Wioski
| Plik:Marsh Davies Mojang avatar.png | “ | Villages are some of the most bustling, lively places in Minecraft outside of the player’s own constructions. They’re populated by sort-of-friendly folk involved in various useful pursuits: farmers, fishermen, fletchers, butchers, clerics, armorers and more. Including my favourite: the nitwit. | „ |
| —Marsh Davies[1] |
Villages are groups of buildings inhabited by villagers, cats, iron golems and occasionally, zombie villagers, wandering tradersSzablon:Only and trader llamasSzablon:Only, that generate naturally in the Overworld.Szablon:TOC limit
Generation
Villages generate naturally in plains, savanna, taiga, snowy tundra, and desert biomes. Szablon:IN, they also generate in snowy taiga, sunflower plains, taiga hills, and snowy taiga hills biomes. The type of the village, and therefore the style of all structures within it, is determined by the biome at the village center or meeting point. If the meeting point does not generate in one of the above biomes, the village will default to the plains style.
The following table describes what biomes will result in what styles.
| Desert | Plains | Savanna | Taiga | Snowy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biome | Desert | PlainsSunflower plainsSzablon:Only | Savanna | Taiga | Snowy tundra |
The number of villagers spawned depends on the number of beds in the village. Villagers spawn only in houses that have beds, while job site buildings (with no beds) always generate without villagers.
If a building or pathway generates over open air, circular or square platforms of grass or sand (depending on the terrain) will generate below the structure, which can cause surface oddities. This can be clearly seen when a village building generates over an ocean. Farms generate a few blocks of open space above them if they happen to generate inside a hill.
Szablon:IN, 2% of villages generate as zombie villages; see Szablon:Section link.
Mobs
- Upon generation
- Villagers (spawn in regular villages only)
- Iron Golems (one spawns near a village meeting point)
- Zombie Villagers (spawn in zombie villages only)
- Horses (spawn in regular villages)
- Pigs (spawn in regular villages)
- Cows (spawn in regular villages)
- Sheep (spawn in regular villages)
- Periodically
- Wandering Traders (one spawns periodically at a village meeting point)Szablon:Only
- Trader Llamas (two spawn periodically at a village meeting point alongside a wandering trader)Szablon:Only
- Cats (spawn naturally inside villages)
- During events
- Zombies (spawn during zombie sieges)
- Pillagers (spawn during raids)
- Vindicators (spawn during raids)
- Evokers (spawn during raids)
- Ravagers (spawn during raids)
- Witches (spawn during raids)
Events
Raids
- A player who kills an illager captain receives the Bad Omen status effect for 100 minutes. Like other status effects, Bad Omen can also be cleared by dying or drinking milk. Entering a village boundary while the effect is active triggers a raid, in which groups of illagers spawn and attack the village.
Zombie sieges
- Zombie sieges are in-game events that occur when many zombies spawn in a village, regardless of how well lit or walled off a village is. They have a 10% chance of occurring at midnight every night or during thunderstorms when a village has at least 20 valid beds.
Structure
Buildings
The number of buildings making up a village can vary, and not every village consists of all buildings at once. Apart from the meeting point, which is unique and systematic, the number of buildings of each type is randomly generated and increased in superflat worlds. The number of lamp posts and decorative structures (hay bales, melon patch, pumpkin patch, snow and ice patches) has no restriction, as they are generated where no other buildings can be placed. Paths are found between the buildings of the village and often extend beyond them.
Structures are chosen randomly from a pool of possible buildings. No one building has a greater chance to appear than another.
Architecture style, and blocks making up the village structures, vary according to village type. Not every building can generate in a single village, although some blocks can be found in any village, such as job site blocks and food items.
Szablon:IN buildings have different probabilities of generating, depending on village type; for example, a weaponsmith shop is more likely to appear in a Taiga village than other villages.
Paths
Villages generate paths between the buildings, and extending outside of the village. Village paths generate at the level of existing terrain, potentially going up steep hills or down ravines without regard for whether an entity could actually traverse the path. Paths do not go below sea level and replace only grass blocks (with air above), water, lava, sand, sandstone, and red sandstone; all other blocks are ignored and the blocks underneath are considered for replacement instead.
In plains, savanna, taiga, and snowy villages, paths are comprised of grass paths and grass. Savanna villages will also generate farmland and crops in some paths. Grass paths that generate over water will be replaced by the village style's planks type. Desert villages generate with smooth sandstone paths.
In Buffet worlds with cave generation, paths may generate on a separate layer from the rest of the buildings. In floating island generation, paths may not generate at all.
Loot
Szablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChest
Szablon:IN Szablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChestSzablon:LootChest
Zombie villages
A village has a 2% chance of generating as a zombie village. In such villages, all generated villagers are instead zombie villagers, and all doors and light sources are missing. These zombie villagers do not despawn but have no special resistance to sunlight. In zombie villages, some wood and cobblestone are replaced by cobwebs and mossy cobblestone, respectively. All glass panes are also replaced by brown stained glass panes.
