, it can be changed into a dot, which does not provide power to any of the four directions.‌[Java Edition only] Redstone wire does not automatically configure itself to point toward mechanism components; the only exceptions are the back and side faces of pistons and sticky pistons in Bedrock Edition. If such a configuration is desired, the other neighbors of the redstone wire must be arranged to create it, i.e the redstone dust must be placed in a way that it would be pointed at the block’s location even if it were not there. When redstone wire is reconfigured after placement, it does not update other redstone components around it of the change unless that reconfiguration also includes a change in power level or another component provides an update. This can create situations where a mechanism component remains activated when it shouldn't, or vice versa, until it receives an update from something else – a "feature" of redstone wire that can be used to make a block update detector. Redstone wire can transmit power, which can be used to operate mechanism components (doors, pistons, redstone lamps, etc.). Redstone wire can be "powered" by a number of methods: The "power level" of redstone dust can vary from 0 to 15. Most power components power-up adjacent redstone dust to power level 15, but a few (daylight sensors, trapped chests, and weighted pressure plates) may create a lower power level. Redstone repeaters output power level 15 (when turned on), but redstone comparators may output a lower power level. Power level drops by 1 for every block of redstone wire it crosses. Thus, redstone wire can transmit power for no more than 15 blocks. To go further, the power level must be re-strengthened – typically with a redstone repeater. Powered redstone wire on top of, or pointing at, a conductive block provides weak power to the block. A weakly-powered block cannot power other adjacent redstone wire, but can still power redstone repeaters and comparators, and activate adjacent mechanism components. Non-conductive blocks cannot be powered. When redstone wire is unpowered, it appears dark red. When powered, it becomes bright red at power level 15, fading to darker shades with decreasing power. Powered redstone wire also produces "dust" particles of the same color. While redstone wire always provides power to the directions it points into, it can still point into directions in which it cannot give power. If redstone wire comes in the form of a cross, the player can right-click to toggle it between a cross and dot. A redstone dot does not power anything adjacent to it, but powers the block under it. Redstone dust is destroyed when a piston tries to push it. It can't be pulled by sticky pistons. Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Achievements Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Redstone", "Redstone dust", or "Redstone wire" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery All renders can be viewed in-game in the debug world. References External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Experience#Renders] | [TOKENS: 1434]
Experience 5HP In Java Edition: Height: 0.5 blocksWidth: 0.5 blocks In Bedrock Edition: Height: 0.25 blocksWidth: 0.25 blocks Experience (EXP or XP for short) can be gained from defeating mobs or performing many kinds of other actions. Experience has no direct effect on the player character, but it can be used to enhance their equipment through enchanting, or by using an anvil to repair, rename, or combine enchantments on equipment. Most sources of experience are produced in the form of experience orbs. In Java Edition, experience gained affects the player's score on the death screen. Experience orbs also recover durability on items with Mending that are being worn or are in-hand. Contents Sources Experience can be gained from several different sources. Most sources drop experience in the form of orbs, which can be claimed by any player, while a few methods directly award the player experience upon completing the action. Gathering experience points increases the player's experience level by gradually filling a bar on the bottom of the screen until a new level is achieved when the bar is full. When the player dies, they drop experience orbs worth 7 * current level experience points, up to a maximum of 100 points (enough to reach approximately 7.5 levels), and all of the other experience vanishes. If the gamerule keepInventory is set to true, the experience is kept even if the player dies. Experience orbs Most experience sources drop experience in the form of experience orbs, which can then be claimed by any player. Experience orbs fade between green and yellow colors and float or glide toward the player up to a distance of 7.25 blocks (calculated from the center of player's feet and the center of the experience orb), speeding up as they get nearer to the player. Experience orbs pulled toward a player are slowed by cobwebs. Experience orbs can also be pulled around or away from the player by running water currents. When collected, experience orbs make a bell-like sound for a split second. Unlike items, experience points are picked up gradually: no matter how many orbs are in the range of the player, they are added to the player's experience one at a time (10 orbs/second). In extreme cases, this can result in the player being followed by a swarm of orbs for many seconds. If an experience orb isn't collected within 5 minutes of its appearance, it despawns. Experience orbs vary in value. The general worth of an orb is reflected by its size, with eleven possible sizes corresponding to specific values. The three smallest sizes are the most commonly encountered, as the majority of experience dropped by mobs and blocks is less than ten. Dense experience orbs with values 17 or higher have orange "eyes" or "cores", and are less frequently encountered, most commonly from defeating the ender dragon, wither and other players, disenchanting objects on a grindstone, breaking spawners, and collecting items from high-traffic furnaces. For performance improvement, experience orbs of the same value can merge into a single entity, but they do not create a higher value orb. Naturally spawned orbs always have an integer value of 1–11, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, or 2477. Fishing, breeding, and trading drop a single orb with a random value in the appropriate range. Breaking blocks, killing mobs and players, smelting items, and bottles o' enchanting calculate their total experience amount and then split it into the base values of orbs by size (1, 3, 7, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, and 2477). Higher values are chosen first, so, for example, a total value of 1000 would be dropped as orbs with values 617, 307, 73, and 3. While the first ender dragon in a world drops 12,000 experience, it is dropped in 10 waves of 1000 and one of 2000, so no orbs of value 2477 are dropped. Such orbs can exist in the world via furnaces that have had a lot of traffic. Like items, experience orbs float when on water. Experience orbs can be destroyed by fire, lava, explosions, and cacti, and can trigger pressure plates and tripwires. Experience orbs can also stop minecarts. In Bedrock Edition, although mob drops spawn the instant the final blow is dealt to the mob, experience orbs do not appear until the mob entity disappears and the smoke appears. In Java Edition, experience orbs appear in the same spatial and temporal location as loot when an entity is killed. Orbs with negative values can be created using the /summon command, either using values below 0 or above 32767 due to 16-bit integer overflow. They use the smallest texture of experience orb. Negative orbs behave differently from positive orbs, namely that they do not deduct experience when collected by the player. They deduct durability from a tool enchanted with Mending, provided the tool is already damaged prior to collection of the orbs. The following mobs and similar entities do not drop experience when killed: Leveling up The formulas for figuring out how many experience orbs needed to get to the next level are as follows: One can determine how much experience has been collected to reach a level using the equations: Likewise, to get the number of levels from the total experience value, one can utilize the following inverse equations: Score The score is the number of experience the player has collected since their last death. This number is the total experience the player has collected, rather than the amount of experience they had upon death. When the player dies, the score is displayed on the death screen. Sounds Java Edition: Experience orbs do not use entity-dependent sound events. Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Experience orbs have entity data associated with them that contain various properties. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Videos History The experience level costs were heavily revised in snapshot 12w22a and 12w23a, and again in version 1.8. Before these, reaching level 50 (the maximum usable on a single enchantment) required 4625 experience, corresponding to defeating 925 hostile mobs (assuming the "common" ones.) Afterward, considerably less experience is needed to get into higher levels. Higher levels cost more experience than lower ones, but the levels are still easier to get than in 1.2.5. Now, level 30 is the maximum for enchantments, and that cost is equivalent of 279 "common" enemies, less than 1/3 the old price. A player dropping excessive experience orbs upon death may cause performance degradation in the game. Issues Issues relating to "Experience" or "Orb" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery References Navigation More More Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Item#Java_Edition_2] | [TOKENS: 898]
