Minecraft is a game that snuck up on the gaming community and set a wild fire bigger than the ones in California! The game itself is based around a basic concept: survive, craft, build, conquer. You play the only man in the world who starts with nothing, during the day, it’s safe and you can mine and harvest material, but at night, creatures come out, including Zombies and Skeleton Archers. There is no tutorial mode or any helpful arrows that point you where to go. But we will tell you how to survive in Minecraft!
How to Survive in Minecraft
Step 1: Generating the World
When you open the game you have a few options to chose from before getting started. I will outline the basics, but there are more you can explore when you play yourself.
The first thing you need to decide is if you want to play in Survival, Creative, or Hardcore mode.
Survival: With survival, you are thrown into a world and must fend to survive. You can change the difficulty (difficulties outlined below), and you must gather all the resources you need to survive.
Creative: You start with everything you could ever find or create in the game (instead of your inventory screen you have a selection screen where you can pick out anything to use). Instead of needing tools to destroy blocks, you can break anything with one hit. You do not have to worry about eating or a health bar. You cannot die even if you jump off a cliff or walk through lava. Lastly, you can fly!
Hardcore: Is like survival except you are on the hardest difficulty which you cannot change. You also only have 1 life to live. Think of this as real life.
Difficulty Levels for Survival Mode:
Peaceful – easiest, no monsters, you can still get hurt and die such as from falling or trying to walk on lava. Your food bar will never deplete, because of that you cannot eat.
Easy – hostile mobs will spawn, but do not damage you as much. Also, the cave spiders cannot poison you at this level. Can survive if food meter runs out.
Normal – hostile mobs spawn and will deal you more damage. In this level, you can still survive if the food meter runs out, but it will run down to half a heart.
Hard – hostile mobs will spawn and cause you the most damage of all the difficulties. If you let your food meter run all the way down, your health will slowly deplete until you die. While doors will usually keep mobs out, at this level, zombies can break down the wood doors.
Another thing you can choose is your FOV (Field of Vision) it ranges from 70 Degrees to 110 Degrees. 70 is the default and what most people use. You can also change this during gameplay.
Time to generate your world!
You never know what it is going to be. It could be a flat desert with nothing for miles, you could immediately be left on an island surrounded by water, or you could get a perfect world with trees and caves aplenty. You will have to adapt to your surroundings right away. Also, make sure to watch your step or you could fall into a cave right away. If you are lucky, you will just take damage, but you could die or you could be stuck in a hole with no light and no supplies to make weapons. So watch your step! Wherever you start is your spawn point. If you die, you will appear back where you first started the game.
Step 2: Wood
The first thing you are going to want to do, is gather wood. It is a necessary resource and you can get it easily, buy just punching trees (some resources require specific tools to obtain).
Just start breaking down all the trees you can.
*Tip: Sometimes the trees are too tall to break all the blocks from the ground. One thing you can do is skip the first (bottom) block and break the two above it. Then you can stand on that block and look up and continue to break all the blocks of the trunk. When you are done, hop down and break the block you were standing on. If you break all the wood of the tree, the leaves will slowly disappear and can drop saplings for planting and even apples!
If the tree is way too tall, you can create a Nerd Pole. A nerd pole is when you look straight down, jump and then lay a block down so you can create a pole while standing on it. I suggest to use dirt as it is easy to re-destroy. To get down, just look down and break the dirt until you are on ground level. (You can also just jump down and leave the dirt if you don’t care about it and you aren’t too high that you will get hurt.)
Once you have wood, you can create a crafting table. That is one of the things you can create in your inventory crafting grid (2 by 2) (many things take a crafting station crafting grid to create them).
To make a Crafting Table:
Put one piece of wood in and this will create wooden planks – 1 Wood Block = 4 Planks
Use 4 planks to make a crafting station – 4 Planks in a square = 1 Crafting Table
Once you have the Crafting Table, just set it on the ground to use it. Now you can create more complicated things like tools and doors.
Step 3: Shelter
Once you have wood, finding/creating shelter is the next thing to knock of your list.
One of the easiest ways to do this is find a dirt hill and carve out a hole in it. Dirt is nice because you can easily break it with your hands. You can also go into stone, but you will need to make a pickax first.
Once night falls, you will need to get in your shelter. You have to make sure you are not exposed to the world. Your options are to:
Block yourself in completely (with wood, dirt, stone, etc)
Create a door – 6 Wood Planks in two columns side by side = 1 wood door*
Block yourself in except for one 1 by 1 block which little can fit through**
Block yourself in with glass so you can see outside (once glass is placed you can only destroy it, you can’t break it and pick it back up), smelt sand to get glass
*A wood door will keep everything out in Easy and Normal. In Hard, Zombies will be able to break down wooden doors.