Mechanics
- A village always consists of at least one acceptable bed and one villager. Rarely, a village structure can generate without buildings with beds, thus not qualifying as a village. Upon creation, a village center is defined as a bed claimed by the first villager, or the gathering site block (a bell), and the village's size is the greater of 32 blocks or the distance to the furthest bed from the center. Any villager, village golem, siege-spawned zombie, or raid-spawned illagers will pathfind back into the village if they find themselves farther than "size" blocks from the center.
Villages are set by the number of valid beds in the village. Szablon:IN, a "valid bed" is a bed unobstructed by other blocks so that it can be used for sleeping.
The minimum population of a village is the number of valid beds. If the population drops below that point (due to death or kidnappings), but there are at least two villagers left who can reach each other, the villagers mate and breed until the population is above the minimum.
Gathering site
Villages have gathering sites where villagers may mingle. A gathering site is defined as a bell located within the village boundary. A wandering trader may spawn at a gathering site, accompanied by trader llamas.Szablon:Only
Job site blocks
Job site blocks are blocks such as grindstones, smithing tables, and lecterns, which are used by villagers. Villagers with the corresponding professions spend their time in front of their job site block, except for nitwits and unemployed villagers (villagers without profession overlays).
Popularity
A player's popularity starts at zero and ranges between −30 and 10, and the following can alter a player's popularity:
| Popularity of Actions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Action | Popularity Change | |||
| Trading with a villager for the last offer slot on their list | +1 | |||
| Attacking a villager | −1 | |||
| Killing a villager | −2 | |||
| Attacking a villager child | −3 | |||
| Killing a villager child | −5 | |||
| Killing a village's iron golem | −5 | |||
When a player acts directly on a villager, particles around that villager indicate the change in popularity. A player's popularity does not reset on death, and players cannot alter other players' popularity. Popularity is stored per village; a player may have high popularity in one village and a low one in another. Additionally, because popularity is stored per village, if the entire village is destroyed, any accumulated popularity, positive or negative, is also eliminated.
If a player has -15 popularity or less, the village's naturally-spawned iron golems act hostile to that player until the player's popularity is increased. Golems constructed by the player, however, are always passive toward the player.
History
| February 21, 2010 | NPC villages and "monster towns" are mentioned. | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| July 1, 2011 | A picture of villages was released by Notch before Beta 1.8 was released. In the early screenshot, villages were partly made of moss stone. | ||||
| July 13, 2011 | An early interview with Notch discussed his plans for the village. | ||||
| August 10, 2011 | Notch originally worked on villages by himself, but eventually gave the task to Jeb, so that he could work on other things. | ||||
| August 11, 2011 | Jeb has said that during early tests of villages, the lava in a smithy often set the village on fire. | ||||
| August 26, 2011 | Villages were shown to the public during the PAX 2011 demo, including the interiors. | ||||
| Beta | |||||
| 1.8 | Pre-release | Villages added. | |||
| They were originally intended to be populated with pigmen.[1] | |||||
| java | |||||
| 1.0.0 | Beta 1.9 Prerelease | Villagers have now been added to villages. They have 'TESTIFICATE' written above their heads. | |||
| 1.1 | 12w01a | Superflat added, allowing bigger villages. | |||
| Blacksmith buildings in villages now hold chests with loot. | |||||
| 1.2.1 | 12w07a | Villagers now repopulate villages based on how many houses there are available. | |||
| Zombie sieges can now occur once a village has reached a certain size. | |||||
| The player may now add houses to villages, provided they are enclosed with a roof and wooden door. | |||||
| 12w08a | Larger villages now spawn iron golems to defend them. | ||||
| 1.3.1 | 12w21a | Desert villages are now made of sandstone instead of wood and cobblestone. | |||
| 1.4.2 | 12w32a | Villages now track the "popularity" of individual players by username. | |||
| 12w36a | Potatoes and carrots can now be found in NPC villages. | ||||
| 1.5 | 13w03a | Changes to water-block generation now make wells proper infinite water sources. | |||
| 13w06a | The lamppost glitch in villages has now been fixed. | ||||
| 1.7.2 | 13w36a | Savanna biome added, which villages can now generate in. | |||
| 1.8 | 14w03a | Gravel roads in villages now have cobblestone underneath, to prevent them from collapsing into caves. | |||
| 14w04a | Doors are now added to the closest village. | ||||
| 14w25a | Zombie sieges have now been re-implemented. | ||||
| 14w30a | Wells in desert villages are now made of sandstone instead of cobblestone. | ||||
| 1.9 | 15w31a | Farms now include beetroot crops. | |||
| 1.10 | 16w20a | Village structures are now no longer restricted by biome boundaries, meaning that a village that starts in a valid biome can now spread into an adjacent invalid biome. | |||
| Villages now generate in taiga biomes (but not their variants), and are made of spruce wood. | |||||
| Savanna villages are now made of acacia wood rather than oak. Acacia logs replace cobblestone in all structures except churches. | |||||
| Paths no longer generate below sea level, and they are made with different material depending on the existing terrain. | |||||
| Grass paths now generate rather than gravel paths, when generated on grass blocks. | |||||
