Minecraft’s latest snapshot kicks off the new season with a massive update featuring the Copper Golem, Copper Chests, new gear, decorative shelves, and technical improvements. Players can now experiment with item-sorting golems, oxidizing equipment, and upgraded chunk loading mechanics.
Minecraft has rolled out its first snapshot of the season, introducing the Copper Golem, Copper Chests, oxidizing lightning rods, and a range of new copper-based items and blocks. Players can now try out copper armor and tools, decorate with shelves, and explore technical changes like an updated chunk loading system and new accessibility settings.
Copper golem debuts with statue mode and item sorting
The Copper Golem is a brand-new mob that can help players with item sorting. When spawned using a carved pumpkin or jack o’lantern placed on a copper block, it will automatically pick items from nearby Copper Chests and place them into standard or trapped chests.
As it oxidizes over time, the golem can turn into a decorative statue that emits redstone signals. Waxing prevents oxidation. If the statue is deoxidized using an axe, it transforms back into an active golem.
Copper chests now offer stylish, functional storage
The new Copper Chest acts like a standard chest but has oxidizing and waxed variants, similar to other copper blocks. It can be crafted using copper ingots and a regular chest. These new chests integrate smoothly with the Copper Golem’s item-sorting abilities.
Introducing copper equipment: weapons, tools, and armor
This update also introduces copper gear including tools, weapons, and armor. Copper items perform better than stone but sit just below iron in durability and enchantability. Players can also smelt copper gear into nuggets or repair them with ingots. Copper Horse Armor is included too, with toughness equal to iron horse armor.
Copper golem statue: poses with redstone signals
Once oxidized fully, the Copper Golem turns into a statue block with multiple poses. Each pose emits a different redstone comparator signal. These blocks can be waxed, deoxidized, and even converted back into a functioning golem using an axe.
Shelves add decorative storage and redstone tricks
Shelves come in multiple wood variants and can hold three visible item stacks. Players can interact with individual slots or, when powered by redstone, swap multiple items with their hotbar at once. Up to three shelves can link together to swap full hotbar inventories quickly.
Oxidizing lightning rods now reflect copper changes
Lightning rods now oxidize over time just like other copper blocks. This includes rods on the Copper Golem itself, adding a new visual dimension to builds and redstone contraptions.
Accessibility updates and input toggles
The new snapshot adds more control options including toggles for attack and use-item inputs. Players can now invert the X-axis and customize a “sprint window” for double-tap movement. These additions aim to make gameplay more flexible across playstyles.
Major tweaks to world loading and spawn chunks
The longstanding concept of fixed “spawn chunks” has been removed. Instead, the game now loads chunks dynamically based on specific player and world conditions, such as forceloaded chunks or active portals. A new loading screen displays which chunks are being prepared and shows progress in real-time.
Other notable changes
- Monster spawn eggs now display tooltips when used in Peaceful mode.
- The debug screen has been streamlined and made more customizable.
- World activity in any dimension will now keep that world “active” for processing entities and chunks.
- Final thoughts
This snapshot brings one of the most feature-packed updates in recent memory. From helpful copper golems and stylish shelves to performance improvements and user-friendly changes, Minecraft continues to evolve while staying rooted in its sandbox charm.


