Tutorials/Best biomes for homes

One of the most important things to think about when building a shelter, is where it is built. Here you'll learn about the biomes to build your base in and the pros and cons. The biomes are listed from easiest to hardest to settle in for a new player, based on the desirable/undesirable characteristics mentioned below. Please note that this page is currently under construction.

Desirability
All biomes have certain characteristics about themselves, which can enhance or dampen the building experience.

Desirable

 * Flat — Easy to build on, easy to roam around and easy to fight and/or evade monsters due to the even terrain.


 * Has a consistent food source — Provides a reliable source of food whether this is in the form of animals or crops.


 * Has trees — Provides an easy and renewable source of wood.


 * Has particular generated structures — Villagers can be traded with, and provide farms for the player to use early on. However, they also attract illagers and zombies, both of which will attack the village in raids and zombie sieges. This, in turn, can endanger the player, but also the villagers, which may even get wiped out in these attacks. Other generated structures can be looted for their resources and even converted into homes, although each structure will come with its own dangers.


 * Scenic — Some biomes are particularly spectacular, whether it is due to personal preference or unique environmental generation that creates memorable areas.

Undesirable

 * Crowded — This can make biomes difficult to move around in smoothly, as well as requiring the player to landscape the environment if they intend to build. Biomes that contain an excessively large amount of trees can shelter monsters during the daytime and allow them to resume spawning under the cover of vegetation. Because of this, players can potentially get ambushed by groups of monsters at a time. Biomes that contain a lot of hills and mountains can cause similar ambush situations.


 * Flooded — Due to the player's dampened speed in water, it can be difficult to navigate at speeds that you'd get on more land-based biomes. This, in turn, means that escaping dangerous situations and monsters will be harder. It is also difficult to build large farms or structures. Mobs that die in sunlight can survive if they are within the water. Skeletons can shoot the player in the safety of bodies of water while zombies may sink and become drowned.


 * No/Few Animals — Some biomes do not spawn animals when generated. Others lack grass, so animals cannot spawn over time.


 * Scarce Wood — Some biomes contain few or no trees, forcing the player to resort to alternative methods of obtaining wood.


 * Unsteady footing — Mountains and jungles offer a greater chance of falling to one's death and may make it more difficult to build farms or homes on the surface. Hostile mobs can attack the player suddenly and can collect in valleys. Lava flows will be more hazardous due to the terrain, causing it to flow unpredictably.

Plains
The plains is a good biome for a player's first house. The lack of obstruction makes it fairly quick to walk or sprint around. The flat ground makes it easy to create a large house, and villages are common. Horses spawn here, allowing for even faster transportation. There is a lot of tall grass, making it easy to collect seeds and start a wheat farm. This biome has many gullies and short hills. Wood is scarce, but forests are likely nearby.

Pros

 * Flat landscape for easy building and traveling.
 * Plentiful tall grass for initial seed farms.
 * The presence of animals offers much-needed meat and resources like leather and wool. Compared to other "green biomes" like the forest, the spawn rate of passive mobs is not increased, but the lack of obstruction makes them easier to find and offers more spawning areas that are usually covered with trees.
 * Villages that offer great trades, potential chest loot, and maybe a good shelter.
 * Plains villages are also the only villages that can generate large houses, which have 4 beds.
 * Horses and Donkey spawn exclusively here or in the savanna. Horses offer great mobility and combat advantage, while donkeys can be used for extra storage. $$ this is the only biome where donkeys can spawn.
 * The sunflower plains offer sunflowers.
 * The abundant tall grass can sometimes hide you from monsters (or surprise them), even when you're on the move.
 * Both water and lava lakes spawn here, often easily identified due to the flat landscape, and can provide plentiful resources for various advanced tasks.
 * Fewer trees mean the undead have little protection from sunlight.
 * Cornflowers generate here, used for blue dye.
 * Bees and bee nests can spawn. This allows for honey farming which brings farming of honey bottles, honeycomb, honey blocks and beehives.

Cons

 * Trees are a bit uncommon, although the plains biome often has forests nearby.
 * There are many open caves which can disrupt the flat landscape, and mobs such as zombies can come out of the caves to attack you.
 * When in combat you will often find yourself swinging your sword at the Tall grass rather than at your opponent.
 * Skeletons and witches can more easily shoot you down due to the lack of obstruction, and you can be found and attacked easily on servers.
 * Tall grass can clutter your inventory with seeds, and can be annoying to clear out when building a large structure.
 * Players and animals can accidentally fall into lava lakes and die within seconds.
 * Pillager outposts can generate in the biome, and although it has loot chests, it spawns pillagers infinitely around the structure and can easily kill unarmed players.
 * There are often many water holes scattered throughout the plains.

Useful Resources
Sunflowers, seeds, lava, horses, donkeys, villages, hay bales (from villages), cornflowers, pillager outposts, and bees are useful resources found in plains biomes.

Tips

 * Consider building your first or permanent house here, with resources you've acquired from other biomes.
 * It is highly recommended to not kill the villagers or leave them vulnerable to zombies by breaking their houses for wood. Eventually, iron golem farms or fully automatic wheat farms will all become possible through villagers, not to mention they offer renewable enchanted diamond equipment.
 * Clearing out tall grass can be quickly done by dumping water on the ground to wash it away.
 * Build a more hidden house when on servers.

Forest
The forest has a lot of trees, making it great for getting wood, but it also means that building a house here involves cutting down a couple of trees. Also, this can be a dangerous biome at night for beginners. There are many trees, allowing for mobs to hide from the player, and minimizing combat space, which is especially dangerous for creepers. Also, the forest provides shade, allowing skeletons and zombies to survive in the daytime.

Pros

 * Lots of wood, which is a resource both new and experienced players require, able to craft nearly every item or an item to unlock another item in the game.
 * High frequency of hills makes for good scenery.
 * Though normal houses may be hard to build, a treehouse is always a good solution.
 * The density and low height of treetops can provide a useful alternative mode of travel, especially at night, since spiders cannot climb past the leaves and other harmful mobs cannot find many ways to follow you - especially since they cannot jump over small gaps between trees. Just don't fall down!
 * Has a small chance of being a "flower forest", and in that case, the biome will be filled with exclusive flowers that are great for decorating. Also, rabbits and bees can spawn.
 * Is hidden and harder for players to find or attack you on servers.
 * Wolves can spawn.