**You can still be shot by an archer though a 1 by 1 block, so if you leave an opening, make sure there is somewhere you can go in your shelter that is out of view of the opening. Also, cave spiders and baby mobs such as zombies can fit through the hole if they can reach it.
Step 4: Tools
Time to create tools. Some are used for defense, while others are for gathering supplies.
Before you can make tools, you need planks (if you are making wooden tools) and sticks. Also, when it comes to crafting in Minecraft, placement is important. You can have all the right supplies laid out in the crafting grid, but if the are not in the right formation, you will not be able to create what you want.
Crafting:
1 Wood = 4 Planks
2 Planks (stacked on top of each other) = 4 sticks
2 Sticks stacked in the middle + 3 wooden planks along the top row = Wooden Pickax
Needed for collecting stone, you can eventually break stone by punching it, but you need a pickax in order to actually collect any cobblestone from it.
2 Sticks stacked + 1 wood plank on top = Wooden Shovel
Not necessary, but makes breaking dirt, gravel, and sand easier
1 Stick in the bottom + two Planks stacked on top = Wooden Sword
Protection from mobs and used to kill animals for meat
8 planks in all spaces except the middle = chest
Not necessary at first, but the as you collect more you will eventually need one for storage.
Step 5: Mining
On your first day of Minecraft, you don’t have to worry about mining, but if you come across coal, it is a good idea to get some. It also doesn’t hurt to get stone if you want stronger tools.
I order to mine coal and stone you will need a wooden pickax. Once you have collected stone, you can easily make a stone pickax which you will be able to use to mine iron.
Step 6: Furnace | Torches
Light is very important in Minecraft, both for simply being able to see and for preventing hostile mobs from spawning near you. Monsters cannot spawn in the light, so it is important to have light in your shelter.
You have some options depending on if you have been able to find coal on your first day. You will need a furnace to smelt charcoal from wood if you have not found coal.
Furnace = 8 Cobblestones in all of the crafting spots except the middle
Create Sticks from Wooden Planks – 2 Planks (stacked on top of each other) = 4 sticks
To create your own charcoal, use any type of wood (raw wood, planks, sticks, etc) and put at least one piece in the bottom for fuel and in the top spot. You will be using wood to turn wood into charcoal. Wood has short burn time so you will only be able to create one piece of charcoal per piece of wood.
Once you have your charcoal or coal stack a piece of either on top of a stick = 4 torches
Once you put a resource in as the fuel, it will immediately burn. Wood burns for a very short time, but things like coal and lava will burn for a while, and whatever you put in there will burn regardless of if you have something you need to cook or smelt. So it is good to be prepared with multiple items to smelt or cook. Also, if you want to smelt different types of things in a row, make sure you remove what you just smelted. For example, if you just smelted charcoal and now you want to smelt iron, you need to remove the charcoal first or there will be nowhere for the new item to go. On the other hand, if you have a stack of iron, you can just put it in the top and walk away and it will go until either the fuel or resource is gone.
Step 7: Food
You will have to eat. You might not have to on your first day, but the more running and working you do, the more your food bar will go down. There are many things to eat in the world, but on your first couple days you will probably be limited to apples and meat.
When leaves from trees disappear (after you have destroyed the trunk) they sometimes drop apples. If you are lucky you will get one from a tree, so it will be hard to play the game as a vegetarian when you first start.
Your other option is meat. Find an animal (a cow, pig or chicken, sheep only give you wool) and just punch it until it dies. It is horrible, but you have to survive. If you do not have a weapon, it will take quite a few punches and the animal will run in fear after you first hit it so you might have to chase it down. Try not to hit it in a hole. Killing the animal will give you raw meat. You can eat raw meat, but if you eat raw chicken, there is a chance you will get food poisoning.
To cook the meat, just put it in your furnace like you would to smelt an item. Use wood or coal to cook the meat in the fuel spot and put the raw meat above.
Everything will refill your hunger bar a different amount. For example, an apple will revive 4 hunger (which is two icons on the hunger bar) and a steak will revive 8 (raw beef will only fill 3). So it is good to keep track of your food and what you need so you make the most of what you have.
Step 8: Your First Night
Your 10 minutes are up and your first day is over. Hopefully you have not gone far from the shelter you created. Time to get inside and blockade yourself in for the night. It is good to use the nighttime to craft things and mine your shelter out (if you are in a mountain). If you have nothing to do, you are going to have to just hangout until the sun rises. Unless you want to venture out and take a stab at the mobs.
If you are lucky enough to find sheep on your first day, you can kill them to collect wool. If you have wool, you can combine it with planks to create a bed.
It doesn’t matter what color wool or planks you use, you will always get the same bed. Once you sleep in a bed it becomes your new spawn point. So if you die, instead of appearing where you first started the game, you will appear on your bed.
