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Paeonia (texture) TU1
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Disambig gray  本頁面介紹的是原主機版或村莊與掠奪更新前的鐵人農場。關於村莊與掠奪更新後的鐵人農場,請見「教學/鐵人陷阱」。

本教學講述了如何建造在原主機版中適用的鐵人農場(也在村莊與掠奪Java版1.14基岩版1.11)前適用)。這種農場依賴於有效村民的數量,原理為只要村民和「房屋(最少只需要一扇木門和兩個方塊,算上支援門的方塊)」的數量足夠多,鐵人就會嘗試生成。

概述

一個鐵人農場通常是一個人工村莊(或幾個隔的足夠遠以保持獨立結構的村莊),其中生成的鐵人會被迅速殺死,或是運送到一個集中點(在村莊外,這樣村莊內就可以生成新的鐵人)之後再殺死以取得鐵錠(也會獲得罌粟)。如果你選擇了第一種方式,你需要在收集點外掛機並用漏斗收集物品或者定期來收集點並在跌落物消失前撿起它們。如果你選擇了第二種方式,你就可以在集中點旁工作時讓鐵人集中起來,並在你需要時全部殺死它們來獲得所有的跌落物。如果這個農場被建造在生成區塊內並且是全自動的,它就可以一直高效地運作。

總體需求

鐵人會在(天然或人造的)村莊中自然生成,前提是至少有10個村民和21個房屋(以有效門數量為準,即一扇上方有一個不透明方塊的門)每生成的概率為1/7000,平均每6分鐘生成一個。

有很多種建造鐵人農場的方法,但高效的農場往往在鐵人生成區(16×6×16)使用兩層地板,並將所有門和村民留在該區域之外,將它們安排在生成區中心正上方或是正下方,或者在圍繞生成區同一高度的「環」上,這是為了讓可用的鐵人生成空間達到最大化,從而減少嘗試生成失敗的次數,讓生成速率儘可能的快,這樣做遠比簡單地增加村民數量來提高鐵人生成數量上限這種只在一個鐵人生成和被運送走並殺死之間的幾秒鐘起作用的方法有效。為了進一步提高資源收集的速率,你可以建造好幾個相隔64個方塊或以上距離遠的鐵人農場,並將鐵人或是它們的跌落物運送到一個中心收集區。最有效的鐵人農場使用許多部分重疊的村莊。因為鐵人對摔落傷害和溺水免疫,你可以選擇使用其他方法如熔岩岩漿塊窒息或是結合這三種方法殺死鐵人。你也可以選擇讓一群喚魔者攻擊處在一個限制它們活動的牢籠裡的鐵人這種更複雜的方式。

Odds of a missed spawn occurring: There are 512 valid spawn points in the 16×6×16 block spawn area. Making a farm with only ½ of the valid spawn points (256) does not reduce your chance of spawn by ½. This is because the game randomly "tries" to find a valid place to put a golem 10 times each time an opportunity to spawn a golem comes up. So, your chances become 0.5 for each of the ten tries. Missing a spawn in this case is equivalent to flipping a coin ten times and have all ten come out tails. It is .5^10 or .00098 which is just about one in a thousand odds. A better suggestion would be to use some of the area of the zone to rapidly move golems out of the interference zone so they do not halt further spawning. This is a much more likely occurrence than missed spawns if the golems can't move out of the area quickly. This is not as rare of an occurrence as has been suggested.

Chances of a missed spawn are calculated as follows:

 ( 1 - ( valid_spawn_points / (16*6*16) ) )^10 * 100% 

So with 256 valid spawn points you will miss 16.2% of the spawns whereas 512 valid spawn points will only result in a loss of 1.7%.

Additionally, console players should note the 50 villager spawn limit, which will make difficult, though not impossible, the full population of certain farm designs. Also, due to changes 4J Studios made to door detection and addition in the December 2015 update that brought MCCE to approximate parity with PC 1.8.8 no stacked or chained village iron farms from the PC community will work on console. Console players should avoid using anything but single village designs at this point. 4J Studios has remained silent as to whether or not the change was intentional or if they plan to fix it. All bug report tickets on MCCE bug tracker have gone unassigned.

No designs are guaranteed to work with modded servers including bukkit/spigot/paper/sponge/etc. due to possible changes in mechanics.

Video

Iron golem farm designs

Easy 2-tier build

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 40
Scalable: yes
Designed by: trunkz

Description

This is an older design by trunkz and one of the earliest to feature two spawning floors for greater efficiency. It uses several villager baskets and door pads and is a little outdated, but quite a good and efficient design for the time it takes to build.