Cons

 * Somewhat inconvenient to build in unless an area is cleared.
 * Trees obstruct visibility.
 * It is difficult to recognize any one section of the forest, which can be bad if you get lost.
 * Hostile mobs are surprisingly prevalent here depending on how dense the forest is. Skeletons can shoot you from around-the-corner, creepers can sneak up from you from behind trees, and undead mobs have plenty of shade to shelter in during the day.
 * Hard to run through due to the high amount of trees blocking your path. Also, horse riding here is near impossible. In a game mode where you must respect your health as much as possible, this will be very dangerous, as suffocation in the trees is likely and hard to avoid without carefully traveling at speeds lower than simply sprinting without the horse.
 * Fire and lightning strikes are a major issue here as they can potentially start huge forest fires.

Useful Resources
Wood, saplings, flowers, wolves are useful resources found in forest biomes.

Tips

 * Consider making this your resource base.
 * Be wary of fires. It's far worse here than in every other biome except for the Nether (and maybe the jungle).
 * Sometimes getting on top of trees helps. Your visibility of the forest will increase and you will be able to travel faster. It also acts as a temporary shelter during the night if you are desperate; if you break the blocks you used to get up, usually, mobs cannot reach you.
 * Never let your guard down! As already stated, a dense enough forest can allow hostile mobs to spawn even in daytime, which can give the player a nasty surprise if they are not careful.

Savanna
The savanna biome has a similar appearance to the grassland, but it doesn't rain here(except in shattered variants), and it contains plateaus for a greater range of building. Abundant trees are never quite as thick as anywhere else, with less vegetation than a swamp to obscure vision. There can be many high mountains, which can be beneficial and problematic. The diversity of views possible offer flat, semi terraced, and sheer vistas.

Pros

 * Trees are rather abundant.
 * Horses can spawn, except in shattered variants.
 * Villages can generate here.
 * Villages here generate melons, also lots of farms.
 * Also village butchers can have chests that have loot.
 * This is the only biome where acacia trees spawn naturally.
 * Llamas can spawn.
 * Shattered savanna and shattered savanna plateau can have spectacular scenery. There is also quite a bit of exposed coal ore and stone. Also $$ rain can occur in shattered biomes.

Cons

 * Lack of water makes farms slightly harder to make, except in shattered savanna.
 * Grass is very thick in this biome, can hide spiders, can camouflage creepers and is very hard to get rid of without a bucket.
 * Pillager Outpost can generate here.
 * Terrain in shattered savanna can be dangerous, especially near a cliff as the player can take fatal fall damages and monsters can spawn in the darkness under the cliffs.

Useful Resources
Acacia and oak trees, horses, llamas for storage, melons and hay bales can be found in savanna villages, double tall grass for seeds, all other passive mobs, pillager outposts are useful resources found in the savanna biome.

Taiga
The taiga is the cold version of the forest. In taiga biomes, only the spruce tree can be found. This is useful for spruce-based building.

Pros

 * Wolves spawn here and can be tamed.
 * Rabbits can spawn here.
 * Villages can generate here.
 * Village fletchers have chests that can be looted.
 * Pumpkins generate abundantly in taiga villages.
 * Only spruce trees are available, giving taigas a less obstructed view of the sky than forests.
 * Berry bushes generate here.
 * Foxes spawn here, and trusted foxes can defend the player.

Cons

 * Although rabbits, sheep, and foxes can spawn here, they can be killed by wolves, additionally chicken and rabbit also targeted by foxes.
 * Hostile mobs can hide under trees.
 * Pillager outposts can generate here.
 * Just like its snowy counterpart, it can house several hostile mobs in the shade of its trees.

Useful Resources
Wolves, villages, ferns, wood, rabbits, pumpkins from village, sweet berry bushes, foxes, pillager outposts are useful resources found in taiga biomes.

Giant Tree Taiga
The giant tree taiga is a variant of the regular taiga which spawns with huge trees. These trees have a few leaves, but yield lots of wood. The ground here is made up of coarse dirt and dead bushes can be found, giving it a more "dead" feel. There are many ferns and double ferns that may otherwise be rare, as well as podzol, which is a good alternative to mycelium (since mushrooms can be placed on it in the daytime). Mossy cobblestone spawns naturally here, making it unnecessary to use up shears to cut vines, if using mossy cobblestone for building. Like other taiga biomes, wolves can spawn in this biome. Foxes can also spawn.

Pros

 * Comes with podzol, one of the places to find it.
 * Comes with abundant mossy cobblestone which can be useful for aesthetic buildings.
 * Wolves can be found and tamed here.
 * Foxes can be found here.
 * Coarse dirt can be found here (although it can also be crafted).
 * Plenty of wood to go around, more than the forest but harder to harvest. It is best to gather the first 5 meters (vertically) of a tree on your first day, then you can start getting more later on.
 * Plenty of mushrooms.

Cons

 * Trees have relatively few leaves (hence saplings) and can be hard to harvest due to their height and lack of foliage to stand on, except in giant spruce taiga.
 * Other than offering the rare podzol, coarse dirt or moss stone blocks, there is not much that this biome offers in terms of progressing through the game.
 * Can house several hostile mobs in the shade of its trees.

Useful Resources
Podzol, mossy cobblestone, ferns, wood, wolf, rabbits, foxes are useful resources found in giant tree taiga biomes.

Tips

 * The trees give off spruce wood. Since it's possible you may have started out somewhere with oak trees, keep in mind your inventory might become cluttered if you collect different types of wood and their plank variants.
 * To cut down these trees, cut into it in a spiral pattern, making a thin spiral staircase all the way to the top. Then, destroy the stairs as you walk back down the tree.

Swamp
The swamp biome offers flat space (admittedly much of it is flooded), plenty of trees, water, and clay. Swamp huts appear here, and slimes spawn on the surface. Mushrooms and huge mushrooms are fairly common, allowing for early mushroom stew. Lily pads are common and useful. Fossils spawn 15-24 blocks underground, great for bone meal supply. Blue orchids are exclusive to swamps. The water also interferes with the spread of fire.

Pros

 * Flat surfaces.
 * Slimes, which will drop slimeballs upon death. Slimeballs are used to craft sticky pistons and slime blocks, making this biome useful for redstone-knowledgeable players.
 * Blue orchids spawn only in this biome, beside in woodland mansion.
 * Swamp huts will spawn witches continuously. This allows for witch farming, which brings farming of redstone, sugar, gunpowder, glowstone, glass bottle and pre-brewed potions.
 * Cauldrons may contain potions or splash potion.
 * Alternatively, one can also claim ownership of the witch hut and use it as their own shelter by lighting up the interior
 * Fire does not spread far in this biome, due to flooded terrain and trees being spaced out enough.
 * A lot of ponds, lakes, and oceans overlapping means it is a good place for fishing.
 * Fossils have a 1/64 chance to spawn underground and can be a good source of bone meal.
 * Provides good hiding spot on servers.
 * Huge mushrooms generate here.
 * Zombie villagers spawn here wearing unique clothes which can be cured into swamp villager.

