Introduction


In the ever-expanding universe of Minecraft Bedrock Edition on mobile devices, some items, mobs, structures, and enchantments stand out due to how incredibly hard they are to find or obtain. Whether you’re surviving in your first world or exploring the Nether on a late-game quest, discovering something rare can be thrilling. Understanding what qualifies as rare, and how to get your hands on these elusive treasures, adds another layer of depth to the mobile Minecraft experience. This Minecraft Bedrock Rares Guide focuses on some of the rarest elements within Minecraft Bedrock Edition, drawing information from the provided sources. Keep in mind that the perceived rarity can sometimes differ from the official categorization

Rare Items in Minecraft Bedrock

One of the most iconic rare items in Minecraft Bedrock Edition is the Elytra. These wing-like items allow players to glide through the air, completely changing how exploration and travel are experienced. On mobile, where terrain navigation can feel slower and more cumbersome due to touch controls, the Elytra opens up the world in an exhilarating new way. Instead of climbing mountains or carefully bridging over ravines, you can soar through the sky with the wind rushing past — it’s a feeling unlike anything else in the game. Mastering Elytra flight takes practice, especially when managing movement on a touchscreen, but once you get the hang of it, there’s no going back.

Obtaining the Elytra is a challenge in itself. It can only be found in End Ships, which appear alongside some End Cities in the outer islands of the End dimension. To even reach the End, players must locate and activate a Stronghold’s End Portal, then defeat the Ender Dragon. Afterward, a portal to the outer islands appears.

These End Cities don’t always have ships, and exploring the End can be disorienting due to its floating islands and void-filled gaps. When you do find a ship, the Elytra is displayed in an item frame at the ship’s bow. This means your journey to get it will likely involve multiple boss fights, high-risk navigation, and strategic resource planning — especially important when playing on a mobile device.

The Dragon Head is another rare treasure, also located on End Ships in the outer End dimension. Unlike the Elytra, it doesn’t provide any gameplay advantage but instead serves as a unique wearable or decorative block. Wearing the Dragon Head gives your character a massive dragon appearance, making it a fun vanity item to show off in multiplayer or just as a trophy in your survival base. Its intimidating design and large size make it visually distinct from any other headgear in the game.

Collecting the Dragon Head is more difficult than it appears. Positioned on the very tip of the End Ship’s bow, reaching it often requires building out over the void or using a tricky glide with the Elytra itself. This adds an element of danger even after finding the structure. On mobile, precise block placement and limited field of view can make recovering the head a nerve-wracking task. Since not all End Cities generate with ships, and only one Dragon Head exists per ship, it remains one of the rarest and most prestigious trophies in the game.

The Totem of Undying is one of the few items in Minecraft that can directly prevent death. When held in your hand or offhand and you receive fatal damage, the Totem activates automatically, restoring a portion of health and granting a few seconds of absorption and regeneration. This instant revival effect can turn the tide in difficult situations like lava falls, Creeper ambushes, or underwater combat. On mobile, where combat responsiveness and aiming are less precise than on PC or console, having a Totem in hand is like carrying a second life.

However, acquiring a Totem requires you to defeat an Evoker, one of the deadliest Illagers in the game. Evokers spawn either inside rare Woodland Mansions — massive, labyrinthine structures that only appear in dark forest biomes — or during Illager Raids, which begin after you defeat a Pillager Captain and enter a village with the Bad Omen effect. Raids escalate in waves and difficulty, making them a chaotic challenge, particularly on mobile where multitasking under pressure is harder. As such, the Totem of Undying isn’t just rare because of its limited sources — it’s rare because of the danger and preparation required to obtain one.

The Dragon Egg is a singular item, a decorative relic that marks the ultimate achievement in Minecraft: defeating the Ender Dragon. It spawns only once per world, resting atop the End Portal frame after the dragon’s defeat. Tapping the egg causes it to teleport nearby, requiring a specific trick with a torch or piston to actually collect it. Though it has no functional use in survival gameplay, it is often placed on pedestals or thrones as a symbol of mastery over the game’s toughest boss.

For mobile players, the Dragon Egg serves a symbolic purpose. Because the path to it involves traveling to a Stronghold, preparing potions and gear, and defeating the Ender Dragon — all of which are more complex and interface-limited on touchscreen — the egg is not just rare, but a personal milestone. Many players choose to keep the egg in a protected display in their base as a memory of their first real survival victory, and since only one can ever exist per world (unless commands are used), it becomes a collector’s item beyond compare.