Step 9: The Dawn of a New Day
Don’t just go running out of your shelter. Though some monsters can’t survive in the light, they can hide in the shade or stand in the water to prevent bursting into flames. If you are on the side of a cliff, something will probably jump down on top of you as soon as you step out. Some monsters can survive in the daylight after spawning in the dark (like creepers and spiders), so you might have some of then you need to deal with before you can continue exploring.
Pro survival tips and tricks that you must know
1. Use the coordinates feature
In the game settings, turn on the coordinates. Whenever you’re playing, sit down with a notepad or take screenshots of important places so that you have their coordinates and can come back if you need to. These important places could be your main base, a village, a stronghold or any other structure to which you intend to return to.
2. Need a clock or a compass? You don’t have to craft them to use them
This is a trick everyone should know. Clocks and compasses aren’t used all that often but take up space in your inventory and require resources. Instead of crafting them, simply head over to your crafting recipes and the clock and compass over there can work even without crafting them.
3. Stay safe underground
Being resource-rich, caves are also equally dangerous. Always use torches to keep areas lit, keep a weapon on your hotbar at all times and wear armour. If you want to take extra precautions, a shield won’t hurt. Always light up your mines as dark places are breeding ground for hostile mobs
4. Always carry a water bucket
One should make it a point to carry a water bucket in Minecraft. Whether it be to get down a ravine, walk over lava or save yourself from a tall fall. Water buckets are a multipurpose tool that you should always carry.
5. Keep an eye on the durability of your tools
It’s always very frustrating when you’re mining and your last pickaxe breaks or you’re trying to take down a horde of zombies when your sword breaks or your elytra breaks while you’re flying around in your world. Remember it’s cheaper to fix up your gear instead of making a new one when it breaks. As the saying goes “A stitch in time saves nine”.
6. Trap in villagers every time you find a village
This one might sound a bit cruel… But if you want to find villagers to trade with, trapping them in would stop them from wandering off or getting killed and some of the ways of doing this are walling up the village or blocking the doors of the houses as the villagers go to sleep. You’re just protecting them from zombies after all!
7. Walls and torches save lives
Building walls is something very important if you want to stay safe. Be it to protect your house or to stop creepers from sneaking up behind you while you’re tending to your crops. Walling up areas stops mobs from getting in while lighting up those areas will stop mobs from spawning in. Walls keep out hostile mobs. Torches stop them from spawning in!
8. Storage Wars
Having an efficient and neat storage system would increase your productivity and make life in Minecraft much simpler. Keep your mining tools close to your mines, keep your food in a separate chest from your wood and if you’re good at Redstone, you can even make machines that sort out your items.
9. Plan out your builds
Let’s say you’re making a new base or renovating your existing one. The process would be much easier if you plan it out and do things like making a block palette or make a skeleton for your build with dirt before you use other materials. Remember, these should be the bare bones of your build made to set the aesthetics- not something intricate and difficult to understand. If you want, you can even use graph sheets to make physical designs of your builds!
10. The best fuel source: Lava
So you made it to the Nether or maybe there’s a surplus of lava in your closest lava pit. In that case, ditch all that grimy coal and get a bucket of lava and throw it in your furnace. A single bucket of lava can smelt 100 items while a whole block of coal can smelt just 80 items.
Mobs. Werewolf: Can be tamed by howling and also one of the ways to get lycanthropy. Werewolf Villager: Villagers that turn into werewolves at night. … Dire Wolf: Minecraft like wolf with red eyes and another way to get lycanthropy.
Not only does Hardcore limit you to a single life, but it sets Minecraft to the hard difficulty, meaning enemies are tougher and it’s possible to die from hunger. Philza survived for five years, streaming several days per week.
Like regular werewolves, the ultima has a human-like form and one with their ears and tail exposed. However, ultimas can turn more wolf-like in appearance. … The most feral form of an ultima resembles a giant wolf with no signs of human features or even the ability to talk. Their eyes are also always red.
A luna wolf is another term for the alpha female in the pack, which is the counterpart of the alpha male and is the main female. … The rest of the group will also provide help and guidance for the luna wolf when she’s pregnant, as they will protect her against enemies and her pups when she is pregnant.
Also read:
- How to get Back Bling in Fortnite?
- Who is Vanessa in FNAF Security Breach? Is Vanny Vennessa? Is She An Animatronic?
- The Most Popular Video Games in US : Fortnite, Minecraft, Call of Duty, Super Smash Bros
- DLSS and FSR are the future of PC games, What do you know about them?
- Lost Ark’s Combat System, Leveling and Tripod System explained
- Minecraft Guide for Beginners + Game Mode and Objectives Explained
- What is the Bedrock version of Minecraft? Which one is better Java or Bedrock?
- What is the Best nether seed in Minecraft? + 10 Best Minecraft Seeds for 2022
- What Game is Most like Minecraft? Best Free Alternatives Games
- Fortnite Beginner’s Guide: Everything you should know
- Why are Game Companies giving up on NFTs? What’s Happening With NFTs in Games?