List of common misconceptions

This page intends to collect and debunk several commonly-circulated falsehoods regarding game mechanics, blocks, items, and other elements of the Minecraft franchise.

Game mechanics

 * It is not possible to blow up blocks such as obsidian and bedrock simply by using large amounts of TNT. A sufficiently large explosion power is needed to detonate these blocks, and TNT explosions will have a strength of 5 regardless of how many TNT blocks explode within a given range or time.
 * Obsidian was able to be blown up with TNT in versions before Alpha 1.0.14, however. Before Infdev 20100618, Obsidian had the same blast resistance as stone and would react as such. From Infdev 20100618 to Alpha 1.0.13_01, Obsidian had a higher blast resistance than stone, but still within the range that TNT can blow up. Alpha 1.0.14 made Obsidian completely TNT resistant.

Blocks

 * There has never existed a central "missing texture block" or "purple error block" in Minecraft: Java Edition. While many blocks and items have used the missing texture at certain points, particularly the locked chest, these were solely due to texture or model data being undefined for that particular block or item, There has never been a specific block ID reserved for error handling.
 * Petrified oak slabs first came into existence in Java Edition Beta 1.3 and were craftable up to 1.2.5. The term "alpha slabs", which is commonly used to refer to these blocks, is a misnomer,

Items

 * Leaves items with data values above 3 are able to be created in release versions up to 1.4.5. The term "alpha leaves", which is commonly used to refer to these items, is a misnomer.

Mobs

 * It is not possible for other entities such as bats to summon the warden. Naturally-generated sculk shriekers will only be triggered, and therefore summon the warden, in response to vibrations produced explicitly by the player.
 * The Dock mob Rana never co-existed with the Dock Steve mobs. Rana was originally made as a test for md3 mobs, and was originally added in Indev 20091223-1. The aforementioned Steve mobs were added in Indev 20100129, replacing Rana, only to then get removed in Indev 20100131.

World

 * The Far Lands were not the edge of the Minecraft world, simply the edge of normal terrain. The actual edge of the world from Infdev all the way to Alpha 1.1.2_01, and the edge of solid land from Alpha 1.2.0 to Beta 1.7.3, was at 32 million blocks out.
 * Brick Pyramids only ever existed between Infdev 20100227-1 and Infdev 20100325.
 * Brick pyramids were not implemented as an early way to obtain bricks. Entities did not work at all in the version brick pyramids were implemented in, and as such collecting bricks from these structures was completely impossible.

Development

 * The game playable at classic.minecraft.net is not the first ever version of Minecraft: Java Edition, not was it ever a part of any of its development phases. Rather, it is a JavaScript recreation of the Classic version 0.0.23a_01 to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the game's initial release, and even minor inspection reveals it to be a very flawed recreation.
 * Java Edition 1.0.0 is not the first ever release of Minecraft. It was the first "official" release of Java Edition in its final development phase which has persisted to the current day, however it is preceded by two and a half years' worth of prior development across six other development phases.
 * Also, despite the launcher calling it "1.0", the version number is "1.0.0" with two zeros.
 * Herobrine was never in the game. Nothing even close to Herobrine was ever added to Minecraft, and all "sightings" are just hoaxes meant to scare children.

Miscellaneous

 * Steve's classic beard was removed in Classic 0.28. As such, Steve was beardless all through-out Indev, Infdev, and Alpha.
 * Also, Steve's beard is often misinterpreted as a smile.