Potato Shaders 1.21 / 1.20

The Minecraft community loves lightweight components, with Potato Shaders leading the way. Potato was meant to operate well on low-end machines that can’t run the latest shaders, hence its name. Due to its innovative approach and frequent upgrades, it remains popular after two years on the market. RRe36, the Potato shader package creator, specializes in high-performance shaders. Potato, unlike other versions, removes most complex features to maximize FPS. It can be utilized right away, but gamers can customize it. It balances performance and image quality perfectly. These shaders will delight you if your Minecraft world has enough water. Potato adds a water model and improves tree shadows and sun rays. The deep, dark blue contrasts wonderfully with the baby blue sky and the new, enhanced shadows. Bloom, a graphic technique that blurs and blends sunlight, makes it more lifelike. This is also evident with torches around glowstone, lava, etc. Potato shaders use tone mapping to improve images with limited high-end properties. It compresses vast amounts of color and lighting data and provides a realistic image with minimal resources. By loading these shaders, your normal Minecraft constructions seem radically different.

 

While they won’t match the quality of more demanding shader packs, it’s still a stunning change considering their minimal requirements. To add realism, ambient occlusion is used. It intensifies low-light zones. This is especially visible in desert temples and forests with just candles for light. Normal maps offer 3D surfaces depth and facilitate these effects. Cobblestones, bricks, trees, and grass blocks will have more complex surface detail. These shaders offer many customizable parameters. The default Minecraft depth of field slider has been replaced. Instead of overdoing one or the other, it incorporates solid functionality for numerous gaming scenarios. Players can toggle custom water on and off. Finally, gamers can enable or disable antialiasing. This feature can smooth jagged shadow edges, but not perfectly. Potato shaders have low system requirements. You can use Optifine (1.12 and later) or Iris (1.5.0 and later). Your PC simply needs an OpenGL 4.0 graphics card and Windows or Linux. Due to malfunctioning Intel drivers, the Potato shader pack will not operate on Intel HD 5000 Series graphics cards in Windows. Monthly shader pack updates are released by the developer. 0 over 250,000 downloads show its popularity. Installation is easy, and customization is a plus. You should use Potato shaders whether you have a terrible PC or wish to join the thousands of other players who have discovered their benefits.

Potato Shader should be compatible with all these versions of Minecraft: 1.21 – 1.20.6 – 1.20.5 – 1.20.4 – 1.20.3 – 1.20.2 – 1.20.1 – 1.20 – 1.19.4 – 1.19.3 – 1.19.2 – 1.19.1 – 1.19 – 1.18.2 – 1.18.1 – 1.18 – 1.17.1 – 1.17 – 1.16.5 – 1.16.4 – 1.16.3 – 1.16.2 – 1.16.1 – 1.16 – 1.15.2 – 1.15.1 – 1.15 – 1.14.4 – 1.14.3 – 1.14.2 – 1.14 – 1.13.2 – 1.13.1 – 1.13 – 1.12.2 – 1.12

Potato Shader — Screenshots

Potato Shader Shader Pack Download

  1. Download and install Minecraft.
  2. Open the Minecraft launcher and set your game profile for the version of Minecraft you want to launch. – in the launcher, select the “Installation” tab from the top menu, click “New Installation”, select your preferred version of Minecraft from the “Version” drop-down list, and click “Create”.
  3. Download and install Optifine or Iris. – we recommend Iris, it is a bit more optimized;
  4. Open the Minecraft launcher and select the newly created Optifine or Iris profile. – if in step 3 you chose to install optifine, it will have optifine profile, if iris, it will have iris profile;
  5. Download the Potato shader pack from the download section below.
  6. Start Minecraft.
  7. For Optifine: Go to Options > Video Settings > Shaders and click “Shaders Folder” to open the shaderpacks folder.
    For Iris: Go to Options > Video Settings > Shader packs and click “Open Shader Pack Folder” to open the shaderpacks folder.
  8. Insert the downloaded Potato shader pack (.zip file). step 5 to the .minecraft\shaderpacks folder you opened step 7.
  9. In-game, select Potato Shaders from the list and click “Done”.
Function:
  • Dynamic colors
  • Tone mapping
  • Bloom
  • Depth of field
  • Motion blur
  • Temporal Anti-Aliasing
  • Ambient occlusion
  • Water to order
  • Normalmap support
  • RRe36 is credited with creating the Potato Shader.
  • We never modify or modify resource packs in any way. None of the resource packs, shader mods or tools you see on this site are hosted on our servers. We only use official download links provided by official authors. Therefore, they are completely safe.
  • Since the links are official and we update them manually – the links may stop working with each new update. We try to update the links as fast as possible and usually we update everything on time and users don’t have any problems, but if suddenly any link stops working – let us know through comments below.
  • Don’t forget to leave a comment below and vote for the pack. In this way, you will help the authors to constantly improve the project. If you want to support the author(s), be sure to check the author links right below the download links.

 

The Java Edition of this shader pack requires Optifine or Iris to run and will not work without them! Get optifine here or get Iris here.

Java Edition:

[1.21.x – 1.12.x] Download Potato Shader Pack

Download instructions:

Curseforge: download starts automatically after a few seconds;

Mediafire: click the big blue button with the text “DOWNLOAD”;

Google Drive: in the top right corner you will see a small download icon (down arrow), click it and the download should start;

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