| Paths made of planks now generate over water and lava to form bridges. | |||||
| Villages now have a 2% chance of generating as a zombie village, which are inhabited only by zombie villagers, and generate without any doors or torches. | |||||
| 16w21a | Blacksmiths now generate with cobblestone in all biomes, rather than acacia logs in savannas and sandstone in deserts. | ||||
| pre1 | Zombie villagers generated in zombie villages no longer despawn. | ||||
| Wooden fences are now substituted with the correct wood type for the biome. | |||||
| Paths no longer replace most blocks, instead considering the blocks underneath, preventing them from generating in treetops or bridging ravines. | |||||
| 1.14 | 18w47a | Added raids, in which groups of illagers attack villages after a player kills an illager patrol leader then enters a village. | |||
| November 28, 2018 | A hotfix for all 1.14 snapshots is released, updating the main menu with a panorama of the new villages. | ||||
| 18w48a | Updated the plains village look. | ||||
| 18w49a | Added snowy tundra villages. | ||||
| Updated the savanna village look. | |||||
| 18w50a | Updated the taiga and desert village looks. | ||||
| 19w04a | Re-added zombie villages in desert and taiga biomes. | ||||
| 19w07a | Re-added zombie villages in plains and savanna biomes. | ||||
| Added snowy tundra zombie villages. | |||||
| 19w08a | Villages now spawn with at least one iron golem. | ||||
| 1.14.1 | Pre-Release 1 | Many structures are tweaked to have better lighting. | |||
| Pocket Edition Alpha | |||||
| 0.9.0 | build 1 | Added villages. They generate with gravel, wooden or sandstone bridges. | |||
| build 2 | Desert villages are now made of sandstone. | ||||
| build 4 | Villages are now rare. | ||||
| build 7 | Villages are now more common. | ||||
| 0.11.0 | build 1 | Grass path blocks now replace gravel paths in villages. | |||
| 0.12.1 | build 1 | Larger villages now spawn iron golems to defend them. | |||
| build 8 | Farms now include beetroot crops. | ||||
| 0.14.0 | build 3 | The door-to-villager ratio in villages has now been increased (was previously 1:1). | |||
| 0.15.0 | build 1 | Added savanna and taiga village variants. | |||
| Villages can now generate in cold taiga and ice plains biomes. Buildings are made out of spruce wood like taiga villages. | |||||
| Villages now have a 2% chance of generating as zombie villages. Buildings in zombie villages include cobweb and moss stone. | |||||
| 0.16.0 | ? | Farms no longer generate crops in ice plains and cold taiga villages. | |||
| 0.16.2 | Chests can now generate inside large houses in ice plains and cold taiga villages containing farming supplies. | ||||
| Bedrock Edition | |||||
| 1.8.0 | beta 1.8.0.8 | Cats now spawn in villages. | |||
| 1.10.0 | beta 1.10.0.3 | Updated the look of plains, desert, savanna, taiga, snowy tundra, and snowy taiga villages. | |||
| Taiga villages are now more common. | |||||
| Villages are now set by the number of beds in the village instead of doors. | |||||
| Villages now have gathering sites in which a wandering trader can appear. | |||||
| Villages now have job sites where villagers go to work. | |||||
| 1.11.0 | beta 1.11.0.1 | Villages now always spawn at least one iron golem. | |||
| Changed some structures; plains tannery now include a single cauldron, some poorly lit areas have torches, lava is no longer a fire hazard, added floors in some floorless houses. | |||||
| Changed village generation by rebalancing the number of houses (buildings with beds) and job sites (buildings with job site blocks). Sand now also has sandstone support below. | |||||
| Plains farms and plains toolsmith houses can now generate in new plains villages. | |||||
| Animals now spawn in the village stables, animal pens, shepherd houses, and butcher houses. | |||||
| Added chest loot to non-plains village variants. | |||||
| Added raids, in which groups of illagers attack villages. | |||||
| beta 1.11.0.3 | Players with bad omen now trigger a raid when in villages. | ||||
| Console Edition | |||||
| TU5 | CU1 | 1.0 | Patch 1 | TU5 | Added villages. |
| TU9 | Blacksmith buildings in villages now hold chests with loot. | ||||
| TU14 | 1.04 | Added desert villages. | |||
| ? | ? | ? | Wells in desert villages are now made of sandstone instead of cobblestone. | ||
| TU31 | CU19 | 1.22 | Patch 3 | Savanna biome added, which villages can now generate in. | |
| Gravel roads in villages now have cobblestone underneath, to prevent them from collapsing into caves. | |||||
| TU43 | CU33 | 1.36 | Patch 13 | Villages can now generate in cold taiga and ice plains biomes, constructed with spruce wood. | |
| Villages now generate with grass paths instead of gravel. | |||||
| Villages in savanna biomes now generate with acacia wood. | |||||
| TU46 | CU36 | 1.38 | Patch 15 | Villages now generate naturally in the taiga biome. | |
| TU58 | CU49 | 1.60 | Patch 28 | TU58 | Villages generated in the desert or the savanna biome now replace the most sandstone/acacia wood with cobblestone. |
| TU60 | CU51 | 1.64 | Patch 30 | TU60 | Villages now generate naturally in cold taiga and snow plains biomes generating with spruce wood. |
| Desert villages no longer generate with cobblestone, including blacksmith and church buildings. | |||||
| Tables in villages now have brown carpet instead of a pressure plate. | |||||
| 3ds | |||||
| 0.1.0 | Added villages. | ||||
Issues
Trivia
- According to Jeb, originally they wanted a system for a village to expand in population if the player improves it. But they found that it was computationally expensive to evaluate what constituted a house, so to make it simple, they decided that a door with an inside and outside counts as a house; however, the house was later changed to beds.