Cons

 * Extremely flooded. It is very hard to attempt to build anything here without reforming the landscape, building stilt house may be a solution.
 * Depending on your equipment and skill level, the extra slimes may be overwhelming.
 * Witches can become a problem due to how prevalent they are.
 * If you are bringing any tamed cats, dogs, parrots and/or any other animal through the region on leads, they may become stuck under a lily pad and drown.
 * Water is discolored and not as appealing as water elsewhere.
 * Zombies may end up underwater and become stuck like mentioned before, turning them into drowned. This makes Nights in this Biome noticeably more dangerous.

Useful Resources
Clay, wood, sugar canes, vines, mushrooms, slimeballs, lily pads, blue orchids, witches, fossils and tridents are useful resources found in swamp biomes.

Tips

 * Consider building bridges out of lily pads or other blocks.
 * The Depth Strider enchantment is helpful for traveling in water, beware of drowned as vision underwater is reduced in this biome.
 * A boat can easily harvest lily pads, can be troublesome if drowned approach and mount boats then attack behind you.

Snowy Taiga
The snowy taiga is a snowy, cold biome. It is a place with lots of snow and trees. Wolves will spawn here, which can aid the player when tamed. Snow falls instead of rain, and water will eventually turn to ice if exposed to the sun, which disallows sugar cane or infinite water sources that are outdoors unless near a light source. Snow on top of your shelter can be annoying, and the tall spruce trees may be too tall to be harvested easily, and if having fewer leaves, they may drop a few saplings.

Pros

 * Plenty of wood in the tall trees.
 * Ice farms and snow farms can be built here and, unlike the mountains, do not need to be above y=95.
 * Wolves and Foxes can be found here and tamed.
 * Igloos spawn here.
 * Berry bushes rarely generate here.
 * Villages can be generated here.
 * Buildings using the same architecture as taiga villages, but are covered in snow, which can be hard to see from distance other than smoke particles from a campfire.

Cons

 * The snowy taiga is inconvenient to farm in because irrigation water freezes into ice if not protected from freezing by light sources like torches.
 * It snows a lot and that is uncontrollable, and can leave annoying snow patches on your structures.
 * Additionally, snow can stack on buildings.
 * It is rather hard to find sheep here as wolves will kill them.
 * Be careful when living in the snowy taiga, as the last thing you want is to have a pack of wolves attacking you!
 * It is commonly a safe haven for undead mobs during the day, they could hide under spruce trees and end up surprising you, especially skeletons.
 * Pillager outposts can generate here.

Useful Resources
Snow, ice, wood, ferns, igloos, wolves, sweet berries, villages, pumpkins from villages, pillager outposts and foxes are useful resources found in snowy taiga biomes.

Tips

 * It is advised not to build something here unless you don't mind having everything covered in snow.
 * Do not attack wolves, as they will group up like zombie pigmen and possibly kill you; also, there is little point in killing wolves, as they don't drop anything except experience upon death.
 * To completely chop the tall trees, try to pillar jump.
 * Many light sources will melt snow and ice which can be used to keep the player's structures somewhat cleaner.
 * This can also be used in snowy taiga village farms, as lack of light source causing these farms to be always frozen, which can uproot any crops on it.

Jungle
Although the jungle may not be the best place to start for new players, it can provide lots of wood, as giant jungle trees are the biggest trees in the game. Also, if you can avoid the traps, the jungle pyramid has loads of good loot to take. One of the problems with the jungle is that thick bundles of leaves generate on the ground, making it hard to navigate. The trees in a jungle can have horizontal branches, on which mobs can spawn, so be careful of these.

Pros

 * Loads of wood.
 * Jungle pyramids have loot in them (they can serve as houses, too). Just be careful of the dispensers that shoot arrows.
 * Ocelots spawn naturally. This will scare away creepers, which may be hard to notice due to their green texture and dense amount of foliage.
 * Lush beautiful grass
 * Melons and cocoa beans generate naturally in huge quantity.
 * The large jungle trees can be made into treehouses, which are easy to protect.
 * Optimal choice for houses on servers.
 * Parrots spawn naturally, it can imitate the sound of nearby mobs, useful for detecting hostile mobs.
 * Bamboo naturally generate here, great for crafting scaffolding and sticks.
 * Pandas can be found here
 * Zombie villagers spawn here wearing unique clothes which can be cured into jungle villagers.

Cons

 * Limited space for building due to the thick tree foliage.
 * It's easy to fall out of a tree, which may be lethal due to the size.
 * Extremely thick vegetation makes it very difficult to navigate.
 * May be more laggy than other biomes.
 * Cannot obtain pufferfish or tropical fish when fishing.

Useful Resources
Jungle wood, vines, melons, loot from jungle pyramids, cocoa beans, parrots, ocelots, bamboo, pandas are useful resources found in jungles.

Bamboo Jungle
Bamboo jungles share many similarities with regular jungles, except massive amounts of dense bamboo shoots and only giant jungle trees can be found.

Pros

 * Loads of bamboo.
 * Jungle pyramids have loot in them (they can serve as houses, too). Just be careful of the dispensers that shoot arrows.
 * Ocelots spawn naturally. This will scare away creepers, which may be hard to notice due to their green texture and dense amount of foliage.
 * Lush beautiful grass
 * Pandas spawn here, which is more common than in regular jungles
 * $$, the bamboo jungle is the only place where pandas can be found.
 * The large jungle trees can be made into treehouses, which are easy to protect.
 * One of the biomes where podzol can be found.
 * Parrots spawn naturally and can imitate the sound of nearby mobs, useful for detecting hostile mobs.
 * Zombie villagers spawn here wearing unique clothes which can be cured into jungle villagers.
 * Melon patches can be found, though not as abundant in the regular jungle.

Cons

 * Limited space for building due to the massive amount of bamboo.
 * Extremely thick vegetation makes it very difficult to navigate.
 * Cannot obtain pufferfish or tropical fish when fishing.
 * A large amount of bamboo can lead to a frozen computer.

Useful Resources
Jungle wood, vines, podzols, loot from jungle pyramids, parrots, ocelots, bamboo, pandas, melons are useful resources found in bamboo jungles.

Snowy Tundra
This biome is made up of large expanses of flat, snow-covered grass. These contain scattered trees in about the same density as plains biomes, although spruce trees generate instead of oak. There is also a sub-biome consisting of mountains which, while tall, are not as tall as the ones in the mountain biome. This biome can be beautiful, but the cold can make finding a reliable food source difficult.

