Creeper

From Minecraft Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Creeper
Creeper.png
Health Points

20 (Heart.svg × 10)

Attack Strength

Varies by proximity
Maximum damage:
Normal: 49 (Heart.svg × 24.5)
Charged: 97 (Heart.svg × 48.5)

Spawn

Light level of 7 or less, anywhere but slabs (half blocks) or glass.

First Appearance

Classic 0.24 Survival Test

Network ID

50

Savegame ID

Creeper

Drops
ItemCSS.png
Gunpowder
(0-2) on non-explosive death.
ItemCSS.png
Music Discs
when killed by a skeleton.
Experience

5

Sounds Hurt
Creeper4.ogg
Fuse
Fuse.ogg
Death
Creeperdeath.ogg

The Creeper is an infamous hostile mob that will ambush players and explode, causing damage to the player and the surrounding blocks. Unlike Zombies and Skeletons, Creepers will not catch fire in direct sunlight, meaning they can wander around unharmed any time of day and are still aggressive. Underground or on the surface, creepers will spawn at night and in dimly lit locations with a light level of 7 or less. They are especially dangerous as they are almost completely silent (except for footsteps and their hissing noises when sensing a player), and their explosion is devastating at short range. Starting in snapshot 12w05a, Creepers run from Cats and Ocelots[1] and will ignore the player when a feline is too close.

When asked to describe the physical texture of a Creeper, Notch said they would feel "crunchy, like dry leaves".[2]

Contents

Publicity

Creepers have a formidable reputation among players because of their potential to damage players and destroy player-made structures, which has made them a widely-recognizable Minecraft icon. They are referenced in several of the items available at the Minecraft merchandise depot,[3] and have become an internet meme complete with fan art, web comic references, and demotivational posters. A central part of the meme is the creeper's unofficial catchphrase derived from the mob's tendency to sneak up on the player and hiss before detonating. This phrase was popularized by the Yogscast:

"That'sssss a very nice ___________ (everything, house, etc.) you've got there... It'd be a (ssss)shame if anything were to happen to it..."[4]


TV Series

Youtube Videos

Flash Games

Other Games

Video


Uses

Creepers are the easiest obtainable source of gunpowder when killed (the more challenging alternatives being defeating ghasts and conquering dungeons), and are therefore critical to the production of TNT. Each creeper can drop 0 - 2 units of gunpowder upon death.

Music Discs

Creepers are the only mob that drops Music Discs, and can only do so if killed by a skeleton. How the creeper is damaged beforehand doesn't matter as long as the final blow which kills it is made by a skeleton's arrow. The easiest way to arrange this is to shoot it once with a fully charged arrow, then with two just under fully charged arrows. After this, put the creeper between you and a skeleton to be shot at. This will kill the Creeper in one shot. However, if a creeper is hit by a skeleton and not killed, it will run towards it and explode, which won't yield a music disc. A music disc must be put into a jukebox to be used. Charged creepers can also drop music discs.

Behavior

A creeper giving chase and about to explode.

When within one block of a player, a creeper will hiss loudly, increase in size and turn more white, and detonate after 1.5 seconds. A creeper will still start its countdown sizzle when the player moves close enough (flying or not) even if the creeper is not focused on the player. Killing a creeper before the countdown starts or finishes will not cause the creeper to detonate. Creepers' footsteps are audible like other mobs', but they are otherwise silent unless they fall or are damaged. Creepers can also create noise in Water which can help a player locate one. If they see a player walking past them, they will turn to face them and start walking towards them in pursuit. If a creeper is following you and you block its path with a door, it will attempt to run through the door. The creeper will look like it is pressing its face to the window in your door, and opening the door will prove to be foolish, as the creeper will get inside your house. Luckily creepers eventually will despawn, but not if in pursuit mode.

A creeper's detonation can be avoided if the player moves out of the blast radius (about 3 - 4 blocks). The hissing will stop as the creeper gradually resets its timer at the same rate that it counted down - if it has been counting down for 1 second, it will take 1 second to "cool down".

A creeper can still go off even if the player stands behind a one-block thick wall although the creeper must be able to see the player to actually detonate. This can often happen when homes are surrounded by fences or short walls that creepers can oversee when jumping. Creepers cannot see a player through glass, so if the creeper is behind a glass barrier one block thick, the player is safe. This should not be confused with the creeper's pursuit mode - like other aggressive mobs, once a creeper acquires a target, it can track it through solid blocks even if the player subsequently enters a completely enclosed building. Because creepers also do not burn in sunlight, it may be waiting for the player just around the door if he/she later emerges thinking it is safe.

If the player manages to block a creeper behind a soul sand one-way entrance, they can approach up to two blocks without triggering the countdown, but if they suddenly go into a sneaking position, the creeper will hiss and initialize the countdown. This demonstrates that creepers count down farther away if the player is at a lower elevation, and will only count down if much closer to a player are at a higher elevation - probably because players can outrun explosions at a higher altitude and are more shielded from the blast there.

