Sculk blocks will give Minecraft players experience with every block of it that gets broken. To produce more Sculk blocks, however, a mob of any type must die within eight blocks of a Sculk Catalyst, which will turn any blocks within its range into Sculk. Fortunately, a mob dying by any cause will grow Sculk, meaning that farms can be built to quickly and automatically generate more.
Building the Sculk farmThis Sculk farm design has mobs — which in this case happen to be zombies — spawning from a spawner block and dropping from a height of 30 blocks to the ground below. Falling from this height will instantly kill the mob without players needing to manually attack them.
While spawner blocks cannot be collected or placed in survival mode, they can be found generating naturally in underground dungeons, where the 30-block drop can simply be mined out from under it. As with any spawning mob, be sure to position the spawner in a dark room or container with, at most, a width and length of nine blocks. To prevent any mobs from spawning outside of this container, be sure to light up the outside of the container around the spawner with torches or lanterns.
Additionally, players must build some type of elevated platform on which to stand near the spawner. Mobs can’t spawn from a spawner unless the player is standing at least 15 blocks away from it. This means that, while the player stands still near the top of the Sculk farm, mobs will spawn, fall, and generate Sculk without the player needing to do anything.
Related: What does a Sculk Catalyst do in Minecraft?
Farming experience from SculkTo make the most of mobs dying from their fall, Sculk Catalysts should be placed on the floor near where the spawning mobs will fall, next to
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