Spice of Fabric
About the Mod
Modern Minecraft versions offer various methods for automating food production, but this leads to several issues:
- Constantly eating industrial dried kelp becomes too easy
- Hoglin farms work incredibly efficiently, disrupting game balance
- The game loses interest when you only eat golden carrots purchased from villagers
The solution to this problem is well-known: as you consume food, its nutritional value decreases, forcing you to diversify your diet.
By default, the system considers the last 20 meals when calculating nutritional value, and the decrease occurs quite rapidly. If this approach doesn't suit you - don't worry, all formulas are fully configurable. You can edit the configuration file manually or use ModMenu to access the settings.
Carrot Mode
There's also the so-called "Carrot Mode," inspired by the Spice Of Life: Carrot Edition mod. The concept is simple: you start with fewer hearts than usual, and as you eat diverse foods, you unlock additional hearts. This mode is also fully configurable.
Food Containers
Food containers are items that can store multiple types of food simultaneously, similar to a shulker, bundle, or backpack. They allow you to eat directly from the container with a simple right-click, just like regular eating.
You can enable the following containers in the settings:
- Paper bag: Made from paper and can store up to five stacks of food
- Lunch box: Created from planks and gold, holds up to nine stacks of food
- Picnic basket: Produced from bamboo and stores up to nine stacks of food
For server installations, you can enable them by installing Polymer on the server and activating the use-polymer configuration.
Dependencies
This mod requires separate installation of Fabric API.
The mod contains Tweed API. Tweed distributes hjson-java under the MIT license, currently copyrighted by Christian Zangl. This mod uses the fork created by PersonTheCat.
The mod distributes exp4j under the Apache 2.0 license.
License
This mod and its source code are available under the MIT license. You can study it and use it in your projects provided you attribute the author.