The Pigstep music disc stands apart from all other discs in the game due to its unique, bass-heavy soundtrack and its exclusivity. It’s the only disc that doesn’t follow the traditional mellow or eerie sound, instead delivering an upbeat, modern track that feels more like a real-world club mix than anything else in the game. The music itself is enough to make it desirable, but its scarcity pushes it into legendary territory.

Pigstep can only be found in Bastion Remnants within the Nether, and even then, only in specific loot chests. Bastions are already dangerous to explore, being populated by aggressive Piglin Brutes that attack on sight. On mobile, navigating tight corridors and dealing with hostile mobs in lava-filled environments is significantly harder than on other platforms. This makes looting a Bastion a nerve-racking but exhilarating task. Because the chance of finding Pigstep is not guaranteed, players often explore several Bastions before they get lucky, making the disc a true badge of persistence.

Mob heads are some of the most elusive decorative blocks in Minecraft. The most well-known include the Zombie, Skeleton, and Creeper heads, all of which require a Charged Creeper to obtain. A Charged Creeper is not a separate mob type but rather a normal Creeper that has been struck by lightning. When it explodes and kills another mob, that mob will drop its corresponding head — a mechanic that doesn’t occur under any other circumstances.

The Heart of the Sea is a powerful item used to craft a Conduit, an underwater beacon-like structure that provides Conduit Power — a status effect that allows you to breathe underwater, see in darkness, and mine faster. This makes it especially useful when exploring ocean monuments or building underwater bases. The Heart of the Sea by itself doesn’t do anything, but as a central crafting ingredient, it’s crucial for advanced aquatic gameplay.

To find a Heart of the Sea, you must locate a buried treasure chest. These chests don’t spawn randomly — they are always located using treasure maps found in shipwrecks or ocean ruins. On mobile, using a map while navigating can be more difficult due to the limited view and touch controls, making treasure hunts a bit more challenging. Once found, the buried chest is often hidden under sand or gravel, requiring careful digging and sometimes dealing with drowned mobs or ocean currents. The extra effort makes uncovering one of these chests — and claiming the Heart of the Sea — a satisfying accomplishment.

Nautilus Shells are another essential item used to craft a Conduit. Unlike the Heart of the Sea, Nautilus Shells are more common but still require work to collect. They can be fished up as treasure loot while using a fishing rod, or obtained from Drowned mobs — some of which may spawn holding one. You need eight of these shells to complete a Conduit, so collecting enough takes time and repetition.

On mobile, fishing is a slower process due to the need to tap precisely and time your actions carefully, especially if you’re aiming for treasure loot instead of regular fish. Hunting Drowned is a faster method in some cases, but they are often found underwater and can be hard to fight effectively on mobile where swimming and aiming at the same time takes extra dexterity. Even though Nautilus Shells are more accessible than other rare items, the effort to collect a full set and combine it with a Heart of the Sea still makes them feel like a valuable part of your rare item collection.

Rare Mobs

Rare mobs often depend on specific spawning conditions or combinations. Skeleton Horses, for example, can appear when lightning strikes nearby, resulting in a “skeleton trap” that spawns skeletons riding undead horses. This occurrence is rare, and even more unexpected when it happens in the middle of a rainy night.

Charged Creepers, crucial for mob head farming, are one of the most elusive creatures due to the weather and enchantment requirements. On mobile, dodging the explosion after making one is a delicate balance of timing and screen precision.

Creating and managing a Charged Creeper scenario is one of the trickiest tasks in the game, particularly on mobile. First, you need a thunderstorm, which is rare on its own. Then, you need a Trident enchanted with Channeling to summon lightning onto a Creeper. Finally, you must lure that Creeper close enough to a mob you want to collect a head from — and survive the blast. This sequence requires extreme preparation, quick reflexes, and good positioning, all of which are more difficult using touch controls. The rarity of the weather, the enchantment, and the conditions make mob heads some of the most rewarding decorative blocks to earn.

Brown Pandas are a genetic variant that only occasionally spawn when breeding regular Pandas. These gentle giants are already uncommon outside of bamboo jungles, so getting a brown one takes effort and patience.