As of snapshot 12w05a, creepers will flee from a cat or ocelot if one is too close, even if the player is within their range of sight. A creeper which sees a cat will run directly away from the cat as best as possible, and come to a stop after a "safe" distance has been reached. This distance is smaller than the creeper's range of sight, and this results in a possible endless cycle of approach an fleeing if a player is standing near a cat. Creepers still will detonate in their fleeing mode and thus are still a danger if the player gets too close.

Explosive Properties

Two creepers' explosion damage radius in sand. Comparison between a charged creeper's (left) and a normal (right) creeper's.

A creeper's explosion is 25% less powerful than that of TNT, with an explosive power of 3. Charged creeper explosions are 50% more powerful than TNT and twice that of a normal creeper's.

As with TNT and Ghast fireballs, all dropped items in the explosion radius will be destroyed. A certain percentage of blocks destroyed by the creeper will survive the blast and can be picked up. In terms of environmental damage, the harder the material caught in an explosion, the less damaging the explosion will be to anything behind the material.

Charged Creepers

A charged creeper is a dangerous type of creeper created when lightning strikes within 3 - 4 blocks of a normal creeper (a rare occurrence). Charged creepers do not otherwise spawn naturally and can be distinguished from normal creepers by the blue aura surrounding them (this blue aura is the power.png in the armor folder in your minecraft.jar file). Many players refer to charged creepers as "Lightning creepers", due to the fact that they are created by lightning.

Charged creepers take damage from the initial lightning strike, so it takes fewer attacks to kill them than an ordinary creeper. Their countdown timers act the same as uncharged creepers, both range-wise and time-wise. However, an explosion caused by a charged creeper is much more powerful, than an explosion caused by a regular creeper (as shown in the image above). This blast is both more powerful and of greater radius.

Charged creepers have the same entity IDs as normal creepers but they have a powered tag set to 1.

Combat

The safest way to engage a creeper is from a distance by shooting two fully charged arrows at it with a bow so it cannot explode near the player. Or you can risk trying to kill it with a sword. If you insist on using melee attacks, you should not stop hitting the air with your sword when waiting for the creeper to approach and have ready a finger on the "s" button to get back if the creeper tries to flank you or initializes the countdown.

Swimming creepers can be easily dealt with using melee attacks while the player is underwater. Players can also take advantage of the creeper's countdown system by hitting it, retreating a few blocks away, and repeating this until it dies. Alternatively, the player can find sufficiently high ground to strike a creeper from above with a melee weapon without the detonation sequence being activated. However, the player should keep in mind that creepers move forwards and to the right (your left) when in pursuit.

A creeper can be hit and knocked out of reach with the sprint hit ability. This allows a player to slowly work down a creepers health while remaining out of the explosion radius. Jumping and hitting a creeper while falling during a sprint will kill the creeper quickly while still keeping it out of reach.

A diamond sword can quickly dispatch a creeper with three successive hits, one right after the other. This is not a recommended tactic around multiple creepers, though it can be a lifesaver when exploring underground should a creeper suddenly fall down behind the player in dim, tight areas.

If a creeper is below the player, the player can suffocate a creeper (and many other mobs) by placing a block of sand or gravel above the creeper as long as the block they are placing is on a wall or a block in front of the player and above the target mob. It will usually take one to two blocks to cover the creeper and when it is covered, the creeper will slowly suffocate to death. This is a slow way of eliminating a creeper but it will keep the player out of harm's way and preserve the durability of their weapon.

If caught in a difficult place without a weapon, the player can run away if he or she is outdoors or tunnel down towards bedrock and wait for the creeper to de-spawn before surfacing. A failsafe is to set the difficulty to peaceful, removing all hostile mobs, although this is considered cheating by many players.

Another method to kill a creeper is by doing a critical attack (implemented in the 1.8 update) by jumping in the air and, while falling, quickly hit the creeper. Then attack the creeper again normally. This is effective for taking out a creeper quickly without it exploding. Best to be done with a stone sword or better.

A sword enchanted with Knockback is efficient at fighting creepers as you can repeatedly strike them without them getting close enough to you for a length of time sufficient for them to explode.

Also a good way to fight it is to attack once, then run away and have it chase you. When it comes towards to you again then rush towards it and back away right as you attack it.

Defensive Measures

Due to creepers' natural stealth and potential hazards to the player and his/her structures, the player must remain vigilant at all times, especially in caverns and heavily wooded areas. Players are advised to keep a sword in their inventory to switch to at a moment's notice, even if they have a cat in tow. To keep creeper populations down on the surface, a player in SSP can sleep in a sheltered bed at dusk since creepers spawn regularly if given the chance to do so at night. Players on an SMP server with other players must coordinate to sleep, as all players must be in a bed after dusk to cycle the map to dawn.

