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Pillager outpost within desert sinkhole

image of a Minecraft seed with a pillager outpost within desert sinkhole image of a Minecraft seed with a pillager outpost within desert sinkhole image of a Minecraft seed with a pillager outpost within desert sinkhole image of a Minecraft seed with a pillager outpost within desert sinkhole image of a Minecraft seed with a pillager outpost within desert sinkhole image of a Minecraft seed with a pillager outpost within desert sinkhole

Seed Information

Seed
971231417261504642
Location
0, 18, 0
Compatible Versions
Minecraft Bedrock 1.20 - 1.21.11
Works with: 1.20, 1.20.1, 1.20.2, 1.20.3, 1.20.4, 1.20.5, 1.20.6, 1.21, 1.21.1, 1.21.2, 1.21.3, 1.21.4, 1.21.5, 1.21.6, 1.21.7, 1.21.8, 1.21.9, 1.21.10, 1.21.11
Renee
Posted by Renee
Contributor

Description

For this Minecraft seed, you spawn right inside a Desert sinkhole. The sinkhole has some streaming water, and as you look up, you’ll find a tall Pillager Outpost. There might even be a few Pillagers roaming around your spawn area, so it’s best to be careful as you’re starting out. The sinkhole has some cave openings you can explore once you’re more equipped. This provides you with a decent supply of Stone and other materials, but you’ll need to find some wood first, which is quite scarce in your spawn area. While on the surface, out of the sinkhole, you’ll find some nearby rivers and even some Badlands biomes.

While your spawn point may prove to be quite a challenge in the early game, you’ll find a couple of structures that may help you out. There are a few villages up north of your spawn area, with one of them being a Savanna village. There’s also a Stronghold under one of the Villages, and another Pillager Outpost you can come across. In terms of biomes themselves, most greenery biomes are found to the far north and east of your spawn, around 1000 blocks from your starting point. Despite that, the seed offers you both challenge and reward if you can conquer it.

Tags

Nearby Locations

Village #1 (desert)

Near a river.

Coordinates: X: 120, Y: 70, Z: -456

Village #2 (Desert)

Close to some unique sand hills.

Coordinates: X: -328, Y: 73, Z: -360

Village #3 (Desert)

Coordinates: X: 790, Y: 66, Z: -323

Village #4 (Desert)

Coordinates: X: -168, Y: 90, Z: -904

Village #5 (Savanna)

Coordinates: X: 200, Y: 85, Z: -1000

Stronghold

Underneath Village #5.

Coordinates: X: 180, Y: 69, Z: -1025

Pillager Outpost

Coordinates: X: 420, Y: 93, Z: -881

Frequently Asked Questions

A seed is just a number or text string that Minecraft uses to generate your world. When you create a world and type something into the “Seed” box (like `12345` or `MyLittleWorld`), the game turns that into a big number. That number is the recipe the game uses to place: biomes, structures (villages, temples, strongholds) and terrain (mountains, oceans, caves). So if you are using the same seed + same version + same edition (Java/Bedrock) = same world layout. Change anything in the seed and you’ll get a different world.
Since 1.18+ Java and Bedrock use more similar terrain generation, so the overall shape of the world can look similar for the same seed: similar mountain ranges, big oceans, etc. but structures and details like villages or ruined portals often don’t line up exactly between Java and Bedrock. Older versions (pre-1.18) are even more different.
No. Seeds are very version-sensitive because Mojang keeps changing world generation. Big updates like 1.13, 1.16, and 1.18 massively changed world gen and 1.20+ keeps tweaking structures and biomes. A 1.16 seed will still load in 1.20, but the world won’t match: biomes can shift, structures move, and if you had a village at spawn that might disappear. The seed number is still valid, but the layout isn’t guaranteed to look the same. As a rule of thumb, always use the same edition and version the seed was shared for if you want your world to look like the screenshots.
A 1.21.1 seed used in 1.21.2 will generate the same world as long as you’re on the same edition. Mojang usually keeps world generation identical across small patch versions.
You can see your seed by opening the world, press T and type `/seed` in the chat (cheats must be enabled), then press ENTER. On Java, if cheats are off, you can temporarily enable them via “Open to LAN → Allow Cheats → Start LAN World” and then run `/seed` . On **Bedrock**, you can find the seed from the world settings: Advanced page or on the Game page. On multiplayer servers, you’ll only see the seed if the server lets you: some allow `/seed` for all players, some only for admins, and many block it entirely

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