Minecraft Earth:Moobloom

"The moobloom is a beautiful cow adorning itself with yellow scented flowers. You can shear and if you're lucky you might find a beautiful new buttercup."

- Player Journal Description

The moobloom was a buttercup-covered variant of the mooshroom found only $$. It was a rare drop of cow tappables. Mooblooms were like mooshrooms except yellow and sprouted buttercups instead of mushrooms.

Appearance
The moobloom was a buttercup-covered variant of the normal cow. Its body was yellow with big white spots scattered throughout its body and head. It had two big black eyes, just like a mooshroom. It had 4 buttercups growing out of it, with three on its back, and one on its head. It had a white muzzle, a dark grey snout, and gray horns.

Obtaining
Mooblooms were a rare mob drop obtainable from cow tappables with a very low 0.6% chance of getting it, making it the rarest cow variant to obtain $$. It was also obtainable by purchasing the "Roadside Inn" buildplate.

Behavior
Mooblooms left a trail of yellow flowers as they walked, with each flower they plant having an 80% chance of being a dandelion, or a 20% chance of being a sunflower. Otherwise, mooblooms mostly had the same AI behavior as mooshrooms and cows. They wandered aimlessly, mooing and huffing constantly, avoiding lava and cliffs high enough to cause fall damage.

Drops
A Moobloom was able to be sheared for 1.

Just like a normal cow, the moobloom dropped the following when killed:
 * 0–2
 * 1–3 ( if killed while on fire)

Trivia

 * The chance of obtaining the moobloom was changed along with many other mobs, with its previous 0.4% chance of being obtained changed to 0.2%, making it significantly harder to get, then changed again to 0.5% chance, then 0.6%.
 * It was included in the Minecraft Live 2020 mob vote, being the first to be eliminated and leaving the iceologer and the glow squid to determine the winner, which was the glow squid.
 * The biome category of the journal revealed that mooblooms spawned in plains rather than flower forests.