[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"article:minecraft:minecraft-server-versions-explained":3,"recent-articles:same-game:minecraft:4":231},{"id":4,"slug":5,"title":6,"excerpt":7,"seoTitle":8,"seoDescription":9,"canonicalUrl":10,"publicPath":11,"gameId":12,"gameName":13,"articleType":14,"primaryTopic":15,"publishedAt":16,"updatedAt":17,"readingTimeMinutes":18,"wordCount":19,"noindex":20,"coverImage":21,"ratingSummary":31,"blocks":33},3,"minecraft-server-versions-explained","Minecraft Server Versions Explained: Vanilla vs Paper vs Spigot vs Fabric vs Forge","Compare Vanilla, Paper, Spigot, Fabric, and Forge to choose the right Minecraft server software for performance, plugins, mods, and long-term server growth.","Best Minecraft Server Software: Vanilla vs Paper vs Spigot vs Fabric vs Forge","Compare Minecraft server software including Vanilla, Paper, Spigot, Fabric, and Forge. Learn which option is best for plugins, modpacks, and public servers.","https:\u002F\u002Fservervote.com\u002Fgame\u002Fminecraft\u002Farticles\u002Fminecraft-server-versions-explained","\u002Fgame\u002Fminecraft\u002Farticles\u002Fminecraft-server-versions-explained","minecraft","Minecraft","comparison","versions","2026-04-21 10:04:38","2026-04-23 07:31:34",8,1741,false,{"id":4,"r2_key":22,"filename":23,"mime_type":24,"bytes":25,"width":26,"height":26,"alt_text":27,"caption":26,"uploaded_by_user_id":28,"created_at":29,"public_url":30},"articles\u002F2026\u002F04\u002F1776784122263-k710jpn6-minecraft-16-9.jpg","minecraft_16.9.jpg","image\u002Fjpeg",147169,null,"Minecraft title screen",1,"2026-04-21 15:08:42","https:\u002F\u002Fservervote.com\u002Fapi\u002Fcontent\u002Fassets\u002F3\u002Ffile",{"averageRating":32,"ratingCount":28},5,[34,40,75,83,104,125,144,164,184,188,206,215],{"id":35,"type":36,"sortOrder":37,"payload":38},393,"rich_text",0,{"markdown":39},"## Choosing Minecraft server software is really two decisions\n\nWhen people search for **Minecraft server versions**, they usually mean one of two things:\n\n1. the game version, such as **1.20.1** or **1.21**\n2. the server software, such as **Vanilla**, **Paper**, **Spigot**, **Fabric**, or **Forge**\n\nFor server owners, the software choice is usually the more important decision. It affects:\n\n- how much performance headroom you get\n- whether you can install plugins\n- whether you can run large modpacks\n- how easy the server is to moderate and scale\n\nIf you are still comparing communities before launching your own project, the [Minecraft hub](\u002Fgame\u002Fminecraft) is a useful way to see how public servers position themselves and what features players expect.",{"id":41,"type":42,"sortOrder":28,"payload":43},394,"comparison_table",{"eyebrow":44,"title":45,"markdown":46,"columns":47,"rows":53,"highlightedColumn":28},"At a glance","Minecraft server software comparison","Most people do not need a deep technical breakdown first. They need a fast answer. This table gives the quick framing, then the sections below explain **why** each option works.",[48,49,50,51,52],"Software","Best for","Plugins","Mods","Performance",[54,59,64,68,71],[55,56,57,57,58],"Vanilla","Pure default gameplay and very small groups","No","Basic",[60,61,62,63,62],"Paper","Most public survival, SMP, economy, and minigame servers","Excellent","Limited",[65,66,62,63,67],"Spigot","Plugin-based servers that want broad Bukkit compatibility","Good",[69,70,57,62,67],"Fabric","Lightweight modern modded servers",[72,73,57,62,74],"Forge","Traditional modpacks and older mod ecosystems","Mixed",{"id":76,"type":77,"sortOrder":78,"payload":79},395,"callout",2,{"level":80,"title":81,"markdown":82},"warning","Quick recommendation","If you want the shortest practical answer:\n\n- choose **Paper** for most public Minecraft servers\n- choose **Vanilla** for pure default gameplay\n- choose **Fabric** when your priority is modern lightweight mods\n- choose **Forge** when you need an established modpack ecosystem\n\nIf you are planning a public server listing, staff tooling, plugins, and performance usually matter more than raw purity, which is why Paper is the most common default.",{"id":84,"type":85,"sortOrder":4,"payload":86},396,"software_spotlight",{"layout":87,"eyebrow":88,"heading":55,"markdown":89,"logoUrl":90,"logoAlt":91,"ctaLabel":92,"ctaHref":93,"bestFor":94,"verdict":95,"pros":96,"cons":100},"image-right","Default gameplay","Vanilla is Mojang's official server software. It is the cleanest choice if you want the server to behave as closely as possible to base Minecraft, with no plugin layer and no extra optimization philosophy layered on top.