Tutorials/Best biomes to play

Biomes in Minecraft, there are many biomes to play in, but there are better biomes to play in than others. Taiga biomes are recommended for beginners since there are diamonds in the weaponsmith chests in a taiga village, tons of trees for wood, and lots of wolves and foxes to tame.

Starting
When you enter your world in Minecraft, your spawn will be in a random biome. There are better biomes to play in than others, as some have lots of trees, some have no hostile mobs, and some have a greater chance of generating a village.

The easiest biome to play in
Taiga biomes are recommended for beginners or players that want a easy version of Minecraft since there are diamonds or obsidian in the weaponsmith chests in a taiga village, and a weaponsmith house has a greater chance of generating in a taiga village than any other village in Bedrock Edition, meaning you might get iron tools in the first day if you manage to find a weaponsmith chest. Lots of trees generate in this biome, so it's super easy to get wood. Wolves can be tamed if you have bones, which can be obtained from Skeletons and other generated structures around this biome. Taming a wolf can make it be your body guard and if you tame two wolves you can breed them to make a wolf army! Foxes are also in this biome, which can be tamed if you breed two foxes and steal the baby fox, which can also protect you after the baby fox grows up. The disadvantage of this biome is having lots of trees, making it easy to get lost in the night. A easy way to prevent this is looking for forest rocks, marking the rocks with a different block for each rock, and remembering the path between each rock. Lighting the ground with torches will also work, or using a shovel to carve an one block wide path so you can follow the path to come back to your base.

The best biome for wood
Dark Forest and Jungle biomes are good for wood, since both biomes have more trees than taiga biomes. The dark forest has so many two block wide trees that the leaves cover the roof of the forest, causing shade and other hostile mobs like zombies and skeletons to survive in day time. It is even more easier to get lost in these biomes than any other biome, since there are lots of trees and thin spaces to walk. Woodland mansions also generate in the dark forest biome, making it difficult if a beginner player wanders into a mansion with tough mobs like vindicators and evokers inside. It's rare for the world spawn to generate in a jungle biome, and jungle biomes are rare anyways. Bamboo jungles are even more rarer, as pandas spawn in this biome. The jungle biome has tall two block wide trees towering the canopy, making tons of wood for the player to collect. The bad part about this biome is having lots of trees, although not as much as the dark forest biome. This biome can also be bad if a beginner play wanders into a jungle temple, which has traps that most beginner players don't know, such as arrow traps and sometime hostile mobs can go inside the temple and attack the player by surprise.

The best biome for diamonds
Everyone loves diamonds, and full diamond gear and tools are recommended to defeat the ender dragon and the wither. The best biome for all those shiny gems is the desert biome, where more diamonds can generate than other biomes, and fossils can also generate in this biome. Be sure to find some wood from other biomes to upgrade your pickaxe until an iron pickaxe or else when you mine the diamonds with a stone pickaxe or a wooden pickaxe it will drop nothing!

The best biome for gold
Piglins love gold! If you need some survival items in the nether, bartering with piglins can get you crying obsidian to fire resistance potions, and most other items for surviving in the nether. The only problem is that you need gold to barter with them, as they don't accept anything else to barter for. The best biome to find gold is the badlands biome, also known as the mesa biome. Mineshafts are very common in this biome, and they can generate more above than a normal mineshaft. Sometimes, a badlands mineshaft can be exposed to the ground, and the mineshafts can hide a lot of gold inside. Mining or finding a cave in this biome also have gold inside, though it's not as safe as mineshafts. Gold can also be crafted into golden apples other than bartering with piglins, which the apple gives you a brief regeneration if you ever lose a lot of health.

The most peaceful biome play in
A rare spawn in a mushroom fields biome is very lucky, since no hostile mobs spawn here, and its peaceful. Hostile mobs may wander into this biome, such as drowned from the surrounding oceans and if the biome is connected with other biomes, more hostile mobs will wander into this biome. Mooshrooms also spawn regularly, meaning they keep spawning even when some mooshrooms are killed. Mooshrooms make beef and mushrooms easy to get, as they are passive, and you can also milk it like a normal cow and use a bowl on it to get mushroom stew.

One of the problems for this biome is there are no trees, so you can't craft a crafting table and more items using the table, such as bowls, buckets, and your tools. And since this biome is in the middle of an ocean, you need a boat to get to the other biomes, which means you can be trapped on this island for a long time unless you swim over the ocean to other biomes and to get wood. A mineshaft might generate under the island, so you need to go down underground and get wood from the mineshaft if there is one.

The hardest biomes to play in
Swamp biomes are hard to play in, since witches spawn in swamp huts around this biome and slimes can spawn in the night. Witches can give beginner players a hard time if they ever run into one. Villages don't generate in this biome, which means you need to travel to other biomes to find a shelter if you can't craft a bed to sleep in during the night. Animals don't spawn here, making it hard for food, although some animals might wander into this biome.

Desert biomes are also hard, since there are not too many passive mobs here except rabbits, making it hard for food, and if the player runs into a husk it can pursuit the player in daylight, since the husk can survive in daylight and inflict you with the hunger effect, so that the player cannot sprint if their hunger points are too low. The desert biome also doesn't generate too many villages, and it has no trees. There are desert temples, that have treasures inside, which you can loot. You can spawn next to desert temples, that is just about the only advantage of the desert biome.

Snowy Tundra biomes are as hard as the desert biome since there isn't many trees around and not too many animals spawn in this biome, except for polar bears, which you can kill for fish. Strays spawn in the night time, and they have arrows that inflict the player with slowness so the stray can hit the player more precisely. If you're lucky, you might come by an igloo, which has a bed, a crafting table, a furnace, plus some igloos even have a ladder that descents to an old looking basement. The basement also has a brewing stand with a splash potion of weakness in it, a cauldron with some water, a potted cactus, a chest with basic loot and an golden apple, and a villager plus a zombie villager in the cells which you can heal using the weakness potion and the golden apple and you can move villagers to a nearby village.