The Purple Axolotl, a mythical-feeling color variant, is another highly sought-after mob. With only a 1 in 1200 chance of spawning through breeding, it’s one of the rarest entities in the game. You’ll need tropical fish in buckets, time, and luck.

Uncommon and Unique Structures
Some of the most exciting discoveries in Minecraft come from stumbling across rare structures. Woodland Mansions are giant, multi-room houses that spawn only in dark forest biomes and are often thousands of blocks from your original spawn point. Inside, dangerous mobs like Evokers make the trek worthwhile for their valuable drops.

End Cities — and more importantly, the End Ships attached to them — are your only way to get Elytra and Dragon Heads. These massive structures hover in the void beyond the End gateway, and not every End City includes a ship, making them even harder to find.

In the Nether, Bastion Remnants offer some of the most unique loot in the game, including Pigstep and Netherite Upgrade templates. However, they are heavily guarded by Piglin Brutes, who don’t take kindly to intruders.

Ancient Cities are another underground marvel, hidden deep in the Deep Dark biome beneath mountain ranges. These eerie cities are home to powerful loot like Echo Shards and the rare Swift Sneak enchantment, but they are also where the terrifying Warden resides.

Biomes like the Modified Jungle Edge, one of the rarest in the Overworld, can only generate under highly specific conditions. On the other hand, Mushroom Fields offer a peaceful, mob-free environment with only Mooshrooms and bats, making them both rare and safe havens.

Every so often, Minecraft’s world generator creates combinations of structures — a village next to a desert temple, or a Pillager Outpost near a ruined portal. These unexpected overlaps can be incredibly rare and are often worth screenshotting or exploring.

Hard-to-Find Enchantments

Some enchantments can’t be found in the enchanting table menu and must be discovered through looting, fishing, or trading. Mending is arguably the most powerful enchantment in the game, allowing your tools and armor to repair themselves with XP. It’s often obtained through Librarian villagers or treasure fishing.

Frost Walker, another treasure enchantment, turns water into ice when you walk across it, making navigation over oceans easier — a surprisingly helpful feature for mobile players. Soul Speed increases your movement on Soul Sand and Soul Soil and is found in Bastion chests or by bartering with Piglins. Swift Sneak, available only in Ancient Cities, increases crouching speed — a stealthy edge when sneaking past hostile mobs.

Blocks You Won’t See Every Day

Some blocks are rare because they generate under very specific conditions or in only one place. Deepslate Emerald Ore is an ultra-rare block, combining two already rare things: Emerald Ore and the deep underground Deepslate layer.

End Portal Frames can’t be mined or collected in Survival and are only seen in Strongholds around the End Portal itself. Blue Ice, a fast-travel block for boats, can only be found in certain iceberg formations in frozen oceans. Gilded Blackstone appears only in Bastions and drops gold nuggets when mined, but be warned — Piglins will attack if they see you do it.

Crying Obsidian is another mystical-looking block that’s important for Respawn Anchors in the Nether. It’s found in Bastions, Ruined Portals, and occasionally through Piglin bartering. Spawners are blocks you’ll see in dungeons and mineshafts — they can’t be mined in Survival, making them functionally unique.

Ocean Monuments house large amounts of Prismarine blocks. These underwater temples are patrolled by Guardians and Elder Guardians and are the only natural source of these blocks, making them both rare and dangerous to raid.

Conclusion


In Minecraft Bedrock Edition, rare items, mobs, and structures offer a rich layer of challenge and reward that enhances every moment of gameplay. From gliding through the skies with Elytra to securing a single Dragon Egg as a permanent trophy, each rare find represents a meaningful milestone in your survival journey.

Tracking down these treasures demands patience, preparation, and sometimes a bit of luck — whether it’s enduring raids for Totems of Undying, surviving Bastion Remnants for Pigstep and Netherite templates, or hunting down a buried treasure for the Heart of the Sea. Even newer additions like Trial Chambers introduce fresh layers of rarity with unique loot like the Heavy Core and Mace.

While a few items remain exclusive to Creative mode, the thrill of the hunt in Survival makes each rare discovery feel earned. These rare elements aren’t just collectibles — they shape your story in the world, turning every adventure into something memorable. Keep exploring, and you just might uncover the next legendary find.

If you’re looking for more guides, be sure to explore the website for more tips and tricks. Enjoy your adventure, and happy mining!