Several months ago a Minecraft user discovered that frogs and goats in the game can devour one other. For more than a decade now, the game has maintained its status as one of the most popular in its genre because of its ability for players to experiment with their designs.
These AI-driven creatures may be found all across the blocky landscapes of Minecraft, and each one has a distinct personality. Mobs can range from passive even when assaulted to hostile at first sight, with distinct classifications denoted by their reactions to the player. Goats, on the other hand, tend to be more hostile when engaging with the player or other mobs, whereas frogs are calmer. In the wake of a new discovery, however, goats could be better served by directing their hostility towards something much smaller.
A Minecraft video submitted by Redditor JamesLovesTV shows frogs preying on goats in the game’s fictional land of Mojang. It is shown that when goats are in range, the frogs will not only consume them but will aggressively pursue them if the user doesn’t manually spawn in both mobs. Many of the comments were intrigued by this finding and eager to see where this frog-feeding frenzy ends.
It is not uncommon for frogs and goats in Minecraft to come into contact with one another. The unexpectedly voracious amphibians spontaneously arise in swamp environments that are often in flat lowlands, sometimes even below sea level, without the intervention of human spawning. However, goats may be found naturally at great altitudes, such as on icy summits, rocky mountaintops, and snowy slopes. Natural spawning would have gone unreported for so long because of the vastly varied biomes in Minecraft, which are the source of these creatures.
This isn’t exactly new, but it seems like the game’s makers have pushed it a step farther than most real-life frogs do. It’s only reasonable to question exactly how big of a herd those blocky amphibians can devour in light of this latest revelation. There have already been some prospective testing in the comments on JamesLovesTV’s article, so it’s possible that we’ll learn more soon. Whatever the case may be, this evidence revealed that the creators’ decision to generally make frogs passive was a good one for Minecraft players.
