Minecraft version 1.14.4 is out now

Minecraft version 1.14.4 is out now

There’s a new version of the Java version of Minecraft. The 1.14.4 patch contains a lot of bugfixes for the Villagers and Pillagers update, which Mojang described as Minecraft’s biggest update ever. As always there’s some entertaining stuff hidden in those bugfix notes, my favorite being “Villagers will now remember their gossip after becoming a Zombie Villager”. And “Gossip about players who converted a zombie villager will now last longer” isn’t bad either.

Now that these fixes are live, the team at Mojang aim to knuckle down and get to work on version 1.15, which as well as adding new features “will also focus on quality and performance improvements”.

Here’s the list of changes in version 1.14.4, for the complete bugfixes head over to the Minecraft blog.

  • Fixed bugs
  • Performance improvements
  • Suspicious stew made from poppies now gives you night vision instead of speed
  • Added /debug report for getting more detailed information. Please include this while making bug reports about performance!
  • Fixed a memory leak
  • Removed camera pivot offset in first-person
  • Improved chunk loading when travelling at high speed
  • Fixed incorrect Pillager texture
  • /reload and /forceload is now available to gamemasters
  • function-permission-level is a new setting in server.properties that controls which commands functions have access to
  • Villagers now stock more items
  • Villagers will now remember their gossip after becoming a Zombie Villager 
  • Improved performance of Villager pathfinding
  • Villagers can now work without also restocking at the same time
  • Gossip about players who converted a zombie villager will now last longer
  • The Player Activity button on the Realm screen has been removed
  • Villagers now wait with restocking until they have trades that need restocking
  • Village sieges no longer occur on mushroom islands
  • Mobs will no longer try to pathfind their way through bamboo
  • Pinged the human
Best Minecraft texture packs for Java Edition

Best Minecraft texture packs for Java Edition

From Borderlands-like cartoons to realistically sunny vistas, here are the best texture upgrades to shape your playing experience

Looking for the best Minecraft texture packs for the Java Edition? Minecraft’s low-fi charms were predictably the first thing modders took to ‘fixing’. The ruddy textures, while distinctive, are an obvious target for an upgrade if you stare at them long enough.

I confess that when I found a texture pack I loved I’ve never gone back to the original look: I’m going to start off with that one and then explore the the rather vibrant world of Minecraft Texture packs. There’s nothing too crazy in here: those packs tend to be part of larger mods that fundamentally change the game, and that’s another article entirely.

But what we do have here is a fantastic selection of textures that bring all sorts of style to the game, from the ultra-realistic to the cartoonish to far out sci fi. There’s even an animated textures included, a feature supported since development snapshot 13w02a was released, although they’re not yet implemented in the main game. Not sure how to grab and install one of these snapshots? Don’t worry, we can help you with that too. Click through to be delighted by the variety and vibrancy of Minecraft’s many texture packs.

HOW TO INSTALL MINECRAFT TEXTURE PACKS

Before you begin, download and point the MCPatcher at your Minecraft install: it’ll enable the game to run with HD images on the blocks, which many of these packs include. If you want to try out any of those animated textures with a development snapshot, here’s how to test Minecraft snapshots. It’s not difficult and the rewards are well worth it.

All these textures are compatible with the 1.4.7 version of Minecraft, so if you want to minimise the amount of switching you’ll have to do, fire up that version. Also keep in mind that if you try some of the snapshots, they will likely contain elements that the texture pack creators haven’t yet made textures for, meaning they’ll either be blank or even invisible.

Another thing to note is that this list is directed at the Java edition of Minecraft, so if you’re using the newer Bedrock edition you’re likely to run into some issues as MCPatcher doesn’t get along with the new launcher -not now, anyway.

