Love adventuring? This mod adds a new, densely-forested dimension shrouded in perpetual twilight that hides both valuable treasures and dangerous monsters. Throw a diamond into a pool of water surrounded by flowers to create a portal there, then spend a while roaming around. You'll find hedge mazes, hollow hills, enchanted groves, glaciers, lich towers and more with rich rewards for those that delve the deepest.
If you like the agricultural aspects of Minecraft, you're going to love Forestry. It's a huge mod, which adds a bunch of new items, machines and blocks, but it's best known for its bees. You can become an apiarist, capturing wild bees and cross-breeding them using real genetic principles to create masses of different useful resources. If I were teaching biology, I'd be using this in the classroom. Creepers not giving you enough grief? We can fix that. The Chameleon Creepers mod makes it so when a creeper passes over a block type, it changes color in the hopes of stealthily blending in to its surroundings.
Pam's HarvestCraft adds 58 new crops, 35 fruit trees, 12 bushes and 16 fish for you to track down, including—vegetarians rejoice—the ability to use tofu in place of meat for any recipe. It's a veritable culinary explosion, and your mouth will thank you. Feeling hungry? You will be after you install Hunger Overhaul.
It makes hunger more of a challenge, rather than a mild annoyance, reducing the amount of hunger each food item refills. Bibliocraft began as a way to store books in bookcases. There are armour stands, potion shelves, cookie jars, clocks, lanterns, display cases, nifty multipart chairs, and even tables and tablecloths. Once you're done with Bibliocraft, your home base might actually start to look like a home. With the recently revealed Picard looking so good, it seems like a good time to try and explore space, the final frontier.
You can build your own space rocket, launch yourself into the starry sky, and then go on adventures from there. You can actually visit planets which have their own atmospheres and mobs, as well as building your very own space station. Now you can have your friends call you up at stupid hours to spoil the latest Game of Thrones episode in-game.
And just like a regular phone, the EyePhone comes equipped with a selection of apps with more unlockable via diamonds. The best feature, though, has to be the ability to email your friends to blow them up, because why not?
Tools are the backbone of everything you do in Minecraft, and Tinker's Construct lets you make far better tools out of a much wider range of materials. They're upgradable, modular, and can be repaired if they break. Oh, and the mod also adds a smeltery to make high-end tools and increase ore processing efficiency. You can probably guess what these mods do. That's right—they both substantially upgrade the capabilities of Minecraft's minecarts. RailCraft adds a bunch of new types of track, including sophisticated redstone-controlled junctions and signals, while Steve's Carts pumps up the capabilities of the carts themselves—adding brakes, shields, drills and more.
You can even make an attachment that launches fireworks. Getting stuff to where it needs to be is often a problem in Minecraft. EnderIO solves that problem impressively elegantly, by adding compact conduits that carry fluid, items, power and redstone signals.
It also has a few machines that enhance your ore processing capabilities, too. When your base starts getting complicated, EnderIO is one of the best ways to sort it out. Storage can also become an issue when you start automating more and more aspects of Minecraft. Applied Energistics solves the problem by turning the matter in your chests into energy, which is then stored on disk drives, accessible wirelessly from anywhere in your base.
You can even use it to autocraft anything you need by interfacing directly with your machines. If that sounds a bit magical, you wouldn't be wrong. It uses vast amounts of power, of course, but once properly configured you'll come to see wooden chests as hopelessly primitive relics of the past. This family of mods are a grab bag of immensely useful utilities with no real theme running through them. OpenBlocks adds sleeping bags, hang gliders, elevators, gravestones, rope ladders and building guides.
It's always refreshing seeing mods that try something a bit different. PneumatiCraft is a tech mod, but instead of power it uses air pressure. You'll need to build compression chambers, pipes and valves to make sure you balance the flow of air, and if you get things wrong an explosion is inevitable. If you get it right, though, the nifty gadgets that PneumatiCraft brings to the table, like air cannons and configurable helmets, are well worth the time investment.
Those of you that work frequently with redstone will know what a pain it can sometimes be. Project Red changes all that, bringing vastly improved control over what you're doing and allowing you to make your circuits much more compact. It also adds integrated logic gates, making task automation way easier. Worth having around if you ever might want to work with redstone. Another incredibly useful automation tool is Steve's Factory Manager, now being updated for current Minecraft versions as Super Factory Manager.
Like ComputerCraft, it's a little on the fiddly side and requires a bit of knowledge of programming concepts to get going. Once you've got the hang of the drag-and-drop interface however, you'll be amazed by the possibilities.
For automating a factory, there's no better solution. How do you fancy creating your own Aperture testing lab? Included in this modpack are a wealth of different Portal-themed blocks and, more importantly, a selection of Portal appliances, which includes floor buttons for dumping companion cubes onto, pedestal buttons, and indicator lights.
While we're learning biology, let's learn some programming too! ComputerCraft adds programmable computers and turtles into Minecraft, which you can write code to control. It's based on the easy-to-learn Lua programming language, and with it you can make passworded doors, private chatrooms, automated mining turtles, and even in-game videogames. The possibilities are endless. From the days before vanilla Minecraft exploded with new animals, LotsOMobs added tons of its own. Rather than just adding a couple of animals here or there, it adds over forty new mobs, including creatures like bees, ants, mammoths, and even cavemen.
On top of that, there are a few new items to spawn some of these mods, and even new portals to go through leading to new biomes. Peter R Fleming Xbox Ambassador. Where can I download mods from? How do I use a mod? Can mods break my world? Do Realms work with mods? Report abuse. Details required :. Cancel Submit. How satisfied are you with this discussion? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. Wow didnt even know there was mod support, ive download some mods the game is even funner now.
How satisfied are you with this reply? When we have it, we will know all its content. I'm afraid I'll never purchase bedrock until it's got the mod possibilities java has. In reply to accused's post on June 23, Hello all,. A subscription to make the most of your time. When downloading Forge, choose the install file that matches your selected mods version requirements.
If your mods are built for version 1. When it comes to hand-held versions of Minecraft, it is still not possible to download and install actual mods. Currently, there are no mods available for the PS4. However, players do have access to add-ons, but you have to purchase them from designated sources. Unfortunately, you cannot add mods to Minecraft on Nintendo Switch. However, you can add as many add-ons as you want. The good thing about Minecraft mods is that you can combine as many as you would like to.
You should then be able to use the new mods after launching Minecraft. In most cases, new mods will integrate with the existing world with no problems. However, sometimes the mod may come with world generation.
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