Lifesteal

Lifesteal changes survival by making PvP permanent. When you kill a player, you take one of their hearts and add it to your own. Dying is not just losing items, it lowers your maximum health, and enough losses can put you into an elimination state until you earn hearts back. Every fight leaves a mark that carries through the whole season.

The loop is straightforward but tense: gear up, learn where people live, choose alliances, then pick clean fights that you can finish. Winning makes you harder to kill and more willing to take risks. Losing pushes you into caution, secrecy, and selective engagement because even a small mistake can shrink your margin for every future encounter. Mining alone, moving through the Nether, and doing End runs all feel riskier when an ambush can permanently weaken you.

Over time, the world develops its own politics. High-heart players become problems that groups plan around. Low-heart players play desperate, disappear into hidden stashes, or gamble on raids and traps to recover. Bases turn into fortresses, coordinates become leverage, and information matters as much as raw aim.

Since hearts are power, the economy tends to orbit around staying alive and winning fights: enchanted armor, potions, totems, pearls, and safe travel. Many servers add heart shops, bounties, crafting tweaks, or revival items, but the core stays the same. Your health bar becomes a currency, and PvP is the fastest way to grow it.

What happens when you hit zero hearts?

Usually you enter an elimination state: temporary ban, spectator lock, or a requirement to be revived by an item or another player. Exact rules vary, but zero hearts is meant to be a real consequence, not a normal respawn.

Is it nonstop PvP or mostly survival?

It plays like survival with predictable flashpoints. Most time is spent gathering, enchanting, building, and scouting, then violence spikes around raids, End access, portal routes, bounty targets, and leaked base locations. You can lay low for a while, but you cannot opt out forever.

How do players avoid losing hearts repeatedly?

They play to avoid bad deaths: carry pearls and fire resistance, keep backup kits, split valuables across multiple stashes, travel smart through Nether routes, and bring teammates for risky objectives. Keeping your base untraceable and your routine unpredictable matters as much as gear.

Do you need high PvP skill to have fun on Lifesteal?

Not necessarily. A lot of success comes from timing, terrain, scouting, traps, and diplomacy. Players who pick their fights, control information, and build defensible positions can thrive without taking every duel.

What separates Lifesteal from a typical SMP, factions, or anarchy world?

The snowball is attached to your character. In most survival PvP, you lose a kit and replace it. In Lifesteal, losses reduce your maximum health, which changes how every future fight feels and forces long grudges, protection deals, and targeted takeovers.