Love to generate the 3D world of Minecraft with virtually infinite terrain, from discovering and extracting raw materials, crafting tools and items, and building structures, earthworks, and simple machines, to crafting weapons and armor to fend off dangerous mobs, but cannot get your villagers to breed? It might not be that serious, and you may be making some mistakes that can be fixed easily!
Playing Minecraft can be so much fun! But sometimes the villagers just refuse to breed! It does not matter how much you try, those little people just do not reproduce! But worry not fellow players; we are here to point out the 7 reasons why your villagers aren’t breeding, and how to fix it!
To make sure that your villagers breed in order to make the huge expanse of Minecraft a bit less lonely, here are a few steps which you can take to nudge them in the right direction to get going on the breeding:
- Make sure the villagers have enough beds
- Provide them with proper food
- Allow them to have privacy
- Ensure that the villagers are willing to breed
- Verify the time of day
- Confirm building a place for the villagers
- Try to keep track of the particles
Still not sure what you’re doing wrong? Keep on reading to find out the best possible solution to the problem of non-breeding villagers in Minecraft, as we discuss in detail the top 7 reasons why your villagers might not be breeding!
Also Read: How to Assign A Villager A Job in Minecraft
Why Your Villagers Are Not Breeding
If you want to increase your villagers’ population, then breeding seems like the best possible way to do that. Nevertheless, your villagers might not breed as you intended them to. Villagers not breeding is a common issue in this game. Breeding is a unique and useful feature that allows similar mobs to reproduce and result in baby versions of themselves. Here are some steps you might take to make sure those villagers breed!
1. Make Sure The Villagers Have Enough Beds
The most important part of making sure that your villagers breed is to ensure that they have enough beds. Minecraft villagers WILL NOT breed if they do not get enough empty beds! All Minecraft players know that the civilized mobs of the game have a set routine, and they associate themselves with a bed so that they could sleep at night. In order for them to breed, the villagers must detect at least three unclaimed beds with two blocks of space above them in their surroundings. The villagers will want to fill all of the beds in the room. This means that the more beds you have, the more your villagers will breed.
Even though the villagers will not physically use the beds to mate, nonetheless, the beds are a staple for breeding. As far as the two blocks of space are concerned, they allow the villagers to climb on them, and the baby villagers might use the blocks to jump on them. Be sure to check for any half slabs or stairs that could prevent the villagers from breeding.
2. Provide Them With Proper Food
Even though other breedable mobs (like horses, cows, donkeys, pandas, and many others) only need a single food item to enter their “love mode”, villagers are often not that easy to please. They require multiple food items to even THINK about reproducing their little spawns!
So what does it mean for the player? It means that their own inventory must comprise 12 food items in order for them to start breeding. You can provide them with different combinations of food like loaves of bread, carrots, beetroot, or even potatoes. Essentially, a loaf of bread is equivalent to four of the quantity, while each of the three vegetables is counted as one. Hence, you must provide them with either three loaves of bread, twelve potatoes, twelve beetroots, or twelve carrots to each of the villagers you are trying to get to breed.
3. Allow Them to Have Privacy
What? Privacy? For the villagers? But they are villagers in Minecraft! They are not real people! What do they need privacy for? If they are not actually going to use the beds, what is the point of giving them privacy? And what does it even mean?
If these are the questions that are driving you crazy, then here might lie the answer to why your villagers are not breeding. It might seem a little (or a lot, to be honest) strange to think that the villagers in the game might need privacy like real people. Minecraft is realistic, you have to give that to them! The villagers of Minecraft like privacy, even to the extent that they might not breed in the presence of a baby!
In order to avoid this from happening, keep on removing the babies from the vicinities of adults, mating villagers, and trying to put the babies in separate houses to give the adult villagers the privacy they need to reproduce. You might be surprised by the outcomes!
4. Ensure That The Villagers Are Willing to Breed
What, now? First privacy, and now consent? Are these game characters or actual, live people? No, we are not pulling your leg. A newer upgrade in Minecraft has introduced the concept of willingness among the villagers to mate. Some of you might find it frustrating, but there is no actual “hack” to make the villagers consent to breed.
Once again being the real game it is, you cannot force anyone’s consent in Minecraft. It does not matter that you follow all other steps perfectly; if the villagers are not willing to breed, then they will not breed. Do not lose hope yet, a fellow player. The villagers will be willing to mate when they are ready. Do not rush, be patient, and provide them with all the necessities to breed, and we do not see why they will not be willing soon enough!
5. Verify The Time of The Day
I must be losing my mind! What time of the day? For the Minecraft villagers to breed? You must be joking! Umm… no. We are quite serious. Villagers have set schedules for the day. Their schedules depend upon their age, employment status, and the nature of their jobs. Villagers strictly follow these schedules and seldom deviate from them. Some priority behaviors which allow them to stray from their set schedules include getting away from an attack, fleeing from the rain, and trading.
In light of the above, it can be safely assumed that the villagers will not breed if you put them behind closed doors when they are supposed to be working. Although they are game characters, they are very strict about their schedules! They will not breed during the night, therefore it is imperative to have spare beds and food ready for the villagers to coax them to breed, as they follow strict day-to-night cycles.
6. Confirm Building A Place for The Villagers
As we have already learned from willingness, villagers cannot be forced to breed. Similarly, villagers do not breed when they are in a foul mood. One of the reasons for the villagers to be in a foul mood is the unavailability of a proper breeding place for them to mate.
In order to avoid this, players must make sure that ample houses are available for the villagers to breed. The size of the house does not matter. The things that matter are separate houses for the couples to mate, a sufficient number of beds, a workbench, and a chest. Make sure these things are ready, and you should be good to go! You can alter the appearance of the houses depending on your taste. You can make it into a full-blown mansion, or you can also keep it as simple as a cottage. Do as you please!
7. Try to Keep Track of The Particles AboveTheir Heads
The particles that you will notice floating above the villagers’ heads alone will tell you more about their willingness to mate than any other thing. When the villagers are content, little heart particles will appear above their heads.; it means that they have entered their “love mode”. It means that they are ready to breed.
Subsequently, if there are little angry particles along with little heart particles above the villagers, it means that the beds present are less than their desired quantity. These little particles can act as your guide on what to do next with the villagers. The little angry particles might also suggest that the maximum population of the village has been met, and it is now time to expand the village. So keep an eye out for those heart particles and let the villagers breed!
Conclusion
Villagers in Minecraft are a great asset to possess! They can be a great source of emeralds, and you can also make iron golem farms, or just have them meander through your Minecraft world so you might not be so alone in the great expanses of your realm. Now that you have learned all that there is about how to breed your villagers, go ahead and start testing out what you had been missing.
We sincerely hope that this article helped you in figuring out how you could make your Minecraft villagers breed. If you found this helpful and enjoyed figuring out what you were missing, then be sure to leave a comment down below and let us know. Your feedback is always appreciated. Happy breeding!