Pros

 * Plenty of snow and ice.
 * The snowy landscape can be very appealing, especially when near to its mountain sub-biome or other snowy biomes.
 * Igloos, uncommon generated structures, contain the basic necessities for a starting player: A bed, crafting table, and furnace. Furthermore, an igloo has a 50% chance of containing a basement (Check under the carpet!), which can contain rare treasures for a starting player like a brewing stand and a weakness potion, as well as having a loot chest with basic loot and one golden apple, and cauldron. The player will also find two villagers, one being a zombie villager, locked in cages. Using the clues lying around, the player can learn how to cure a zombie villager.
 * Snowy villages can generate here.
 * Village shepherd houses generate chest which can be looted.
 * Snowy villages are the only place where sheep, cows and pigs spawn in this biome.
 * Some snowy village houses are made out of packed ice and blue ice.
 * $$, skeletons and strays are the only monsters that can spawn in this biome, so the underground may be safe to explore as zombies can only spawn during sieges or from spawners. Spawners still spawn monsters though.
 * Rabbits can spawn here.

Cons

 * The cold temperature is not directly threatening, but any water in this biome will freeze without a nearby heat source. Thus, farming can be difficult without putting in extra effort to keep the water heated.
 * Village farm can be used as an alternative, so the player doesn't need to build a farm.
 * Cow, pig, and sheep only spawn as part of village generation.
 * Polar bears spawn fairly frequently; These neutral mobs will attack when approached if there is a cub (Otherwise will only attack when hit). They are generally best avoided unless the player needs their drop, fish.
 * When it snows, snow layers will be created on any flat, solid blocks. It can be a nuisance, but heat sources will melt the layers.
 * Top snow can stack during snowfall.
 * During the night, strays spawn on the surface.
 * Pillager outposts can generate.

Useful Resources
Snow, ice, igloos (which is if it had good loot such as golden apples), snowy villages, pillager outposts, raw salmon and raw cod from polar bears, rabbits and wood from trees are useful resources found in snowy tundra biomes.

Tips

 * If the player is finding themselves low on wood, a snowy taiga biome may be nearby.

Mountains
The mountains biome is perhaps one of the most spectacular biomes, with arches and stone cliffs, but also one of the most difficult to get around. In mountains biomes, it is better to build bases in the mountains, instead of on them. Large surface caves, floating mountains, and overhangs are often found. Snow falls above y-level 95, allowing for snow farms and ice farms in this biome.

Pros

 * The scenery of the mountains biome is something to be desired.
 * Emerald ore is scattered underground, providing a helpful start for trading with wandering trader if the player cannot find a village. There is also quite a bit of exposed coal ore and stone.
 * One of the better biomes to farm ice and snow. The farm must be built over y=95, but most mountains reach far beyond that height.
 * Exposed stone makes it easier for beginning players to obtain it, in turn making it easier to upgrade both gear and building materials.
 * The exposed stone walls also make it easier to find early-game ores.
 * Find lava without having to go down deep into a cavern, as lava will commonly spawn on the surface and allow you to build whatever you need with it (cobblestone generator, nether portal, Mob farming, etc).
 * Some trees, which are handy for starters, although they are few and far between.
 * It is very easy to find and harvest coal, which means you will never have to use the few trees you find for charcoal.
 * Later on, you can make a hidden base using simple redstone here.
 * Llamas can spawn here, useful for storage pack.
 * Zombie villagers spawn here wearing unique clothes which can be cured into taiga villagers.

Cons

 * Heights. Falling can kill you depending on the height. The vibrant environment of the mountains makes it hard to find an existing landmark to know where your inventory's contents are. The terrain is not easy to explore to get to your items very quickly, and getting there will take a lot of hunger and food.
 * The hilly terrain often provides very little flat ground, making it hard to build structures.
 * Hard to find sugar cane due to the lack of apparent open lakes.
 * There are relatively few trees, which can pose problems for beginning players, except if the player in wooded mountains.
 * Infested stone (releasing silverfish) are also scattered underground, which can be dangerous for the unprepared.
 * You will have to dig farther to reach ores that generate below layer 16.
 * While ores can spawn in the cliffs, it can be quite challenging to reach them because they are so high up.
 * Gravelly variants have surface almost completely made out of gravel, almost no trees at all, and slightly dangerous unsupported gravel may fall down.

Useful Resources
Cobblestone, snow, ice, stone, emerald ore, coal ore, llamas, gravel, flint, spruce wood are useful resources found in mountains biomes.

Tips

 * $$, you can avoid infested stone by seeing how long it takes to mine the supposed stone block. If it takes unusually long or takes the same time to mine regardless of what tool you use, it is an infested stone. You can also mine them with a Silk Touch pickaxe if you have one, because if they're mined with a Silk Touch pickaxe, they don't spawn silverfish. Consult the infested block page for more information.
 * If you get a critical hit, you may be able to kill a silverfish in one hit (so you don't awaken others) with an iron or diamond sword.
 * To obtain more wood, gathering saplings or building your house near its wooded variant (like wooded mountains) is advised.
 * Watch out for steep cliffs, falling is one of the leading causes of death in this biome. Boots enchanted with Feather Falling are strongly advised.

Stone Shore
The stone shore biome often occurs where a mountains biome meets the ocean. Therefore, stone shores have many of the advantages and disadvantages of both ocean and mountains biomes. Stone shore, despite its beach biome variant, it very different from a standard beach biome. It contains many high hills and steep cliffs, and, true to its name, it is completely made of stone.

Pros

 * In stone shore biomes, you can often see both mountains and ocean, which makes great scenery.
 * Stone shores are completely made up of stone, making it great if you need to go stone mining but don't want to go underground
 * As stone shores often occur near mountains and oceans, this means that both emeralds and ocean monuments are available nearby.
 * Unlike in mountain biomes, water is easy to obtain in stone shores, as they are directly next to oceans.
 * Similar to mountains, stone shores contain a lot of coal and at some height will snow.
 * Buried Treasure can generate at high elevations here, so you don't need to dig below sea level.

Cons

 * No passive mobs can spawn in this biome, meaning that you have to go to another biome to get porkchops, beef, chicken, raw mutton, or rabbit.
 * Like in mountain biomes, the heights of stone shores make it difficult to navigate, and provides little level ground for houses.
 * There are no trees at all in a stone shore biome, although some dirt patch may generate, this biome never generates any trees.

Useful resources
Water, snow, ice, buried treasure, stone, coal ore are useful resources found in stone shores.

Dark Forest
This is the only place that dark oak trees naturally spawn. These thick trees allow players to chop a single tree down for more than half a stack of wood, plus saplings and the occasional apple. Also, dark forests will occasionally spawn woodland mansions. However, in addition to all of the problems with living in a regular forest, the area underneath the trees is often dark enough for monsters to spawn, making this biome rather dangerous, especially for beginners.