Creepers' straightforward path finding tendencies can be used against them.

Construction Safeguards

Specialized Methods

Cactus Field

Deadfall Field

Deadfall Variants (all potentially lethal to players, so use caution)
Drowner/Burner
By placing water or lava in deadfall field pits, a player can protect their buildings while also disposing of the creeper entirely. Lava can be placed at the surface (1 block deep) or at the bottom of the 3+ deep pit. While highly dangerous to any player or mob, this will quickly eliminate any creeper threat. Any items dropped will of course be consumed by the lava.
Cactus Deadfall Combination
By widening the bottom of each deadfall hole and placing a sand block directly under the pit itself, cactus can be planted to damage anything falling into the hole. To accomplish this, the cactus must have clearance. The builder must ensure that there is only one block of space between the lowest pit opening and the cactus itself. This configuration requires more time, but can allow the player to access the lower area to collect loot (and cactus as they will break off when they attempt to grow upward).
True Deadfall
Though time consuming, a player can dig each pit deep enough to ensure creeper death on impact.
Piston Trap
By putting a (stone) pressure plate at the bottom of the hole, and linking it up to a piston 1 block above the pressure plate and 1 to the side, it is possible to kill creepers while keeping their items easily. However, the complicated wiring needed to keep the piston down long enough to suffocate the creeper consumes redstone.
Netherrack Burner
A deadfall can also end in netherrack that is infinitely burning. This makes an effective alternative to lava-filled pitfalls. Since a player may have plenty of netherrack on them at any given time, but lava takes up a full bucket for each distribution, players may find this variant to be more convenient to make.

Moats

As an alternative to a deadfall field, a player can simply dig a moat encompassing their property, spanning it with bridges equipped with secured entries (Doors, pistons, etc.). Moats can be dry, or filled with water/lava or lined with burning netherrack.

A 3 block deep dry moat will trap creepers, and a ladder with trap door can provide hapless players with a method to escape while preventing creepers from also doing so. Note: one caveat to simple dry moats, is the potential for a player to fall into a moat already containing creepers, resulting in explosion damage to the surrounding area.

Filling the moat with water can be more aesthetically pleasing, but the builder must ensure that the waterline is deeper than the lip of the moat to ensure creepers cannot escape once trapped. Water, as previously noted, has the side effect of mitigating block (but not entity) damage as well.

Filling a moat with lava has the same benefits and drawbacks as lava filled deadfalls, mentioned above.

Variants
Piston Crusher
With moats one or two meters wide, sticky pistons can be used to automatically or selectively crush mobs that fall into a trap. Depending upon the size of a given moat, this can be extremely resource and time intensive. One option is to combine this with water to channel creepers into the crusher itself. Another drawback is that in the event that a player somehow sets off a creeper inside or near the moat, the damage can be difficult to repair.
Arrow Dispenser
A dry moat lined with pressure plates wired to arrow filled dispensers is an expensive but effective and interesting method of dealing with creepers. One must ensure that the dispensers are periodically refilled. This method can also be configured for manual activation, an option that is less dangerous to players and easier to recover spent arrows and loot.

History

The original pig model the creeper was based on.

Creepers were first introduced in Survival Test version 0.24 on August 24, 2009. They were based on a failed pig model Notch had created.

In Survival Test, the creeper's default look was a darker shade of green and flashed to a lighter green upon being hit. Before creepers spotted the player their heads would droop down. Creepers behaved much like zombies except their attacks dealt only two hearts worth of damage rather than the zombies' three (or the more recent range of 8+). After taking damage, it would flash as an indicator of impending detonation. When killed, this creeper caused a 4x4x4 spherical explosion that left a sizable crater, destroyed plenty of blocks (with the exception of stone) and hurt any players nearby. The creeper was worth 250 points when killed, but this was later decreased to 200 points.

As of Beta 1.4, the 'A' in the Minecraft logo included a Creeper's face.

Before Beta 1.6, creepers (and other mobs) could be attacked through the windows of both iron and wooden doors as long as the doors were placed from the outside of the shelter.

When the ability to sprint and hit mobs was introduced in Beta 1.8, creepers could be quickly knocked out of detonation range by an unarmed player.

In 12w05a, Creepers will run away from cats and ocelots, making creepers the first mob with a real weakness.

Trivia

A sight that can scare the most courageous players.

References

  1. http://mojang.com/2012/02/02/minecraft-snapshot-12w05a/
  2. http://twitter.com/notch/status/27464490580
  3. http://www.minecraft.net/merch.jsp
  4. http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/minecraft-creeper/
  5. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ndA69KiffJE=1m1s
  6. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FthvzV8rZAk
Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Minecraft Wiki
Minecraft
Toolbox
In other languages

Recent Community Articles

Mojang Tweets

    Getting your tweets...