- Prior to Village and Pillage, the farms in villages would avoid overhanging by filling in the area below them with dirt when they spawned. When a farm overhangs a ravine, a tall rectangular dirt structure generates underneath. Buildings would fill the area below them with cobblestone, often resulting in the same behavior.
- Occasionally, surface ravines generate through villages, causing missing pathways or even entire buildings sunken into the ravine. This also applies to cave entrances and other surface oddities.
- In the Legacy Console Edition, in the TU19 tutorial world, the village behind the castle has a blacksmith, but there is only a Music Disc, not ordinary loot.
- In rare cases, players can find very small villages containing only one house, or even just one job site building (a building with job site blocks) without any houses (building with beds), causing the village to not spawn any villagers.
- Plains village is the only type of village with much of its architecture resembling the old villages prior to Village & Pillage.
Gallery
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Two taiga villages generated right next to each other.
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A screenshot of a village released by Notch.
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A screenshot released by Notch of a player near two village houses.
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A picture of the village from PAX Prime.
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The 13w22a banner, containing a village.
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LadyAgnes tweets a screenshot of an updated savanna village.[2]
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Another image of a village tweeted by LadyAgnes.[3]
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A screenshot of part of the Java Edition 1.14 main menu panorama.
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An igloo structure that generated in a snowy tundra village.
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A snowy tundra village.
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A plains village well.
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A village farm.
MINECON Earth 2018
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A desert village overhaul shown in MINECON Earth 2018 for 1.14.
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A shepherd's house in a desert village overhaul shown in MINECON Earth 2018 for 1.14.
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New house architecture in a desert village overhaul shown in MINECON Earth 2018 for 1.14.
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A plains village overhaul shown in MINECON Earth 2018 for 1.14.
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A plains village overhaul shown more detailed inside, shown in MINECON Earth 2018 for 1.14.
Before Village and Pillage
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A plains village before Village and Pillage.
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A village generated in a taiga biome.
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A savanna zombie village.
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A village generated in a superflat world.
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An extremely small village.
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An inside view of a church.
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A village generated on water, before plank paths were implemented.
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The four outdated village types. Clockwise from top right: desert, savanna, taiga, and plains.
Bedrock Edition
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First official screenshot of a village generating with grass path blocks as roads.
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A double village.
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A village with a wooden bridge beside the world border.
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A zombie village that generated in a cold biome.
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A desert village mixed with a jungle biome.
Odd generation
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A village that generated along the edge of a mountain. Note the house that generated within a cave.
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A plains village extending into a swamp.
Before Village and Pillage
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A village generated in the amplified world type. Notice how some of the buildings are built into the mountain, and others on huge cobblestone towers.
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A village generated too close to a cold biome, causing the water in the farm to freeze and the crops to dry out.
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A village generated without buildings.
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A fence in one village overwriting part of a wall in another. Notice how it forces air blocks above the fence.
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A village generated at the boundary between a desert and savanna biome. Notice that it is in the style of the plains biome. This is because the well generated in the river.
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A savanna village with failed farm generation, causing water to flow.
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A desert temple generated in a zombie village.
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A village farm generated in a cave alongside buried treasure.
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A village building sunken into a ravine.
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Part of a village generating over the void in a Buffet world.