Item An item is an object that can exist within inventories of players, mobs, or armor stands; in various storage blocks (like chests or droppers), as well as in item frames, glow item frames, and shelves. Contents Behavior Some items when used, place a block (ItemBlock) or entity (minecart, spawn eggs, etc.) version of themselves into the game world. Put simply, they are an item when in the inventory, and a block when placed. For example, boats turn into an entity when placed, and beds turn into a group of blocks when placed. When selected in the hotbar, items briefly display their names above the HUD. The only methods by which an item can be properly displayed within the game environment is to place it into an item frame, shelf, or armor stand. Displayed items, either on these blocks, the hand (both third-person and first-person), or thrown, are rendered in-game with MERS texture sets with Vibrant Visuals, and can show shadows, reflections, or caustics. Various items have emissive lighting and glow in the dark. If an item that does not become a block is dropped, it becomes an entity represented by a sprite that floats above the ground. It remains for 5 minutes in a loaded chunk before despawning (except for the Nether star), unless the player walks over it to pick it up, it is picked up by a mob, hopper or minecart with hopper, or it is destroyed by fire, lava, cactus, explosion, void, or /kill. A submerged object ascends toward the water's surface. If the water is flowing, the object is pushed along with it. Hoppers draw in any items that are placed above them if they are not powered by redstone. 0.98 degUnreachable1 Direct hit Items can either stack up to 64 or 16, or not stack at all: Lists of items Technical blocks serve various purposes during events within the game, or use a separate name spaced ID in order to avoid unnecessary combinations of block states. In Java Edition technical blocks do not exist as items, while in Bedrock Edition they may be obtained using inventory editors or add-ons. These items, when highlighted in a player's hotbar (or "held"), in the off hand, or equipped in an armor slot, can be used by either attack or use, or can serve a specific purpose (for example, offer the player advantage or disadvantage). Some can be used any time, others only when aiming at specific blocks or entities. The player cannot interact with or directly use these items; however, they are used for trading, brewing, enchanting, or crafting ingredients for other items that do have direct uses. Clocks and recovery compasses are exceptions, as they merely serve an informative function (although clocks also attract piglins as a dropped item entity). Spawn eggs spawn the entity inside them. They cannot be obtained in Survival mode. These items are exclusive to Minecraft Education and Bedrock Edition when the "Minecraft Education features" cheat setting is enabled. The portfolio is exclusive to Minecraft Education, and the poster, slate, and camera are obtainable in Bedrock Edition only through inventory editing or add-ons. The garbage item is obtainable only through invalid lab table recipes or via inventory editing. Some items are unimplemented, or have been mentioned to be implemented in the future. Removed items no longer exist in current versions of the game. These blocks were removed from the game entirely. These blocks were "retconned" into other blocks through a major simultaneous name and texture change. Some blocks and states of blocks were distinguished via numerical metadata in previous versions of the game. Having metadata values outside of the accepted range could produce unintended results for some block IDs. Joke items are present only in April Fools' Day joke versions in the game. These blocks only exist in April Fools' Day joke versions of the game. Display by entities Mobs and some other entities are capable of holding items as well as having them equipped in certain slots; in some cases, this results in the item being displayed visually. A table of mobs that do this is as follows. Note that this does not count equipment, which uses a separate system. Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Item" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Gallery See also Notes References Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Honey_bottle] | [TOKENS: 383]
Honey Bottle Common 40 game ticks (2 seconds) 6 () 1.2 () Heals: 0.8HP × 0.4Duration: 0.4 seconds Clears Poison Yes Yes Yes (16) A honey bottle is a consumable drink item obtainable by using a glass bottle on a full beehive or bee nest. Honey bottles remove Poison when drunk and can be used to craft honey blocks and sugar. Contents Obtaining A honey bottle can be obtained by using a glass bottle on either a beehive or bee nest with a honey level of 5. Doing this angers any bees inside, causing them to attack the player, unless there is a campfire or another block on fire within 5 blocks below the nest or hive. Using normal fire would likely cause the nest, bees, and flowers around it to burn. A dispenser with glass bottles can be used to collect the honey without angering the bees. The honey bottle appears as an item in the dispenser's inventory. If the dispenser is full, the honey bottle is shot out. Usage To drink a honey bottle, press and hold use while it is selected in the hotbar. Drinking one restores 6 () hunger and 1.2 hunger saturation and returns a glass bottle. Consuming the item also has the benefit of removing any Poison effect applied to the player. Unlike drinking milk, other applied effects are not removed upon drinking a honey bottle. Honey bottles can be drunk even with a full hunger bar. Drinking a honey bottle takes 25% longer than eating other food - 2 seconds - and has a unique sound. Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Achievements Advancements History Issues Issues relating to "Honey Bottle" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Biome#Java_Edition_2] | [TOKENS: 9830]
Biome A biome is a region in a world with distinct geographical features, plants, mobs, temperatures, humidity levels, colors, and more. Biomes separate every generated world into different environments, such as forests, deserts, and oceans. The biome of a location is determined during world generation rather than by the current environment, even if all blocks in a large area are altered to imitate the terrain of other biomes. In Java Edition, the /fillbiome command can be used to change the biome in a selected area. Existing biomes can be located with the /locate biome command. Contents List of biomes In Java Edition, there are 65 different biome types: 54 for the Overworld, 5 for the Nether, and 5 for the End, plus one used only for a superflat preset. In Bedrock Edition, there are 87 biome types: 54 for the Overworld, 5 for the Nether, 1 for the End, and 27 unused. On this page, for convenience of description and reading, the biomes in Overworld are divided into 8 categories, which are not official. These biomes are used for the generation of oceans and mushroom fields. They are large, open biomes made entirely of water going up to Y=63, with underwater relief on the sea floor, such as small mountains and plains, usually including gravel, dirt, and sand. Squid and fish spawn frequently in the water, and dolphins spawn in non-frozen oceans. The basic ocean biome. Like its colder variants, its floor is largely made up of gravel, covered with kelp and seagrass. However, small patches of dirt, sand and clay can also appear. Cod and salmon‌[BE only] can spawn here alongside dolphins, squid and nautiluses. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. A variant of the ocean biome. In deep ocean biomes, the ocean can exceed 30 blocks in depth, making it twice as deep as the normal ocean. The ground is mainly covered with gravel. Ocean monuments generate in deep oceans, meaning guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges can spawn here. A variant of the ocean biome, with light teal water at the surface. Like the lukewarm ocean, it has a floor made of sand and like all oceans, it is populated with seagrass, but without kelp. Pufferfish and tropical fish spawn here alongside dolphins, squid and nautiluses. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. Unlike other ocean biomes, warm oceans allow for the generation of coral reefs and sea pickles. It is the only ocean biome that does not have a deep equivalent, but the terrain in this biome can reach the same depth as deep oceans. A variant of the ocean biome, with light blue water at the surface. Its floor is made of sand with an occasional patch of dirt or clay. Kelp and seagrass generates here. Unlike the warm ocean biome, cod and salmon‌[BE only] can spawn here, together with pufferfish‌[JE only] and tropical fish. Dolphins, squid, and nautiluses may also spawn here and drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses can spawn at night or during thunderstorms. Coral reefs cannot generate here. Similar to the lukewarm ocean biome, but twice as deep. Because they are a deep ocean variant, they can generate ocean monuments, resulting in the spawning of guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges. A variant of the ocean biome, with dark blue water at the surface. Like regular oceans and frozen oceans, its floor is made up of gravel, though occasional patches of dirt can be found. Kelp and seagrass generates here. Salmon, cod and nautiluses can spawn in cold ocean biomes alongside squid and dolphins‌[BE only]. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms. Similar to the cold ocean biome, but twice as deep. Like other deep oceans, ocean monuments can generate here, which contain guardians, elder guardians, prismarine and sponges. A variant of the ocean biome with dark indigo water at the surface. Like the cold ocean, it has a gravel seabed and squid swimming about. However, the water's surface is frequently broken up by patches of ice and large icebergs, consisting of packed ice and blue ice, and occasionally topped with snow blocks and snow‌[BE only]. Strays, drowned, rarely zombie nautiluses, living nautiluses, polar bears, and rabbits‌[BE only] can spawn here, but dolphins can't. Salmon and cod‌[BE only] may also spawn here. Like the frozen ocean biome, the only fish that spawn here are salmon and cod‌[BE only], squid and nautiluses may also spawn here, and the floor consists of gravel. The frozen deep ocean biome also contains ocean monuments and a deeper floor than normal oceans, like other deep oceans. Frequent floating icebergs with blue ice generate here. Polar bears, strays, drowned, rarely zombie nautiluses and rabbits‌[BE only] can also spawn here, but dolphins can't. This rare biome consists of a mostly flat island and has mycelium instead of grass as its surface. Mushroom fields are always adjacent to a deep ocean and are always isolated from other biomes, and they are typically a few hundred blocks wide. It is one of the few biomes where huge mushrooms can generate naturally, and where mushrooms can grow in full sunlight. No mobs other than mooshrooms, bats‌[JE only], and glow squid spawn naturally in this biome, including the usual night-time hostile mobs. This also applies to caves, mineshafts and other dark structures, meaning exploring underground is safe. However, monster spawners still spawn mobs, wandering traders along with their llamas can spawn, raids can still spawn illagers, but villages don't spawn here. the player can still breed animals and spawn mobs using spawn eggs and insomnia still attracts phantoms‌[JE only]. Highland biomes are biomes with a higher Y-level. Rugged terrain and snow-covered peaks appear above the snow line. One of the three biomes that generate in the peaks of a mountain. This biome is found in taller and more jagged and pointy peaks that often pass the clouds and can peak at Y=256. It is covered by a single layer of snow blocks with stone underneath often exposing ores such as coal, iron and emerald. Just like the snowy slopes, stone cliffs can generate in some sides of the mountain. Goats spawn in this biome. Polar bears and rabbits may also spawn here and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. The frozen peaks are covered by snow blocks and packed ice with occasional small blobs of ice. Goats can spawn in this biome. Polar bears and rabbits may also spawn here and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. This biome usually generates in smoother and less jagged mountains compared to the jagged peaks biome. The stony peaks are a warmer variation of peak biomes that generates in warmer regions to avoid temperature clashes. It is mainly covered by stone with large strips of calcite and exposed ores. No passive mobs spawn here and there's no snow in this biome. The meadow is an elevated grassy biome found in plateaus near mountain ranges. It is filled with patches of flowers and turquoise-green short grass and tall grass. All small flowers generate except blue orchids, tulips, lilies of the valley or wither roses. Rarely, a lone oak or birch tree can generate and always has a bee nest. Both pillager outposts and plains villages can generate in this biome. Sheep, donkeys and rabbits are the only passive mobs that spawn in this biome. Cherry groves are grasslands with a lot of short grass, tall grass and, instead of the traditional dandelion and poppy flowers, the ground is covered with pink petals. The main environmental feature of the cherry grove are cherry trees identified by their striking pink color. The cherry trees may generate densely enough to create a cover of leaves. Sheep, pigs and rabbits are the only passive mobs that spawn in this biome. The grove creates a forest of spruce trees beneath the mountain peaks when near a forested biome. It is quite reminiscent of the snowy taiga, but the surface is covered with snow blocks and powder snow instead of grass blocks. Rabbits, wolves and foxes can spawn in this biome. The snowy slopes generate beneath the mountain peaks and are covered with multiple layers of snow blocks and powder snow, with some sides also having stone cliffs. Goats spawn in this biome alongside rabbits and polar bears‌[BE only]. Strays may also spawn here at night and during thunderstorms‌[BE only]. This is the only mountain biome where igloos can generate, making it one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. A highland biome with some steep hilltops and an occasional oak or spruce tree‌[JE only]. The terrain is usually flat, but sometimes hilly and shattered. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. Snowfall also occurs above certain heights, rarely creating snow layers on the top of the hills. Windswept hills are one of six biomes where emerald ore and infested stone can be found naturally. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. The windswept gravelly hills are mostly covered in gravel with occasional patches of grass and stone blocks. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. Due to the low amount of grass, the population of spruce and oak trees in this biome is sparse. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. This biome is found when windswept hills are located next to forested biomes. This is one of the few biomes where llamas can spawn naturally. It does not generate stone patches, so the floor is entirely covered by grass. There are more spruce and oak trees in this biome, forming small forests with a lower tree density than other forest biomes. Cold animal variants may also spawn here. Woodland biomes are rich in plants with a variety of trees, flowers and grasses. A common biome with many oak and birch trees and a fair amount of short grass, mushrooms and flowers. The ground beneath the trees is covered with leaf litter. Wolves can spawn in this biome. This forest variant has fewer trees but contains nearly every type of flower and tall plant in the game. Wolves do not spawn in the flower forest, although rabbits spawn occasionally. Bee nests have a higher chance to generate in this biome. A biome covered by a forest of spruce trees. Ferns, large ferns and sweet berry bushes grow commonly on the forest floor. One can find packs of wolves here, along with small groups of foxes, rabbits or cold animal variants. Villages may generate in this biome; the houses in these villages are built with spruce wood. Pillager outposts may also generate in this biome. This is one of the few biomes where trail ruins can generate. A biome composed of spruce trees (despite it being called a pine taiga, since there is no pine in the game), much like the standard taiga biome. However, some trees are 2×2 thick and taller than normal, akin to large jungle trees. Mossy cobblestone boulders appear frequently, mushrooms are common, and podzol can be found on the forest floor. There are also patches of coarse dirt that do not grow grass, with some dead bushes. Wolves, foxes and cold animal variants can spawn here, as they do in normal taiga biomes. Rabbits may also spawn here‌[JE only]. At first glance, this biome may look almost exactly the same as its pine tree counterpart. However, the most striking feature of this biome is its giant spruce trees, which are essentially a scaled-up version of regular spruce trees. One can easily differentiate this from an old growth pine taiga by observing how the leaves almost completely cover the tree trunks, whereas in pine ones, leaves tend to cover only the top. Like the old growth pine taiga, wolves, foxes and cold animal variants spawn here, and trail ruins can also generate. Rabbits may also spawn here‌[JE only]. Similar to the standard taiga, except much of the biome is covered in snow. Ferns and large ferns generate here commonly, however sweet berry bushes generate more rarely than in the regular taiga. Wolves, foxes, rabbits and cold animal variants can spawn here. One may also find an igloo nestled between the trees, making it one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. Villages and pillager outposts may also generate here‌[BE only]. Villages use the same architecture as taiga villages, but the villagers wear snowy biome outfits. A forest that is solely made of birch trees. The grass is aqua in color, and unlike the regular forest, no wolves spawn in this biome. Wildflowers are very common in birch forests. Birch trees grow much taller than usual in this uncommon variant of the birch forest biome. Whereas normal birch trees grow up to 7 blocks tall, these trees can grow up to 13 blocks in height. This makes deforestation a much more difficult task, although it provides the player with far more resources. This is one of the few biomes where trail ruins can generate. This biome is mainly composed of dark oak trees, which create a mostly closed roof of leaves. Oak trees, birch trees, and huge mushrooms can also be found occasionally, and the ground is covered with leaf litter. Trees in this forest are so densely packed that some areas are dark enough for hostile mobs to spawn, even during the day. On rare occasions, a woodland mansion may generate. The pale garden is a rarer variation of the dark forest biome. It is, in fact, the rarest biome. The dark oak trees are replaced with pale oak trees, with lots of pale hanging moss hanging from the trees. Patches of pale moss blocks and pale moss carpets cover much of the ground, and patches of eyeblossoms dot the landscape. The sky, foliage, and water in this biome are gray and desaturated, and no music plays inside the biome. Some of the pale oak trees may have a creaking heart hidden within them, which spawns a creaking at night. No passive mobs spawn in this biome. Trees in this forest are so densely packed that some areas are dark enough for hostile mobs to spawn, even during the day. On rare