This farm has been tested in Spigot 1.8. Extra care must be taken with breeding villagers as they no longer breed as easily as they did in earlier version. For testing in 1.8 the villagers were bred to a population of 20 on the ground before being transported to their cells (the individual villagers were transported to their cell by minecart, the other 18 went to their cell on a dirt ramp). The method given in the video will probably work if the breeding villagers are provided an ample supply of suitable food, e.g. carrots, potatoes or bread.


Survival mode build: Iron golem village

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 30-40, plus occasional loot from other mobs
Scalable: No
Design by: Amatulic

File:GolemFarmVillage.jpeg

A simple iron golem farm built in a village with free-roaming villagers.

Survival iron farm2

Another simple iron golem village farm, using fences instead of glass to block the doors.

Description

This is a simple but flexible design that can be built fairly easily in survival mode, without the need to transport villagers. The villagers can multiply and roam freely, allowing you to trade with them. The farm will occasionally capture other mobs and their loot. Multiple tiers can be built to target more golems or different mobs.

Preparation

You will need to gather sufficient resources: enough wood to craft a bunch of doors and fencing, optionally enough sand to smelt 40 glass blocks, and some iron to craft a bucket. You may need wool to craft a bed to sleep on before you start, to move your spawn point to the village in case you die and respawn while you work — some of the work is best done at night while the villagers are indoors and not getting in your way.

Find a village near a source of lava. Some villages have a blacksmith shop with a pool of lava, others have a lava source nearby.

If buildings in the village are missing any doors, give them doors, but keep the total under 21 for now. This encourages villagers to multiply and gives them a place to go at night while you work. Clear a flat 16×16 area in the village; some villages have an empty quadrant that is useful for clearing. You can use existing building walls as boundaries for the 16×16 area. Fence off the area, preferably at night after the villagers have scurried indoors, and install a gate to enter and exit the area. Villagers are curious; don't open the gate if villagers are near it, or they will go through.

Construction

The design is a 16×16 pit 2 blocks below the base of the doors, with a 2×2 hole in the middle, buildings on each side of the pit, and fencing all around. It doesn't matter how you design the buildings as long as the door arrangement is symmetric from the center of the hole. Each building shown here has at least 5 doors facing the pit. Doors on the edge of the pit should be barred from opening using glass blocks if the doors are against the edge of the pit. If the pit is completely fenced, the doors will be set back a block and need not be barred by glass. Also there are doors on other walls; placement doesn't matter as long as it's all symmetrical; an imaginary line from any door through the central hole should intersect another door an equal distance on the other side of the hole.

If your doors are on the pit's edge, then avoid placing the doors during the day! Otherwise villagers might fall into your pit. Place them and block them with glass before daylight. Once you have placed all your doors, destroy any remaining doors in other buildings that aren't part of the symmetry of the farm. Also destroy beds in any building that isn't part of your farm, and put them in your new buildings, preferably in a symmetric arrangement. Your buildings around the pit should have doors (symmetrically placed) on the side walls to allow villagers to use the buildings.

File:LavaBlades.jpeg

This iron golem farm uses a lava blade trap, intended for when the farm gets additional tiers to catch mobs of different heights, although the single-tier farm described already killed a skeleton and a spider in its first hour of use. Unfortunately, baby zombies would still pass through.

Before placing your doors, you should first complete the trap. To sweep the iron golems from the pit into the hole, it's best to cover the whole area with running water, otherwise the iron golems will try to stick to the dry spots. The design shown here has a 1 block undercut around the pit's edge, with water sources along two parallel sides, 2 water source blocks at the middle of the other two sides for the final sweep. This design uses lava blades across the top and middle of a 2-wide by 3-high tunnel leading from the hole. At the bottom of the hole is a river that sweeps the mobs into the blades, and sweeps the loot toward the end of the tunnel.

At the end of the tunnel, build some access to the surface (shown in the first image on the lower right). Villagers are free to go in and out, but make a barrier in the tunnel to keep them from reaching the lava.

You don't need a hopper or chest at first — just watch your farm and when an iron golem falls through the hole, go into your tunnel and collect the iron that drifts toward you. After you have five iron ingots, you can craft a hopper and put it at the end of the water stream in the tunnel, to deposit the ingots into a chest.


4 spawn modules 2-level

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 160
Scalable: yes
Design by: JL2579 (tutorial by docm77)

Description

This design, originally created by JL2579, uses 4 spawning modules, with 2 modules per level, with doors surrounding the modules. This pattern could be repeated to fill a very large area with iron farms. The farm also features a lava system to damage the iron golems so that the piston suffocator works more quickly. Youtuber docm77 made this tutorial for the design.


