Datapacky
Procházet a instalovat Minecraft datapacky
What are data packs?
Data packs are Minecraft's built-in customization system for Java servers. They can add custom recipes, modify loot tables, create advancements, change world generation, and add quality-of-life features like one-player sleep or mob head drops — all without mods. Players do not need to install anything on their client.
How do I install a data pack?
Open the Datapacks page (or "Datapacks" on a world card). First select a world from the dropdown — the active world is labelled (Primary). Search and browse packs from Modrinth, then click Install. The pack is saved to that world's
/datapacks folder. Run /reload in the console or restart the server to activate it.How do I filter data packs?
Use the search bar to find packs by name. Open Advanced Filters to sort by Relevance (default), Downloads, Follows, Newest, or Recently Updated, and to filter by category (Adventure, Decoration, World Generation, Utility), game version, Featured Only, or Open Source Only. Click Reset Filters to restore defaults.
Can I install multiple data packs?
Yes — multiple data packs can run on the same world. When two packs modify the same mechanic, load order determines priority. Use
/datapack list in-game to see active packs and their order. Data packs that change world generation only affect newly generated chunks, not terrain that already exists.How do data packs differ from plugins and mods?
Data packs are per-world and run on Vanilla and most Java server software with no client-side install required. Each pack is tied to the world you selected when installing it, so switching worlds with the world dropdown changes which packs you are managing. Plugins live in
/plugins and mods in /mods, while data packs live inside the world folder.What version should I install?
Install a version that matches your server's Minecraft version — the Versions tab shows each pack's compatible game versions, and you can set the game version filter to narrow results. Prefer the latest compatible release. A data pack built for a different version may fail to load or behave incorrectly.