\n\nThat makes it appealing for private friend groups, testing, and small communities that value simplicity over flexibility. The downside is that public servers often outgrow Vanilla quickly once they need moderation tools, performance tuning, or deeper gameplay systems.","\u002Fimages\u002Farticle-software\u002Fvanilla-badge.svg","Vanilla server software badge","Official Minecraft server download","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.minecraft.net\u002Fen-us\u002Fdownload\u002Fserver","Small private servers and players who want official default behavior.","Strong for purity, weak for growth and customization.",[97,98,99],"Closest experience to base Minecraft","Simple to explain and maintain","Good fit for tiny private worlds",[101,102,103],"No plugin ecosystem","Less room for performance tuning","Usually not ideal for public communities",{"id":105,"type":85,"sortOrder":106,"payload":107},397,4,{"layout":108,"eyebrow":109,"heading":60,"markdown":110,"logoUrl":111,"logoAlt":112,"ctaLabel":113,"ctaHref":114,"bestFor":115,"verdict":116,"pros":117,"cons":121},"image-left","Most practical choice","Paper is the option most people should start with when they are building a public Minecraft server. It sits in the Bukkit and Spigot ecosystem, which means broad plugin support, but it also adds performance improvements and operational quality-of-life features that help once a community starts growing.\n\nIf your plan involves staff permissions, moderation plugins, economy systems, custom gameplay loops, or a smoother experience for larger player counts, Paper is usually the most balanced path. It is also the easiest recommendation to make to someone who wants one answer instead of five.","\u002Fimages\u002Farticle-software\u002Fpaper-badge.svg","Paper server software badge","Visit PaperMC","https:\u002F\u002Fpapermc.io\u002Fsoftware\u002Fpaper","Public SMPs, survival servers, economies, minigames, and most plugin-first communities.","Best all-around choice for most public servers.",[118,119,120],"Excellent performance for a plugin-first stack","Huge ecosystem of admin and gameplay plugins","Great starting point for public server growth",[122,123,124],"Not the right foundation for full modpacks","Purists may prefer official Vanilla behavior","Some gameplay behavior differs from pure Vanilla",{"id":126,"type":85,"sortOrder":32,"payload":127},398,{"layout":87,"eyebrow":128,"heading":65,"markdown":129,"logoUrl":130,"logoAlt":131,"ctaLabel":132,"ctaHref":133,"bestFor":134,"verdict":135,"pros":136,"cons":140},"Plugin compatibility","Spigot still matters because it is deeply associated with the classic Bukkit plugin world. Some guides and plugin communities still frame advice around Spigot first, and many server owners already understand that stack.\n\nIn practice, a lot of operators choose Paper instead unless they have a specific reason not to. Paper usually feels like the more polished recommendation for public deployments, but understanding Spigot still helps because it defines so much of the historical plugin ecosystem.","\u002Fimages\u002Farticle-software\u002Fspigot-badge.svg","Spigot server software badge","Visit Spigot","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.spigotmc.org\u002F","Plugin-based communities that want familiar Bukkit compatibility.","Still relevant, but often overshadowed by Paper for new public servers.",[137,138,139],"Broad plugin compatibility","Well-known in long-running server communities","Reasonable option for classic plugin stacks",[141,142,143],"Usually less compelling than Paper for new builds","Not designed for full modded experiences","Smaller performance story than Paper",{"id":145,"type":85,"sortOrder":146,"payload":147},399,6,{"layout":108,"eyebrow":148,"heading":69,"markdown":149,"logoUrl":150,"logoAlt":151,"ctaLabel":152,"ctaHref":153,"bestFor":154,"verdict":155,"pros":156,"cons":160},"Modern modded choice","Fabric is a strong choice when your server identity is built around mods rather than plugins. It is popular with communities that want lighter modding, quicker ecosystem movement, and a more modern feel for custom gameplay.\n\nThat does not make Fabric a better version of Paper. It solves a different problem. If your real goal is a heavily customized modded server, Fabric can be the better fit. If your goal is a public plugin-based server with staff tooling and familiar admin workflows, Paper usually wins.","\u002Fimages\u002Farticle-software\u002Ffabric-badge.svg","Fabric server software badge","Visit Fabric","https:\u002F\u002Ffabricmc.net\u002F","Lightweight and modern modded Minecraft communities.","Best when mods are the core product, not just an extra feature.",[157,158,159],"Strong fit for lightweight modern modding","Often faster-moving than older mod ecosystems","Good choice for communities built around custom mod experiences",[161,162,163],"Not a drop-in replacement for plugin-first public servers","Less useful if you rely on Bukkit-style plugins","Staff tooling expectations may differ from Paper-based servers",{"id":165,"type":85,"sortOrder":166,"payload":167},400,7,{"layout":87,"eyebrow":168,"heading":72,"markdown":169,"logoUrl":170,"logoAlt":171,"ctaLabel":172,"ctaHref":173,"bestFor":174,"verdict":175,"pros":176,"cons":180},"Traditional modpack path","Forge remains relevant because so many established modpacks and older mod ecosystems still depend on it. If your community is launching around a specific Forge-based pack, the decision is often already made for you.