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Minecraft:Baby

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Revision as of 11:03, 27 May 2026 by SyncBot (talk | contribs) (Sync: updated from Minecraft)
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File:Baby Chicken JE3 BE3.png
A chick
File:All Babies.png
Every baby in Java Edition as of the Minecraft:Chaos Cubed drop (excluding variants)

Babies are smaller variations of their adult counterparts, typically having faster walking speeds. Some have unique sounds while others use the same sounds as their adult variants but 50% faster and pitched up by 6 semitones. With the exception of the Minecraft:tadpole, baby mobs are considered the same mob as their adult counterpart.

List of baby mobs

The following baby variants exist:

Template:EntityLink Template:Columns-list

Template:EntityLink Template:Columns-list

Others

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Spawning

Baby animals can be manually spawned by Template:Control Minecraft:spawn eggs on a grown animal. This also works on zombies or variants. Baby animals may also be spawned using the Template:Cmd command with a negative Template:Code tag; for example, using Template:Cmd spawns a baby sheep at the player's position, that matures in 100 Minecraft:ticks (5 seconds). For baby mobs that don't grow up like zombies and Minecraft:piglins, the Template:Code tag is used instead.

The following mobs have a baby variant, but they cannot breed:

Drops

Most baby mobs do not drop any Minecraft:loot or Minecraft:experience when killed, with the exception of items they pick up. The following baby mobs do drop loot and/or experience:

Baby Minecraft:zombies, Minecraft:zombie villagers, Minecraft:husks, Minecraft:gurgles, Minecraft:zombified piglins, and Minecraft:zoglins drop both their typical loot as well as experience, while baby Minecraft:hoglins and baby Minecraft:piglins only drop experience, with baby piglins dropping less experience than adults.

Baby zombies can drop Minecraft:Music Disc Lava Chicken if they are killed while riding a chicken, while adult zombies cannot even if one somehow mounts a chicken. When a baby Minecraft:turtle grows up, it drops one Minecraft:turtle scute.

Behavior

Most baby mobs do not have certain behaviors that their adult versions do. For instance, Minecraft:wool and Minecraft:armadillo scutes cannot be collected from baby Minecraft:sheep or Minecraft:armadillos. Baby Minecraft:villagers and Minecraft:piglins cannot trade or barter, baby Minecraft:cows, Minecraft:mooshrooms, and Minecraft:goats cannot be milked, and baby mounts cannot be saddled or ridden.

Following

Most baby animals choose and follow an adult within 8 blocks of the same species, regardless of whether it is their parent. Babies can choose new targets to follow whenever they do not have a valid target, such as when the previous target dies or moves further than 16 blocks away. Tamed kittens and puppies follow their owner if the parent is absent or sitting.

Baby animals that do not follow adults consist of:

Humanoid baby mobs (such as villagers, zombies and piglins) never follow adult mobs.

Minecraft:Ghastlings occasionally follow nearby players, most land animals and Minecraft:villagers within a range of 16 blocks, and they prioritize following players.

Growing up

picture of two graphs showing grow time relationship of feedings to minutes
Feed graphic for baby animals in Java Edition

Most baby mobs take 20 minutes to grow up. This can be accelerated by feeding them their breeding item. Green sparkles appear similar to those caused by Minecraft:bone meal. Template:IN, each feeding usually reduces the remaining time before the animal grows up by 10%. The less time remains, the less time is saved by each feeding, making it inefficient to feed an animal continuously until it becomes an adult. After the eighth feeding, the time saved by one feeding is less than a minute, as shown in the graph. Template:IN, each feeding saves 10% of the total time rather than the remaining time, so no more than ten feedings are needed to age up a single baby.

Minecraft:Horses, Minecraft:donkeys, Minecraft:mules, Minecraft:llamas, and Minecraft:camels have different mechanics: different breeding items grow babies by different amounts, and each item ages babies by a constant time rather than a percentage of the remaining time.

If a baby mob is fed with a Minecraft:golden dandelion, it stops and resets its aging.

Variants

File:SheepBreedingColor.png
An example of how a bred sheep inherits a mixture of its parents' colors when possible

When a baby of a species with different fur/pattern variants is born, they usually inherit the pattern of one of their parents, chosen at random, with some exceptions:

  • In the case of Minecraft:sheep, if the parents have "compatible" colors (meaning that their corresponding Minecraft:dye items could be combined into a third dye), the baby inherits a mix of the parents' colors.
  • In the case of Minecraft:mooshrooms, breeding two of the same variant has a 11024 chance to spawn a mooshroom of the opposite variant. Breeding two mooshrooms of differing variants has an equal chance of a baby mooshroom of either type.
  • In the case of Minecraft:horses, there is a 1345 chance of having a random color/markings instead of matching either of its parents.
  • In the case of Minecraft:axolotls, a baby axolotl bred by a player (not found in the world) has a 11200 chance to be the rare blue variant, with this being the only way to obtain this variant. Otherwise, it inherits the color of one of its parents at random.
  • Minecraft:Frogs do not inherit their variants from their parents. A frog's variant is determined by the biome it matures from a Minecraft:tadpole in.
  • In the case of Minecraft:goats, the baby has a 2% chance to be a screaming goat. Similarly, when breeding a normal goat and a screaming goat, the baby has 50% chance to be either one of the two sound variants, and when breeding two screaming goats, the baby will always be a screaming variant.

Interaction with golden dandelions

Using a Minecraft:golden dandelion on a baby mob causes it to become "age-locked". Age-locked mobs cannot grow up into adults. Using another golden dandelion on an age-locked mob removes the age-lock and resets its aging so that it will grow up in 20 minutes. Certain baby mobs cannot be fed golden dandelions, neither to lock or unlock their age. These consist of:

History

Java Edition

Template:HistoryTable

Bedrock Edition

Template:Expand section Template:HistoryTable

Gallery

Ageable

These baby mobs age naturally.

Non-ageable

These baby mobs do not grow up.

References

<references group="note"/> Template:Reflist

Navigation

Template:Navbox entities

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