THE BEST MINECRAFT TEXTURE PACKS

Okay, now that’s out of the way. Let’s start with something big and bright. We’re going to change the world, or your world, at least.

minecraft-best-texture-packs-jolicraft



Jolicraft

A lot of texture packs have a theme that they try and nail, but Joli’s is about personal expression: he made a texture pack, a sort of twee fantasy world that best reflected his own happy demeanour: the swirling sun is definitely a sight more cheerful than the default, squat square. Jolicraft feels like a warm summer day. But even more impressive are the customisation options: you can build your own texture pack at the site, choosing how the game represents everything from doors and shadows, to water drops and clouds. It’s a remarkable thing.

JohnSmith
This is one of the most popular texture packs out there, in part I’m sure because it too is quite customisable, but also because it has some fantastically creepy-looking skeletons and it does a fine job with surfaces, be those rock, cobblestone or even netherrack. Compared to Jollicraft, it’s a much more sombre pack, but a Minecraft world looks surprisingly good with muted colours.

Glimmar’s Steampunk 
And if sombre is your sort of thing, then I thoroughly recommend you give this pack a try. As well as its slightly faded walls, its glimmering starfield and its gorgeous moon, this steampunk pack also features some fantastic tools and skins. Just check out the how golem looks above.

minecraft-best-texture-packs-painterly-pack

Painterly Pack 
While we’re on the subject of customisation, you should also have at this pack, which is as much a tool as it is a way to revamp the look of your game. Not happy with the pack you just downloaded? Want to contribute your own ideas? Why not get started here, it’s not as difficult as you might think.

Isabella 
If you’d prefer something a little more subtle, a little more muted, then Isabella’s gentle shading might be what you’re looking for. Its tones are softer, its wood warmer and its stone faded, all of which gives it a more natural feel. As natural as a world made from giant blocks can ever be, that is.


Chroma Hills 
Some of us, I’m sure, would just prefer the prettiest textures that they can find and Chroma Hills is certainly one of the best-looking out there, even if it’s beautiful stylings are slightly at odds with the blockiness of Minecraft’s world. To get the very best from it you’ll want to make sure you use some shaders too, but even without those it’s still a fine lookin’ thang.

Creative One’s Medieval Texture Pack 
Another lovely HD patch, the Medieval Texture Pack features a lot of subtle and yet very smart touches, such as the glow from an Ender chest (see the video below) or the woven texture in wool blocks. It also gives much of the game a very worn look, which, it turns out, suits Minecraft very well indeed.

minecraft-best-texture-packs-ocd-2

oCd Texture Pack 
I dabbled a bit with oCD’s texture pack before settling on Short Stuff’s: it takes the minimalist approach, rendering all the blocks in solid colours with bold lines. It’s striking, and removes the organic nature that I wanted. The colours seem a bit bolder and punchier. The theme is actually disco, hence the funky trailer.

Misa’s Realistic Texture Pack 
Realism is an odd term when you’re talking about a world made out of cubes, and yet it’s one of the most prevalent goals for the Minecraft modding community. If trying Isabella has made you want something grubbier, something with muddier ground and fluffier clouds then Misa’s pack brings all this to the game.

If the real world was built out of cubes, it would look a bit like Misa’s interpretation. It’s not flashy, it’s for those looking for a “grim up north” feeling. And the pigs are terrifying.

minecraft-best-texture-packs-summerfield

Summerfields 
This is my antidote to Misa’s grubby brown realism: if Misa’s texture packwas Game of Thrones, then Summerfields is LotR before Frodo goes off in his quest. The browns here feel like they glow, radiating the heat of the summer day that beats down from the fuzzy, circular sun: even the skeletons feel a bit cheerful I’m pretty sure the people who live in Misa’s end of the world would take holiday in Summerfields.

Sphax PureBDCraft 
The flipside of the inevitable realism packs was that someone would endeavour to convert Minecraft to a comic book style. The blocks demanded it. BDCraft’s is a gorgeous, and essentially reverential, upgrading of the base Minecraft graphics: switching between them is like putting on glasses and seeing everything clearly for the first time: ore is full of clear gems, the new grass as chunky as an anime character’s head. It’s sharp, colourful and a good upgrade to base Minecraft that retains its flavour.