\n\nWhat matters here is expectation setting. Forge is not the best answer for every Minecraft server. It is the right answer when compatibility with the mods you care about matters more than plugin workflows or pure performance tuning. If you are building a modpack-led server identity, that trade can make perfect sense.","\u002Fimages\u002Farticle-software\u002Fforge-badge.svg","Forge server software badge","Visit Minecraft Forge","https:\u002F\u002Ffiles.minecraftforge.net\u002Fnet\u002Fminecraftforge\u002Fforge\u002F","Established modpacks, legacy mod ecosystems, and pack-specific communities.","Best when the modpack dictates the stack.",[177,178,179],"Large history in modded Minecraft","Still necessary for many established packs","Clear fit when the community is modpack-first",[181,182,183],"Performance can vary more widely","Not built for Bukkit-style plugin workflows","Can be heavier operationally than simpler stacks",{"id":185,"type":36,"sortOrder":18,"payload":186},401,{"markdown":187},"## Best choice by use case\n\n- **Choose Vanilla** if you want the simplest possible server and you do not need plugins or mods.\n- **Choose Paper** if you want the strongest default recommendation for a public server.\n- **Choose Spigot** if you specifically want a classic Bukkit-style path and already know why it fits your stack.\n- **Choose Fabric** if your community is centered on modern lightweight mods.\n- **Choose Forge** if your server lives or dies by Forge-based modpack compatibility.\n\n## Where Velocity fits\n\n**Velocity** is not a replacement for Paper, Spigot, Fabric, or Forge. It is a proxy layer, usually used when you are connecting multiple backend servers into one network.\n\nThat means a common setup looks more like this:\n\n- **Velocity** in front\n- **Paper** or **Spigot** behind it for lobby, survival, minigames, or other plugin-driven servers\n- sometimes **Fabric** or **Forge** behind it too, if the network includes modded experiences\n\nIf you are only running one standalone server, you probably do **not** need Velocity. If you are building a network with multiple backend nodes, player transfer, and centralized entry points, Velocity becomes much more relevant.\n\nYou can learn more from the [Velocity project](https:\u002F\u002Fpapermc.io\u002Fsoftware\u002Fvelocity) if you are planning a network architecture.\n\n## Final takeaway\n\nIf you are launching a public server and want the safest all-around choice, start with **Paper**.\n\nIf your main selling point is a modded experience, decide between **Fabric** and **Forge** based on the mods and pack ecosystem you actually want to run.\n\nAnd if what you really want is an official, low-complexity Minecraft experience for a few friends, **Vanilla** is still a valid answer.\n\nIf you want to compare live communities next, browse the [Minecraft server hub](\u002Fgame\u002Fminecraft) or continue through the [Minecraft articles index](\u002Fgame\u002Fminecraft\u002Farticles).",{"id":189,"type":190,"sortOrder":191,"payload":192},402,"faq",9,{"items":193},[194,197,200,203],{"question":195,"answer":196},"What is the best Minecraft server software for most public servers?","For most public servers, **Paper** is the best starting point because it balances performance, plugin support, and operational flexibility better than Vanilla or Spigot.",{"question":198,"answer":199},"Is Spigot or Paper better?","For most new servers, Paper is usually the stronger recommendation. Spigot still matters for plugin compatibility history, but Paper is often the more practical modern choice.",{"question":201,"answer":202},"Should I use Fabric or Forge for a modded Minecraft server?","Choose based on the mod ecosystem you actually want. Fabric often suits lighter modern modded setups, while Forge is still common for established and traditional modpacks.",{"question":204,"answer":205},"Is Vanilla ever the right choice?","Yes. Vanilla makes sense for small private groups, testing, or players who want official default gameplay without plugins, mod loaders, or extra complexity.",{"id":207,"type":208,"sortOrder":209,"payload":210},403,"recent_articles",10,{"title":211,"scope":212,"gameId":213,"limit":106,"hideIfEmpty":214},"More Minecraft reading","same-game","",true,{"id":216,"type":217,"sortOrder":218,"payload":219},404,"closing_panel",11,{"title":220,"body":213,"authorName":221,"authorRole":222,"contactLabel":223,"contactHref":224,"issueLabel":225,"issueHref":226,"primaryCtaLabel":227,"primaryCtaHref":228,"secondaryCtaLabel":229,"secondaryCtaHref":230,"showRating":214},"Thanks for reading","Eps","Editorial Team","Contact us","\u002Fcontact","Report an issue","\u002Feditorial-policy","Browse more guides","\u002Fguides","See all articles","\u002Farticles",{"gameId":12,"gameName":13,"items":232},[233],{"id":4,"slug":5,"title":6,"excerpt":7,"gameId":12,"gameName":13,"articleType":14,"publishedAt":16,"updatedAt":17,"readingTimeMinutes":18,"publicPath":11}]