Minecraft Earth:Rainbow Sheep

"’’Bored of single, solid colors? The Rainbow Sheep grows wool with not one, not two, but SEVEN bold hues to make rainbow-tastic creations.’’"

- Player Journal Description

The Rainbow Sheep is a rainbow variant of the sheep found only $$.

Appearance
Rainbow sheep are a rainbow-colored variant of the normal sheep. They bear similarities to the sheep nametag Easter Egg in the base game, where it emanates a lot of colors, but unlike it, the sheep already have a set coat of colors. Their wool goes in a rainbow pattern with the red section being the biggest one and covers the front part of the sheep, orange wool covering its lower front legs, and yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet stripes run along their body. The wool on their hind legs is violet in color.

Behavior
Rainbow sheep behave the same as a normal sheep, walking aimlessly and avoiding cliffs and lava. They can be sheared for rainbow wool and they regrow their wool when they eat grass, just like normal sheep.

Obtaining
Rainbow sheep can be obtained as a reward in Season 5 by having a bone block, coal block, and red sandstone in the Journal, they can also be obtained by buying the "Colorful Cottage" Buildplate. They are of epic rarity, and can be obtained via sheep tappables with a 1.5% chance of getting one.

Drops
When sheared, rainbow sheep drop 3.

When killed, they can drop:
 * 1
 * 1

Trivia

 * Rainbow sheep are the second mob variant $$ that drop new items, with the moobloom being the first one, with its buttercups.
 * Rainbow sheep were first found datamined in the game files, with their menu sprite found within it.
 * Rainbow sheep are the second mob variant with an epic rarity with the muddy pig being the first one.
 * The Season 5 prize map shows the rarity of rainbow sheep as rare, though they are actually epic.
 * Rainbow sheep are the second rarest sheep variant with a low chance of 1.5% of obtaining from sheep tappables. The rarest is the horned sheep, even though it is of rare rarity.

de:MCE:Regenbogenschaf