Cartoon Default 
This pack almost turns the game into Borderlands, drawing bold black lines around mobs and objects, but still keeping everything very recognisable and extremely true to the original look of the game. With these textures, Minecraft becomes posterized, but also an awful lot clearer. While it might not be to everyone’s taste, or terribly easy on the eyes, you can’t deny that it has style.


DEFAnimation 
Animated texture packs are still a rarity, partly because relatively few people are going to use them right now. Since animated textures are only supported by a recent development snapshot, most players won’t have a version of Minecraft that can make use of them and will have no reason to seek them out. That said, more and more people are trying those snapshots and we’d like to think that perhaps PCGamesN’s encouragement has had some part in this.

This pack adds some wonderful animations to the game, wonderful because they’re so subtle and a great example of the tiny but impressive changes that animated textures can make. Unmined ores sparkled in the darkness, weapons shine and lava seethes.

Bladecraft 
I’m sorry, I just had to end with something a little different, something a little sillier. Who says Minecraft should only be about the pseudo-fantasy, pastoral theme?

BladeCraft throws it into the near future and creates something… well, actually, something really quite impressive. I feel bad for even suggesting that this is silly now. Now enjoy what is by far the coolest of all the videos in this post.

minecraft-best-texture-packs-faithful

Faithful Maybe you’re not looking for a wholesale change, and want something that adds some sheen on what’s already there. If that’s the case, then the Faithful texture pack is what you’ll want to install. The changes you’ll notice here merely smooth out textures, and refine what’s already present.

And there you go, the best Minecraft texture packs. Whether you’re looking for a pack to turn your Minecraft world into a cartoon, or one to make it look more like the real world, you should find what you’re looking for here.

Minecraft brewing guide: how to use a Minecraft brewing stand to make potent potions

Minecraft brewing guide: how to use a Minecraft brewing stand to make potent potions

Learn the Minecraft brewing basics for cooking up potions and saving the day in Mojang’s blocky universe

If you’re new to Minecraft brewing and want to get to grips with the basics – including what on earth you should do with your phantom membranes – we’ve created a simple guide to get you started. Our guide includes Minecraft brewing equipment, key ingredients, and some of the most powerful mixtures you can concoct.

Minecraft brewing can be used to create a vast array of consumable potions that will cause various status effects, such as healing buffs, strength enhancers, and elemental cures. All potions created from brewing require a base ingredient, which can then be adapted and enhanced using a secondary ingredient and/or modifier.

We’ve broken down exactly what you’ll need in this Minecraft brewing guide below, including some of the most common ingredients and their effects. We’ll start by breaking down the key equipment you’ll need to get started on your journey to become a Minecraft brewing pro before moving onto the ingredients you’ll be combining. So, without further ado, here’s your Minecraft brewing primer for beginners.

Click the links below to the part of this Minecraft brewing guide you need:

MINECRAFT BREWING EQUIPMENT

  • Brewing stand: used to add and combine ingredients into water bottles
  • Cauldron: holds one bucket of water or three bottles of a single potion. The cauldron equates to three glass bottles
  • Blaze powder: the fuel for brewing, an essential to fuel the brewing stand
  • Glass bottle: used at a water source to create a water bottle. Is also the potion container
  • Water bottle: the starting base for all potions, created from filling a glass bottle at a water source or cauldron
Minecraft brewing stand

HOW TO USE A MINECRAFT BREWING STAND

  • Fill 1-3 glass bottles with water from either a cauldron or a water source
  • Place the water bottle(s) into the bottom three slots
  • Fill the top spot with the base ingredient
  • Use Blaze Powder for the brewing process
  • Repeat these steps until you have the desired potion

MINECRAFT BREWING INGREDIENTS

BASE

The base ingredients are the first ingredient added to the brewing process. Every potion requires a base ingredient, which determine the potion’s type. The base ingredients are listed below, along with the type of potion each ingredient creates. The modifier effect is when the ingredient is used at the end of the brewing process, to enhance or adapt potions.