Pros

 * Lots of wood.
 * Huge mushrooms, Huge mushrooms are naturally spawned near the trees.
 * The canopy of the forest is safe. Mobs do not spawn on the leaf blocks. This can also be used to travel over the forest quickly as there are little to no obstructions.
 * Woodland mansions can spawn here, which can provide shelter but are very rare and difficult to find. The player will also need to light and clear the mansion of hostile mobs. The mansion can be turned into a base once cleared and looted and is generally easy to find after doing so because of how large and easy to notice a mansion is from far away, and your explorer map may be fully explored.

Cons

 * Can be difficult to navigate.
 * Leaves block out most of the sky, allowing undead mobs to be active throughout the day. It is usually dark enough on the forest floor to spawn even more monsters.
 * Trees may hinder construction.
 * Woodland Mansions provide an instant and very gorgeous-looking shelter, although the original owners are not exactly hospitable homeowners.
 * Consult the Tutorials/Defeating a woodland mansion article for more information about clearing out the mansion

Useful Resources
Dark oak wood, mushrooms, totem of undying (found when you kill a evoker found in a woodland mansion and raids) are useful resources found in dark forests.

Badlands
The badlands hold a lot of terracotta. While only a select few variants have some useful trees to start out with, you'll want to come back here to enjoy the scenery. When not enjoying the scenery which allows many structures that look here and nowhere else, you can mine out the terracotta for other projects. Like the desert or mushroom fields, it's best to start out somewhere else and return here when you have gathered some basic materials. You can also find above ground mineshafts in this biome

Pros

 * Good source of gold.
 * Mineshafts are easier to find.
 * Plenty of cactus.
 * Scenery is great for building here in the natural plateau.
 * Surface-level mineshafts generate, which can be a source of dark oak planks as well as a good place to find gold and loot.
 * Terracotta can be mined out here for future projects.
 * The only place where red sand can be found, which is useful for red sandstone, glass or TNT.
 * You can easily get sticks by breaking the dry grass without the need to craft them, a good strategy since this biome almost lacks of trees.

Cons

 * Not much surface-level or near-surface-level stone.
 * It is rather hard to find wood here, and while the badlands can have oak trees, relying on the chances of spawning there is not efficient as it only generates in wooded badlands plateau variants.
 * Lack of passive mobs and therefore meats and their other products cannot be obtained.
 * $$, eroded badlands can spawn cows, chickens, pigs and sheep, so it's better to live in these badlands variants.

Useful Resources
Terracotta, dead bushes, red sand, red sandstone, cactus, gold, oak wood from trees in wooded badlands are useful resources found in badland biomes.

Tips

 * Make sure to collect the saplings from the trees in the badlands biome! You want to make sure you will never run out of trees or their saplings.
 * Use a mineshaft to get down somewhere you can get stone and ore, even chest loot from minecart there.

Desert
Many players prefer to not live in deserts, as they lack grass, wood, and many other vital resources - however, once a player has basic materials, living in a desert can be beneficial. Sand can be obtained in large quantities, and cactus is rare in other biomes. Almost no water generates here, which poses a problem if spawned deep within these biomes. Also, no passive mobs spawn here other than rabbits. No trees spawn here, either. Though not the best biome for the beginner, it is still a nice biome to live in after you've got your initial house set up somewhere else (see Tutorials/Survival in an infinite desert for tips on how to survive in a desert).

Pros

 * Desert pyramids spawn here (which contains good loot inside the treasure chests).
 * Desert villages spawn here.
 * Village temple can have chests, which can be looted.
 * Desert villages are the only place where pig, sheep, and cow can be found in this biome.
 * Generally flat terrain, except hills variants.
 * Rain does not obscure your vision from potential dangers like mobs. It also means no thunderstorms causing any trouble.
 * Lots of cactus and dead bushes.
 * Lots of sand means you can get lots of sandstone, TNT and glass. Sand and sandstone are quite rare in other biomes.
 * The bright sand can make it easier to see in the dark, and the mobs that come with it.
 * Undead mobs will have a harder time trying to find shade during the day with the lack of foliage.
 * Rabbits spawn here, which offer food when the desert doesn't spawn animals.
 * Fossils spawn underground in this biome like the swampland biome, which can be a good source of bone meal.

Cons

 * Little water (except in desert lakes, a variant of the desert) which causes difficulty in many water-related activities, especially farming. However, villages and desert wells can be good sources of desert water.
 * Lack of rain also means you can't boost the time of fishing, and you can't hydrate crops if the desert is lacking any water sources.
 * No grass.
 * No trees or reliable way to naturally get wood.
 * Sand can suffocate you if it falls on you while mining near the surface.
 * Like the plains, you can get shot down by skeletons due to the lack of foliage shielding its shots.
 * Husks, a variant of zombies, makes up 80%/70% of zombies found there. They give the Hunger effect when they hit. Also, husks will not burn in daylight, and can, therefore, be dangerous for players who have trouble during mob fights, or to villagers in desert villages.
 * Pillager outposts can generate here, which supply a large amount of dark oak log and birch planks in the desert.

Useful Resources
Sand, cactus, dead bushes, sticks, sandstone, sugar cane, melon seeds from melon stems from desert village farms, rabbits, villages, wood from pillager outposts are useful resources found in desert biomes.

Tips

 * Spawning in a desert is a rough time. For newer players, it is recommended to wander to another biome as staying here means accepting a great challenge when it comes to survival.
 * Coming to the desert to mass-collect the sand in bulk is great if you need glass or sandstone.
 * If you find a desert and expect to need sand in the future, set up a base somewhere more habitable and come back later.

Ice Spikes
Ice spikes is a very interesting biome with its random giant spires of packed ice, which have a very pleasant appearance, but also, like the badlands, lacks resources. This biome is also good for building homes that are more for show than for function. The taller ice spikes can be made into a tower with some work, although, inside, it will be little more than a spiral staircase with a room on top. The smaller ones can also be hollowed out and used to make an igloo. If you decide to live in an ice spikes biome, try to find one that is near a snowy taiga biome, so that you can harvest wood more easily.

Pros

 * This is one of the places where you can naturally find packed ice beside the frozen ocean and snowy villages.
 * Great source of ice and snow.
 * The ice spikes in this biome are very nice to look at.
 * The packed ice can be used as spawn areas for mob grinders, or to craft blue ice.

Cons

 * No wood naturally spawns in the ice spike biome. This is a horrible place for a beginner to build a house because there is no wood, meaning the only way you can successfully live in the biome is if there is a biome with wood nearby that you can harvest wood from.
 * The ice spike biome is extremely difficult to farm in. Because the biome is so cold, water will freeze unless protected. This means that you will have to go through extra work to build your farm inside your house or underground. Because of this, no natural sunlight would be there to boost the crop's growth, meaning that you would have to go through extra trouble to provide illumination.
 * Biomes that are hot or medium/lush are usually not found near ice spikes, which means that it's harder to gather resources if living in an ice spikes biome.
 * There are practically no passive mobs in this biome (aside from occasional rabbits or polar bears), which, coupled with the total lack of plants, as if things weren't bad enough, makes it ever so harder to obtain food.
 * Strays can spawn here.

