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Essential Fabric Mods Every Player Should Install

The baseline Fabric mod set: Fabric API, Sodium, Lithium, Iris, and ModMenu. What each one does and why every setup starts here.

TRtrol6 min read

What are the essential Fabric mods every player needs?

Every solid Fabric install starts with the same five mods: Fabric API as the shared base, Sodium and Lithium for performance, Iris for shaders, and ModMenu to manage all of it from inside the game. Get these in place first and the rest of your list drops in without drama.

Think of it as the floor, not the ceiling. None of these are flashy content mods. They're the plumbing that makes a modded setup fast and stable. Skip them and you'll spend your afternoon debugging crash logs instead of playing.

5
mods to start
the whole baseline
2
pure performance wins
Sodium + Lithium
1
hard requirement
Fabric API

The baseline set at a glance

Here's the entire starter kit and what each piece is responsible for. If you read nothing else, install everything in this table.

ModWhat it handlesOptional?
Fabric APIThe library most mods are built againstNo. Install first
SodiumRewrites rendering for higher frame rateNo
LithiumSpeeds up mob AI, physics, and tickingNo
IrisLoads shader packs, built to work with SodiumYes, if you want shaders
ModMenuIn-game mod list and config screensStrongly recommended

Why Fabric API comes before everything

Fabric API is the shared code library that the rest of the ecosystem is written against. It exposes the hooks and helpers individual mods rely on, so without it most of your downloads simply won't start. It isn't a feature you'll notice in-game. It's a prerequisite.

Match the Fabric API build to your Minecraft version. When you update the game, update the API too, then everything downstream lines up.

Sodium and Lithium: the performance pair

These two are the actual reason a modded game can run better than vanilla. They split the work cleanly. Sodium owns what you see, Lithium owns what the game is calculating, and they don't overlap, so you run both.

Sodium: rendering

A ground-up rewrite of Minecraft's renderer. It's the single biggest frame-rate gain you can drop in, and the difference is loudest on older or weaker GPUs. Same vanilla look, far more frames.

Lithium: game logic

Optimizes the invisible half: mob pathfinding, physics, block ticking, the simulation itself. Nothing changes on screen. The game just stops hitching when a lot is happening at once.

Sodium smooths the picture; Lithium smooths the world behind it. Together they cover both halves of performance, which is why you'll see them recommended as a unit everywhere. For a deeper tour of the fastest add-ons, see our roundup of the best performance mods for Minecraft.

If you came from OptiFine, Sodium is the modern replacement for its rendering side. The two don't coexist on Fabric, so pick the Sodium stack and don't look back.

Iris: shaders without surrendering frames

Iris is the optional one. It loads shader packs, and crucially it's built to sit on top of Sodium, so you get the lighting, water, and shadow upgrades without throwing away the frames Sodium just earned you. If you don't run shaders, you don't need it. Most people who try it leave it on.

  1. Confirm Sodium is already installed

    Iris is designed to pair with Sodium. Get the renderer in first, then add Iris alongside it.

  2. Drop a shader pack into your shaderpacks folder

    Pick one pack to start. Heavier packs cost more frames, so begin light and scale up.

  3. Enable it from the in-game shader menu

    Open the shader screen, select your pack, and tune the quality to taste.

New to shaders entirely? Walk through our how to install shaders in Minecraft guide, then come back and pick a pack from the best Minecraft shaders list.

ModMenu: stop editing config files by hand

ModMenu adds the in-game mod list and the per-mod settings screens. Without it, configuring a mod often means closing the game and editing a text file. With it, you open a menu, see exactly what's installed, and change settings live. It's pure quality of life, and it makes every other mod on this page easier to live with.

Why it earns a slot

  • See your full mod list and versions at a glance
  • Open any mod's config without leaving the game
  • Spot a missing dependency before it crashes you

Worth knowing

  • It's a management layer rather than a feature mod, so it changes nothing about gameplay on its own
  • A mod only shows a config screen if its author wrote one

Build on the baseline, then specialize

Once these five launch cleanly, you've got a fast, stable foundation to grow from. From here, layer in what fits how you play, whether that's quality-of-life tweaks, visual polish, or a PVP stack. Just add mods a few at a time and confirm the game still launches between rounds.

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