Fish in Minecraft

Fishing in Minecraft is one way to gather food for your character, plus you get a small chance of finding a special item. All it takes is a fishing rod and a body of water. Fishing in the right weather and light conditions will make the fish bite faster.

Steps

Preparing to Fish

  1. Make a fishing rod. You'll need three sticks and two pieces of Obtain-String-in-Minecraft. Place the sticks in a diagonal line. Place the strings in a vertical line, underneath the sticks.
  2. Consider enchanting the rod. There are three enchantments that enhance a fishing rod. Unbreaking increases durability, Lure speeds up fishing, and Luck of the Sea increases the chance of getting treasure instead of junk.[1]
    • Unbreakable is much more common than the other two. Your chance of getting either Lure or Luck of the Sea is about 35% at level 15, and about 53% at level 30.[2]
  3. Look for a rainy area if possible. If it's raining over your fishing bobber, it takes about 20% less time to catch something. Unless your rod has Lure, this means you'll catch something every 20 seconds on average, instead of every 25.[3]
    • Rain falls in all temperate biomes at once.[4] As long as you've checked one forest, swamp, or plains, you know whether or not it's raining anywhere.
    • If cheats are enabled, enter to start a downpour.[5]
  4. Break everything directly over the block of water. Once you've chosen a spot to fish in, break all blocks directly above it. If anything blocks sunlight or moonlight from hitting the water, fishing will take twice as long. Anything non-transparent (including leaves) will block light, and anything that blocks movement will block rain.[3]

Casting the Rod

  1. Find water. It doesn't matter which body of water you fish in. You can even dig a hole and pour a bucket of water in it. It does help to make the hole at least two blocks wide and two deep, so it's easier to cast the line without hitting a solid block.[6]
  2. Use the rod on the water. Equip the fishing rod and use it on the water (right-click on the computer edition). The string will fly out with a bobber attached to the end of it.
    • The bobber can hook onto objects and mobs, so watch your aim.
  3. Watch for small splashes. Initially the bobber will sink, then it will rise to the surface of the water. Watch and listen closely. When you see small splashes around the bobber and hear a splashing noise, immediately use the fishing rod again to reel in the catch. If successful, a fish or other item will fly out of the water and land near your character, along with an experience orb.[3]
    • You will not see the splashes if particle effects are set to "minimal" in your settings.
    • If you miss your chance, the fish will escape. You can leave the bobber in the water to try again.
  4. Pick up the item. If the item doesn't land nearby, look around. If it hit a solid block when reeled in, it could be off at a right angle somewhere. Here's your chance of getting each type of item with an unenchanted fishing rod:[3]
    • 85% chance of fish. This is usually just the "raw fish" item, but you can also get salmon, clownfish, and pufferfish. Careful: pufferfish are poisonous.
    • 10% chance of junk. These are miscellaneous items like damaged leather boots, tripwire hooks, or ink sacs.
    • 5% chance of treasure. There are six possibilities, all equally likely: a damaged, enchanted bow; a damaged, enchanted fishing rod; an enchanted book; a name tag; a saddle; or a lily pad.
    • The items are the same on all editions, but the percentages are only confirmed for Computer Edition.

Tips

  • When casting the rod, if it collides with a solid block, it will get stuck (with the exception of bedrock). You can still catch fish but reeling it in will cost extra durability. Consider the distance required for casting safely when building pools of water for fishing.
  • Raw fish doesn't restore much hunger. Cook it in a furnace first for better results.
  • You can use fish to tame and breed ocelots.

Warnings

  • Be careful of the yellow pufferfish. Eating these poisonous fish gives you the nausea, poison, and hunger effects, reducing your hunger and health.[7] You can remove the negative effects with a bucket of milk.

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