Minecraft’s villagers, just like people in the so-called “real world”, need a place to work. Shepherds have their loom. Masons have the stonecutter. Librarians have lecterns, and Farmers have the composter. But what about the village’s most important member – the toolsmith, who makes the tools used by all the other villagers? They have our block of the month – the smithing table.
Smithing tables were added to Minecraft in the Village & Pillage Update, which also added barrels, bells, and blast furnaces. Initially, they didn’t do anything except look pretty. But in the Nether Update, they gained the ability to upgrade diamond gear to netherite gear, and now they do even more.
“What more?” I hear you cry. Well, first of all, “What more?” isn’t very good English. But second of all, smithing tables now let you use smithing templates to add a nifty-looking colored pattern on your armor called a “trim”.
To use this functionality, you’ll need an armor piece, a smithing template (found in various ancient places), and a material that matches the color of the trim you want. Lapis makes blue, emerald makes green, nether quartz makes white, and so on – experiment with different materials to see what works. We’ll go deeper into smithing templates another day because this article is about the smithing table.
What else can you do with this block? Well, as mentioned above you can upgrade diamond gear to netherite gear, you can convert an unemployed villager to a toolsmith, you can burn it in a furnace as fuel, and you can put it under a note block to get the “bass” sound.
Oh, where do you get one? You can craft one with two iron ingots and four planks, or steal one from a toolsmith in a village. They also occasionally spawn in trail ruins. แทงบอลออนไลน์UFABET