SMP

An SMP is a long-running Survival Multiplayer world where the point is simple: live off the land, build something real, and share the map with other players doing the same. It is vanilla survival at its core, but the server feels defined by the people, not a scripted game mode.

Most of your time is the classic loop: punch trees, gear up, establish a base, then turn that base into a project. Early game is about safety and resources. Midgame becomes farms, villagers, Nether travel, and infrastructure. Late game is megabuilds, storage systems, and polishing the world so it works for a community.

What makes an SMP different from solo survival is the social layer. You bump into neighbors, claim an area, trade for things you do not want to grind, and end up with highways, shopping districts, and shared farms. Cooperation is common, but tension still exists. Even on peaceful-leaning servers, borders, pricing, and trust matter.

Rules and plugins vary, but the vibe usually stays grounded. Many SMPs use lightweight quality-of-life features like one-player sleep, land claims, chest protection, or basic economy. The best ones keep survival meaningful, discourage random griefing, and let players tell the story through builds, alliances, and the occasional rivalry.

Is SMP the same as vanilla survival?

It plays like vanilla survival, but the multiplayer context changes everything. Even with minimal plugins, shared space means trading, politics, community builds, and long-term world history.

Do SMP servers allow PvP and griefing?

It depends on the server rules. Many SMPs allow consensual or limited PvP but ban griefing and theft. Others run a harder survival vibe where conflict is part of the world. Always check the rules before settling in.

What should I do first when joining an SMP?

Get stable fast: food, a bed, iron tools, and a safe starter base away from spawn traffic. Then learn the server norms, locate the market or community area, and start a project you can grow over time.

Are economies common on SMP servers?

Very. Some use diamonds as currency, others use plugins for shops and balances. Even without a formal economy, trading services like elytra access, villager setups, and farm outputs becomes the backbone of the server.

How long do SMP worlds usually last?

Good SMPs run for months to years, but resets happen. Many servers keep the same world until performance, version changes, or player interest calls for a fresh start.