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Home›Savanna desert›Minecraft’s Desert and Savannah Updates Haven’t Taken Over Yet

Minecraft’s Desert and Savannah Updates Haven’t Taken Over Yet

By Christopher J. Jones
September 9, 2022
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MinecraftThe ever-expanding strategy has always allowed for continued growth with new features, biomes, blocks, and mobs being added with every major update. The most recent update gave players a new biome to explore in the mangroves, but there were two other biomes that Mojang promised to update in 2018 that still show no changes. The savannah and desert biomes were voted second and third in the biome selector vote, finishing behind the taiga biome which added foxes, campfires and berries to Minecraft.

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Deserts and savannas in Minecraft are in desperate need of an update, as these two are arguably the most barren biomes in the game. trees, making them bad places to spawn when starting a world. At MineCon Earth 2018 it was revealed that both of these biomes will be updated in the future, but four years later fans are still waiting for updates that make these biomes interesting.

RELATED: Minecraft’s biggest updates since launch


The desert biome

minecraft desert

Currently, the main characteristics of a desert biome in Minecraft are desert villages, bunnies and temples, but the promised update in Minecon Earth 2018 was to make deserts an easier place to start a new world. The update would add palm trees, giving players living in the desert a way to find renewable wood, oases that would serve as respite and could provide food, and meerkats that could be useful for detecting hostile mobs. Each of these additions would have drastically changed the way fans play Minecraft in the desert and would have made the biome an easier starting point than it was.

Palm trees would likely be the same as all other types of wood, but could include coconuts which would serve as a food source in the desert. Oases would be the best place to find palm trees and mobs like rabbits and meerkats, as well as the perfect place to settle in the desert biome as it would include blocks of water and land, both essential to agriculture. Finally, the meerkat would be a passive mob that could be useful for monitoring players who are too busy building to pay attention to their surroundings, making it a particularly useful mob.

The Savannah Biome

Minecraft acacia in the savannah

Like the desert, the savannah biome is not one of the most diverse in the Minecraft, because it simply spawns villages and all the mobs that would spawn in a meadow. According to Minecon Earth 2018, the next Savanna biome update would have added baobabs, termites, and ostriches, each adding important features to the game that could benefit many players, especially in the early game. These characteristics would make agricultural crops and the cutting of trees in Minecraft much easier while providing players with a new mob that could be ridden or hold chest like horses and llamas.

Baobabs are said to be larger versions of Acacia trees which can also grow baobab fruits which grow like the cocoa beans in the jungle biomes. This fruit is said to serve to attract termites, which can eat wood and have a chance of dropping a log and sawdust. Sawdust could be extremely useful in the early game, as it could be used on crops to increase yield. Termites would be perfect for an auto tree farm, and they’re something many players hoped to see added eventually. Minecraft.

The desert and savannah biomes are currently two of the most underutilized biomes in the game, as they aren’t the best to start with and don’t offer anything the other biomes don’t. Adding new trees and monsters would make these biomes viable contenders for the best early game biomes and make them worth searching for. Whether it’s increasing crop yields or giving players a break from the harsh desert, the features that could be added via a biome update would prove extremely useful for gamers. Minecraft.

Minecraft is available now on Mobile, PC, PS4, PS5, Switch, Xbox One and Xbox Series X|S.

MORE: Minecraft: 6 Updates The Caves Still Need

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