occasions, a woodland mansion may generate, making the pale garden one of only two biomes where it can be found. A dense forested biome that includes many different plants and features. Jungle trees and mega jungle trees are common, with the mega trees having 2x2 thick trunks and possibly growing up to 31 blocks in height. Fancy oak trees are also common, and jungle bushes often cover much of the forest floor. Ferns and large ferns are found commonly, and vines are found growing on most types of blocks, especially on jungle trees. Additionally, cocoa can also grow on the sides of jungle trees. Melons can generate here in patches, similar to pumpkins, although they are much more common. Single shoots of bamboo can be found scattered throughout the biome. The foliage in the jungle is a bright, lush green color. Jungle pyramids and trail ruins can generate, and ocelots, parrots, pandas and warm animal variants can spawn in this biome. In contrast to the wild and overgrown vegetation of the jungle biome, the sparse jungle consists of jungle trees, fancy oak trees, and jungle bushes that are spaced out and isolated, creating a much more open environment. The terrain of this biome is often flat, but there may be some small rises in elevation. Parrots, ocelots, and pandas can still spawn in the sparse jungle‌[Bedrock Edition only]. Wolves can also spawn in this biome along with warm animal variants. In this biome, large areas of the landscape are covered with massive amounts of bamboo. Patches of podzol can be found underneath the densely packed bamboo. Additionally, mega jungle trees, fancy oak trees, and jungle bushes can also generate here. Pandas have a much higher chance to spawn here than the other jungle biomes, making this the best place to find them. Ocelots‌[BE only], parrots and warm animal variants are also able to spawn, and jungle pyramids can generate here‌[JE only]. Wetland biomes are rivers, swamps and beaches. They have a large amount of water resources. Rivers separate other biomes; beaches generate as a transition between the ocean and land. A biome that consists of water blocks that form an elongated, curving shape similar to a real river. Rivers cut through terrain or separate the main biomes. They attempt to join up with ocean biomes, but sometimes loop around to the same area of ocean. Rarely, they can have no connection to an ocean, instead forming a loop, or ending in a swamp or far inland. The grass has a dull aqua tone, much like the ocean, and trace amounts of oak trees, bushes, and firefly bushes tend to generate there as well. Rivers are also a reliable source of clay. These biomes are good for fishing, but drowned can spawn at night and during thunderstorms. In Bedrock Edition, mobs other than salmon, squid and drowned cannot spawn in this biome, even underground, except from a monster spawner. A river with a layer of ice covering its surface. It generates when a river goes through snowy biomes. Salmon spawn underwater while rabbits‌[BE only] and polar bears‌[BE only] spawn on the surface. At night and during thunderstorms, drowned can spawn below the ice with strays‌[BE only] on the surface. In Bedrock Edition, no hostile mobs other then strays and skeletons can spawn here, even underground, except from a monster spawner. A biome characterized by a mix of flat areas around sea level, and shallow pools of green water with floating lily pads. Clay, sand and dirt are commonly found at the bottom of these pools. Trees are covered with vines and can be found growing out from the water. Mushrooms, firefly bushes, dead bushes, and sugar canes are abundant, and blue orchids grow exclusively here. Frogs of the temperate variant can spawn here as well. Swamp huts with a black cat and a witch generate exclusively in swamps. Slimes also spawn naturally at night and during thunderstorms, most commonly on full moons. Some zombies may end up underwater, which can transform them into drowned, and some skeletons are replaced by bogged, making this an especially dangerous biome at night or during thunderstorms. Temperature varies within the biome, causing foliage and grass colors to vary. In Bedrock Edition, huge mushrooms also spawn in this biome. Visibility is also lower than other biomes when the player is underwater. A biome characterized by a dense foliage, featuring plenty of mangrove trees of varying heights. The floor is mainly composed of mud blocks with occasional grass patches. The grass has the same color as in the normal swamp but leaves and vines have a unique light green tint and the water is teal rather than gray. Warm frogs often spawn in this biome. Slimes also spawn naturally at night and during thunderstorms, most commonly on full moons. Some zombies may end up underwater, which can transform them into drowned, and some skeletons are replaced by bogged, making this an especially dangerous biome at night or thunderstorms. Visibility is also lower than other biomes when the player is underwater. Generated where oceans meet other biomes, beaches are primarily composed of sand. Beaches penetrate the landscape, removing the original blocks and placing in sand blocks. These are also useful for fishing. Buried treasure can be found under few blocks of sand, and an occasional shipwreck can also generate here. Passive mobs other than turtles do not spawn on beaches. Like a regular beach, one can find plenty of sand in this biome and buried treasure can be found underground in this snowy beach. However, sand is covered in a layer of snow. Snowy beaches are found when a snowy biome borders a frozen ocean biome. No passive mobs other than rabbits‌[BE only] spawn in this biome. This stone-covered biome generates at shores with low erosion values, usually close to mountains. Depending on the height of the nearby land, stony shores may generate as medium slopes or huge cliffs, its tops tall enough to be covered by snow even when near warmer biomes. No passive mobs spawn here. Buried treasure can generate here‌[BE only]. Strips of gravel can sometimes be found here. These biomes have a wide view on usually flat terrain, but can also generate on large hills or cliffs. Trees spawn less here and water sources are plentiful. They also have a higher number of passive mob spawns. A flat and grassy biome with rolling hills and few oak trees. Villages are common. Cave openings, lava lakes and waterfalls are easily identifiable due to the flat unobstructed terrain. Passive mobs are easily found in plains biomes; this biome is also one of the few biomes where horses and donkeys spawn naturally, while hostile zombie horses will spawn during the nighttime. Pillager outposts may also be generated. A fairly uncommon variation of the plains, this biome is the only place where sunflowers naturally generate. In Bedrock Edition, villages and pillager outposts may also generate here. An expansive biome with a huge amount of snow. Sugar cane can generate in this biome, but can become uprooted when chunks load as the water sources freeze to ice. There are few spruce trees in this biome. No animal mobs other than rabbits and polar bears can spawn; however, it is one of the few biomes where strays and zombie horses appear. In Bedrock Edition, this biome does not spawn monsters other than strays and skeletons, but monster spawners can still spawn monsters. This is one of the three biomes where igloos naturally generate. Villages and pillager outposts may also generate here. A rare variation of the snowy plains biome that features large spikes and glaciers of packed ice. Usually, the spikes are 10 to 20 blocks tall, but some long, thin spikes can reach over 50 blocks in height. The floor in this biome is entirely covered in snow blocks instead of grass, and ice patches made of packed ice can generate on it. Like the regular snowy plains, no animal mobs other than rabbits and polar bears can spawn and strays appear at night or during thunderstorms. In these biomes, it neither rains nor snows. The surface is covered with sparse vegetation. A barren biome consisting mostly of sand dunes, dead bushes, dry grass, and cacti. Sandstone and sometimes fossils are found underneath the sand. The only passive mobs that spawn naturally in deserts are gold/creamy rabbits and camels. At night and during thunderstorms, husks, parched, and camel husks usually spawn in the place of normal zombies and skeletons. Sugar cane can be found if the desert is next to a river biome. Desert villages, desert wells and desert pyramids are found exclusively in this biome. Pillager outposts can also generate here. A relatively flat and dry biome with a dull-brown grass color and acacia trees scattered around the biome, though oak trees may generate occasionally. Tall grass covers the landscape. Villages can generate in this biome, constructed of acacia wood, with some stained terracotta. Pillager outposts can also generate here. Horses, armadillos and warm animal variants can naturally spawn here, while hostile zombie horses will spawn during the nighttime. Llamas may also spawn here‌[BE only]. This biome generates when a normal savanna biome spawns at high altitudes and near mountains. It is mostly indistinguishable from the standard savanna, with the main differences being the fact that llamas and wolves can spawn, and villages and pillager outposts cannot generate. In contrast to the mostly flat and calm terrain of the savanna biome, this uncommon variant generates chaotic terrain, with gigantic mountains covered in coarse dirt and some patches of stone. The mountains in the windswept savanna are extremely steep, sometimes jutting out at 90-degree angles, making it almost impossible to climb. On top of that, they can reach heights comparable to the mountain peak biomes, sometimes rising above the clouds. Massive waterfalls and lavafalls are quite common, and ocean-like lakes can also generate. Unlike