Useful Resources
Packed ice, ice, snow, polar bears, rabbits are useful resources found in ice spikes biomes.

Mushroom Fields
Despite this biome being far down on the list, it is actually one of the easiest biomes to live in. However, Mushroom fields are very rare and are rarely connected to the "mainland" in any way. The most common reason for players to find a mushroom fields biome, is the fact that no monsters naturally spawn here, although spawners will still spawn mobs. It is completely safe for new players, and still great for experienced players. The one mob that does spawn there, mooshrooms, can be "milked" with a bowl to get mushroom stew or with a bucket to get milk, allowing for an infinite food source as long as the player has a bowl. Finding one can be difficult. The mycelium is useful for growing mushrooms, and with the exception of the dark forest biome and swamp, this is the only biome containing giant mushrooms. Normal monster spawning cannot happen at all, meaning that gunpowder is unobtainable but the drops of zombies, spiders, and skeletons are available from spawners, additionally mineshafts still generate and can spawn cave spiders. Trees also don't spawn here, meaning that wood is unavailable unless you find a shipwreck on the mushroom field shore. Make sure to bring saplings with you if you decide to build your house on a mushroom island, if you don't have saplings, wandering traders can still spawn in this biome and may sell saplings, make sure to have emeralds to buy it.

Pros

 * Mycelium, on which you can plant mushrooms independently of the light level, like podzol. Contrary to podzol, though, the mycelium will spread like grass, making it easier to obtain in large quantities.
 * Red Mooshrooms spawn here, and give a reliable infinite food source, as long as you have bowls in stock.
 * $$, when mooshrooms breed, they have a small chance to spawn as brown mooshrooms, which if milked after being fed by flowers will give you Suspicious Stew that can inflict you with status effects depending on the flower used. Red mooshrooms also transform into brown mooshrooms when struck by lightning and vice versa.
 * Small and large mushrooms, both types(red and brown), spawn here, allowing for more mushroom collecting and using the mushroom block as a building material (if you have a Silk Touch shovel).
 * No hostile mobs spawn within this biome, which means an overall safer experience.

Cons

 * Aside from mooshrooms, no other passive mobs spawn which makes obtaining food harder.
 * No natural light-based mob spawning means creating a mob farm without a spawner is impossible or without transporting animals and breeding them. This means the only ways to obtain drops such as bones (which speed up crop growth), string (to craft bows), or arrows (for use in bows) is to build out over the ocean.
 * Alternatively as long you have a composter, you can convert mushroom into bone meal.
 * Make sure to have loads of emeralds as wandering trader trades are very useful in these biomes.
 * No wood. No wood means no first set of tools or crafting table or anything crafted with cobblestone or wood. No wood also means no bowls, and that negates the effect of mushroom stew.
 * The only wood source is from shipwrecks which can generate on land in mushroom field shore, though rare.
 * Rarely connected to any other land, and if you spawned here for the first time, you will have a very hard time going to the mainland due to your hunger going down from swimming. You can't make a boat either, because wood is not available in mushroom fields.

Useful Resources
Mycelium, mushrooms, mushroom stew, milk, suspicious stew, planks from shipwrecks, loot from dungeon, mineshaft chest and buried treasure in mushroom field shore are useful resources found in mushroom fields biomes.

Tips

 * Like the desert, come back here after venturing to the mainland so you can have wood to start your gameplay with.
 * You can get dirt blocks to build a bridge to the mainland.
 * If you find one of these biomes when in a boat, use the extra space to take a mooshroom with you back to your base.
 * Make sure to sleep regularly in this biome, as if you forget to sleep for 3 days you will be attacked by a group of phantoms when leaving this biome (even if you just leave for one block).

Ocean / Deep Ocean
As of Update Aquatic, oceans have been reworked to be much more appealing for players to live in. Oceans spawn in temperature variants, such as warm, lukewarm, normal (basic ocean biome), cold, and frozen. Each one of these (except warm oceans) also have a "deep" variant, allowing for larger underwater structures. All ocean types can contain underwater ruins and shipwrecks, and all deep variants can contain ocean monuments.

Pros

 * All variants except for warm oceans contain kelp, which can be used as an underwater "crop" for food.
 * While warm oceans lack kelp, they are the only variant to generate coral reefs and sea pickles, which are a spectacle.
 * What variant you're in depends on what type of underwater mobs spawn. Warmer variants spawn tropical fish which come in thousands of color combinations, as well as dolphins and pufferfish; Cold (but not frozen variants) will also spawn dolphins as well as cod and salmon; squids spawn in normal and frozen variants.
 * Dolphins, when fed fish, will lead the player to a nearby underwater structure chest, likely a shipwreck or underwater ruin. They also provide the player with a dolphin's grace effect or instant swimming boost that increases their swimming speed when swimming alongside them.
 * Turtles actually only spawn on beaches, but you will generally find them swimming around in the adjacent ocean. They will often head back to their home beach to lay eggs, which can be collected with silk touch or observed until they hatch to harvest scute from baby turtles.
 * Both underwater ruins and shipwrecks can contain valuable loot such as crops, books, paper, iron bars and nuggets, gold, and even diamonds and emeralds. However, their most valuable loot is the buried treasure map, which leads to a buried chest in a nearby beach biome. These chests contain more valuable minerals, as well as one heart of the sea, which is the main component to the conduit.
 * Drowned, while difficult, can sometimes drop nautilus shells (used for making conduits), or tridents, a weapon that can be used as a sword or thrown. It can also be enhanced with unique enchantments like Channeling, which calls down a lighting strike; riptide, which pulls the player along with the trident as it is thrown; or loyalty, which causes the trident to return to the player once thrown.
 * Abundant supply of ink sacs.
 * Ocean monuments are found in deep oceans. This is the only source of resources like sponges, also one of place where sea lanterns and prismarine can be found, and can be used to create guardian farms.
 * A good, deep source of water for fishing in.
 * Fish can be caught with water buckets, allowing for the player to move them to their desired location.