IngredientPotion typeModifier effect
Nether WartAwkward PotionNone
Redstone DustMundane PotionExtends potion duration
Glowstone DustThick PotionEnhances potion potency
Fermented Spider EyePotion of WeaknessCorrupts a potion, reversing its effects
GunpowderSplash Water BottleExplodes on impact
Dragon’s BreathLingering Water BottleExplodes on impact, leaves a damaging cloud

SECONDARY

The secondary ingredient, also known as the effect ingredient, is to be added to the base one. This ingredient will influence the type of potion created.

 IngredientEffect
 SugarSwiftness
 Rabbit’s FootSwiftness
 Glistering MelonHealing
 PufferfishWater breathing
Magma CreamFire resistance
 Golden CarrotNight vision
 Blaze PowderStrength
 Ghast TearRegeneration
 Turtle ShellWater breathing
 Phantom MembranesSlow falling
 Fermented Spider EyePoison

ELEMENT INGREDIENTS

An addition to Minecraft brewing can be found in the Minecraft Bedrock and Education Editions and includes the elemental ingredients below that can cure nausea, weakness, poison, and blindness.

ElementEffect cured
BismuthNausea
CobaltWeakness
SilverPoison
CalciumBlindness

If you’re excited to venture out from the confines of your mining sanctuary, brewing in Minecraft is a great skill to have. Now you’re familiar with the basics, you can experiment with Minecraft brewing recipes to create potions to suit your combat needs.

Some of the Minecraft potions created from brewing include poison, fire resistance, and healing, but ingredients can be combined and manipulated to create a wide range of potions using Minecraft brewing recipes. But, for now, best of luck on finding the materials you need to help you in your future endeavours.

Twitch suspends streamer Anomaly for showing a Hitler skin in Minecraft

Twitch suspends streamer Anomaly for showing a Hitler skin in Minecraft

Earlier this week, prominent streamer Ludvig ‘Anomaly’ Lagerstedt received a 30-day suspension from Twitch after he briefly showed a Minecraft skin depicting Adolph Hitler. Anomaly is appealing the ban – he says it’s “quite excessive” – but the streamer has already gotten into hot water with Twitch over hateful conduct in the past.

In the offending clip, Anomaly opens his Minecraft inventory and immediately closes it as he realises the Hitler skin is on display. “Oh my god, I have the wrong skin on me,” he says, bursting into laughter. On Twitter after the ban, Anomaly said “I had the skin because me and some friends were gonna record a Minecraft video and I was gonna make a little joke about ‘Meinkraft’ and forgot to change back the skin.”

According to the relevant bits of Twitch’s community guidelines, “hateful conduct is any content or activity that promotes, encourages, or facilitates discrimination, denigration, objectification, harassment, or violence” against people in a wide range of categories, and it’s not hard to see how Twitch might recognise Hitler jokes as – at the very least – ‘facilitating denigration.’

It’s not the first time Anomaly has been banned from Twitch for inappropriate conduct, as Dot Esports notes. Over a year ago, he received an indefinite suspension from the platform for violating the hateful conduct rules.

While we never officially got confirmation on why that ban happened – obviously it was eventually overturned – it did come immediately after a clip in which Anomaly dressed a black PUBG character in prison clothes, and followed with the same sort of exaggerated laugh we hear in the Minecraft clip.

Minecraft may be headed to Tesla cars, Cuphead coming in August

Minecraft may be headed to Tesla cars, Cuphead coming in August

Kill time behind the wheel in the wide, wide world of Minecraft.

What you need to know

  • Minecraft may be on its way to another platform: Tesla cars.
  • Tesla founder Elon Musk tweeted that the company is working on bringing the blocky game to its vehicles, and it’s a “high priority.”
  • Musk also revealed that Cuphead will launch in Teslas in August.

Minecraft has already become one of the most ubiquitous games out there, with ports on nearly every platform you can think of. However, you might be able to add another, unconventional platform to that list soon: Tesla vehicles.

Tesla founder Elon Musk recently tweeted that Minecraft is on his company’s list of to-dos for game ports. Going further, Musk says it’s a high priority, alongside Roblox.