the regular savanna, villages and pillager outposts do not generate in this biome. Horses, armadillos and warm animal variants can still spawn in the windswept savanna, as well as hostile zombie horses during the nighttime. Llamas may also spawn here‌[BE only]. An uncommon biome where large mounds of terracotta and stained terracotta generate. Red sand also generates here instead of regular sand, with occasional cacti, dead bushes, and dry grass. This biome is usually found alongside desert biomes and it can generate in mountainous terrain. Armadillos are the only mobs that can be found here. Mineshafts generate at a higher altitude than normal - occasionally a player may come across a mineshaft jutting out of the badlands. Gold ore also occurs more frequently, because additional veins can generate within badlands up to Y=256. The composition of this biome is useful when other sources of terracotta and gold are scarce. The wooded badlands has layers of coarse dirt and grass blocks, and forests of oak trees with leaf litter that generate at higher altitudes in humid areas. The lower parts don't generate the oak forests, exposing terracotta and red sand to the sky. The color of the grass and leaves is a dull green-brown hue, giving it a dried and dead appearance. These trees are a rare source of wood when living in the otherwise barren badlands. Armadillos can spawn here during the day, and wolves and warm animal variants can spawn on the wooded plateaus. This rare variant generates unique terrain features that are similar to the structures in Utah's Bryce Canyon. Tall and narrow spires of colorful terracotta rise out of the floor of the canyon, which like all other badlands variants, is covered in red sand. Armadillos are the only passive mobs that can be found here. These biomes generate inside caves in the Overworld. They're mostly found underground but can sometimes leak out of cave entrances. A dimly lit cave biome that generates deep underground mostly within the deepslate layer. It is largely sculk blocks 1 block thick upon all surfaces, with frequent sculk sensors and occasional sculk shriekers, the latter of which can directly summon a warden. Large structures known as ancient cities can generate here, containing chests with unique loot. No mobs aside from wardens spawn here, except from a monster spawner. These are caves filled with dripstone blocks and pointed dripstone both hanging as stalactites and growing from the ground as stalagmites and small water wells of 1×1 in the ground. Large dripstone clusters structures generate occasionally inside these caves. Copper ore blobs found in this biome are much bigger compared to other biomes. Drowned and rarely zombie nautiluses can spawn in aquifers. Lush caves are often found underground below azalea trees. These caves are covered by moss blocks, moss carpets, short grass and azalea bushes on the floors. On the ceiling, vines and cave vines with glow berries grow down and light up the caves, and spore blossoms grow from the ceiling and spore particles. There are also shallow lakes with clay where dripleaf plants grow out of them and axolotls spawn, making this the only biome where they can spawn. Tropical fish can also spawn inside the aquifers in a lush cave. Can be accessed only through Single Biome world selection or The Void superflat preset. In a single biome world, the landscape consists of stone, as well as water and bedrock depending on the generator type. In The Void superflat preset, the world is completely empty except for a single structure: a 33×33 stone platform with a single block of cobblestone in the center. No mobs (passive or hostile) aside from phantoms and pillager patrols can spawn without spawn eggs, monster spawners or commands. It does not rain in this biome. The Nether is considered a different dimension. All biomes in this dimension are hot and dry, and it is not possible to place water; ice can still be placed, though it does not turn into water upon melting. Lava oceans are generated as a feature and are therefore not considered a separate biome. The Nether wastes is the most common biome in the Nether. The terrain mainly consists of netherrack, with glowstone clusters growing and lava leaking from the ceiling and gravel and soul sand lining its shores. Most of the Nether’s mobs can spawn here, including ghasts, zombified piglins, magma cubes, striders, piglins, and the occasional enderman. The soul sand valley mainly consists of soul sand, basalt and soul soil. Notable features of the biome are exposed Nether fossils in various shapes and sizes, large amounts of lava, blue fog, large spires made of basalt, soul fire, and the occasional Nether fortress or bastion remnant. Ghasts and skeletons are common in this biome while endermen are rare. Striders can spawn here as well. This is the only place to find dried ghasts naturally. The crimson forest consists of many huge crimson fungi, which act as the "trees" of this biome. The huge fungi often generate with weeping vines hanging from them, and shroomlights which light up the landscape. The floor is mostly covered with crimson nylium, with occasional patches of bare netherrack or Nether wart blocks. Crimson roots, crimson fungus, and occasionally warped fungus grow on the ground. Small patches of Nether wart blocks and weeping vines can also be found growing on the ceiling. Hoglins, piglins, zombified piglins, and striders can spawn in this biome. The warped forest consists of many huge warped fungi, which act as the "trees" of this biome. The huge fungi often generate with shroomlights, which light up the landscape. Twisting vines grow throughout the biome in patches. The floor is mostly covered with warped nylium, with occasional patches of bare netherrack or warped wart blocks. Warped roots, warped fungus, Nether sprouts, and occasionally crimson fungus grow on the ground. Endermen and striders are the only mobs that spawn in this biome. The biome emits out a magenta-purple fog upon entry. A gray biome, the basalt deltas are said to be the remnant of ancient volcanic eruptions.[citation needed] The ground consists of basalt and blackstone blocks, with small patches of netherrack and pools of lava. The shape of the terrain is chaotic and uneven, making it somewhat difficult to traverse and build on. Unlike the other biomes in the Nether, bastion remnants do not generate in basalt deltas. When this biome borders a lava ocean, clusters of basalt form near the coast. Fog is colored light-gray and particles of dust can be seen falling from the ceiling upon entry. Magma cubes have a high spawn rate in this biome, making the basalt deltas the best place to farm magma cream. This biome also contains a much higher abundance of blackstone compared to other Nether biomes. Ghasts and striders can spawn in this biome as well. The End is considered a different dimension. The terrain consists of end stone islands of varying sizes, floating in the void. They use five different biomes in Java Edition, or all use the End in Bedrock Edition, with no terrain differences. This biome is used to generate the circle of radius 1000 centered at the 0,0 coordinates in the End. The End central island is generated at the center of this circle, and it's surrounded by a complete vacuum all the way to the edge of the biome. Most of the End features are exclusive to that island, including the ender dragon, the obsidian pillars, the End crystals, the 5×5 spawn platform, the exit portal and the 20 central End gateways. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. It does not rain or snow in this biome unlike the other low-temperature biomes. The outer islands in the End can be accessed using End gateways after the ender dragon has been defeated. In Bedrock Edition, this biome is instead the biggest, as it is used to generate the whole dimension. If the biome is used for a superflat world, the sky appears nearly black and an ender dragon spawns at the 0,0 coordinates in the Overworld. Only endermen spawn at night. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the empty expanse between the larger islands, populated by the smaller, circular islands. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the gradual slope from the hilltops of each island down to the cliffs around the edge. End cities generate here, but chorus trees do not. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the hilltops of each island, and is the only biome in the End where both chorus trees and End cities generate. