Minecraft has a new maintenance release, 1.21.10, which is available now and focuses on a range of bug fixes. The patch is notable because it is the tenth small update for the 1.21 cycle, the first time a second-column update has hit double figures in 11 years.
What 1.21.10 changes
The release itself is compact. It fixes several bugs related to pistols, wind, and teleportation, along with a few other small issues. You can read the patch notes on Mojang’s site for the full list.
There is also a short video tied to the recent 1.21 work:
The way Mojang labels updates uses three columns: the first for major, game-changing shifts, the second for yearly or similar minor updates, and the third for smaller, more frequent patches. Hitting ten in the second column is unusual, and the last time a version needed this many patches was 1.7 back in 2014. For newer players who might feel like ancient history, but it matters because a long trailing list of fixes implies major follow-up updates could come later than expected.
With 1.21 already on patch ten, many players are adjusting expectations for a 1.22 release this year. Some argue these hotfixes could have been numbered as subpatches, like 1.21.9.1, but the versioning choice is mostly semantic. The practical outcome is the same; 1.22 is not the one you just installed.
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