Minecraft Wiki
Advertisement
This article is about the individual items. For the large fungi that can be grown with bonemeal and are found in mushroom biomes, see Huge Mushrooms.

Template:Food

Template:Food

Mushrooms are plants that can grow in dark caves and shady areas. They are more readily available in swamp and mushroom biomes and the Nether due to its low light conditions. Red mushrooms are generally rarer than their brown counterparts.

Mushrooms can be collected without any specialized tools (by hitting) and planted on the ground in light levels below 13 (except in the case of Mycelium blocks, where mushrooms will remain planted even under full sun). Planted mushrooms will grow into Huge Mushrooms when bone meal is used on them, and will pop out of the ground if the light level goes above 12, water flows over them, or when pushed by a piston.

The individual blocks of Huge Mushrooms will drop individual small mushrooms when broken by the player. Oddly enough, the blocks cannot be set on fire and are unaffected by lava.

Mooshrooms are a unique mob that serve as a source for red mushrooms (when sheared) and Mushroom Stew (when "milked" by the player while holding a bowl).

Uses

Product Ingredients Input » Output Purpose
Mushroom Stew Brown Mushroom
+
Red Mushroom
+
Bowl
Template:Grid/Crafting Table Used as food
Fermented Spider Eye Spider Eye
+
Brown Mushroom
+
Sugar
Template:Grid/Crafting Table Creating Potions

History

Pre-Beta

In Creative Mode, mushrooms were a decorative item, having no crafting use and remaining in the ground when planted. In Classic, mushrooms could be placed on any block except another mushroom, and would remain planted when the block below them was removed. During Indev, mushrooms were generated in rare instances under trees or in the shadows of other floating continents in the "Floating" map type. In Survival Test, Pigs were able to eat mushrooms. Brown mushrooms healed ♥♥♥ and the consumption of red mushrooms caused ♥♥ damage to the player's health. From Indev onwards, red and brown mushrooms could not be eaten on their own, but could be crafted together with a bowl to yield Mushroom Stew.

With the addition of biomes and the dimly-lit Nether in Alpha 1.2.0, mushrooms became a more common sight.

Beta

Mushrooms could be generated in the open when exploring during night, or under low-light conditions such as those found under trees or overhangs. If planted in direct sunlight or a light level higher than 12 they popped out of the ground. Several bug reports mentioned mushrooms growing on top of trees, but this was a very rare phenomenon.

With the Beta 1.6 update, mushrooms were given the ability to spread in light levels under 13 onto any square touching their own, including squares located upwards and downwards diagonally in Beta 1.6 (defunct guides to mushroom farming in 1.6 are archived here). Mushrooms could be placed on any solid, non-transparent, square including pumpkins, workbenches, furnaces, and chests. However, while mushrooms could be placed on Jack-O-Lantern and Glowstone blocks, they would not grow due to the brightness of these blocks.

After Beta 1.8, mushrooms' spreading ability was severely restricted - a mushroom would only spread if there were fewer than 5 mushrooms in a 9 x 9 x 3 area around the original mushroom. However, mushroom farming became much easier since Bone Meal could be used on mushrooms to grow Huge Mushrooms that dropped several individual fungi when harvested. Mushrooms could also be found more easily in the new swamp biome under vine-covered trees.

The first 1.9 pre-release revealed the addition of the mushroom biome, an island composed of Mycelium blocks and populated by Huge Mushrooms and Mooshrooms, strange red cows with red mushrooms growing on their backs. The second 1.9 pre-release added a new crafting recipe involving brown mushrooms. Each one could be crafted with a unit of Sugar and a Spider Eye to produce a Fermented Spider Eye.

Trivia

  • Red mushrooms bear a strong resemblance to Amanita muscaria (Fly Agaric) mushrooms. In the real world, consuming these red mushrooms will cause delirium and hallucinogenic effects and death if their toxicity has not been reduced by parboiling.

Bugs

  • In the 1.9 pre-release, if a mushroom is placed next to another mushroom, both mushrooms drop and cause a duplication bug. Mushrooms also grow on trees.
Advertisement