Simpler JL2579 design

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 30
Scalable: yes (you can build a second farm 80 blocks overhead to increase the spawning rates)
Design by: Nims

Description

This design, by NimsTV, is less efficient than JL2579's design. However, it is much simpler and easier to build, because the water streams are easier to configure and there is only one villager basket. The golem spawning area is larger than the farm, which is why JL2579 did not build his farm in this way. You have to block spawning anywhere outside the farm, if you intend to build several duplicate farms in an array.


The Iron Stream

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 640
Scalable: no
Design by: Eta740

Description

This design is a 16 Village Iron Farm that can be rebuilt on demand if not built in the spawn chunks and the chunk it is in has been unloaded. The village rebuild process takes 24 minutes and it will produce 640 ingots per hour when running at full speed.


The Iron Head, a 100% Efficient Iron Farm

Requires spawn chunks: no but you will get more regular iron if you do build them there
Iron per hour: 41+
Scalable: yes (you can build a second farm 65 blocks away from the village center). Possible to fit 36 within the spawn chunks (though not easily).
Design by: GruvaGuy

Description

This is a single village iron farm designed by GruvaGuy in 1.9 using Golem spawn mechanics to achieve a 100% efficient iron farm. Very different to most designs and can be placed flush on the ground without any digging required. Though this is as efficient as possible it is also expensive in resources. The mechanics show in the video can be applied to most other iron farms.


Comet 107's 30 Village Iron Farm

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 1200
Scalable: No
Design by: Comet 107

Description

This design is a 30 village iron farm that can be rebuilt on demand if not built in the spawn chunks and the chunk it is in has been unloaded. The village rebuild process takes just over 40 minutes and it will produce 1200 ingots per hour when running at full speed.


The Iron Casster

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 640-3800
Scalable: no
Design by: GruvaGuy

Description

This design is an expandable 16-96 village iron farm that can be rebuilt on demand if not built in the spawn chunks and the chunk it is in has been unloaded. The village rebuild process takes up to 106 minutes for 96 villages and it will produce 3800 ingots per hour when running at full speed.


Comet 107's Double Stacking 168 Village Iron Farm

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 6700
Scalable: no
Design by: Comet 107

Description

This design is a 168 village iron farm that can be rebuilt on demand if not built in the spawn chunks and the chunk it is in has been unloaded. This iron farm resets 2 villages at the same time giving it a faster reset speed than most other designs. The village rebuild process takes 96 minutes and it will produce 6700 ingots per hour when running at full speed.

Tutorial:


The Iron Bakery

Requires spawn chunks: yes
Iron per hour: 500 each layer with 10 rows of doors
Scalable: yes
Design by: Emonadeo

Description

A great advantage to this design is the customization. You can decide how big and efficient it gets by changing the number of the rings of doors and/or layers. It uses a similar door placement to the Iron Titan by Tango Tek. It is also efficient on smaller multiplayer servers.

Emonadeo has since released a video on how to fix it for 1.9/1.10


Iron Processing Unit (IPU-128)

Design by: Panda

Description

The most important part of any farm is its spawning floor, both in regards to maximising spawning area and the speed at which it can remove spawned entities to be replaced. In the following video, Panda describes a unique spawn floor design that drastically increases both of these. Combine this spawn floor with any of the other designs to improve its output. (Spawnpads still work in 1.8).


Iron Nucleus

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 1000+
Scalable: yes
Design by: SwoodyCraft

Description

This design uses offset stacks of villages allowing players to compress a large number into a relatively small space (27 villages in less than 150 sq blocks). It is highly efficient and requires relatively low amount of resources to build. It does not require any redstone to build nor does it have to be built at spawn. The only limiting factor (as with any iron farm) is that it must be built at least 64 blocks from any other village.


Flexible design

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 30 - 40 (depending on configuration)
Scalable: yes (As long as the second farm is constructed 70 blocks away)
Design by: MCinstructabuilds

Description

This design is not as efficient as some other designs. However, it is simple to build and lends itself to variation and disguise. The spawning area for the golems is 16x16, but can be made smaller by digging 8 blocks down around the edges if desired. The doors are placed equally around the spawning area, but specific placement can be varied. It is this varied door placement that allows the farm to be easily camouflaged. MCinstructabuilds provides three example disguises, a fort, a town, and a mining camp / Furnace. Unlike other designs the villagers are not kept contained. The Farm can be constructed easily and at ground level.