Cons

 * The biggest problem with underwater activity is, of course, the lack of oxygen. The player will need to find a method for prolonged underwater living that best suits their needs, be it water breathing potions, air pockets using non-waterloggedable, bubble column, turtle shell helmets with or without respiration / other helmets with respiration, or the conduit frame.
 * If the player wants to build above water, islands are sparse, usually small, and low on resources. Building anything with wood, such as a ship, is difficult due to the lack of trees, although shipwrecks can be dismantled for a good amount of wood.
 * Transport in/on oceans can be difficult for early players. A boat or boots with the Frost Walker enchantment are recommended for above water, while underwater, the player can activate the sprint button to begin swimming, and/or can use boots with the Depth Strider enchantment.
 * Guardians can be found in ocean monuments, which may be deadly to unprepared players.
 * While no mainland/underground mobs will spawn underwater, drowned, a swimming zombie variant, spawn fairly frequently anywhere underwater and in ocean ruins. They can occasionally wield tridents, which makes them very dangerous as they can damage the player from a distance.
 * Nearby ocean monuments may cause one of the elder guardians to attack you with mining fatigue, preventing you from progressing due to this making early-game resources like coal taking too long to be mined out.

Useful Resources
Water, dolphins, cod, salmon, kelp, sea grass, coral, sea pickles, tridents, treasure map, prismarine shards, prismarine crystals, gold, sponges, wet sponges, ink sacs and magma blocks are useful resources found in oceans and deep oceans.

Tips

 * Unless the player explicitly wants to live underwater, building on a nearby beach may be a better idea if the player is having trouble dealing with air loss or lack of resources.
 * While drowned are the only outright hostile mobs, pufferfish can inflict poison damage if you get too close, and dolphins will become hostile if attacked like wolves.

Frozen Ocean/Deep Frozen Ocean
Frozen ocean is an ocean with a surface completely freeze, including deep variants. Some resources are different enough than in other ocean biomes.

Pros

 * Frozen oceans have icebergs on the surface, composed of ice, packed ice, blue ice, and snow. Blue ice won't melt regardless of biome and is the most slippery version of ice.
 * Medium-sized iceberg (one without water pool or tunnel) can also be used as a starter house in the early game, by digging a hole in it and live inside it.
 * On some occasions, a structure such as ocean ruins and shipwreck may generate inside an iceberg, which makes these structures easier to reach without diving underwater.
 * Player don't need to worry about being attacked by drowned(especially one armed with trident) since surface on the frozen ocean is ice.

Cons

 * Stray can spawn at night in the frozen ocean and deep frozen ocean, while polar bear spawn during day, which can be dangerous.
 * Underwater of these oceans are completely barren without kelp nor seagrass.
 * While being save from drowned, Unlike other ocean, frozen ocean also spawn regular hostile mobs, such as creeper, zombies, spiders, and witches (skeletons spawn in fewer rate). So stray are not only hostile mobs found in here.
 * $$, due surface in deep frozen ocean completely freeze, ocean monuments are less noticeable till player get mining fatigue, especially if player travel on ice, even when the monument under feet due to surface landscape.
 * No dolphin spawn in frozen ocean, which means if ruins and shipwreck generate underwater, the player should find it manually or by fed dolphin from other ocean biomes.

Useful Resources
Water, salmon, blue ice, trident, treasure map, prismarine shards, prismarine crystals, gold, sponge, wet sponge, ink sacs, magma block, cod

Beach
When it comes to how to live on a beach, it really comes down to how to survive in their adjacent biomes. Beaches themselves are small biomes of barren sand/gravel except for sugar cane, turtle nests, and buried treasure, if you manage to stumble on some when terraforming. Beaches are mainly appealing for players who want to be able to see the ocean or have an above water base for ocean operations.

Pros

 * As mentioned above, beaches are good for players who want to see the ocean, but live on land, or have an above ground base when not exploring the ocean.
 * If you live near a turtle nest, turtles will lay eggs, which hatch into babies that drop scute, who grow into an adult and repeat the process. Turtles will remember their nest location meaning that the same area will be the center of turtle activity permanently. Note that the player may need to set up protection for them, as undead mobs will attempt to crush turtle eggs or kill the baby turtles.
 * You could stumble upon a buried treasure chest without a map, but it is very unlikely. Additionally, a beach dweller would find little use for a conduit.
 * Sugar cane grows adjacent to water, so a beach makes a great natural farm.
 * A good amount of sand, or gravel if you live next to a cold biome.
 * Sometimes, shipwreck generate on beach.

Cons

 * Hostile mobs are generally no worse here than any other flat, barren biome, but a turtle nest may attract unwanted attention.
 * Other cons mainly consist of the cons of your neighboring biomes.

Useful Resources
Turtle eggs, scutes, heart of the sea, sugar cane, sand, gravel and shipwrecks are useful resources found here.

Nether
The Nether is perhaps one of the most dangerous biomes to try and live in. It is a barren hellscape full of fire, lava, ghasts and other dangers. Living here is only recommended for skilled players. Structure-wise, the Nether takes the appearance of a huge underground cave network containing everything from small tunnels to enormous open subterranean spaces to steep cliffs to overhangs, lava falls, giant lava oceans and random fires scattered about. Note that it is extremely difficult to live solely in this dimension; Important resources such as pickaxes can only be found in the dangerous Nether Fortresses, and the realm is completely void of wood.

See the Tutorials/Nether survival article for a full-length guide on how to survive in this biome.

Pros

 * There is plenty of netherrack available, which can be mined easily and smelted into nether bricks for building ghast-proof structures.
 * Glowstone is found naturally and can be collected and used as a light source
 * Traveling one block in the Nether is equal to traveling eight blocks in the Overworld which can be used to quickly travel large distances in the Overworld.
 * Mushrooms can occasionally spawn here.
 * The Nether is the only place where nether quartz is found.
 * Zombie pigmen spawn frequently here which can allow the player, once established enough, to set up a gold farm.
 * Nether Fortresses provide a plentiful source of Nether Brick, Nether Wart and can also contain chests with loot. Skilled players could even consider converting them into bases.

Cons

 * Cannot be accessed without a Nether portal, which requires at least 10 pieces of obsidian and a method of lighting it.
 * Once the player makes it through the portal, the location where they come out of the portal is almost completely random, which can pose a hazard in itself.
 * If the Nether Portal you used to enter the Nether is destroyed and you have no flint and steel or fire charges on you, relighting it will be challenging and may require you to find a flint and steel in a Nether Fortress treasure chest or to forage the Nether for resources to craft a fire charge.
 * Fire and Lava are found all over the place, Potions of Fire Resistance can become a necessity.
 * Aside from endermen and occasional skeletons, no Overworld mobs spawn in the Nether, which makes animal farming impossible.
 * Water cannot be placed anywhere except for in a cauldron and will instantly evaporate if one attempts to place it.
 * This greatly hinders crop farming which, coupled with the complete lack of Overworld passive mobs, makes the Nether very bleak in terms of food availability.
 * However, Sweet berries can grow in the nether, provided you have dirt to plant them on.
 * The aforementioned complete lack of proper food may drive a starving player to resort to consuming rotten flesh from zombie pigmen.
 * As a consolation of sorts, Rotten Flesh can be farmed if one sets up a mob grinder and, given that zombie pigmen also drop occasional Gold Nuggets, the mob grinder can also double up as a gold farm.
 * Ghasts fire explosive fireballs which can cause major structural damage to any structures not built from stone. In addition to that, due to how fragile netherrack is, standing near any ledges or cliffs is not advised as the ghasts can potentially destroy the floor from underneath the player, leading to a potentially lethal fall.
 * The terrain is extremely challenging to negotiate due to the prevalence of fire, lava oceans(!), steep cliffs and hostile mobs.
 * The Nether Fortresses contain many highly dangerous mobs and exploration should never be attempted without proper equipment.