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. Generates as part of the outer islands of the End. This biome represents the outer rims of each island, with steep cliffs below the edge. Neither End cities nor chorus trees generate in this biome. Large amounts of endermen spawn in this biome. These biomes have been completely removed from the game in Java Edition. In Bedrock Edition, they still exist in the code, but do not generate and can only be found in old worlds. Most biomes were removed from the generator because the terrain was the only difference with their regular biome variant. This biome doesn't generate naturally from Pocket Edition Alpha 0.9.0 onward. When Bedrock Edition 1.4.0 introduced the new frozen ocean, this biome was not removed or replaced by the new frozen ocean, although the id name changed from frozen_ocean to legacy_frozen_ocean. This biome doesn't generate naturally from Pocket Edition v0.9.0 alpha and Java Edition 1.7.2 onward. The deep warm ocean did not naturally generate in any non-snapshot or non-beta version. Most hills were gentle rolling slopes on which the usual biome terrain generated, with some sharper cliffs here and there. Snowy mountains had a lower chance of spawning passive mobs during world generation than other biomes (7% versus 10%). Swamp hills and dark forest hills generated as 'modified' biomes instead of hills biomes, making them slightly rarer but also bigger in size. Tall birch hills generated as 'modified hills' biomes, which made them even rarer than modified biomes. Tall birch hills had much more mountainous terrain than most hills biomes. In Bedrock Edition, this biome did generate as a much hillier version of the giant spruce taiga, even more mountainous than regular hills biomes. However, the giant spruce taiga hills used the same trees as the giant tree taiga hills (with leaves only at the top), making this biome very similar to the giant tree taiga hills. With the new terrain generation in Caves & Cliffs: Part II, the regular badlands biome also featured these plateaus and this biome became redundant. In Bedrock Edition, the grass and foliage color was lush green (the same color as in mushroom fields), making it easily distinguishable from the regular shattered savanna. Because the terrain was the only difference with the regular mushroom fields biome, this biome became redundant after Caves & Cliffs: Part II. In Bedrock Edition, the regular gravelly mountains did not have any trees, but this biome did, making it slightly different. Because almost no grass blocks were generated between the gravel, trees did rarely generate. These biomes no longer exist in current versions of the game. Snow, grass blocks, ice Grass block, short grass, ferns, oak trees, birch trees Grass block, short grass, oak trees Sand, snow, ice Grass block, oak trees, birch trees These biomes can appear only in April Fools snapshots of the game. This "biome" includes all the other non-custom dimensions biomes. All mobs, blocks, particles and structures in 20w13b (vanilla) can generate in this biome. A dimension can have multiple of these randomly generated biomes. Tint All biomes use a set of colors for various environmental aspects such as the sky, water, fog, and some blocks. In Bedrock Edition, biomes specify their colors in the client_biome JSON files in the vanilla resource packs. Some biomes specify their colors directly, while others use colormaps or separate JSON files which can also control other environmental effects. In Bedrock Edition, all biome colors for blocks are also visible on maps. Biome grass and foliage colors are selected from three 256×256 colormap images: grass.png, foliage.png, and dry_foliage under assets/minecraft/textures/colormap‌[JE only] or textures/colormap‌[BE only] in the vanilla resource pack. The grass.png colormap sets the colors for grass block, short grass, tall grass, ferns, large ferns, ferns in flower pots, sugar canes, bushes and stems of pink petals and wildflowers. Meanwhile, the foliage.png colormap sets the colors for vines and tree leaves of oak, jungle, acacia, dark oak and mangrove. The dry_foliage.png colormap sets the colors for leaf litter. Only the colors in the lower-left halfs of the images are used, even though the upper-right side of foliage.png and dry_foliage.png is colored. The adjusted temperature and adjusted downfall values (recognized as AdjTemp and AdjDownfall in the following, respectively) are used when determining the biome color to select from the colormap. They are computed as follows: AdjTemp = clamp( Temperature, 0.0, 1.0 ) AdjDownfall = clamp( Downfall, 0.0, 1.0 ) * AdjTemp. "clamp" limits the range of the temperature and downfall to 0.0—1.0. The clamped downfall value is then multiplied by the adjusted temperature value, bringing its value to be inside the lower left triangle. Treating the bottom-right corner of the colormap as AdjTemp = 0.0 and AdjDownfall = 0.0, the adjusted temperature increases to 1.0 along the X-axis, and the adjusted downfall increases to 1.0 along the Y-axis. In the following cases, the plants are not tinted exactly according to the colormap. In Java Edition, several of them are specified in biome Jsons in vanilla data pack. Swamps In swamps and mangrove swamps, the grass color is based on a noise on XZ plane. When the value of this noise is less than -0.1, it uses the color #4c763c. Otherwise using #6a7039. The foliage color is #6a7039 in swamps and #8db127 in mangrove swamps, which are not affected by the colormap. The dry foliage color in swamps and mangrove swamps is #7b5334, which also ignores the colormap. In Bedrock Edition, all swamp biomes use colormaps to determine these colors, similar to regular colormaps described above. Dark forest In dark forests, the grass color is the result of the bitwise AND between the color in the colormap and #fefefe, and then averaging with #28340a. In vanilla, that is #507a32. Badlands In badlands, wooded badlands and eroded badlands, the grass color is #90814d and the foliage color and dry foliage color is #9e814d. They are not affected by the colormap. Cherry grove The color for grass and foliage in cherry groves is always #b6db61, which is not affected by the colormap. Pale garden In the pale garden, the grass color is #778272, the foliage color is #878d76, and the dry foliage color is #a0a69c They are not affected by the colormap. Other leaves The color for spruce leaves is #619961 and the color for birch leaves is #80a755. Both are not affected by the biome, but determined by colormaps in Bedrock Edition. The color of the daytime sky in Overworld changes according to the basic temperature value of the biome. The basic temperature is first modified as T = clamp( Temperature / 3 , -1.0, 1.0 ). Then the triple (0.62222224-0.05T, 0.5+0.1T, 1) is the sky color. The color of the sky in the pale garden biome is #b9b9b9, which is unaffected by the above formula. See § List of biome climates below for all sky colors. The colors and surface opacity of water are defined in the vanilla data pack‌[JE only] or client biome JSON files in vanilla resource packs.‌[BE only] Some biomes in Java Edition, or most biomes in Bedrock Edition have unique water colors. Swamps and warm oceans in Bedrock Edition have unique water surface opacities, 65% and 55% respectively. The color and density of water and sky fog is different for most biomes, defined by separate JSON files for each biome in Bedrock Edition. The underwater fog color is #050533 with a few exceptions in Java Edition, or the same as the water surface color with some exceptions in Bedrock Edition. The sky fog color is #c0d8ff‌[JE only] or #abd2ff‌[BE only] in all Overworld biomes, except pale gardens which use #817770. Nether biomes and the End have unique fog colors. Vibrant Visuals ignores default colors for the sky, water, and fog, and adds new effects for each biome or a set of biome. Which environmental settings are used is determined by the biome JSON file, and all environmental settings are stored in separate directories in resource packs. In vanilla, the following effects are affected by the biome: Water colors are not visible with Vibrant Visuals, but all regular fog colors still apply asides from the volumetric fog. When plants or water are at the borders between or among biomes, the color is affected by the biome of the surrounding blocks at the same Y-level. The range of the block involved in the calculation is determined by the biome blend radius in options. Takes the plant color or water color of the biomes within a square centered on this block and with the side length being the biome blend radius, and calculates their average value to get the final color for this block. The sky color‌[JE only] and the fog color use the color processed by Gaussian blur from colors of the biomes at each block in the range of 5×5×5 centered on the block the camera is in. Climate A biome has three climate attributes: temperature, downfall and precipitation. Each biome has a base temperature value (see § List of biome climates), but the actual temperature value at each location in the biome is also affected by the height of the location. Locations with Y≤80 use the base temperature as actual temperature. At Y=81, the actual temperature value randomly fluctuates up and down by -0.00875 — +0.01125 from the base temperature based on a noise on the XZ plane, and at Y≥81 the actual temperature decreases by 0.00125 (1⁄800) every block up. In frozen oceans and deep frozen oceans, it is also affected by a noise value on the XZ plane. In some regions according to the noise, the base temperature value is always regarded as 0.2. The actual temperature values for these regions are also calculated on this basis. This is detectable in frozen oceans, as its base temperature is low enough to freeze or snow, so that only these regions do not freeze or snow at sea level. The temperature affects at which height snowfall can occur, the sky and block colors, and whether sponges dry in the air.‌[BE only] The downfall value is a number between 0.0 and 1.0 (see § List of biome climates). When the downfall value is greater than 0.85, the biome is marked as humid, which is related only to the random extinction of fire and block colors. This value doesn't affect the weather. The precipitation value can be "true" or "false". If the precipitation of the biome is false, no rain or snow occurs. Otherwise, a location is rainable when its temperature value is equal or greater than 0.15, and snowable otherwise. So, if the base temperature is less than 0.15, it's snowable at any Y level. Even if equal or greater than 0.15, it will still snow above a certain Y level, which are listed below: Snowy Plains Ice Spikes Grove Frozen Peaks Jagged Peaks Snowy Slopes Snowy Taiga Snowy Beach Some regions of Frozen Ocean The exact minimum height for snowfall is randomized per block, with a margin of 8 blocks. In Bedrock Edition, this is a transition layer where both snow and rain particles are visible at the same time. This transition also appears when moving horizontally between snowy and rainy biomes, and the particle density decreases when moving to a dry biome. In Bedrock Edition, the amount of snow layers generated on the surface is based on the snow accumulation value of the biome. The snow height is randomly selected per block between a minimum and maximum value, with 0.0 being no snow and 1.0 being the full height of one block. During snowfall, snow can stack infinitely on top of generated snow, unlike in Java Edition where this is controlled by a snow accumulation game rule. #9c754d‌[BE only] Generation Biome IDs Each type of biome has its own Resource Location, shown in the following tables. Before 1.13 biomes used to have a numerical ID. These can be seen in this page: Biome/IDs before 1.13 In versions after 1.13 biomes use a numerical ID which is determined by the alphabetical ordering of their resource locations.[verify] This information is however only used by the game internals and is not included below. Each type of biome has its own Resource Location / IDs, shown in the following tables. Achievements Advancements History Issues Issues relating to "Biome" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery See also References External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Bedrock_Editor_0.6.9] | [TOKENS: 91]