We’re working on it. Agreed, Minecraft is high priority. Roblox too.3,4239:41 AM – Jul 28, 2019Twitter Ads info and privacy456 people are talking about this

Teslas all feature a large displays from which you control much of the car’s functions. Tesla has been gradually adding games to the built-in computers for months now, including Atari titles, Beach Buggy Racing 2, and even chess. Of course, the games are only meant to be played while the car is at rest, so don’t get your hopes up for playing Minecraft as you drive. That’s just plain dangerous.

In further Tesla game news, Studio MDHR’s notoriously difficult Cuphead, which was teased earlier this year, will launch on Tesla vehicles in August, Musk confirmed in another tweet.

For those of us without a Tesla, both Cuphead and Minecraft are available to pick up across Xbox One, Windows 10, and a number of other platforms in the meantime.

Minecraft Monday Week 6: Teams, live stream and results

Minecraft Monday Week 6: Teams, live stream and results

Minecraft Monday is returning for Week 6 as the UMG event put together by Keemstar continues.

The Week 6 rosters were recently announced, although the full teams aren’t complete yet. The first roster release says Bajan_Canadian is still in need of a partner. They have a few more hours to find a partner, so hopefully we’ll have full rosters by the time it starts.

ShotGunPlays & Technoblade won Week 1, Technoblade & iBallisticSquid won Week 2, traves & cscoop won Week 3, Vikkstar123 & Preston won Week 4 and Skeppy & BadBoyHalo won Week 5. Skeppy and BadBoyHalo are teamed up again for Week 6, so we could see a repeat champ.

When does Minecraft Monday start?

  • Date: July 22nd
  • Time: 4 p.m. EST, 1 p.m. PT

How to stream Minecraft Monday Week 6

UMG will be streaming the event live above.

You can also watch live from individual streamers on their respective platforms (some stream on Twitch, others stream on YouTube, a rare few choose other outlets).

Minecraft Monday Week 6 teams, rosters

WEEK 6Player 1Player 2
Team 1James CharlesConnorEatsPants
Team 2SchlattTechnopig
Team 3JackSucksAtLifeDangthatsalongname
Team 4YammyLaurenzSide
Team 5TravesCscoop
Team 6CaptainSparklezAntVenom
Team 7DanTDMThinkNoodles
Team 8PrestonLogodoptiz
Team 9GoodGuyFitzSwaggerSouls
Team 10JeromeASF‪Ph1LzA‬
Team 11SkeppyBadBoyHalo
Team 12Vikkstar123ZerkaaHD
Team 13CallMeCarsonYTNivison
Team 14iHasCupquakeJaidenAnimations
Team 15AphmauNepentheZ
Team 16Jon BamsPapalatte
Team 17QuackityJunkyJanker
Team 18xQcm0xy
Team 19DennisSub
Team 20Bajan_CanadianNEED PARTNER

Minecraft Monday rules, scoring system

  • Eliminations: +10 Score
  • Victory: +30 Score
  • Top 2 Teams: +20 Score
  • Top 3 Teams: +10 Score
  • Surviving: +2 Score (Whenever a team is eliminated all other remaining teams earn +2 Score)

An added note, scoring for placements, surviving and victories are split between teammates if both are alive. But if one member of the team gets eliminated, the score is awarded to the surviving teammate.

There’s no cheating allowed. Cheating includes no cross-teaming, no “feeding” to help another team no mods or resource packs that grant unfair advantages. Trash talk is allowed, but toxic trash talk could result in a ban.

UMG listed the games played as follows for Week 5. This section hasn’t been updated for Week 6, so we’ll keep an eye out in case it changes.

  • 1. Hunger Games (Spark City)
  • 2. TNT Run
  • 3. Dropper
  • 4. Spleef
  • 5. Battle Arena
  • 6. Find The Button
  • 7. Run From The Lava
  • 8. Bingo Hunt
  • 9. Hunger Games (MAP)

Minecraft Monday Week 6 results

The leaderboard above will update throughout the tournament, and you can check at the end of the event who won.