

One thing they all have in common is that they add new paintings that are so great that they could hang in your real life bedroom. You can see that there are different styles in this category. Our personal favorite are photo-realistic texture packs. Others are more medieval, but still have some realism to offer. Many of them are quite modern and encourage you to build a futuristic building. Today we want to convince each of them otherwise, because realistic texture packs will make Minecraft graphics look much better. Some even claim that the game graphics look like in a game from the 90s. According to them, everything is just pixels and the textures don’t look nice. While the vast majority of textures were updated since Java Edition 1.14 and beyond, the following textures remained unchanged since Java Edition 1.13.Often people make fun of Minecraft because they think it doesn’t look like a real video game. 2.4.1 Textures still using pre-Texture Update elements.2.3 Other textures which weren't updated.

The original textures (with the exception of leather horse armor) are available as a resource pack/texture pack built in-game or as a separate download (named " Programmer Art" in Java Edition, and " Classic Textures" in Bedrock Edition). The textures were developed primarily by JAPPA (Jasper Boerstra). The update changes most of the textures in the game, except for a few iconic textures like the creeper. The Texture Update is an update released in Java Edition 1.14, Bedrock Edition 1.10.0, and PlayStation 4 Edition 1.90 (with further amendments in Bedrock Edition 1.17.10, as well as minor revisions in subsequent major updates for textures which were left behind). When? Soon! In the Beta Resource Pack, where all my beloved pixels live. You cannot escape my sweet, sweet textures. Changing the textures! Except for a few, like the Creeper.Īcross all versions? YEP, both on Java and Bedrock.