Bedrock Editor 0.6.9 Bedrock Editor July 17, 2024 1.21.20.23 ◄ 0.6.8 0.6.10 ► Bedrock Editor v0.6.9 is a minor alpha release for the Bedrock Editor released on July 17, 2024, which makes some UI and API changes. Contents Additions UI API Changes UI API References Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Adventure] | [TOKENS: 446]
Adventure Adventure is a game mode intended for player-created maps, limiting some of the gameplay in Minecraft. In this mode, the player cannot directly destroy any blocks with any tools or place any blocks, in order to avoid spoiling adventure maps or griefing servers. Contents Gameplay Adventure mode is similar to Survival in that players receive damage from their environment, dying is possible, and players must manage hunger. However, it is different in many ways as well. In Java Edition, blocks can be destroyed only with an item/tool that has the can_break component, and cannot be destroyed by the player's fist. Likewise, blocks require the can_place_on component to be placed. In Bedrock Edition, similarly, can_destroy and can_place_on NBT tags are required to destroy and place blocks. However, players are able to make use of the environment in other ways - including interacting with mobs and other entities (for example, killing them), turning a redstone mechanism (such as a lever) on or off, and trading with villagers. Additionally, players are able to craft items as they normally would in any other game mode. Another feature is that players always spawn exactly on the world spawn point, no matter where it is - unlike Survival mode, where players can spawn anywhere within a certain grid. Custom Minecraft maps make good use of Adventure mode, and many custom maps are set to this game mode; players cannot break blocks or place them, therefore disallowing them to destroy the map, or add anything to it that would ruin the map. Also, it is often used to protect various multiplayer servers from griefers. Command blocks are usually used in conjunction with Adventure mode, in servers and custom maps. Players with the ability worldbuilder set to true can break and place blocks freely on Adventure mode.‌[Bedrock Edition and Minecraft Education only] A player can switch to Adventure mode from any other game mode by using the command /gamemode adventure when commands are enabled. In Java Edition, if no custom data components are used, interactions with the world are divided in the following way: History Issues Issues relating to "Adventure" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. See also References Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Raw_Beef] | [TOKENS: 201]
Raw Beef Common 32 game ticks (1.6 seconds) 3 () 1.8 () Heals: 1.2HP × 0.6Duration: 0.6 seconds No Yes Yes (64) Raw beef is a food item that can be eaten by the player or cooked in a furnace, smoker, or campfire to make steak. Contents Obtaining Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Usage To eat raw beef, press and hold use while it is selected in the hotbar. Eating one restores 3 () hunger and 1.8 hunger saturation. Raw beef can be used to breed and heal tamed wolves, lead them around, and make baby tamed wolves grow up faster by 10% of the remaining time. Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Advancements History Issues Issues relating to "Raw Beef" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Gallery Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Experience#Images] | [TOKENS: 1434]
Experience 5HP In Java Edition: Height: 0.5 blocksWidth: 0.5 blocks In Bedrock Edition: Height: 0.25 blocksWidth: 0.25 blocks Experience (EXP or XP for short) can be gained from defeating mobs or performing many kinds of other actions. Experience has no direct effect on the player character, but it can be used to enhance their equipment through enchanting, or by using an anvil to repair, rename, or combine enchantments on equipment. Most sources of experience are produced in the form of experience orbs. In Java Edition, experience gained affects the player's score on the death screen. Experience orbs also recover durability on items with Mending that are being worn or are in-hand. Contents Sources Experience can be gained from several different sources. Most sources drop experience in the form of orbs, which can be claimed by any player, while a few methods directly award the player experience upon completing the action. Gathering experience points increases the player's experience level by gradually filling a bar on the bottom of the screen until a new level is achieved when the bar is full. When the player dies, they drop experience orbs worth 7 * current level experience points, up to a maximum of 100 points (enough to reach approximately 7.5 levels), and all of the other experience vanishes. If the gamerule keepInventory is set to true, the experience is kept even if the player dies. Experience orbs Most experience sources drop experience in the form of experience orbs, which can then be claimed by any player. Experience orbs fade between green and yellow colors and float or glide toward the player up to a distance of 7.25 blocks (calculated from the center of player's feet and the center of the experience orb), speeding up as they get nearer to the player. Experience orbs pulled toward a player are slowed by cobwebs. Experience orbs can also be pulled around or away from the player by running water currents. When collected, experience orbs make a bell-like sound for a split second. Unlike items, experience points are picked up gradually: no matter how many orbs are in the range of the player, they are added to the player's experience one at a time (10 orbs/second). In extreme cases, this can result in the player being followed by a swarm of orbs for many seconds. If an experience orb isn't collected within 5 minutes of its appearance, it despawns. Experience orbs vary in value. The general worth of an orb is reflected by its size, with eleven possible sizes corresponding to specific values. The three smallest sizes are the most commonly encountered, as the majority of experience dropped by mobs and blocks is less than ten. Dense experience orbs with values 17 or higher have orange "eyes" or "cores", and are less frequently encountered, most commonly from defeating the ender dragon, wither and other players, disenchanting objects on a grindstone, breaking spawners, and collecting items from high-traffic furnaces. For performance improvement, experience orbs of the same value can merge into a single entity, but they do not create a higher value orb. Naturally spawned orbs always have an integer value of 1–11, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, or 2477. Fishing, breeding, and trading drop a single orb with a random value in the appropriate range. Breaking blocks, killing mobs and players, smelting items, and bottles o' enchanting calculate their total experience amount and then split it into the base values of orbs by size (1, 3, 7, 17, 37, 73, 149, 307, 617, 1237, and 2477). Higher values are chosen first, so, for example, a total value of 1000 would be dropped as orbs with values 617, 307, 73, and 3. While the first ender dragon in a world drops 12,000 experience, it is dropped in 10 waves of 1000 and one of 2000, so no orbs of value 2477 are dropped. Such orbs can exist in the world via furnaces that have had a lot of traffic. Like items, experience orbs float when on water. Experience orbs can be destroyed by fire, lava, explosions, and cacti, and can trigger pressure plates and tripwires. Experience orbs can also stop minecarts. In Bedrock Edition, although mob drops spawn the instant the final blow is dealt to the mob, experience orbs do not appear until the mob entity disappears and the smoke appears. In Java Edition, experience orbs appear in the same spatial and temporal location as loot when an entity is killed. Orbs with negative values can be created using the /summon command, either using values below 0 or above 32767 due to 16-bit integer overflow. They use the smallest texture of experience orb. Negative orbs behave differently from positive orbs, namely that they do not deduct experience when collected by the player. They deduct durability from a tool enchanted with Mending, provided the tool is already damaged prior to collection of the orbs. The following mobs and similar entities do not drop experience when killed: Leveling up The formulas for figuring out how many experience orbs needed to get to the next level are as follows: One can determine how much experience has been collected to reach a level using the equations: Likewise, to get the number of levels from the total experience value, one can utilize the following inverse equations: Score The score is the number of experience the player has collected since their last death. This number is the total experience the player has collected, rather than the amount of experience they had upon death. When the player dies, the score is displayed on the death screen. Sounds Java Edition: Experience orbs do not use entity-dependent sound events. Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Experience orbs have entity data associated with them that contain various properties. Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Videos History The experience level costs were heavily revised in snapshot 12w22a and 12w23a, and again in version 1.8. Before these, reaching level 50 (the maximum usable on a single enchantment) required 4625 experience, corresponding to defeating 925 hostile mobs (assuming the "common" ones.) Afterward, considerably less experience is needed to get into higher levels. Higher levels cost more experience than lower ones, but the levels are still easier to get than in 1.2.5. Now, level 30 is the maximum for enchantments, and that cost is equivalent of 279 "common" enemies, less than 1/3 the old price. A player dropping excessive experience orbs upon death may cause performance degradation in the game. Issues Issues relating to "Experience" or "Orb" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery References Navigation More More Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Bedrock] | [TOKENS: 868]