Useful Resources
Nether bricks, gold nuggets, coal, glowstone, nether wart, soul sand, magma cream, ghast tears and magma blocks are useful resources found here.

The End
This biome would not be accessible to a beginner player, but for players who want an advanced challenge, the End could serve as a home after the final boss is defeated. The End dimension is made up of two different areas: The Center Island where the final boss is fought; And the Outer Islands that begin generating 1000 blocks from the center. The Center Island is a somewhat small landmass that is made up of end stone, obsidian and bedrock. The outer islands feature many endstone islands, chorus plants, and valuable end cities. Should the player chose to live solely in this biome without important items from the Overworld (as if they had spawned into the world for the first time), the Center Island is uninhabitable; it offers no food or resources to collect. The Outer Islands must be reached in order to live sufficiently. Note that the player will need to kill the final boss before the challenge begins, as it will likely kill an item-less player in a few seconds.

Pros

 * Plenty of ender pearls.
 * Plenty of chorus plants can be collected, which, while serving as a sufficient food source, will randomly teleport the player when eaten.
 * The end cities on the Outer Islands can provide some of the tools the player had been lacking, including enchanted iron/diamond tools and armor. The most valuable loot is the elytra, found on the flying ships in an end city. This item can make traversing the vast chasms between islands much easier. Also, the cities can be renovated or deconstructed for their unique building blocks, some of the only ones the player can obtain.
 * Given that both chests and shulker shells can be obtained in End Cities, the player can create shulker boxes for mobile storage needs.

Cons

 * Living in this biome without items from the overworld is brutal.
 * To get to the outer islands, the player must either bridge to them, use a flying machine, or kill the ender dragon and get into the end gateway, either by using an ender pearl or placing water and swimming into the gateway.
 * Once the outer islands are reached, the player will need to head to an end city for tools. These structures are quite dangerous due to the shulker mobs scattered about. Given that the only thing the player will be armed with at this point is ender pearls and chorus fruit, the challenge comes with making it to the chests at the top of the towers/the end ship without being able to efficiently kill shulkers. While the towers are designed so that all areas can be reached by foot, albeit requiring parkour while under attack from shulkers, with the exception of the ship, the shulker bullets will prove difficult to avoid. A few ideas include using the shulker's bullets to your advantage to levitate upward, although it requires the consumption of chorus fruit to keep your health up, which may teleport you back down a few blocks. You could use the chorus fruit as well, in hopes that it progressively teleports you upward. The best strategy is likely using ender pearls, although you will need many, which requires a lot of bare-handed enderman farming.
 * Crossing to other islands can be achieved by either: throwing ender pearls or making bridges of chorus plant blocks. Once the player loots an end city, they could build block bridges or use elytra.
 * Endermen are everywhere and deadly to an unarmed player, so keep your head down and avoid eye contact.
 * The player will likely be using a lot of ender pearls, which can occasionally spawn endermites. While weak, they attract enderman which can teleport or walk in front of the players vision.

Useful Resources
Endstone, Purpur, Shulker Shells, Shulker Boxes, Ender Pearls, End City Loot, Elytra, Chorus Fruit, Chorus Flower, ender chest

Other
While not technically biomes, these areas offer different base building experiences than any biome and may be desirable to some players.

Sky
Building high above the surface can be challenging, as there is a constant danger of falling, and the player will need to set up farms to sustain themselves without taking trips to the surface. However, building a skybase can allow the player lots of creative freedom without any land to get in their way.
 * The vast areas between islands in the End is similar to living in the Sky in the Overworld, with the added Con of it naturally being very dark at all times.

Pros

 * At this height, the player will not have much difficulty lighting up their sky base, the only place where hostile mobs could spawn and attack. Phantoms are the sole exception, spawning in the air regardless of light level, but they can be avoided by sleeping frequently.
 * Depending on your render distance and height, you may be able to see the surface which provides a nice aerial view.
 * With no land obstructions, the player can exercise complete creative freedom, and have plenty of space for any structure.

Cons

 * There are absolutely no natural resources in the sky (With the exception of snow fall creating snow layers in some biome's skies). The player will need to make cargo trips from the surface during building their sky base to bring up necessary resources and farmables.
 * Constant danger of falling off if not careful, likely at a height that will kill the player.
 * Unless the player intents to live on their sky base 100%, a way of getting up and down to the surface is necessary, such as a very long ladder.

Underground
As an opposite to the Sky, the underground may require the player to spend lots of time mining out space for structures. Any room or cave near the players base will need to be lit up sufficiently to prevent mob spawning, however wandering trader along with two trader llamas can also spawn underground. However, the player would be living right next to a vast amount of resources such as iron, diamond, and more. While likely less desirable than living on the surface, living in the underground can provide a unique survival experience.

Pros

 * Immediate access to the underground's vast mining resources
 * Plenty of stone, dirt, ores, etc.
 * A cave, especially one that is big and/or opens up at the surface, can be transformed into an improvised home.
 * The player may find structures like Strongholds or Abandoned Mine Shafts suitable to easily change into a home.
 * Due to their trades, Wandering traders that spawn underground can serve as underground shops for useful resources that would otherwise require the player to go to the surface.

Cons

 * Many hazards such as hostile mobs in the dark, lava lakes, loose gravel that can create cave-ins, dungeons and other structures.
 * Lots of mining may need to be done to clear out an area for a desired structure.
 * Many resources needed for ongoing survival such as wood and foods will require the player either first bring them from the surface, or find a structure such as an Abandoned Mineshaft or Stronghold that provides such things, wandering trader may also solve the problem as long as the player has a large quantity of emeralds.

Useful Resources
Stone, dirt, gravel, andesite, diorite, granite, iron, gold, redstone, lapis lazuli, diamonds, emeralds, obsidian, dungeon/abandoned mineshaft/stronghold Loot and mob farming opportunities are useful resources found here.

Video
教程/最佳居住生物群系