The Iron Paradise

Requires spawn chunks: no
Iron per hour: 500+ (Depending on server lag)
Scalable: yes (64 blocks horizontally and 100 blocks vertically)
Design by: TheBurntPhoenix

Description: Although this design consists of multiple regular Iron Golem spawning platforms, the way that each of these spawning platforms is arranged makes the design as efficient as possible. This design is best suited for laggy multiplayer servers or servers that have the mobstack plugin. In TheBurntPhoenix's video, he has built a total of 12 spawning platforms separated into 3 layers, with 4 on each layer. Each platform on a single layer is 64 blocks away from each other, and is vertically 100 blocks away from each layer in order to optimize the rate that iron golems are spawned on slower servers. The bridges sends the newly spawned iron golems away from the spawning area, which allows more iron golems to be spawned without the issue of them being stacked together on servers with Mobstack. This way, the killing process will be much more efficient, allowing more iron to be obtained.


Tower design

This design can be built in survival mode. It will yields 30-40 iron per hour. It's suggested to use one of the above for better efficiency with the same effort.

Step zero - resources

To build an iron golem farm, you should have a fair amount of resources, such as cobblestone and wood, as well as a way to get villagers into it.

You will need:

  • at least 1100 cobblestone (about 18 stacks)
  • 64 doors (6 wood per 3 doors=128 wood planks or 2 stacks)
  • 18 water buckets (or 2 water buckets to make an Infinite Water Source)
  • 1 lava bucket
  • 4 signs
  • 2 hoppers and 2 chests (This is for the option to use hoppers to collect items when you are away from the farm)
Step one - Building location

To build the Iron Golem farm you should:

  • Choose a good location. Don't build it far from your home or main base, because you want the golems to spawn even when you are not at the farm. An ideal spot is on top of your existing home or close to it. Remember, village doors need direct access to sunlight within 5 blocks straight ahead of them.
  • Gather the resources listed above.
  • Follow the instructions below to begin building the base.
Step two - Building instructions
  • 1. Start by building a 4×4 cobble base.


  • 2. Continue this until you have a tower that is 10 blocks tall. Next, break a 2×3 hole in the bottom so the golems will be able to go through.
    Golemfarm-base
  • 3. Build out 7 blocks from the top of this tower to form an 18×18 platform with a 2×2 hole in the middle.
    Golemfarm-18x18
  • 4. Build in 4 blocks from each corner, then 3 blocks diagonal in both directions to build a triangle.


Golemfarm-triangle

  • 5. Next build a 1 block wide platform around this so the platform is now 20×20.
  • 6. Now build a wall with windows in it as show below.
    Golemfarm-windows

This is how wide each of the holes in the wall should be:
Golemfarm-windowsize

  • 7. Seal off the backs of the windows, and build some small cups to hold the villagers. The cups should be 4×4 on the outside, so there is 2×2×3 of air on the inside. Make sure that there are at least 10 villagers altogether and note that adding villagers after reaching 30 will have no effect on the efficiency of the farm.
    Golemfarm-colsed
  • 8. Place doors against the back of the indents. This is to make the villagers think these are homes.
    Note: To place doors against the inside wall as shown, stand inside the indent, face the spawning area, look down and "place" the door on the block directly under your feet (works on PC up to at least 1.12.2). Don't place them sideways; this can cause them to be not counted as homes.
    It should look like this:
    Golemfarm-doors
    Note: every single door opens onto a blank wall. The villagers should not be going in and out of the doors; they are trapped inside their cups and can't leave.
  • 9. Then place down 1 water in each of the 4 villager cups, and 2 water down in between each of the raised triangles to form this pattern:
    Golemfarm-water1
  • 10. Place 1 water on each of the triangles in the very back corner of the wall.
    Golemfarm-water2

Now the top part is finished, the golems will spawn once there are 3 villagers in each of the holding cups.
The next step is to build the golem grinder.

  • 11. Build 4 blocks out from the bottom of the tower and 3 blocks up on each side, then place 2 blocks at the end of it to keep the golems from escaping.
    Golemfarm-base1
  • 12. Next, place 4 signs in a cup shape to hold the lava that kills the golems.
    Golemfarm-base2
  • 13. Now place the lava in the signs.
    Golemfarm-base3
  • 14. Place the last 2 water in the very back of the base, so the golems will get pushed into the lava.
    Golemfarm-base4
  • 15. Put down 2 hoppers going into a large chest for automatic resource collection (this is not required, but it is a good idea so you don't let any of the items despawn.)
    Golemfarm-base5
Maintenance

Since villagers will turn into witches when struck by lightning (albeit it happens very rarely), it is sometimes needed to refill the villagers into the farm after a thunderstorm. But if the farm is not built inside the spawn chunk, you can just move away from the farm to let the chunk unload during a thunderstorm. Villagers bred inside the farm will also occasionally spawn outside of the containers.

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