Bedrock No Yes (64) None 3,600,000 -1 No No No No 11 STONE Bedrock is an indestructible block found in all three dimensions. Contents Obtaining Bedrock can be obtained only from the Creative inventory, using pick block in Creative mode, or commands. Bedrock can't be destroyed by breaking. Bedrock drops nothing when destroyed. Bedrock comprises the five bottommost layers of the Overworld and the Nether in a rough pattern, although the top four layers are predominantly flat bedrock with only rare gaps, rendering the lowest, completely flat fifth layer (at Y=-64) mostly inaccessible. The distribution of bedrock is dependent on the world seed. ‌[JE only] In the Nether, bedrock additionally comprises the top five layers in a rough pattern. At the top of the Nether (Y=127), the layer is composed solely of bedrock, preventing the player from ascending above Y=127 without switching their gamemode to Creative or Spectator, or exploiting glitches. The patterns of bedrock are consistent in the Nether in Java and Bedrock editions. In the End, a single block of bedrock generates on top of each End spike, each topped with an End crystal. The bedrock remains after the destruction of the crystal and is lit on fire indefinitely. Bedrock additionally composes part of the exit portal at the center of the central island. Unlike in other dimensions, there is no bedrock floor at the bottom of the End, meaning it is possible to fall into the void without exploiting glitches. An unlimited number of End gateways generate randomly across the outer End islands, each consisting of 12 blocks of bedrock and an End gateway block. If the bedrock that makes up the exit portal is removed by any means, it regenerates when the ender dragon is defeated or re-summoned. An End gateway is generated on the central End island upon the death of each ender dragon, which is mostly made of bedrock. A total of 20 of these gateways generate in a circle centered on the exit portal in set positions. A corresponding End gateway is generated in the inner edge of the outer islands after an End gateway on the central island is activated for the first time. Usage Bedrock generates at the bottom of the Overworld and the Nether to prevent entities from falling into the void in these dimensions. The bedrock ceiling in the Nether prevents players from accessing the Nether roof, which is meant to be an empty out-of-bounds area. Bedrock generates as part of End gateways, end spikes tops and End exit portals to prevent those parts of the structures from being broken. Mobs do not spawn on bedrock. Endermen are unable to place the block they are holding onto bedrock. Beacons treat bedrock as a transparent block, meaning their beams can pass through it, allowing beacons to be used in the Nether. In the End, any fire on bedrock never extinguishes naturally, similar to netherrack, but does not spread. Since bedrock is indestructible in Survival, it can be used against withers. Certain configurations of bedrock (such as that found under the exit portal) can be used to securely trap withers by spawning them below the bedrock.‌[Java Edition only] The wither can then be easily killed, utilized to break blocks automatically, or used to farm wither roses. Bedrock is one of the only two blocks on which End crystals can be placed, the other being obsidian. Placing four End crystals on bedrock around the exit portals triggers respawning the ender dragon. Placing an End crystal on bedrock in the End sets it on fire. Note blocks can be placed above bedrock to produce "bass drum" sounds. Bedrock is unable to be pushed or pulled by either of the piston variants (regular or sticky). Sounds Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: Data values Java Edition: Bedrock Edition: In Bedrock Edition, bedrock uses the following block states: Bedrock Edition: Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Bedrock" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Trivia Gallery External links Navigation Navigation menu
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[SOURCE: https://minecraft.wiki/w/Item#Bedrock_Edition_2] | [TOKENS: 898]
Item An item is an object that can exist within inventories of players, mobs, or armor stands; in various storage blocks (like chests or droppers), as well as in item frames, glow item frames, and shelves. Contents Behavior Some items when used, place a block (ItemBlock) or entity (minecart, spawn eggs, etc.) version of themselves into the game world. Put simply, they are an item when in the inventory, and a block when placed. For example, boats turn into an entity when placed, and beds turn into a group of blocks when placed. When selected in the hotbar, items briefly display their names above the HUD. The only methods by which an item can be properly displayed within the game environment is to place it into an item frame, shelf, or armor stand. Displayed items, either on these blocks, the hand (both third-person and first-person), or thrown, are rendered in-game with MERS texture sets with Vibrant Visuals, and can show shadows, reflections, or caustics. Various items have emissive lighting and glow in the dark. If an item that does not become a block is dropped, it becomes an entity represented by a sprite that floats above the ground. It remains for 5 minutes in a loaded chunk before despawning (except for the Nether star), unless the player walks over it to pick it up, it is picked up by a mob, hopper or minecart with hopper, or it is destroyed by fire, lava, cactus, explosion, void, or /kill. A submerged object ascends toward the water's surface. If the water is flowing, the object is pushed along with it. Hoppers draw in any items that are placed above them if they are not powered by redstone. 0.98 degUnreachable1 Direct hit Items can either stack up to 64 or 16, or not stack at all: Lists of items Technical blocks serve various purposes during events within the game, or use a separate name spaced ID in order to avoid unnecessary combinations of block states. In Java Edition technical blocks do not exist as items, while in Bedrock Edition they may be obtained using inventory editors or add-ons. These items, when highlighted in a player's hotbar (or "held"), in the off hand, or equipped in an armor slot, can be used by either attack or use, or can serve a specific purpose (for example, offer the player advantage or disadvantage). Some can be used any time, others only when aiming at specific blocks or entities. The player cannot interact with or directly use these items; however, they are used for trading, brewing, enchanting, or crafting ingredients for other items that do have direct uses. Clocks and recovery compasses are exceptions, as they merely serve an informative function (although clocks also attract piglins as a dropped item entity). Spawn eggs spawn the entity inside them. They cannot be obtained in Survival mode. These items are exclusive to Minecraft Education and Bedrock Edition when the "Minecraft Education features" cheat setting is enabled. The portfolio is exclusive to Minecraft Education, and the poster, slate, and camera are obtainable in Bedrock Edition only through inventory editing or add-ons. The garbage item is obtainable only through invalid lab table recipes or via inventory editing. Some items are unimplemented, or have been mentioned to be implemented in the future. Removed items no longer exist in current versions of the game. These blocks were removed from the game entirely. These blocks were "retconned" into other blocks through a major simultaneous name and texture change. Some blocks and states of blocks were distinguished via numerical metadata in previous versions of the game. Having metadata values outside of the accepted range could produce unintended results for some block IDs. Joke items are present only in April Fools' Day joke versions in the game. These blocks only exist in April Fools' Day joke versions of the game. Display by entities Mobs and some other entities are capable of holding items as well as having them equipped in certain slots; in some cases, this results in the item being displayed visually. A table of mobs that do this is as follows. Note that this does not count equipment, which uses a separate system. Videos History Issues Issues relating to "Item" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there. Gallery See also Notes References Navigation Navigation menu
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